In This Issue
Innovative pet product set for Dragons' Den
Pet shop boss blames local council for closure
Research reveals average UK dog is 22% overweight
Premium pet food sector is attractive to small firms
Illegal pet shop ran rabies dog risks
AQUA 2017 shaping up to be a bumper show
Darcy named PDSA Pet Survivor 2016 after 60ft fall
SureFlap launches handy SureSense Microchip Reader
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The Top 20 most read stories in 2016
Crufts sponsorship continues for Arden Grange
Retailers failing to inspire customers in stores, says retail expert
Scorpion halts high-speed train
Farmer and Border Collie win ‘A Way With Dogs’
Cat nearly croaks after ‘poaching’ salmon from the cooker
Top dog names of 2016 revealed
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Scorpion halts high-speed train
 
A scorpion, which escaped a rail passengers bag bringing a London to Edinburgh train to a halt at Peterborough, has given birth its rescuers have revealed.

The Guatemalan scorpion shocked passengers when it made a surprise appearance on New Year’s Day.

The creature was tempted into a food container before it was taken to The Exotic Pet Refuge in Deeping St James.

Staff at the centre said the scorpion had two or three babies overnight.

The female passenger was travelling back from a holiday in Guatemala with her son when she reached into her bag for her glasses - and discovered the surprise guest attached to the case.

It probably took refuge in the rucksack as it was “looking for somewhere dark and dry” to give birth, Darren Mansfield, from The Exotic Pet Refuge told the BBC.

“She dropped the case and the scorpion disappeared from sight. “A passenger tried to catch it in an ice cream tub, but scorpions don’t like sticky, wet places so it wasn’t interested.

“Luckily, the woman’s son was eating a chicken dinner so she made him wolf that down and it was lured into that container.”

The black Guatemalan bark scorpion - which has a sting “equivalent to about three wasp stings” and is not lethal to humans - had “two or three babies last night”, Mr Mansfield said.

He said the scorpion and her babies would stay at the Lincolnshire rescue centre.


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