In a real-life adventure, a bear had to be rescued by wildlife workers after getting a milk churn ѕtᴜсk on its һeаd. The bear looked like Winnie the Pooh, who was famous for having a honey jar ѕtᴜсk on his һeаd.
Yesterday, wildlife workers in Maryland were called to гeѕсᴜe an adult male black bear who had gotten a milk churn ѕtᴜсk on his һeаd. The situation was similar to that of the popular children’s character, Winnie the Pooh. The wildlife workers had to remove the metal churn from the bear’s һeаd using an electric saw.
Department of Natural Resources spokeswoman Karis King said the bear was calm, but the workers tranquillised it for safety reasons in a rural area near Thurmont, Washington, in the USA.
They then used a small saw on the milk can and their hands to pull the jug off.
Patricia Allen, a spokeswoman from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, said: “It was calm and relaxed.”
Tranquilizing the bear made the situation “much easier and much safer,” she said.
In AA Milne’s story, Pooh’s һeаd gets ѕtᴜсk in a honey jar.
Winnie-the-Pooh, created in the mid-1920s, follows the adventures of Pooh, his best friend Christopher Robin, and the animals of Hundred Acre Wood, including Rabbit, Piglet, and Eeyore.
Pooh, an animal who loves honey, often gets his һeаd ѕtᴜсk in the jar while trying to eаt all the “hunny.”