Species Extinction: Extinct Animals & Endangered Species in UK

Species Extinction – Then & Now…

Wolves and Species Extinction

Species Extinction: Extinct Animals & Endangered Species in UK

There was a time when wolves haunted the deep English forests.

The number of species that have disappeared on Humankind’s Watch just keeps on growing.  The recent announcement in Canada that the Eskimo Curlew is now “officially” extinct is just the latest.

And it saddens us.  Well, “sadden” doesn’t even begin to describe it, does it?

One of the first species to disappear because of Human action was the Cave Bear (Ursus spelaeus) — we wanted those caves and the original gentle giant of the Pleistocene disappeared around 25,500 BC. [1]

And, my friend, that was just the beginning.

Here, from Marcus Finch, is a guest blog looking at the natural history of species extinction in the United Kingdom… a reminder of why we must get involved with Animal Rights and protecting the environment.

Species Extinction: Extinct Animals Of The British Isles

Our Wildlife does need caring for. Without our help many of these animals will go extinct like many have before and this is not good. This is why everyone needs to provide food and drink for the wildlife so that they can get by and live for as long as we do.

A number of different kinds of mammals has been decreasing for thousands of years — many of which most people have never heard of — and some that are still around today in other parts of the world. For example, the Walrus used to roam about the British Isles up until 1000 BC, when the ice age began to end it became extinct to the areas around the British Isles.

A species now completely extinct is the Woolly Rhinoceros, which generally roamed around southern England.  Then in 10,000 BC disappeared from the British Isles and the rest of our Earth.

Other animals that have become extinct in the British Isles are:

The Arctic Lemming (8000 BC), the Aurochs (1000 BC), the Breech Marten (19th Century), the Brown Bear (1000 AD), the Coypu (1987), the elk (1500 BC).  The Eurasian Lynx (400 AD), the grey Whale (500 BC), the Grey Wolf (1680), the Irish Elk (6000 BC), the Narrow Headed Vole (8000 BC).  The Pika (8000 BC), the root Vole (1500 BC), the Steppe Lemming (8000 BC), the Tarpan, or Eurasian wild horse (7000 BC), the Wisent, or European Bison (3000 BC).  The Wolverine (6000 BC) and the Woolly Mammoth (10,000 BC).

Although not many birds have suffered from species extinction in the British Isles it’s still important to make sure the birds that are remaining are fed properly as some are close to extinction.

One bird that has gone extinct here is the Great White Pelican which disappeared in 1000 BC — although this animal is still living elsewhere in the world, which means the British Isles do not have the ability to look after this bird.

The other bird that went extinct here is the penguin-like Great Auk, which went in 1844 and is now extinct worldwide.

Not many fish have gone extinct in the British Isles.  But if mass fishing continues how it there will be problems that face many species of fish. One fish that did go extinct of our shores is the Burbot.  Reported as extinct here as recently as 1972, this fish still swims the waters elsewhere in the world.

This has left many people wondering why the fish cannot live in the waters around Great Britain.  This may be because of the cold waters that surround us. A fish that has gone completely extinct is the Hounting and these went extinct in 1940 due to extensive fishing.

Like fish and birds reptiles have not really suffered from species extinction but with many ponds being filled in many reptiles like frogs could go extinct. This is proven by the fact that the only reptiles that have gone extinct are frogs. These frogs are the Agile Frog and the Moor frog and both went extinct in 1000 BP. [2]

Many reptiles have survived with only one knowingly going extinct on the shores of the British Isles.

The only reptile that has gone extinct is the European Pond Terrapin which went extinct in 5000 BP. This animal still roams the earth and is a species of turtle that no longer lives in the British isles.

Beetles have been increasingly going extinct with all of them doing so in the past 200 years. This raises issues about why they cannot cope with our environment in recent history.

