"Come to enjoy the countryside, but be safe, be responsible," Mr Aitken said.
Pawz for Thought's facilities in Sunderland are not equipped to care for the owlet so it is being transferred to another charity, which is better tailored to its needs."He now has to go and live with three other owls up in Blyth," said Ms Ebdale.
"We dare not put him back there."Once the owl is fully grown it will be rereleased into the wild."Birds do more than just feed their young," Ms Ebdale explained.
"They teach them and nurture them. We can't replicate that but what we can do is grow them to the point where they are fit enough to fly off."Ms Ebdale said there were increasing numbers of fires being set, which damage habitats for animals.
"This is going on all over the country - it's just awful," she said.
"We've got precious little left as it is and it's all just being destroyed. There are no safe places any more."A search for the country's conservative presidential candidate Kim Moon-soo brings up a related suggestion for "conversion", as he is widely seen to have "converted" from being a fervent labour activist to a conservative politician.
Naver said it decided to do this to "provide more accurate and fair information during the election campaign".Celebrities and public figures are also being extra careful, as they are held to high standards of political impartiality. Even the clothes they wear during election time would be highly scrutinised.
Wearing colours like blue and red - which represent the country's liberal Democratic Party (DP) and conservative People's Power Party (PPP) respectively - has in the past been enough to trigger online backlash.Sometimes, even a baseball cap or necktie alone is enough to spark accusations of partisan support.