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00:00G'day, welcome back to the Animal Hospital.
00:30The other day a rather colourful character was brought in to David Grant's clinic.
00:33His owner was convinced that he was actively trying to lose his colours.
00:38Good morning. Good morning. Hello. Hello, dog.
00:43Who have we got here? What have we got in there? A surprise.
00:47Oh, it's a parrot. Wow. The parrot, yeah.
00:51What's he called? Freddy.
00:53Freddy, right. And what's the story with him?
00:55Freddy's owner was worried that he was pulling out his feathers with his beak.
00:59Yes. He break my other one, because beautiful colour they go.
01:03Pulling all the feathers? Yeah, very much.
01:04Does he speak Italian or English? No, really English.
01:08Is he friendly? He's beautiful.
01:10If he don't like somebody, he... He bites them?
01:13Yes, until my eyes burn. Hello, baby. He's a very, very good boy.
01:19What do you feed him on? Well, I give him the biscuit,
01:22I give him bread, he like, he like curry. Yeah.
01:26He like pasta and potato, because I'm Italian.
01:29You want to come in? Be careful, mummy, be careful.
01:32He like to stay with me.
01:33Then Freddy began to find the whole thing a bit of a laugh.
01:36Can we talk?
01:41He start to laugh.
01:42Can I come over and have a look at him, then? Hello.
01:44He don't like me. I don't know if he...
01:46But his feathers look quite good.
01:49I do spray in the cage, I wash the cage. We have a big, big, big cage.
01:53Yeah. It's brass.
01:55Tell me about the feeding again, because that's something I think
01:58we might have to look at. Do you give him pasta?
02:01I give him pasta, he like rice, he like curry.
02:04Curry.
02:05Curry, love of curry.
02:06He likes curry.
02:08When he don't like something, he throw.
02:09What about seeds and that kind of thing? Does he eat carrot seeds?
02:13Yes, he eat.
02:14I'll put something over his head to have a look.
02:16You all right there, my dear?
02:17When he don't like somebody, bite, a very big bite.
02:20A big bite?
02:21Yeah. I'm going to keep quiet, it's all right.
02:25Yes, you're in charge, aren't you?
02:31You know, I say, the lady, I love that.
02:34All right, you can use this. I'm going to use this.
02:35Come on, put this over him. Come on, mate.
02:37Oh, be careful, no biting me.
02:40But despite all the precautions, Freddy had a quick bite at David's finger.
02:45No, no, be careful.
02:47Yeah, don't worry. I didn't bite that.
02:50Come on, there's a good bird.
02:51Yes.
02:52OK, sweetie, but...
02:54All right now, then, let's have a look at you.
02:56Come here, then.
02:56That's it, that's grand.
02:57There you go.
02:58That's good, Rob. Be careful, then, we'll have a look.
03:02Now we can see.
03:07But that looks quite good to me.
03:09Let's put him back for a second.
03:11Can you go, old lad?
03:12I'll give you a biscuit in a minute, yeah?
03:14But he doesn't look as if he's pulled himself naked at all.
03:17He doesn't look bald.
03:20Sorry about that.
03:21Don't worry, I'll find out from some of my friends.
03:23Yes.
03:24Who know a lot about parrots, and I will check it out with them.
03:27But what I will do in the meantime is to give you some supplement to his diet
03:33to make sure he has the proper amount of minerals and vitamins
03:36and alter his food so that it's more like a parrot and less like a human.
03:41Yes.
03:43Won't you give us a kiss?
03:44If you stay away, give us a kiss.
03:46Give us a kiss, Garmin. Come on.
03:51He'd have to be very friendly before I tried that.
03:55A few days ago, the RSPCA was told about two animals
03:58that had been left unattended in a flat in an East London house.
04:02Inspector Dave Braybrook had taped over the door locks
04:05and a couple of days later went back to see if anybody had been in there.
04:09No.
04:13Tapes are still intact.
04:15Basically, nobody's been in and out of this address
04:17certainly since I taped it up on five o'clock on Monday.
04:20My concerns is there's a parrot,
04:22or I've been told there's a parrot and a cat in here.
04:24So two days is long enough now.
04:28If I leave it much longer, the animals are going to start suffering
04:30if they haven't got food and water.
04:31So I've got to basically try and make entrance to the flat
04:34and make sure the animals are okay.
04:37The RSPCA is not allowed to force entry to a property.