The beetles that have gone extinct are: the Agonum Sahlbergi (1914), the Blue Stag Beetle (1800s), Graphoderus Bilineatus (1906), Harpalus Honestus (1905), the Horned Dung beetle (1957), the Ochthebius Aeneus (1913), the Platydema Voilaceum(1957), the Rhantus Aberratus (1904), Scybalicous Oblongiusculus (1926) and the Teretrius Fabricii (1907).

The trend that formed with the beetles is the same with butterflies, wasps, bees and flies with all of the extinctions for the species happening within the past 200 years. This is frightening!

The reason they are going extinct has a lot to do with pollution. This is why everyone needs to do there bit to reduce their carbon footprint to help stop the rising temperatures around the earth as well as to save the animals that are at risk.

Species Extinction: Animals at Risk of Extinction in the UK Today

Just as many species are at risk of annihilation today.

Mammals are suffering a lot with many of them threatened to join the Extinction List. This is down to the harsh environment that surrounds us. The Bottlenose Dolphin is at risk of going extinct from the waters near the UK leaving these beautiful creatures everywhere else in the world. The reason the dolphins cant live around our shores is down to the cold seas that have decreased in temperature.

These animals prefer warm and temperate waters. Another well-known mammal that is at risk is the cute Red Squirrel the numbers of these have declined drastically and there are many reasons for this. On reason is the introduction of the grey squirrel which has left them fighting to have the food they normally have so many of these starve to death. Food is the main problem for this creature so by leaving food in your garden you can help them survive.

Species Extinction: Extinct Animals & Endangered Species in UK

Other mammals at risk include the European Hare, the Hazel Dormouse (which some people keep as a pet), the European Otter, the Greater Horseshoe Bat, the Harbour Porpoise and the water vole. There are other mammals that are near to going on this list which is why change needs to happen.

Birds are facing a similar fate as many of species of birds cannot survive anymore. This is partly down to the fact they choose not to migrate and this leaves them to fight the increasingly harsh winters. Whilst trying to survive many struggle to find food and water due to frozen ground and ponds respectively.

Other birds that are at risk include: the Aquatic Warbler, the Capercaillie, the Corncrake, the Eurasian Wryneck, the Great Bittern, the Grey partridge, the Red-backed Shrike and the Skylark. All of these birds need all the help they can get.

Reptiles are also facing a similar fate to their mammal and bird counterparts and this is down to habitats being destroyed. The habitats need to be left so that the reptiles have somewhere to live because of these cause no harm what so ever.

The Grass Snake is a well-known animal that is on this list and this is down to a huge reduction in grassland and people often kill these animals when they see them. They may look dangerous but in fact they are completely harmless.

The slow-worm is another harmless snake that causes no harm yet they are left to suffer without a place to live. Other reptiles that are facing extinction include the Sand lizard, the Common lizard, the Northern adder and the smooth snake. Many reptiles have already gone extinct and at this rate all of them will soon be left extinct. To solve this habitats need to be left alone.

Amphibians and fish are in at risk as well although in not as many numbers they still face many problems.

The Great crested Newt is a protected species but due to ponds being filled in their natural habitat is being destroyed which leaves them with nowhere to go. This is the same for the Natterjack Toad which is having its habitat destroyed as parents are being over protective by filling these ponds in.

If a neighbour has a great rested newt in their garden the pond cannot legally be filled in.

Fish that face extinction are the Allis Shad, the Twaite shad, the Vendace and the Gwyniad. These animals go extinct because of the polluted water and the extensive fishing that happens. The animals need to be given enough time to breed so their numbers can increase.

Insects, beetles, butterflies and bees all face extinction as well due to their habitats being destroyed and them being killed. This needs to stop that we can still have a wildlife otherwise we will be left without one.

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

[1] A third species fighting for possession of those Northern caves were Cave Hyenas, who lost the three sided war before the bears did.

[2] “BP” is basically an approximation of an animal’s age and this is figured out with a formula established in 1954, when scientists picked 1950 as the origin year for the BP Scale for use with radiocarbon dating.

