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Animals Me Photography

H is for Hawk

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Goshawk by Leila Jeffreys

At junior school we were split into houses, this is pre-Harry Potter of course, so there were no jokes about Sorting Hats or Slytherin, all I knew is I wanted to be a Hawk. My sister was a Hawk and like any good younger sibling at that age I knew that whatever my sister was doing must be the best; I dreaded that I might be assigned to another house.

The other three houses were Eagles, Falcons and Kestrels. I know now that the designations don’t quite make sense but the division is so ingrained that years later it took no small amount of mind-bending to accept that Kestrels are Falcons. I still associate each word with its house colour: Hawks are red, Eagles are blue, Falcons yellow, and Kestrels green.

The house designations were just groupings of students rather than wings of a castle or anything fancy and inter-house competition was mostly sports-based with the exceptions of General Knowledge, a University Challenge like competition, and Chess. The overall House Cup was awarded on a combination of the inter-house results and overall house points (points awarded for effort and achievement in school work, deducted for bad behaviour).

I became a Hawk (thankfully) and eventually followed my sister in becoming House Captain. While I was no good at sport I helped win the inter-house General Knowledge competition and in my final year we won the House Cup. As with many things that matter so much at the time I’ve barely thought about it since, with the exception of the birds. I think about birds a lot.

My first close encounter with a bird of prey was at a falconry display with my Dad, it was at a nearby castle or stately home, I can’t have been older than 10 and at the end I got to get up close. Very close. The glove was rough and sweaty and far too big, but most of all it was heavy. I was convinced that I wouldn’t be able to feel a thing but when the bird landed the pressure of the talons was incredible. I couldn’t even tell you what bird it was, where we were, what I was wearing, why we were there, but the feeling of those claws through the glove is as vivid as if it was happening now.

But I’m not sure it happened.

We definitely went to a falconry display but whether I really had a falcon on my wrist or whether that’s something I dreamed or imagined I really can’t tell. Which is a little worrying. I have another memory from when I was even younger of walking through a blizzard to reach my grandparent’s house in Ireland that I know didn’t happen. We visited most Christmases when I was young and I’m pretty sure it snowed at least one year but we certainly didn’t walk through a blizzard. But the memory feels at least as real as things I know happened.

I know my sister was House Captain at school but was I? I honestly don’t know. I remember hoping I would be, I no doubt imagined what it would be like but am I remembering what happened or what I imagined? I know in my first year I choked in the inter-house General Knowledge but I redeemed myself by winning it in my final year, didn’t I?

Some years ago at a job interview I was asked about my greatest fear, mine was losing my memory but now I’m a bit worried I’m remembering too much. Being too memorious as Borges might have it. Dreams, wishes, imagined possibilities, maybe some been repeated so many times they’ve more firmly etched in my memory than real events I’ve rarely recalled. In many cases it’s quite embarrassing to ask whether they really happened but this has made me think I should make more of an effort to record my life, if only for myself.

I started H is for Hawk earlier this week which has me thinking about hawks but also about memory and reminiscence. By a stroke of serendipity I found Leila Jeffrey’s photography the morning after, the goshawk at the top is hers and worth sharing I thought; all of her subjects are quite beautiful.

I still like to see falconry and raptors in general; one local charity brings a beautiful selection to Leamington Christmas every year but my favourite has to be the time John and I visited Stoneleigh Village Fête probably a good eight years ago now.

Fête feels like an exaggeration, I think there was a whittler, a jam stall and the birds. There were owls and a Harris hawk plus some small falcons. It was mostly children with their parents gathered round and one boy near the front turned to his mother and asked, “What do they eat?” Without missing a beat (and without a hint of a smile) the falconer said: “Children,” left a pause that was just slightly too long, then turned back to his bird.

As an adult I found it hilarious; as a child I would’ve had nightmares for weeks. I wonder if I would’ve believed they happened?

Also: Previously in bird photography.

Categories
Animals

Giraffes

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Categories
Animals

Rogue Taxidermy

So it turns out ‘rogue taxidermy’ is a thing. A rogue taxidermist suspended by his captain, forced to turn in his badge and gun because he refuses to play by the rules? A taxidermist who steals from the rich and stuffs for the poor? A taxidermist who only stuffs from a 90° angle behind their subject?

It’s none of those. Rogue taxidermy is:

…the creation of stuffed animals which do not have real, live counterparts…They may represent impossible hybrids such as the jackalope and the skvaderextinct species, mythical creatures such as dragonschimerasgriffinsunicorns or mermaids, or may be entirely of the maker’s imagination.

Which still sounds like it might be cool. While in Copenhagen I caught an exhibition of curios at the Black Diamond that included a unicorn ‘skeleton’ and a mermaid that were quite fun, the zoological museum in Copenhagen also has a stuffed griffin I’ve known about for a while, and the Fiji/Feejee mermaid is fairly well known (if a bit weird). And while taxidermy can be a bit creepy they’re not all bad. This summer I visited the Natural History Museum and although many of the specimens are old they’re pretty well done so with this in mind I thought the idea of seeing a ‘real’ creature from myth or legend sounded pretty cool, right?