04:41Alpha 2-4, Alpha Base receiving.
04:44Could you call the police to the address I gave you earlier?
04:48We need some assistance.
04:49Thank you. Alpha 2-4 out.
04:55Hello. Hiya.
04:57Right, the problem is we've been informed
04:59there's a cat and a parrot in the top flat.
05:02I've had it taped up for 48 hours and nobody's gone anywhere else.
05:05Right.
05:06And the lady downstairs said the parrot has now stopped making any noise.
05:09No noise at all. Lovely.
05:14At the end of the day, that's what we've got to take in.
05:33After 10 minutes of kicking, a change of tack was needed.
05:39Right.
05:48The policemen couldn't get through the gap.
05:52Even a crowbar couldn't shift the door.
05:58Slimmer reinforcements arrived in the nick of time.
06:02Right.
06:17A quick search revealed no cat, but one abandoned bird.
06:21Well, we've got one cockatiel.
06:27Put it down.
06:32There you go.
06:45Right, he's not too bad.
06:47None the worse for his little escapade.
06:50Once safely back in the cage,
06:51the cockatiel was taken back to the Harmsworth
06:54to be checked over by vet Barbara O'Malley.
06:59It's a bit thin, actually.
07:01He's a bit low on the body muscle there.
07:03Yeah, well, the food was running out.
07:10His belly muscle's a bit underweight there,
07:13so even though he may appear all fluffy and feathered there,
07:16he actually is below normal body weight.
07:18This is far too small for a bird of this size as well.
07:20This is a budgie cage as opposed to a cockatiel, really.
07:23It's much too small.
07:24And only one perch as well, you know,
07:26so he couldn't even hop from perch.
07:28Yeah, so it's real terrible neglect.
07:31Plus, it's all filthy dirty.
07:33There's actually dust and dirt there as well.
07:36OK, we'll take him in and get him all cleaned up.
07:38Right, lovely.
07:40That bird is now perfectly OK
07:42and it's at an RSPCA centre waiting to be rehomed.
07:46Isn't it surprising what people leave on buses?
07:49Umbrellas, gloves, books, even a cat.
07:53This is Metro, is it?
07:55What can we do for her?
07:57A lump.
07:57She does, doesn't she?
07:59That's not so good, is it?
08:01I think that's the reason why somebody left it on the bus,
08:03because of the lump.
08:04Oh, really?
08:05Yeah, it was tied up in a carrier bag.
08:07Right.
08:08Well, what this little lump is, is a hernia.
08:12And it's exactly in the position of the umbilicus,
08:16where the belly button is, basically.
08:19And have you pressed it before?
08:21Yeah, it's soft.
08:24It's quite soft and what it is, is just fatty tissue there.
08:27And you can actually push it back into the abdomen.
08:33Now, the problem with it that occurs,
08:36is that at the moment we've only got fat coming through there.
08:40When...
08:41But the possibility is that we may get something
08:44more important coming through, like a loop of gut.
08:46Now, if a loop of gut goes in there and it gets stuck,
08:49then we've got a really very serious problem.
08:53It's quite a common condition in young kittens
08:56and in fact young puppies as well.
08:59The cat was anaesthetised and vet Gabriel Haggard prepared to operate.
09:05Is that it sticking up there?
09:07That's it there, that's the ring of the hernia.
09:10Okay.
09:11So we've just got to take the edges there and there
09:14and bring them together in the middle.
09:16That should protect it.
09:19What would have caused a thing like that to happen?
09:23What has happened is that while the kitten was developing,
09:26in the womb,
09:28it failed to create a proper muscle wall there,
09:33where the hernia is.
09:34So there's a gap, a defect, where it should have been.
09:39You can see the hole very clearly there now.
09:43So it's just a matter of closing up something
09:46which would normally be closed in a healthy cat.
09:47That's right, exactly.
09:53And here she is, little Metro.
09:55It worked a treat, she's fine and healthy.
09:58Regular viewers of Animal Hospital may have noticed
10:00the occasional appearance of someone whose voice reveals
10:03that he's from the same part of the world as me.
10:05This Aussie is a locum vet.
10:07A locum is someone who moves from practice to practice
10:10and he's been working on and off here for about a year now.
10:13That's quite nasty.
10:15So how exactly did this happen?
10:17Put on a broken bottle.
10:19Broken bottle.
10:21He does this quite often, doesn't he, judging from his records.
10:25Yeah, that's very sore.
