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Ducks in a road

 
Tessa Dawson-Price, 14, and her dad, Mike Price, carry a dozen young ducks and their mother one block from their home to Lake Pasadena in St. Petersburg. Price, who rehabilitates neighborhood wildlife with the help of his daughter, has been nursing mother ducks back to health and saving their hatchlings after several of them started dying mysteriously. He raised them in his yard and released them back into the lake Wednesday. “It’s really nice to see all the kids at the lake smile at the ducks and feed them,” Dawson-Price said.
Tessa Dawson-Price, 14, and her dad, Mike Price, carry a dozen young ducks and their mother one block from their home to Lake Pasadena in St. Petersburg. Price, who rehabilitates neighborhood wildlife with the help of his daughter, has been nursing mother ducks back to health and saving their hatchlings after several of them started dying mysteriously. He raised them in his yard and released them back into the lake Wednesday. “It’s really nice to see all the kids at the lake smile at the ducks and feed them,” Dawson-Price said.
Published July 2, 2015

ST. PETERSBURG — Mike Price, who rehabilitates neighborhood wildlife with the help of his 14-year-old daughter, Tessa Dawson-Price, nursed mother ducks back to health recently, saving their hatchlings after several of them near Lake Pasadena started dying mysteriously.

Price said he raised them in his yard. On Wednesday, he and his daughter released them back into the lake.

"It's really nice to see all the kids at the lake smile at the ducks and feed them," Dawson-Price said.