How many firefighters does it take to save a bat stuck up a lamppost? The craziest animal rescues in South Yorkshire

From a bat up a lamppost to a dog inside a pool table, South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue has had some odd requests to help save animals in the last three years.
A Savi's pipistrelle batA Savi's pipistrelle bat
A Savi's pipistrelle bat

Dogs caused the most number of call-outs with 61 incidents requiring 285 firefighters to spend their shifts hauling the animals out of badger holes, pool tables and drainage pipes.

Other creatures saved from perilous situations from April 2013 to March 2016 included sheep, snakes, badgers, cats, horses, a bat, a squirrel, swans, hawks, a bull, a guinea pig and fish.

Sonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pubSonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pub
Sonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pub
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Cats were to blame for 60 call-outs, 17 of which involved a cat being stuck in a tree.

Only 48 horses needed rescuing but due to their size 321 officers were needed to save them.

The most bizarre incident was when five officers spent an hour and a half rescuing a bat that had become stuck up a lamppost in Doncaster in May 2013.

Firefighters were called to Castle Street, Conisbrough, after a bat became entangled in fishing wire up a lamp post.

Sonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pubSonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pub
Sonny the Springer with owner Paddy Moloney, after Sonny's head was trapped in the pool table at the White Hart pub
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A bat conservation specialist helped the crew who used a ladder to rescue the bat.

Similarly perplexing was when a dog had to be sawn out of a pool table in a pub in Sheffield in August last year.

At around 1.30am firefighters were called to the White Hart pub on St Philip’s Road, Netherthorpe in Sheffield.

Sonny the springer spaniel had been underneath the table when his head became stuck in a hole.

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At the time the fire service said: “Animals do get themselves in strange places but this was particularly unusual.”

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Sonny's tale of rescue after fire crews free him from Sheffield pool table

Call-outs for cat rescues took a whopping 270 hours to resolve in total while horse and pony rescues took 80 hours, dogs 66 hours and birds 33 hours.

Head of emergency response at South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue, Tony Carlin, said: “Animal rescues are an established part of fire service work that’s greatly valued by the communities we serve.

“Rescues performed by firefighters with specialist training and equipment stop the public getting into danger by attempting rescues themselves.

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“These incidents also highlight that firefighters contribute far more to local communities than simply putting out fires.

"Animal rescues are part of the thousands of ‘special service’ incidents our crews attend each year, including freeing people from road traffic collisions, water rescues, flooding and lift releases.”

There has been a 25 per cent decrease in animal rescues over the last three years.