Category : Animals
(NPR) Eagle Love Story: Injured Mates Reunited At Rehab Center
Here’s a feel-good story.
“Two seriously injured bald eagles, found two months apart and more than a mile away from each other near the Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge,” in Western New York State, “were rescued and reunited in a wildlife rehabilitation facility in Medina last week,” the Buffalo News reports.
And on…[Monday’s] All Things Considered, raptor rehabilitator Wendi Pencille tells host Michele Norris the remarkable story of what it was like when the two lovebirds were reunited.
Read or listen to it all (and you have to love the picture).
In San Diego Cat Owners Hiss at Licensing Proposal
Should cats be treated like dogs, when it comes to licensing and immunization requirements?
The San Diego city auditor’s office recommends doing just that — for the sake of health, safety and “cost recovery” for taxpayers.
A Picture to Begin the Day–two Otters Carry two of their Baby Triplets
A Deer in the Backyard!
Is there any better way to start the day?
You Absolutely Positively Have to See These Pictures–War Dog
Dogs have been fighting alongside U.S. soldiers for more than 100 years, seeing combat in the Civil War and World War I. But their service was informal; only in 1942 were canines officially inducted into the U.S. Army. Today, they’re a central part of U.S. efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan — as of early 2010 the U.S. Army had 2,800 active-duty dogs deployed (the largest canine contingent in the world). And these numbers will continue to grow as these dogs become an ever-more-vital military asset.
So it should come as no surprise that among the 79 commandos involved in Operation Neptune Spear that resulted in Osama bin Laden’s killing, there was one dog — the elite of the four-legged variety. And though the dog in question remains an enigma — another mysterious detail of the still-unfolding narrative of that historic mission — there should be little reason to speculate about why there was a dog involved: Man’s best friend is a pretty fearsome warrior.
Simply amazing stuff from Foreign Policy Magazine and yes, read it all.
Tuesday Mental Health Break–What Cats Say When Trying to Play Patty Cake
(CEN) Dorset dog walker saves church from fire
An early morning stroll saved a 12th century Dorset church from destruction last week, when a dog-walker saw smoke rising from St Mary’s Church in Maiden Newton and called for help.
While out walking his spaniel, Alex Adair-Charlton (39) of Maiden Newton saw a cloud of smoke or mist hovering above the village’s medieval church. His curiosity turned to alarm, however, when he saw flames rising from the church’s roof, and he telephoned the fire services from his mobile phone.
A team from the village fire service arrived within four minutes of the 6:20 am alarm, and by the end of the day approximately 30 firefighters were able to extinguish the blaze. An aerial platform was brought in to fight the blaze, so as not to damage the church’s wooden doors, believed to be among the oldest in England.
Bomb Sniffing Puppies Honor 9/11 Victims
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Watch it all–this one made me cry.
Decorah Eagles First Egg Pip and Hatch
Simply fantastic–watch it all.
Weekend Mental Health Break–The Nissan Leaf Polar Bear Commercial
What a super effort this is–watch it all.
A Livestream of An Eagle on her Eggs
Check it out–wonderful to see (Hat tip: BRLM).
On A Personal Note–The Black Lab is in Surgery for a Torn ACL
I am undone by it all–ugh; KSH.
(NY Times) Police Departments Downsize, From 4 Legs to 2
(Charleston, South Carolina) He was a 10-year veteran of the Charleston Police Department, specializing in patrolling this city’s palmetto-lined streets, improving community relations and keeping big crowds in check ”” until his unit was disbanded, a victim of budget cuts.
So this month he was put out to pasture, quite literally.
Napoleon lost his policing job, along with the other five police horses here, as Charleston joined the growing number of cities that have retired their horses and closed their stables to save money. The Great Recession is proving to be the greatest threat to police mounted units since departments embraced the horseless carriage.
Wonderful Local New York Area Story–Chicken Vanishes, Heartbreak Ensues
As with any theft, the worst part is the blow it deals to one’s faith in humanity. The chickens were in danger of being demoted from goodwill ambassadors to harbingers of doom, canaries in the neighborhood coal mine.