Wrong.

This is the stuff of fucking nightmares.

I want you to click on those links so you can see what I mean, but I also don’t want you to because you may never sleep again. In fairness there’s plenty of by-the-book taxidermy that’s pretty horrendous and even the well done stuff can feel creepy but… yeah. This was not what I expected.

Categories
Animals

Endlings

An endling is an individual that is the last of its species or subspecies. Once the endling dies, the species becomes extinct

I spotted a tweet Monday morning about Martha, the last Passenger Pigeon, she died 100 years ago but enjoyed some degree of posthumous celebrity:

It got me wondering how many other species we know (or at least think we can identify) the last member of that species.


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Booming Ben, the last Heath Hen, was last spotted in 1932, he was the last member of his species for 4 years.

Long before Ben the Heath Hen was target for early conservationists, though in a turn that would be comical if it wasn’t both bad for conservation and quite racist:

Heath hens were one of the first bird species that Americans tried to save from extinction. As early as 1791, a bill “for the preservation of heath-hen and other game” was introduced in the New York State legislature. Some representatives misinterpreted the bill when it was read as an act to protect “Indians and other heathen“; although the legislation was passed, it turned out to be unenforceable.

As recently as this April the heath hen was proposed for ‘de-extinction’ by a company called Revive and Restore. The list also includes Plesitocene megafauna that have been extinct for 4,000-10,000 years. He may not be as big and flashy but I’d say Ben has a better chance.


Benjamin, the last Thylacine

Another Benjamin, the last Thylacine, died in Hobart Zoo in 1936. I’ve posted footage of him before, and it’s well worth watching if only to see how huge Thylacine jaws really were.

Thylacines are also a candidate for the Revive and Restore project though the Tasmanian Tiger still clocks up 40-50 unconfirmed sightings a year (the link is worth checking out for the Thylacoleo and Yowie sightings info).


Celia, the last Pyrenean Ibex was found dead in 2000, you can visit her taxidermied remains and she was briefly resurrected via cloning in 2009.


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Lonesome George is one of the more famous examples, a number of attempts were made to breed him with similar sub-species but none of the eggs were viable. He died in 2012 at the age of 102, he’d been an endling for at least 40 years.


rabbestreefrog

This is the quite possibly the last Rabbe’s fringe-limbed treefrog, he resides at the Atlanta Botanical Garden and has been the last known member of his species for 2 years now, though the last known female died in 2009. The species was only discovered in 2005 and the last known observation “was that of a single male heard calling (but not seen) in 2007″.


softshellturtle

This is the last female Yangtze giant softshell turtle, she lives at Suzhou Zoo in China and is the last hope for continuing her species. She’s co-resident with one of the remaining males but after hundreds of unhatched eggs over the last 6 years it was confirmed last month that “the male is either infertile, or incapable of inseminating the female.”

The other two known members of their species live in separate lakes in Vietnam, though as the article states there have been unconfirmed sightings in the Red River in Yunan Province, and as our female certainly has no problems laying eggs artificial insemination may bring some success.


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This photos contains the entire breeding population of Northern White Rhinoceros. They were formerly resident at the Dvůr Králové Zoo in the Czech Republic but were reintroduced into the wild in 2009 after the species had become extinct in the wild. One rhino remains at Dvůr Králové and two are in San Diego (a male and an infertile female). The last Northern White Rhino birth was in 2000.


In reality most endlings won’t be named, or even known. There are almost 20,000 species currently at risk of extinction.

Categories
Animals Illustration Natural Science Nature

Natural illustration

A Summer spent visiting museums has left me a little hooked on historical natural illustration (amongst many, many other things).

The American Museum of Natural History are posting images from their archives on a few pinterest boards, the Vertebrate Zoology Anatomy Illustrations board is probably the pick of the bunch.

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It looks like they rotate the images they have up on the board periodically. The Natural Histories board also has a few nice pics.

Also worth mentioning, you can pick up Art of Nature by the Natural History Museum (London) for £4 here. The illustrations are grouped by continent and it’s a good mix of people, plants and animals (certainly worth £4!).

Currently in my Amazon basket I’ve also got Curious Beasts, a collection of animal illustrations from the 15th-19th centuries produced by the British Museum. I missed the exhibition when it came to the Midlands though I was lucky enough to catch a similarly themed exhibition in Copenhagen a few years ago (complete with mermaid skeleton), I imagine I’ll know a few of the prints already but even if not I’m fairly sure it’ll be up my street.

Categories
Animals

Teh cuteness!

Now, this is what Molly does to me in the mornings when it’s breakfast time so all I need to do is start waking up on my front so that she’s actually working the knots out of my back!

(via Laughing Squid)