Friday, January 13, 2012

BOB TRUBSHAW: New at 'Heart of Albion'

Just to let folk who might be interested know that I've just uploaded my latest publication as a *free* PDF download from the Heart of Albion website.

It's called Souls, Spirits and Deities and is mostly about trying to understand the Anglo-Saxon view of, well, souls, spirits and deities. However, as is typical for my writing it takes in much else along the way and raises some fairly novel thoughts about the overlaps between late pagan and early Christian world views. See
http://www.hoap.co.uk/general.htm#ssd for more details and the link to the PDF download.

D.R SHOOP: Domesticated alpacas

Jon,

I thought you might get a charge out of seeing some domesticated Alpacas.

About a year ago my sister and brother-in-law decided to invest in these animals and Christmas Day was my first-hand look at the critters.

You may notice the lack of snow for us here in Minnesota. Last year at this time we had over 20 inches; this year it's dry as a bone, which suits me fine.

JON'S JOURNAL: Black tigers and Black dogs

One of the most important books in my life has been The Hong Kong Countryside by the late Geoffrey Herklots in which he urged everyone living in the colony who had an interest in nature to keep a nature diary.

Well, I haven't lived in Hong Kong for about 40 years, and I have never kept a regular nature diary, although my various jottings on the subject have been posted on this blog over the past six years. However, at the age of 50 (about 44 years after I first read Herklots' sage advice) I am going to try.

This morning I received an email from Matt Salusbury who wrote:

Came across this Victorian poster on the Natural History Museum library site which appears to be advertising a show with "black tigers." Are there known black tigers, or were they dyed, or deliberately misidentified other melanistic cats, I wonder.

http://www.nhm.ac.uk/natureplus/community/library/blog?fromGateway=true

Are there black tigers? Well, possibly. In 1773, while in the service of British East India Company in Kerala, southwest India, artist James Forbes painted a watercolor of a black tiger shot a few months earlier by the soldiers The painting has been lost, but Forbes' description of it survives:

I have also the opportunity of adding the portrait of an extraordinary Tyger [sic], shot a few months ago by the Nairs in this neighborhood, and presented to the chief as a great curiosity. It was entirely black yet striped in the manner of the Royal-Tyger, with shades of a still darker hue, like the richest black, glossed with purple. My pencil is very deficient in displaying these mingled tints; nor do I know how to describe them better than by the difference you would observe in a black cloth variegated with shades of a rich velvet.

Other black tigers across history have probably been melanistic leopards and it is tempting to presume that this is what were advertised in the Wombwells poster that Matt brought to our attention.

The largest amount of black tiger lore that I have been able to find is in Karl Shuker's seminal Mystery Cats of the World (1989) but - sod's law - I can't find my copy at present, which is worrying.

And what about the black dog in the title? That one is firmly on my back as I am presently going through one of my regular bouts of bi-polar instability. I feel as mad as a bagful of cheese at the moment, and am probably being a pain in the are to all who come into contact with me. But it will pass - it always does...



Lisa Hannigan sings Nick Drake's 'Black Eyed Dog', one of the best bi-polar songs ever. I wish I'd written it.

DALE DRINNON: Another Poor "Sea-serpent" Photo from Argentina

One of the last messages on the topic of the Argentinian "Sea Monster" photo was a request to see an even more obviously mistaken "Sea Monster" photo.

Read on...

CFZ PEOPLE: Dale Drinnon takes us to the world of 'Cedar and Willow'

Latest on Cedar and Willow, continuing the reinterpretation of the superheroine Power Girl as being a few decades older than she admits to:

http://cedar-and-willow.blogspot.com/2012/01/not-power-girl-but-wonder-gran-part-ii.html

ANDREW MAY: Words from the Wild Frontier

News and stories from the remoter fringes of the CFZ blogosphere...

From Nick Redfern's "There's Something in the Woods...":
From CFZ Australia:
From CFZ Canada: