Ever wonder how brightly coloured shrimp can manage to avoid being eaten by predators?
Sign
Gorilla
Gibbon
From Wikipedia:
“Flagpole sitting was a fad in the mid-to-late 1920s. The fad was begun by stunt actor and former sailor Alvin “Shipwreck” Kelly, who sat on a flagpole, either on a dare by a friend[3] or as a publicity stunt. Shipwreck’s initial 1924 sit lasted 13 hours and 13 minutes. It soon became a fad with other contestants setting records of 12, 17 and 21 days. In 1929, Shipwreck decided to reclaim the title. He sat on a flagpole for 49 days in Atlantic City, New Jersey, setting a new record. The following year, 1930, his record was broken by Bill Penfield in Strawberry Point, Iowa who sat on a flagpole for 51 days and 20 hours, until a thunderstorm forced him down. Flagpole sitting in the 1920s was a major part of the decade. For the most part, pole sitting died out after 1929, with the onset of the Depression.”
This tells us some very interesting things:
1) There wasn’t a lot going on in the 1920’s.
2) There was a period of time in which Iowa went 51 whole days without a thunderstorm, yet it was warm enough to sit on a pole outside.*
3) Gibbons are about 90 years behind the fads.
* I am presuming that if the pole were inside, he wouldn’t have needed to stop sitting on it.
Echidna
The echidna is one of the animals that has been on my short list of critters to get good photographs of (along with pangolins and platypusesisi*). This is not a good photo, because of the gloves, but it’s the best I’ve been able to get because, even if you are lucky enough to find a zoo that has one, these little guys are almost always asleep. Still, you can see eyes, nose, spines, and paws**, so it’s an OK shot, I guess.
* I don’t know the plural of “platypus” and am too tired to look it up.
** Hands? Feet?
Cheetah
Cheetah
David Attenborough chasing an anteater
Snake Skeleton
Bird
Arctic Fox
Polar Bear
Rhino
Sniff Port
This is another interesting interactive display. You pretty much breathe through the sniff port and the polar bear comes to sniff your breath. Rumor has it that peanut butter is quite popular at the sniff port.
I would suspect that pickled herring would also be popular, but I don’t think kids eat quite so much of that so that may not yet have been discovered.
Lion
Wildebeast
Sign
Go ahead, zoom in on this one. This is a fascinating display of animals that have ridden the “extinction train”, and which ones are on it right now … all placed at the eye height of children with buttons to press.
I have no idea if there is a group that assigns awards to zoo signs and displays, but this one should be considered. It’s brilliant.
Barbour’s Map Turtle (Graptemys barbouri)
Mandrill (Mandrillus sphinx)
Bornean River Turtle (Orlitia borneensis)
This turtle just thought of the concept of a “Progressive Funeral”, in which each mourner opens their home for a few hours and, over the course of several days, everyone moves from house to house, eating, drinking, playing music, and sharing memories of the deceased … and wherever the ashes get forgotten is where they have to be scattered.
This turtle isn’t sure if the idea is brilliant or horrifying.