A funeral car broke rank mid-procession and sped off towards its passenger’s house – where a squirrel had started a fire.
Former Havering councillor and friend of the deceased, Mr Tebbutt was in the final car of a funeral procession in Brentwood Road on the afternoon of Friday, March 8, when he received an unwelcome phone call.
‘I had a fellow in my house putting a new bathroom in,’ he told The Recorder. ‘He had the window open and saw smoke coming out of the garage roof.
‘So he rang the fire brigade and then rang me.’
Mr Tebbutt initially believed the caller was pulling his leg – but as it dawned on him the fire was no wind-up he realised he had to get home, funeral or no funeral.
‘I said to the driver: “I’m telling you, my house is on fire. Go left here.”
‘The driver said: “I can’t go left – I’m in a funeral.”
‘I said: “Never mind that. Turn left.” ’
The driver did as he was bidden and chauffeured the former Tory councillor, along with a number of family members of the deceased, to his home in Romford – pausing while Mr Tebbutt negotiated his way through a road block set up so the fire brigade could run a hose across the street.
He arrived to find three fire crews battling the flames, which ended up damaging fifty per cent of the garage and costing upwards of £20,000.
But it wasn’t until a fire investigation team pinpointed the cause of the incident that the strangest aspect of the afternoon’s proceedings came to light – the fire had been started by a squirrel.
It’s a battle between me and the squirrels
A fire brigade spokesman said the mischievous rodent had chewed through the cable of a fluorescent light, sparking an electrical fire that quickly spread through the garage.
‘It’s nuts to think that squirrels can start fires, but that’s exactly what happened here,’ he admitted. ‘We think it was nesting in the garage and caused the blaze by chewing through some cables.’
Self-proclaimed ‘animal lover’ Mr Tebbutt said he was nearing the end of his tether with the rodents.
‘I put nuts out for the birds but the squirrels keep eating them,’ he revealed. ‘Whatever contraption I put up, they seem to beat me. It’s a battle between me and the squirrels.
‘I put up with that but now they’ve set my house on fire I’ve decided I’m going to shoot them all.’
I’ve decided I’m going to shoot them all
Under UK law, it is legal to shoot grey squirrels but illegal to cause them unnecessary pain.
The RSPCA website warns that ‘squirrels may suffer if the shooting is not accurate’.