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Thread: Animals are Magical

  1. Link to Post #2701
    Avalon Member Eva2's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    An ingenious little bird - Darzee from Rudyard Kipling Jungle Book:


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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Tent caterpillars tend to appear en masse on ten year cycles. This article doesn’t really say why, it handwaves that question. I wonder if that interval is needed for their food source — tree leaves — to recover from their innocent barging gluttony. Oof.

    Apparently, these critters are hard for birds to eat, because of their hair. And also beetles, which are also faster than them along the ground.

    The major hazard, not the major munching of leaves, is causing roads to be slippy. They are so legion, when they party. Drive safe out there.

    Never thought I’d be dissapointed in a beetle. ~8(

    https://globalnews.ca/news/11876099/...llar-outbreak/


    ‘Just be amazed:’ Alberta is seeing a cyclical outbreak of caterpillars

    By Fakiha Baig The Canadian Press
    Posted June 1, 2026 5:13 am


    Quote Forest tent caterpillars are not entomologist Ken Fry’s favourite insect but the black-coloured critters with vibrant blue-and-yellow marks do have a soft spot in his heart.

    They’re why his dad once let him break the house rule of not climbing the two poplar trees in their backyard, so Fry could clamber to the top of one and grab hundreds of caterpillar eggs before they hatched and destroyed leaves.

    ‘I was about seven-years-old … My dad said, ‘Ken, get up that tree, get after those caterpillar eggs,” said Fry, who is an instructor at Olds College of Agriculture & Technology in central Alberta.

    “This particular species allowed me to climb our tree with wild abandon and absolute endorsement of my parents.”

    Millions and millions of forest tent caterpillars, with fur that chokes hungry birds and makes beetles think twice about their next meal, are feasting on leaves in Alberta.

    Fry said the outbreak of the caterpillars, voraciously feeding now across the province’s lush areas including Edmonton’s river valley, is a natural phenomenon that happens roughly every decade across northern areas in the Prairies with boreal forest.

    “An unsavoury aspect of it is what goes in must come out so, if you are under a nice aspen tree on a picnic table and all of a sudden you think, ‘Hey, where’s all these droplets coming from?’ it’s not very nice,” Fry said with laugh.

    “But that’s good fertilizer.”

    It’s unclear what causes their population to explode cyclically. Fry said it has to do with the health of the caterpillars themselves, their natural enemies, and other factors such as the temperature, the moisture and how the trees are performing.

    He said the caterpillars are native to Alberta. They typically appear in smaller numbers in spring and summer.

    The City of Red Deer in central Alberta said residents may be noticing more caterpillars on trees, sidewalks and trails.

    “Crews may physically remove or squish caterpillars where practical during regular work,” it said in a news release.

    “At this time, the city is not conducting large-scale pesticide treatment for forest tent caterpillar.”

    The town of Olds, also south of Edmonton, said the caterpillars are lurking on its poplar, aspen, ash and other deciduous trees. It said it understands seeing more bare trees in spring might seem dramatic but it’s a natural process.

    “While mostly harmless, the small hairs on the caterpillars may cause skin irritation or mild allergic reactions in some individuals if handled, particularly for those with sensitivities,” the town said in a statement.

    Fry said a moth can lay between 100 and 300 small black-coloured eggs on a tree’s canopy ahead of winter and during the year of the outbreak. The eggs, like most Canadians, withstand the cold.

    They hatch in the spring and begin feasting on leaves. They move faster than slugs but slower than beetles. Roads running through forest might become slippery if the caterpillars are crawling on them.

    “Then they’ll spin a silken cocoon and pupate either on the tree, your fence or on the side of your garage after four to five weeks of feeding,” Fry explained.

    They have the word “tent” in their name because of their similarities with other species that spin silk to create a dome over their heads that protect them from predators.

    Forest tent caterpillars don’t create a dome, Fry said, but spin silk to create a path connecting them from one branch to another.

    Near the end of June, they transform into tan-coloured, furry moths that go on to lay more eggs.

    Fry said Albertans can expect to see more moths hovering around porch lights until early July, when they perish.

    Alberta Forestry found in 2025 that 70 per cent of all the defoliation in the province’s north to date was caused by forest tent caterpillars, Fry said, but added the destruction of trees is not a cause for concern.

