Bird in hand! Moment woman rescues rare KINGFISHER after it flew into her kitchen before it takes flight from her palm

  • Charlotte Lawrie, 33, saved a rare kingfisher after it flew into her kitchen
  • Bird got trapped behind her potted plants at home in Bourne, Lincolnshire
  • Kingfishers are critically endangered bright blue and orange birds

This is the heartwarming moment a woman safely rescued a rare kingfisher by hand after it flew into her kitchen and got trapped inside her home.

Charlotte Lawrie, 33, captured the incredible encounter with the elusive bird before it took flight from the palm of her hand following the dramatic rescue mission.

She had been making a cup of coffee while getting ready for work when the eye-catching blue and orange bird flew through her doors at 9.30am on Friday.

But the startled kingfisher got into a flap when it saw Charlotte's pet dog and became trapped behind her house plants on the kitchen windowsill.

Charlotte moved her rottweiler Triton outside into the garden while she went about trying to usher the frightened bird towards an open window.

But as she attempted to push him back with an unopened pack of dishcloths he froze, forcing her to pick up the tiny fragile bird by hand and carry it outside.

Amazing footage shows Charlotte telling the bird 'you've got this little bird, you're okay, you're just in shock sweetheart' as she tenderly strokes him in her palm.This is the heartwarming moment a woman safely rescued a rare kingfisher by hand after it flew into her kitchen and got trapped inside her home

This is the heartwarming moment a woman safely rescued a rare kingfisher by hand after it flew into her kitchen and got trapped inside her home

Charlotte Lawrie, 33, had been making a cup of coffee while getting ready for work when the eye-catching blue and orange bird flew through her doors at 9.30am on Friday
Charlotte Lawrie, 33, had been making a cup of coffee while getting ready for work when the eye-catching blue and orange bird flew through her doors at 9.30am on Friday

Charlotte Lawrie, 33, had been making a cup of coffee while getting ready for work when the eye-catching blue and orange bird flew through her doors at 9.30am on Friday

She then carries him back towards the river which runs behind her home in Bourne, Lincolnshire, while saying 'You're okay Mr Kingfisher.'

As Charlotte strokes the bird's head, it then takes off from the palm of her hand towards the water as she exclaims: 'Hey, look at that, he's fine.'

Charlotte said she felt 'like a Disney princess' when she rescued the bird which was as 'light as air' when she picked it up to move it to safety.

She sometimes catch's glimpses of kingfishers and hears their distinctive calls but was left flabbergasted when one flew into her home.

According to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), kingfishers are small 'unmistakable' bright blue and orange birds of slow moving or still water.

Charlotte Lawrie, 33, captured the incredible encounter with the elusive bird before it took flight from the palm of her hand following the dramatic rescue mission

Charlotte Lawrie, 33, captured the incredible encounter with the elusive bird before it took flight from the palm of her hand following the dramatic rescue mission

They fly rapidly, low over water, and hunt fish from riverside perches, occasionally hovering above the water's surface.

Kingfishers are amber listed - the second most critical group of birds - because of their unfavourable conservation status in Europe.

They are also listed as a Schedule 1 species under the Wildlife and Countryside Act offering them additional protection.

Charlotte, who works in manufacturing and lives with partner Joe Ray, 28, said: 'We see them flitting up and down the river but it's never more than a momentary glance.

'I have never heard of one flying into somebody's home let alone anyone rescuing them by hand. It's insane really.

'It flew in through the kitchen door while I was getting ready for work. Our back garden looks over a little river called the Bourne Eau.

'Although I knew it was a bird, I didn't realise it was a kingfisher until I saw the blue and orange. Now there was one in the kitchen and I thought 'that's amazing'. 

'I tried to get outside by opening the window. There are cacti on the window sill and I was worried it would get hurt really badly on the spikes.

'I moved those out of the way, but it wasn't going towards the window. It had frozen. I think it was a possum thing trying to play dead.

Charlotte said she felt 'like a Disney princess' when she rescued the bird which was as 'light as air' when she picked it up to move it to safety
Charlotte said she felt 'like a Disney princess' when she rescued the bird which was as 'light as air' when she picked it up to move it to safety

Charlotte said she felt 'like a Disney princess' when she rescued the bird which was as 'light as air' when she picked it up to move it to safety

According to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), kingfishers are small 'unmistakable' bright blue and orange birds of slow moving or still water

According to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), kingfishers are small 'unmistakable' bright blue and orange birds of slow moving or still water

'It must have been massively confusing for it to one minute be flying up and down a river and then stuck in glass cage with a load of cacti plants.

'I took some Sainsbury's dish clothes and tried to push it the right way. That didn't work so I decided to pick it up. I felt like a Disney Princess.

'In the video you can see my hand was shaking. I didn't want it to hurt himself. They are so fragile. When I picked it up, it was like picking up air. 

'I put it on a flower bed, took the dog inside and waited. There are also cats in the area and I didn't want it to become prey. Then I picked it up and took it over to the river hobbling on my crutches, as I've got a busted leg.

'It was a bit difficult to balance the phone, the crutch and the bird but I just felt like it was such a rare moment I had to capture it on camera

'As I was checking it over and looking at its wings she suddenly flew off and was fine.

'It was once in a lifetime experience. They are such rare and beautiful birds. I see them as England's tropical birds because their colours are so vibrant.'   

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