The sidewalk confabs reached a fever pitch. People were devastated.
A man with a neck tattoo shook his head and tut-tutted, “What kind of person would do something like this?” A woman in a church hat encouraged us to turn to God. Neighbors posted another sign: “439 Franklin misses Gertrude!” People scribbled commiseration. (“My son is sad! Find Gertrude!”) The crime was taken as proof of the decline and fall of civilization, and we found ourselves assuming the role of the comforter far more than the comforted.
Again, this is Bed-Stuy. Not Mayberry. Yet the response was more suited to a town with less in the way of a police blotter. Such dramatic emotional outpourings for a lost chicken seemed frankly disproportionate, since you can hardly walk a block in this town without being offered some tantalizing version of dead chicken….
A South Carolina Dog who knows 1,022 nouns
Chaser, a border collie who lives in Spartanburg, S.C., has the largest vocabulary of any known dog. She knows 1,022 nouns, a record that displays unexpected depths of the canine mind and may help explain how children acquire language.
Chaser belongs to John W. Pilley, a psychologist who taught for 30 years at Wofford College, a liberal arts institution in Spartanburg. In 2004, after he had retired, he read a report in Science about Rico, a border collie whose German owners had taught him to recognize 200 items, mostly toys and balls. Dr. Pilley decided to repeat the experiment using a technique he had developed for teaching dogs, and he describes his findings in the current issue of the journal Behavioural Processes.
He bought Chaser as a puppy in 2004 from a local breeder and started to train her for four to five hours a day. He would show her an object, say its name up to 40 times, then hide it and ask her to find it, while repeating the name all the time. She was taught one or two new names a day, with monthly revisions and reinforcement for any names she had forgotten.
Long-eared Jerboa: extraordinary desert creature
What an amazing looking animal!
Subsisting on Arsenic, Microbe May Redefine Life
Scientists said Thursday that they had trained a bacterium to eat and grow on a diet of arsenic, in place of phosphorus ”” one of six elements considered essential for life ”” opening up the possibility that organisms could exist elsewhere in the universe or even here on Earth using biochemical powers we have not yet dared to dream about.
The bacterium, scraped from the bottom of Mono Lake in California and grown for months in a lab mixture containing arsenic, gradually swapped out atoms of phosphorus in its little body for atoms of arsenic.
Scientists said the results, if confirmed, would expand the notion of what life could be and where it could be. “There is basic mystery, when you look at life,” said Dimitar Sasselov, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and director of an institute on the origins of life there, who was not involved in the work. “Nature only uses a restrictive set of molecules and chemical reactions out of many thousands available. This is our first glimmer that maybe there are other options.”
Felisa Wolfe-Simon, a NASA astrobiology fellow at the United States Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif., who led the experiment, said, “This is a microbe that has solved the problem of how to live in a different way.”
In Aiken, South Carolina, the Hounds receive an annual blessing for the 16th year
Michael Laughlin’s Mill Race Farm served as the fixture for the Edisto River Hounds 16th annual Blessing of the Hounds, Opening Meet and Stirrup Cup on Saturday afternoon.
Father Garrett Clanton of All Saints Anglican Church officiated the Blessing of the Hounds.
“It’s a good day for a fox hunt, and we’ve welcomed friends and their families,” said D.J. Newell, Edisto River Hounds, joint Master of Hounds. “Among the things that we’re renowned for are safety and education. We enjoy for people of all ages, who are involved in all riding disciplines, to come out and go ride with us. We place an emphasis on teaching people to hunt in a safe environment.”
Follow up–The magic that happens when a dog picks the person with whom he's to be paired
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Watch Jennifer Arnold of the Canine Assistants Program give a wonderful description of the amazing connection between a person and a dog in this ministry.
A Wonderfully Encouraging Video Report for Friday: Loving Dogs Changing Lives
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Watch it all–are those puppies cute or what?