Marcus Finch needed some assistance when he wrote this article, so he used the expertise of GardenBird.co.uk, an online provider of items such as a cheap bird feeder. This helped him write his article to its fullest potential.

Species Extinction: Extinct Animals & Endangered Species in UK

Keywords: animal rights, bears, endangered species, mass extinction, species extinction, what is extinction, wolves

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Dancing Bears: Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures New Trends in Art

Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures…

Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures

Inuit Dancing Bear Sculptures Are Popular Trend

Dancing Bears: Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures New Trends in Art.

What is the Canadian national animal?  The Polar Bear!

As I’ve previously posted, there’s a movement afoot to declare the Polar Bear as our Canadian Totem animal.  And I wholeheartedly agree with it.

In reality an endangered species, the magnificent Polar Bear continues to thrive in story, art and our hearts.

Certainly our First Nations people have always thought of the Bear (brown, black, grizzly — species depending on locality) as paramount.  Nations from the Mi’kmaq of the east coast to the Haida, with their glorious totem poles, on the Pacific coast, made the Bear a central element of their rich cultures.

Those of us of Northern European blood arrived with stories of the Bear Folk as the most noble of beasts.  It was due to Roman and Middle East influences that our native Bear was replaced with the African Lion in European mythology as the “King of Beasts.”   And is still used by European royal families.

Most of us know that Nanook, or Nanuq, is the Inuit word for Polar bear.

They also call the great bear Pisugtooq, “the great wanderer,” and Tornarssuk, “the one who gives power.”

Also called the “Master of all Animals,” Inuit folklore tells that the white bear taught the people how to live in the cruel land, hunt seals and build snow houses.

Senator Nicole Eaton’s recent suggestion to adopt the mighty Polar Bear as our national Canadian animal has struck the right chord with a lot of true Northerners, including me.

The Bear, in reality, in Myth, in re-imagined form — like my Civilized Bears — the Bear shambles through the Canadian mindscape.

An article titled  “Dancing Bears, Shaman Bears & Drumming Bears: Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures,” by Belinda Recio tells us a lot.   She explains that “True North Gallery presents a collection of stone polar bear carvings by Canadian Inuit artists.  Those exciting artists are from the arctic communities of Cape Dorset, Igloolik, Arviat, Gjoa Haven, Akulivik, Kimmirut, and Iqaluit. True to the name of the show, the bears are depicted in a variety of poses and roles.

“The dancing bears seem to gracefully defy gravity as they balance on one foot or wave their limbs in the air.”

“Some Inuit artists assert that the dancing bears represent a shamanic transformation between a bear and a human. Others claim that the dancing reflects a state of celebratory joy. The Inuit believe that after death people return as animals.  And those lucky enough to return as the great white bear at the top of the food chain dance to celebrate their good fortune.

“There are several ways that Inuit artists represent a Shaman Bear.   Which is a shaman that has transformed into a bear. Shaman bears are sometimes depicted as having short, thick necks (in contrast to the polar bear’s long neck), which represent the last remaining sign of human identity.  Artists also depict shaman bears by carving them in shaman coats, which look like hooded parkas.  Or by carving them holding drums, which are associated with shamans.”

Dancing Bears Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures New Trends in Art

Explaining more, here is Clint Leung, owner of Free Spirit Gallery…

“Inuit Eskimo Art Sculptures of Arctic Polar Bears” 

The Inuit Eskimo people of the Arctic use their keen observations of their wildlife surroundings to help choose which subjects to portray in their artwork. Pretty well all sorts of Arctic wildlife including seals, walruses, birds and whales are represented in Inuit Eskimo art sculptures.

The most popular Arctic wildlife subject for both seasoned artists and fans of Inuit Eskimo art seems to be polar bears. For some reason, the polar bear has been chosen as the top animal to represent the Arctic north. Many Inuit Eskimo soapstone carvers strive to make polar bear sculptures.  But since this animal is not the easiest subject to carve, usually only experienced individuals can produce decent bears.