    “The caterpillars are doing the trees a service by taking out the weak and leaving only the strongest trees,” Fry said, adding they’re a vital part of a healthy forest and people should grab their binoculars and get a sight of them.

    “Just be amazed at what you see because it doesn’t come around every year.”

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    The Origins of Cats Were Never What We Thought — Ancient DNA Finally Revealed The Truth
    FOSSILIA
    1.34K subscribers
    May 17, 2026

    (This doesn't take into account how long "forbidden archeology" demonstrates that humanity has actually lived on this planet, including advanced cultures. But it gives some interesting history re modern felines, in any case.)

    "Ancient DNA extracted from 209 cats buried across nine thousand years of human history produced one of the most overturning findings in the field of animal domestication — not because of when cats first lived with us, but because of where, how many times, and on whose terms it actually happened.

    Cats were not domesticated in Egypt. The story almost every textbook still tells — pharaohs, temples, the goddess Bastet — begins thousands of years after the real origin. The first cats lived alongside humans in the Levant nearly ten thousand years ago, in farming villages older than any pyramid. They were not bred. They were not tamed in any traditional sense. They moved in by themselves and stayed because the arrangement suited them. A second, separate domestication later began in Egypt and spread along Mediterranean trade routes — eventually riding on Viking longships across the North Sea. And for nine thousand years afterward, humans almost never bred cats at all. The cat in your home today is, in genetic terms, nearly the same animal that was buried at a Neolithic farmer's feet on the island of Cyprus.

    Drawing on findings from the 2017 landmark study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution on the palaeogenetics of cat dispersal (Ottoni et al.), alongside the 2007 Driscoll study identifying the African wildcat as the ancestor of every modern domestic cat."

    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    In the late nineties, I was at the Avebury stones and walked across the fields to Silbury hill, at the bottom around the hill were large shallow pools. My dog started to run about in them, doing figure of eights and circling at high speed, in a reverie, the splashing water catching the sunlight, she'd been nervous around water until then.
    We walked to the top of Silbury hill and there was a small south American looking boy, who my dog started to bark at as she circled him. He was amused rather than afraid and said he'd enjoyed watching her running in the water. The two men who were with him on the other side of the summit were perfectly relaxed. My dog had been trained to be great with children, her reaction to the boy was confusion rather than aggression, he couldn't have been more than six, but spoke and had the demeanor of an adult. I'd never met a child with the self possession of this little boy, and wondered if he was something like a young lama.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    How Does a Kangaroo Rat Escape a Certain Death? (1 minute)
    Kangaroo rats have the uncanny ability to jump high at just the right moment. They use their exceptional hearing and powerful hind legs to jump clear of rattlesnakes — or even deliver a stunning kick in the face.
    Longer version
    Kangaroo Rats Are Furry, Spring-Loaded Ninjas (4 minutes)



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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    60-Ton Whale Begged For Help
    The marine giant was entangled in a complex web of fishing gear, ropes and chains attached to a massive anchor weighing about one and a half tons. This lethal weight was slowly dragging the animal down, restricting its movements and causing severe pain with each movement. The ropes dug deeper into the whale skin, leaving painful wounds

    An incredible rescue story that shocked the world! Watch as experienced diver James risks his life to save a giant whale. What happened after the rescue defies explanation…

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Elysia marginata is a marine gastropod sea slug in the family Plakobranchidae, renowned for its ability to self-decapitate and regenerate an entire new body, including its heart, from its head within approximately 20 days.


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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    I am a very curious person, but was in my fifties when I found out Sperm whales have a brain seven times the volume of humans, with a significantly higher proportion of the high functioning, calculating type structures. This reluctance to admit humans have about the fortieth largest brain on earth, I believe is a symptom of man's self deification.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Quote Posted by Eddy Fire (here)
    I am a very curious person, but was in my fifties when I found out Sperm whales have a brain seven times the volume of humans, with a significantly higher proportion of the high functioning, calculating type structures. This reluctance to admit humans have about the fortieth largest brain on earth, I believe is a symptom of man's self deification.
    A bigger brain doesn't automatically mean greater intelligence.
    • A sperm whale needs a huge nervous system to control a body that can weigh 40–50 tons.
    • Humans devote an unusually large share of their neural resources to cognition, language, planning, abstract reasoning, and social learning. (abstract on human brain)
    Which animal has the largest brain relative to its body size? Smaller animals have larger brains relative to their bodies.
    At 18 pounds (8 kilograms), on average, the sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) has the largest brain, but has an overall body mass of  45 tons (40 metric tons), giving it a brain-to-body-mass ratio of 1:5,100. But which animal has the biggest brain relative to its body size? A 2009 study in the journal Brain, Behavior and Evolution found that an especially tiny genus of ant has the largest brain for its body size. Live Science Plus

