Tuesday, November 16, 2010
GLEN VAUDREY: Dancing Dodo
It all started with the strains of Don Fardon’s cracking tune ‘I’m Alive’ and lo and behold, there pops up a dancing dodo. Short of a juggling great auk, what could be better?
The dodo is one of the better known extinct birds and going from the one in the advert, it was also a great dancer.
Sadly, back in the in the real world the dodo was a bulky flightless bird of the Solitaire family, renowned for its clumsy movements, which would make a dancing dodo rather special; of course nowhere near as special as a living dodo as the last of its kind was reported to have died on Mauritius in the 1690s.
So it would seem rather surprising that there have been a number of reported sightings of this remarkable bird within living memory. The earliest of these sightings date from the 1930s when natives of Mauritius told Lawrence Green that the birds still could be found in caves and mountains in the remote parts of the country.
But there have been further reports not nearly so long ago. In the 1990s there started to appear reports of dodo-like birds walking along the beach in the Plain Champagne area. Whether these sightings consisted of live dodos or a related species is still open to question.
If you haven’t seen the dancing dodo it is worth tracking down, and if you haven't heard the song that is certainly worth tracking down too.
NEW RSPB APPEAL
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TOADS FROM THE TROJAN WAR
OLL LOOKS AT AN ENDANGERED GIBBON
Whilst we await news from India, here is another article from Oll about the wildlife of the area.
ARCHIVING PROJECT: General Forteana Part 31
This 3031st collection once again really is a collection of completely uncategoriseable stuff, including Admiral Byrd, flesh-eating bacteria, animal mutes, a stolen tarantula, and the Turin Shroud. It doesn't get much better than this. Good stuff.
HERE
OLL LEWIS: The Cambodian Jungle Girl
Sal Lou took the girl in to his family and at the time of the discovery planned to undertake a DNA test to prove he was the girl's father, a plan he has since abandoned. When she was discovered she only seemed to know 3 words: “father”, “Mother” and bizarrely “stomach-ache.” She would often try to communicate by gesturing, like pointing to her mouth when she was hungry.
The girl has deep scars around her ankles and wrists, indicating that, rather than having lived wild in the jungle for most of her life, she was kept somewhere against her will by persons unknown. Like many supposed feral children hers may be a story of escaping a situation where she was abused and deprived of human contact while growing up rather than actually being raised by animals.
The girl makes frequent attempts to return to the jungle but is often found some time later near her 'parents' house. On the most recent of these escapes in May 2010 she was found in a toilet pit 100m from her adoptive home 11 days later, having accidentally trapped herself there.
Although Sal Lou and his family has made some progress in teaching the girl some more words and skills since she came to live with them he freely admits that they don't have as much time as they would like to be able to teach her and the mental health NGO Psicologos Sin Fronteras have stepped in to help her reintegration into society.
OLL LEWIS: Yesterday's News Today
On this day in 1855 David Livingstone became the first European to see Victoria Falls.
And now, the news:
Jack Russell chases mountain lion up tree
Animal Activists Aflutter Over Real-Piglet Piggy B...
Ears Could Make Better Unique IDs Than Fingerprint...
Shanghai Considering One-Dog-Per-Family Policy
New bat species found in Ecuador
Pterosaur reptile used "pole vault" trick for take...
Deciphering an Old Dog's Trick
Speaking of dog tricks:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yb8cW6KEiog