10:26So we'll have him in tomorrow morning and we'll sort it out.
10:30What we're going to do now that we've got him under the anaesthetic,
10:33I'm just going to radically cut this back
10:35and we'll treat it as an ulcer of the paw,
10:37which basically means just keeping it dressed and protected.
10:42So how did you come over to this country from Australia?
10:46Well, basically, when I graduated, wasn't that many jobs going?
10:52So we'd had a visit from a representative of a locum agency
10:58and she had said that, basically,
11:00if you're looking for work after you graduate, head on over
11:03because there's plenty in England.
11:04And sure enough, England had a shortfall of vets
11:08and still does to a large extent.
11:11What sort of things have you done over there
11:14which you wouldn't have had any sort of chance to do over here, for example?
11:19In college, and I think it was the same in just about all the vet colleges back home,
11:24there was like a wildlife group
11:26and we used to get many animals that were brought in, possums.
11:29They're very delightful, aren't they, possums?
11:31I mean, they've got big eyes and those huge ears.
11:34Yeah, they're certainly very big on the cute factor, aren't they?
11:36The thing that fascinates me about them is
11:37when they wrap that prehensile tail around you,
11:40the inside of it is like beautifully polished leather.
11:44Yeah, yeah.
11:45It's just like a...
11:46At college, we used to foster out any that used to come in as orphans
11:50and you could always tell someone who was burdened with a possum
11:53because it'd either be this curled tail sticking out over their collar
11:57because they'd always be sitting under your shirt for the warm,
11:59wrapped in a sock or a little handbag that you'd made out of a flannel or something like that.
12:05You're mad keen on flying.
12:08How did that start?
12:11That was something I've always wanted to do since I was a kid
12:13but circumstances as a student and such
12:16I never really got an opportunity.
12:17But when I started work, actually over here, I joined up with a gliding club.
12:23Went up for my first flight in 91, I think.
12:33Three-minute flight and a really grotty day and just knocked it.
12:36It's just really good.
12:38And it's sort of gone from there.
12:38Would you ever use flying in connection with veterinary practice?
12:43Well, that's what I'm working towards now.
12:45I'm working towards getting my commercial licence together
12:48so that way I can then combine the two quite effectively
12:52and look at working in the third world.
12:55I've always had an interest in conservation.
12:57That's something that I really would like to get into.
13:01Having flying qualifications is really handy, especially in the third world.
13:07What's it like working here?
13:09Really good.
13:10Very busy.
13:13I could have helped you.
13:16Very busy?
13:17Very busy but good.
13:17But that's good, isn't it?
13:18To be busy?
13:19I mean, you'd hate to be hanging around wondering what to do.
13:22Yeah.
13:22You sort of see, I would say, for every six months you work here
13:26you probably see a year's worth of cases because we're so busy.
13:30Not only that, the work here is very varied.
13:32The vets have to deal with all sorts of problems.
13:35Take this, for example, a common grass seed.
13:38We picked it up on the grassy area just outside the hospital.
13:41These little side hairs have a particular effect.
13:44Watch.
13:46Any movement around it and it makes the seed travel always in the same direction.
13:55See?
13:57That could be a clue as to what caused problems
13:59for a little Yorkie brought into Barbara O'Malley's clinic.
14:02We went on holiday about three, four months ago.
14:04Right.
14:05And she got a grass seed in her foot.
14:07Right.
14:08And they did lance it without an anaesthetic.
14:11Right.
14:12And she was given antibiotics plus an antibiotic injection.
14:16Right.
14:17And it healed.
14:18Did they find a grass seed?
14:19They didn't find it.
14:20Right.
14:21Since then she's constantly chewing this area of her leg.
14:23And then last week her foot came up again.
14:27Right.
14:27And she got the same abscesses here and everything.
14:30And she was given an injection and antibiotics.
14:33Okay, let's just check and see.
14:34So this was the...
14:35Sorry, Tina.
14:36I'm sorry.
14:36It was the rock spot.
14:37There's a good dog.
14:38Just relax.
14:38Good girl.
14:40This paw here, is it?
14:41Yes.
14:43Can I ask you, Barbara, how they actually move?
14:46Do they go through muscle or they get in a blood vessel or what?
14:49How do they move?
14:50They just...
14:50As soon as the dog's leg is moving, they move up the leg quite easily.
14:53And they normally go in where the dog is walking,
14:57to here or through there.
