After a flurry of feathers the lone emu, named Mr Emu, had its legs bound and was bustled into a truck and delivered home nearly 3km away.
"They got it in the corner and threw a blanket over it then one guy tackled it," Mr Raven said. "It was pretty funny. But one of the guys did get kicked and it ripped his pants," Mr Raven said.
Members of the Mangawhai and Kaiwaka volunteer fire brigades were nearby, having put out a small grass fire, when they got the call to contain the large, flightless bird.
The emu's owner, who asked not to be named, said a tree-trimmer had scared "the bejesus" out of the bird, causing him to flee his Mangawhai Heads Rd home.
He careened through a wire fence, skinning his shins, before taking off down the road.
"He's fairly tame ... [But] you can't jump in front of them and corner them, they just take off," the owner said.
"By the time we got the calls he was quite stressed."
Mr Emu, a 7-year-old bachelor, had also fled around Christmas, when a firecracker startled him. He was retrieved from a neighbour's property.
Kaiwaka's chief fire officer John Bowmar said it was a new recruit who had made the brave dive at the bird. He was kicked in the leg and taken to a medical centre.
Late yesterday, Mr Emu was recuperating with an alpaca herd, which his owner said had a calming influence on him.