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    The giant sauropods had brains the size of apples and they could weigh double the sperm whales, which have a digital fractal sonar communication system that defies human interpretation, that's probably global as they make the most powerful sound in nature. The true power of our intelligence is collective, maybe that's why it's as hard and unnatural for humans to have individual beliefs as it is for a wilderbeast to go for a stroll alone in the Serengeti.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    At the start of the plandemic I carelessly managed to get a billhook stuck into the bone of my shin, I pulled it out and before two paces, my shoe was squelching with blood. Casualty was fifteen miles, I
    had no car, I remembered some advice from a survival book I'd read years ago, and gathered a golf ball size clump of spiders web and duck taped it over the wound, not a drop of blood leaked out. It worked perfectly, I'd duck taped lesser wounds before with little success.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Tiger, tiger sit along.
    You can't win them all.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    …………


    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 8th June 2026 at 12:12.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    This Harmless Salamander Has an Extremely Toxic Look-Alike (40 seconds)
    Ensatinas are a sprawling group of colorful salamanders, each one with different strategies for avoiding predators, from bold warning colors to confusing camouflage. Their diverse family tree offers us a rare snapshot of millions of years of evolution – how one species becomes many.
    Longer version (4 minutes)
    Ensatina Salamanders Are Heading For a Family Split


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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    A person helped the mantis by giving it water during the drought. (2 minutes)


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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    When Animals Love


    Last edited by RunningDeer; 9th June 2026 at 13:46.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Beauty of music and nature 🌺🌺

    A trekker was hiking the Santa Cruz Trail in Peru. He had moved about 30 minutes ahead of his group, but as he approached Punta Unión Pass (around 4,750 meters above sea level), dense fog and snowfall caused the trail to disappear.

    Suddenly, a local dog emerged from the mist and confidently led him in the right direction. The dog would wait for him whenever necessary and guided him safely all the way to the top of the pass. It was as if the dog were a guardian angel—or an unexpected mountain guide. 🐕🏔️❄️

    https://x.com/Axaxia88/status/2063969294619230489


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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    This little guy lost 6 of his 8 legs and can barely get back to his den.



    Watch Crabs Go Through One Crazy-Looking Growth Spurt (1 minute)


    Deeper look (5 minutes)
    Whack! Jab! Crack! It's a Blackback Land Crab Smackdown
    It's an all-out brawl for prime beach real estate! These Caribbean crabs will tear each other limb from limb to get the best burrow. Luckily, they molt and regrow lost legs in a matter of weeks, and live to fight another day.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    One Sunday morning about 4am I was outside, occasionally you will here a pheasant call at night, but the valley and the tributary valley where I live were echoing with the calls of hundreds of pheasants. I don't remember ever hearing anything like it before, it definitely felt weird at the time.

    It was a few days later that I checked, and it was the time of the big Tonga earthquake, that made the news. As mainly a ground based bird, they would be at more risk than other species.

    Of course to those of us who see electromagnetic forces as the driver of the Universe, rather than the puny force of gravity, this isn't such a mystery.

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    Default Re: Animals are Magical

    Wild Crow Knocks On Window To Play With His Baby Friend Every Day
    Cuddle Buddies TV
    326K subscribers
    Jun 3, 2026


    "Russel is a wild crow who shows up every single day to visit his best friend, a little boy named Otto. After being rescued as a weak abandoned baby crow, Russel slowly returned to the wild but never stopped coming back to see the family who saved him. From knocking on the window at breakfast time to playing with toys, riding alongside Otto’s bike, and bringing him little treasures, the two formed an incredible friendship. Their heartwarming bond shows the beautiful connection that can exist between animals and humans, even with a wild crow."

    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

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