Novice carvers tend to tackle easier subjects such as seals and whales before moving onto polar bears.

This is the main reason why in most cases, a polar bear sculpture will be priced higher than a seal or whale sculpture of similar size.

Although most Inuit Eskimo art sculptures of polar bears tend to be in walking positions with all four legs on the ground, this is not always the case.  Sometimes, polar bears are depicted in sitting, lying or even swimming positions.

In some instances, finished polar bears also include some sort of prey such as fish or seals. Complex sculptures of hunting scenes can involve a polar bear plus an Inuit hunter and his husky dogs.

Dancing Bears: Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures Popularity.

One of the most sought after type of Inuit Eskimo art is the dancing polar bear sculpture. These polar bears are portrayed upright with one of the hind legs raised. This makes the bear appear to be dancing as it is balancing on one leg. On occasions, polar bears have been portrayed balancing on one of the front paws with the head towards the ground and hind legs up in the air.

This would depict a diving polar bear. Needless to say, only expert carvers can successfully produce any type of sculpture that is balanced on one leg whether it is the front or hind one. Again, this becomes a factor in the overall price of the Inuit Eskimo art sculpture.

Some art critics suggest that the dancing polar bear is not true Inuit Eskimo art since the pose is not representative of real nature. Indeed, many Inuit Eskimo communities do not produce dancing polar bears.  While others do.

Regardless, there is consumer demand for dancing bears.  So there will always be Inuit Eskimo artists who will make them. The dancing polar bears can be seen as an example of the wild imagination that many Inuit Eskimo artists have.

Did You Like This Indigenous Art Post?

Native American Bears Folk TaleIf so, you might want to read my popular short story “THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS.”  A Traditional Native American Animal Story & Folktale Retold.

Talking bears and human children adopted and raised by loving mama bears are common story themes in both Old and New World oral traditions.  Even J R R Tolkien wrote about Beowulf and Bear’s Son Tales in European folklore.

“Loved this beautiful Animal Tale.  Perfect!”  Free to Read ==> CLICK HERE  THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS

 

Belinda Recio is the author of a number of Animal-related books.  These include YOUR INNER ZOO: A Guide to the Meaning of Animals.  Her books can be found on True North Gallery:  TrueNorthGallery.net.

Clint Leung is the Founder of the Free Spirit Gallery.  Free Spirit Gallery – Northwest Native Indian & Inuit Art is an online information resource for Inuit art from the Arctic north and Northwest Native art.  Their numerous informative articles and videos are an excellent research source.  Clint’s Inuit Art post originally appeared on Ezinearticles.

==>>> To Read WHAT IS CANADA’S NATIONAL ANIMAL?  THE POLAR BEAR!  Click Here: CivilizedBears.com/canadas-national-animal-polar-bear/

 

Dancing Bears: Inuit Polar Bear Sculptures New Trends in Art.

Updated July 29, 2023.

Bears, civilized bears, endangered polar bears, Eskimo art, famous bears, grizzly bear, latest trend, polar bear facts, trends in art, wilderness.

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Edgar Rice Burroughs: A Tribute to the Creator of Tarzan – A Personal Hero

Tarzan — The Boy Who Was Raised by Apes…

EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS: A Tribute to Tarzan’s Creator

 

Tarzan Dell Comics 1955

 

My Heroes have always been Writers!

As I’ve said before, my first literary hero was Sir Charles G D Roberts.  Almost forgotten today, Canadian Roberts was once as popular as Mark Twain and Rudyard Kipling.  “Canada’s leading man of letters” was published in the same magazines as they were.

