Morrinsville police Sergeant Vic Sneddon said.
"We have images of her chasing one of our staff around a patrol car so
while it may have had problems adjusting its internal GPS, she still had
plenty of life left in her.
But in terms of how she came to be there in the first place, its lips were definitely sealed."
It is not known exactly when the seal began its journey from the Firth
of Thames but Department of Conservation ranger Garry Hickman believed
it used the Piako River to navigate in and out of the canals during
heavy rain.
"They come up the rivers, sometimes there can be one or two. They are chasing trout, mullet, koi carp, so it's not hard for them to get a feed. They have to chase the fish - they are opportunists." Hickman arrived at the farm to find the docile seal napping in the shade about 15 meters from the road. "It looks like it had been out of the water for quite a while as it was pretty dry, the nearest drain would of been about 100 meters away." He said the seal, measuring about 1.5metre long, made a move, clambering through a farm fence into a paddock.
"You can walk up to a seal and it looks really docile but they can react like lightning." With the help of police officers, the trio approached the seal from different directions, boxing it in. "I threw a net over it while it was looking the other way. It hissed and snarled and bared it's teeth as they do." The seal was then put in a polypropylene box and driven to Tapu where Hickman released it back into the sea from the beach. "When I let the bag go on the rocks she popped her head up, looked at me, and swam back into the ocean."
"They come up the rivers, sometimes there can be one or two. They are chasing trout, mullet, koi carp, so it's not hard for them to get a feed. They have to chase the fish - they are opportunists." Hickman arrived at the farm to find the docile seal napping in the shade about 15 meters from the road. "It looks like it had been out of the water for quite a while as it was pretty dry, the nearest drain would of been about 100 meters away." He said the seal, measuring about 1.5metre long, made a move, clambering through a farm fence into a paddock.
"You can walk up to a seal and it looks really docile but they can react like lightning." With the help of police officers, the trio approached the seal from different directions, boxing it in. "I threw a net over it while it was looking the other way. It hissed and snarled and bared it's teeth as they do." The seal was then put in a polypropylene box and driven to Tapu where Hickman released it back into the sea from the beach. "When I let the bag go on the rocks she popped her head up, looked at me, and swam back into the ocean."
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