14:59They travel up under the skin.
15:01They can often go to the muscle as well.
15:02But normally under the skin.
15:03And a dog has quite loose skin.
15:05So they can often...
15:06I mean, I've seen them emerge this area here.
15:09You know, around the armpit.
15:10But it sounds like the offending object is still in there somewhere.
15:13But it's a question of getting it out.
15:16If you're lucky, it'll come out in the pus.
15:19The pus builds up all around it.
15:21And if you're lucky, it'll pop out.
15:23It's just that it's happened again.
15:24I wouldn't like it.
15:25It's very nice when they do come out.
15:26But often you do so many operations
15:28and you maybe find one out of five or something.
15:30Because they're so tiny.
15:31People often think, gosh, you know, why can't you find it?
15:33It sounds so easy, doesn't it?
15:35You know, a piece of cake.
15:35It's just a little grass seed.
15:38But when you go in there and look, it's actually very hard.
15:41Would you be able to see something like a migrating grass seed in an x-ray?
15:46No, no, you wouldn't.
15:48Because a grass seed isn't opaque enough to show an x-ray.
15:52Well, I think what we might do is take her off the tablets completely.
15:54After she's finished them.
15:55Yeah, and for a week.
15:57And hope that the thing may come to a head and become ripe.
16:01If it does, then what we can do next week is operate.
16:04Right.
16:04And see if anything's in there.
16:06They did eventually operate.
16:08And as Barbara predicted, they couldn't find anything.
16:11So if there is a grass seed, it could still be there.
16:14It's amazing the problem something so small can cause.
16:18Here on the miscellaneous ward, we've got a crow being attacked by some other crows.
16:22We've got a seagull with a badly damaged wing and a cracked beak.
16:27And a beautiful barn owl.
16:30With the sheer range of problems they get in a hospital like this,
16:34it pays to have a variety of expertise around.
16:37The other day, hospital receptionist Christine Harrison
16:40had to call upon nursing supervisor Richard Thompson for help.
16:44Hi, Richard.
16:45We have a young couple in reception who brought a bird in.
16:48We're not quite sure what it is.
16:49Could you come and identify it, please?
16:51OK, thanks.
16:56You don't know where he's bleeding from?
16:58No, it's underneath him somewhere.
16:59Just underneath him somewhere.
17:02Hiya.
17:02All right, what have you got?
17:03I don't know, you tell me.
17:05That's a woodcock.
17:06Is it?
17:07Yep.
17:07Never seen one before.
17:10What happens is we get thousands of these migrate from Scandinavia at this time of the year.
17:14And they fall down in the city and in the West End.
17:17And, you know, people like yourself kindly bring them in to us.
17:22I think we need to take it through to the vet.
17:24Yeah, that's great.
17:25Thanks very much for bringing it in.
17:27It's really good, thanks.
17:29Hey, Richard, what you got there, mate?
17:30Got a nice bird for you here.
17:32Right, what is it?
17:33It's a woodcock.
17:34Oh, dear.
17:35Let's have a look.
17:38They found it in Covent Garden.
17:41Underneath the car.
17:42Yeah.
17:42There's some blood in the box, but I'm not sure where it came from.
17:45Might be a toe, but...
17:46Right.
17:47Give it a quick look there.
17:52A little bit there, but it's not really a cut at all.
17:56Can you just hold on to...
17:57Sure.
17:58Hold on to him from the front there, or from the back, I should say.
18:02Might be actually something here on his chest.
18:05Yeah, there it is.
18:06There.
18:06Let me just grab a swab there.
18:12It's quite a nasty, nasty tear here.
18:18Yeah, that in itself is nothing to worry about.
18:20The only thing I'm a bit concerned about is there's air here under the skin,
18:24which could mean that one of the air sacs has been damaged.
18:28Right.
18:29OK, I think the best thing is going to be to give it a little shot of antibiotic,
18:33and if we can pop him out back with the... in the bird section,
18:36and we'll give him a couple of days to get over it.
18:39But that'll seal up really quickly and shouldn't cause too much problem, hopefully.
18:44Right.
18:48The woodcock spent a couple of days being cared for in the hospital.
18:52Why do you have the towel over him?
18:53Well, he's got over his attack now, and he's a lot brighter.
18:58This is really to prevent him flying at the bars and damaging himself.
19:02Right, he'd just try to escape then, wouldn't he?
19:04Yeah, that's right.