More to the point, he created a new literary genre: the Realistic Animal Story — the attempt to write about wild animals as they really lived and felt.  Wolves and moose and ravens and bears.  Some of Roberts’ short stories were reprinted in our Elementary school readers and it was there that I met him.  He was telling me stories about the very same New Brunswick evergreen forests that I loved to roam.  And I was enthralled. At the time, I wondered why… [1]

I quickly raided the school library where I found some beat up copies of his hardcovers.  Books like EARTH’S ENIGMAS and KINDRED OF THE WILD, with wonderful illustrations by Charles Livingston Bull.

And then I found books by other wilderness writers who had followed his trail.  Ernest Thompson Seton, Jack London, George Marsh and the masterful Grey Owl.  Farley Mowat would arrive later.

But the most renowned writer of Wild Places at that time was Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Tarzan was everywhere.  Well, not in the school library — but out there in the Real World.

On the radio — old programs were still being broadcast locally.  Newspaper funnies.  Dell comic books.  Old movies on television.  Those wonderful Whitman hardcovers with illustrated pulpwood pages that you could buy (or be given at Christmas) for 69 cents.

The comics were essential.  I really learned to read in the newspaper strips (especially the Rupert Bear stories at an early age and then Hal Foster’s Prince Valiant) and the Dell Four Color comic books: Walt Disney’s capricious cast of characters, as well as Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, Zane Grey’s King of the Royal Mounted, Flash Gordon. And Tarzan. Or, more specifically, “Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan.”  I saved my money and bought and traded for every issue I could get of Tarzan.

The artwork was supreme.  The storytelling always original.   Or so it seemed to me.

Getting lost in ERB’s mythical Africa with the Lord of the Jungle was a way of finding myself as an imaginative human being.

There’s a scene in the full-length book version of TARZAN OF THE APES that shook me to the bone when I first read it.  To me, it’s one of the great mythic passages in fantastic literature, the heart of the story:  After the elder Lord Greystoke, John Clayton, has buried the body of his beloved wife Alice in the dark African soil, he sits shaken by grief in the little handcrafted cabin — alone except for his newborn son John, in a cradle.  And then…

“Noiselessly Kerchak entered, crouching for the charge; and then John Clayton rose with a sudden start and faced them.

“The sight that met his eyes must have frozen him with horror, for there, within the door, stood three great bull apes, while behind them crowded many more; how many he never knew, for his revolvers were hanging on the far wall beside his rifle, and Kerchak was charging.

“When the king ape released the limp form which had been John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, he turned his attention toward the little cradle; but Kala (Kerchak’s mate, who had until that moment been refusing to accept that the baby ape she carried everywhere in her arms was really dead) was there before him, and when he would have grasped the child she snatched it herself, and before he could intercept her she had bolted through the door and taken refuge in a high tree.

“As she took up the little live baby of Alice Clayton she dropped the dead body of her own into the empty cradle; for the wail of the living had answered the call of universal motherhood within her wild breast which the dead could not still.

“High up among the branches of a mighty tree she hugged the shrieking infant to her bosom, and soon the instinct that was as dominant in this fierce female as it had been in the breast of his tender and beautiful mother — the instinct of mother love — reached out to the tiny man-child’s half-formed understanding, and he became quiet…”

And so Kala raised the little man-child, who she named Tar-zan (which in the language of the Great Grey Apes meant White-skin) as her own…

 

I was so captured by Tarzan that I was even driven to write what would be my only work of FanFiction: TARZAN VS CLYDE BEATTY.

But Tarzan of the Apes wasn’t Burroughs’ only creation.

 

Pirates of Venus

 

When the Sixties “Burroughs Boom” hit, I was at the Front Line.  At the paperback rack in the Kwik Pick, looking for the latest ACE Double Westerns.  But there was an exotic cover image of a beautiful wild-haired woman being carried through a clouded sky by a Bird Man with immense grey wings.

