Mystic Echidna
13 October 2006 22:35I was visited by the Mystic Echidna this morning, just before the alarm woke me.
I was wandering through a field covered in short soft grass that was wet with dew. Dotted about the field were tussocks of reed mace and low termite mounds. Walking in front of me was an echidna, pottering about from mound to mound and leaving a trail in the grass. The bat clinging to me pointed a wing at her and she - and I know it was a she just by looking at her, despite the best scientists not being able to tell the sex without disection or DNA sampling (and monotreme sex chromosomes are a whole other bucket o' weirdness I won't go into. X, Y, and K chromosomes, in 5 pairs. Or is that 10? 12?) - She turned to look at me and I saw her skin and fur were white, but her spines were normal colours. She really looked at me, not the usual echidna-like vague squinting Did That Shape Move?
Then the alarm woke me.
ursulav gets Mother Terapin. I get Mystic Monotremes.
Tonight is a rest night as far as slurpage goes. In the wild the female are be away from the burrow fo up to 3 days, so it's not good to give puggles a big feed every night. Puggle's weight is up to 249g tonight, that's a 14g increse from last night.
no subject
Date: 13 Oct 2006 13:16 (UTC)no subject
Date: 13 Oct 2006 13:24 (UTC)Mystic Echidna= Miracle Monotreme?
Sounds like it has chosen you!
(The white buffalo calf born in northern Wis that died was named Miracle; the new one from the same mother is named Miracle's Second chance. And recently a a white MOOSE was discovered, but scientists can't classify it as true albino without examining it, hence the "white" designtion.)
no subject
Date: 13 Oct 2006 14:13 (UTC)no subject
Date: 13 Oct 2006 15:29 (UTC)no subject
Date: 13 Oct 2006 23:40 (UTC)Also special is that you are cognizant of normal echidna nursing rhythms and that you base your hand-rearing on that knowledge. Unlike people who kidnap fawns to amuse the grankids, feed them heavy cream and egg yolks ad lib a few times a day and hand them off to wildlife officers when they get tired of the mess.
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Date: 14 Oct 2006 00:20 (UTC)Lumpy Jaw might be curable with time, but the addiction meant it could never be released. We had to euthanase it.
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Date: 14 Oct 2006 01:13 (UTC)no subject
Date: 14 Oct 2006 02:27 (UTC)I don't have a totem as such since I'm a "gubba" but it's quite possible the Bats chose me.
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Date: 14 Oct 2006 02:45 (UTC)no subject
Date: 14 Oct 2006 04:41 (UTC)no subject
Date: 14 Oct 2006 05:40 (UTC)no subject
Date: 14 Oct 2006 11:27 (UTC)None of my fawns were addicted to nicotine (that I knew of) but several stank of old dog when I got them. Fawns allogroom as well as eat dirt, thereby acquiring gut flora. After a week of proper diet and dirt ad lib they'd lose the stench.
Bill Plympton forgot to include a weed-warding wallaby in his animated short 25 Ways to Quit Smoking.
no subject
Date: 14 Oct 2006 12:21 (UTC)