19:05Oh, he's beautiful.
19:07Beautiful feathers.
19:09Richard thought it best for the woodcock to be released at night.
19:15Is this a good time to release him?
19:17Yeah, it is a good time.
19:17You can avoid the large birds like crows that would attack him,
19:20and also they feed more actively at night.
19:22And is this his natural habitat?
19:24Yeah.
19:24That's where he would live?
19:25Yeah, this is perfect.
19:26It's low, dense woodland, and low cover as well.
19:31So you think he'll probably be quite happy here?
19:33Yeah, I think he'll be fine here.
19:34Okay.
19:35Shall we put him down and let him out into his new home?
19:38Now, should I keep this light away?
19:39Yeah, just keep it away.
19:40I'll just put it down here.
19:47You're just going to let him walk out on his own rather than get your hands in?
19:50That's right.
19:50It's better then.
19:51You can adjust better.
19:52Right.
19:52Okay.
19:55Come on.
19:57Come on.
19:58This is your new home.
20:02If you were watching the program a couple of weeks ago,
20:05you may remember seeing this.
20:07Wasn't he a lovely cat?
20:09Just like Vincent here.
20:10It's a good name, isn't it?
20:12If, like me, you're a fan of Van Gogh, I'm sure you can work out why.
20:16This little cat needs a new home, but born with only one ear, who knows?
20:21Well, the cat they called Vincent was special to someone who was also watching that night,
20:26and the cat didn't need to be rehomed after all, as Steve Knight found out.
20:30What happened, Grace?
20:32Well, I was watching the television, and I just put the tape in,
20:36tape the TV program, which has the animals, and I saw her on there,
20:41and I just went, that's my cat!
20:44And I was straight on the phone to the RSPCA.
20:47You must have been stunned.
20:49And I was a bit tearful, because she's very, very special.
20:52Yeah, and we called her Vincent because of the missing ear.
20:55What's her actual name?
20:57Her actual name is Frida.
20:59What happened was she had a fight with one of my other cats,
21:02and it bit the ear, and I took her down to get sorted out,
21:07and I had to take her ear off.
21:10So where was she found?
21:11She was found on Holloway Road.
21:13Just wandering along?
21:14Just wandering along Holloway Road,
21:16and some kind person picked her up and took her down to the RSPCA.
21:21Thank goodness.
21:22Otherwise I would never have got her.
21:23So how do you feel to have her back?
21:25Oh, very happy.
21:27I thought she was a goner.
21:30The vets here recommend that dog and cat owners have their pets neutered.
21:34They advise this for a number of reasons.
21:36One is that it reduces the risk of certain diseases,
21:40as the next owner in David Grant's clinic found out.
21:43What can we do for this one today?
21:45She came along four weeks ago,
21:47and the other veterinary surgeon, he looked at her.
21:50She's got, I believe, their tumours.
21:53All right.
21:53Where?
21:55Under her tummy.
21:55All right.
21:58She licks her feet a lot, doesn't she?
21:59Yes, sometimes she does.
22:00I bet you're surprised I know that, aren't you?
22:03Do you wonder how I know?
22:04Because they've all got brown.
22:05Yeah. Do you know why they've got brown?
22:07No, I don't.
22:07Because the saliva stains them brown.
22:09Oh, right.
22:10That's a characteristic.
22:11She's been licking her toes, see that?
22:14Anyway, you're not here for that.
22:15You're here for these lumps.
22:16Let's have a look.
22:17Shall we do the kung fu then?
22:19Yeah, I can turn her if you want.
22:20Yeah, Rob will do it.
22:20Here we go.
22:21You hold on to her head and make a big fuss of her.
22:23There's a girl.
22:24Let's put her, make a fuss of her head now.
22:25That's good.
22:26That's a good dog.
22:27Let's see.
22:28Oh, here they are.
22:29Just there, or were they elsewhere?
22:31Can you remember?
22:33Right, there's one here.
22:34Yeah.
22:36And one a bit further up.
22:37Yep.
22:38Yeah. Have they got bigger?
22:40I don't think so, no.
22:41I've been, like, feeling them, like, all the time and I don't think so, no.
22:45Are they surfaced?
22:47Are they on the surface?
22:48They're actually the mammary glands.
22:50So it's a form of breast cancer.
22:54Which is very, very common in the dog, actually.
22:56Extremely common.
22:58It's common in intact bitches.
23:02In other words, dogs that haven't been spayed.
23:03If you spay a dog before she's a year old, it's virtually impossible for her to get breast cancer.
23:10And how old is she, eight and a half?
23:11She's eight and a half, yeah.
23:13Well, that doesn't appear to have spread.
23:15No.
23:17My feeling is, because she's so young, and because she's hopefully going to live quite a bit longer,
23:22we should operate and get rid of these now.
23:24Ah.
23:26That'll stop you worrying.
23:28Yeah, because I do love her so much.
23:29Do you?
23:30Yeah, I do.
23:36Why is it that when a dog's been spayed, then the onset of this sort of cancer is less common?
23:42Well, I think the answer is it's likely, or very, very likely, that the source of the cancer is driven by hormones.
23:50And if you remove the main sex hormones in the dog, which are in the ovaries,
23:55that takes away the cause of the cancer.
23:59How long do you think the dog's had this?
24:01Not very long.
24:02Two tubers, weren't they, together?
24:03Not very long.
24:04I think we've got a very observant owner.
24:06And it's quite right, she should come down early.
24:09And the survival percentages on this, I mean, it's not as...
24:14They're quite, quite good.
24:16Yeah.
24:17But we'll see what the histology says.
24:22Now, if that biopsy comes back saying that it's malignant, what's the end result of that, then?
24:30Well, it's more of a worry.
24:32I mean, chemotherapy's not terribly effective in these,
24:36so we will need to be extra vigilant.
24:39The good news is that we got the biopsy results back, and it's benign.
24:45Oh.
24:47Oh, thank you.
24:48Yeah.
24:50That means it won't spread, and it won't kill her.
24:52And in all probability, we almost certainly cured it.
24:56Have you been very worried about the whole thing?
24:59I have, yeah.
25:00Especially waiting for the operation to finish, and I kept ringing up and ringing up.
25:04Did you?
25:06Catching any animal that doesn't want to be caught can be tricky,
25:09but what if there are two such animals,
25:11with 20 or more metres of muddy water between you and them?
25:14It's, well, could you catch them?
25:18Inspectors John Storey and Mark Martin showed Steve Knight how to go about it.
25:23Right, what's happening here is that these geese have actually had their wings clipped.
25:27Yeah.
25:28And they've been put here by personal persons unknown.
25:32What, been dumped here?
25:33Yeah, basically.
25:33There was three.
25:35One of them was shot with an air gun pellet.
25:38Yeah, so this is not suitable.
25:41And so what we're going to do is collect them up and take them to their new home.
25:49We had to climb around to an unfenced area so we could reach the geese with nets.
25:53Thank you.
25:57It's only about sort of eight inches deep, but...
26:00Yeah, you see, look.
26:02Right, the procedure now is to feed the geese.
26:05I hope they come here.
26:07This is highly technical.
26:10The trick is to get it to land about two or three feet in front of them.
26:14Yeah.
26:16They go for the ones you've just put in, don't they?
26:22Come on then.
26:25What are the chances of getting these out, John?
26:27What are the chances of getting these out, John?
26:29Well, there's every chance of getting them out.
26:31Might not use this strategy.
26:32We might have to devise some other strategy, but...
26:36We usually get our bird in the end.
26:39The geese enjoyed their meal, but were not tempted close enough for us to net them.
26:43Clearly, a more adventurous plan was needed.
26:47As an ex-naval man, a bit of water was no problem for Mark Martin.
26:51From there in back.
26:55It is time to go in and drive the geese into our waiting nets.
27:01Please don't get any deeper.
27:04Isn't it lovely, Mark?
27:05The tension mounts.
27:07Will they or won't they?
27:09Well, I'm afraid that's all we've got time for this week,
27:11but of course we couldn't leave you in suspense.
27:14So we'll say goodbye with our intrepid inspectors ducking and diving out of the pond.
27:19Bye.
27:22It was his plan D, was it?
27:38One step ahead all the time.
27:39Very good.
27:41Goodbye, she's gone.
27:43That was a bad old trip again.
27:45Did you get it?
27:47Yes.
27:49Well done.
27:51There you go.
27:53All you have to do is jump.
27:55There you go.
27:57There you go.
27:59There you go.
28:01There you go.
28:03There you go.
28:05There you go.
28:07Jump.
28:09There you go.
28:11Jump.
28:13Jump.
28:15Jump.
28:17Jump.
28:19Jump.
28:21Jump.
28:23And run.