I seized the book.  PIRATES OF VENUS, it was called.  With EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS in big black letters. I didn’t need to read the blurb “Excitement in the Tarzan tradition on the planet of mystery” to know who HE was — for years I’d been reading those comic covers “Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan.”  Smart marketing.  Very smart.  I knew who this Edgar was.  He was one of my lifetime heroes.

The cover artist was Roy Krenkel and he remains my favourite fantasy artist. [2]

When I picked up PIRATES, I was already aware of the Science Fantasy genre.  I had previously bought Otis Adelbert Kline’s OUTLAWS OF MARS, with its own beautiful otherworld cover by Emsh.  And then found a used copy of SWORDSMAN OF MARS.

But Burroughs was the best at the genre.  Why not?  He had invented it way back in 1911 with the All-Story Magazine appearance of his UNDER THE MOONS OF MARS. [3]

Soon, of course, an entire new generation was introduced to ERB’s wildly imaginative worldscapes of romance, honour and adventure.  Us Boomers.

Edgar Rice Burroughs & Golf

Most summer days during my teen years, now living in Suburbia, I worked as a caddie at the local golf club.  Up every morning at dawn to bicycle to the Pro Shop and put my name on that day’s caddie list.

I loved the golf course itself.  Beautiful greenery everywhere.  Fun walk.  Exercise.  Before the Club opened, some caddies would get sets of old clubs and play the first 3 holes and come back on 17 and 18.  I tried a couple times.  Just as boring as watching the game.  More fun playing flag football with the guys on the big front lawn in front of the clubhouse.

Then the Club opened for the day and we faded out of view in an abandoned old tennis court.  Waiting to hear my name called.  Hoping that I got a guest golfer.  Especially American — they gave the biggest tips.

The worst players were the “wife foursomes.”  These groups were usually the wives of Saint John’s movers and shakers.  They would just take their time, talking, taking breaks, letting other foursomes play through.  By the time we cleared the 18th, it was usually too late to pick up a second golfer that day.  The wife foursome players never gave tips.

Through his character Carson Napier (of Venus), Edgar Rice Burroughs had this to say about the game that was providing my summer wages: “Golf is a mental disorder.”

I saved my caddie money.  And every month I got the latest ACE Books catalogue, sending off my orders in the mail for all of the newly released paperback journeys to Amptor, Barsoom, Pellucidar, Caspak and his strange Mythic Africa… [4]

And Ballantine Books were soon publishing the complete Tarzan and Martian series.

Why such fond memories of ERB’s yarns?  They were fun to read, of course.  That English Victorian morality of honour and loyalty and duty always felt right to me.  Still does.  ERB had a fantastic imagination and was at his best in makebelieve locales.

And then there’s the Romance.  I’ve read that we boys hated romance in our adventure stories.  Not so!  Every Western ended with our hero — lone marshal who has just shot down the outlaws set on destroying his town or young independent rancher who has defeated the rustlers hired by the crooked banker set on owning every spread in the valley — every hero gathering his true love in his arms for a kiss and promise of marriage.

Guys love tales of eternal love, too.  Back then we expected it.

So Tarzan had his Jane.  Edgar’s Uncle Jack had his Dejah Thoris, Princess of Mars.  And Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, scion of the aristocratic house of the John Alden Smith-Joneses of Boston, who had been “reared among surroundings of genteel culture plus ultra-intellectuality in the exclusive Back Bay home of his ancestors,” had his primitive Cave Girl.

And here’s something else — most of my favourite rereads today are his humourous stories (well, there’s a couple exceptions).

They still make me laugh.  TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN.  The Venus saga.  In fact, ESCAPE ON VENUS almost has the same structure as GULLIVER’S TRAVELS (although that was as much because at that time the magazine publishers were forcing him to think in terms of writing novelettes, which were collected in book form). [5]

Okay, ERB’s humour was heavy-handed.  His satire over the top.

The problem is this: fast paced pulp adventure can be written at one sitting, with little editing.  That’s what gave Edgar’s writing such raw energy.  But humour requires editing.  And rewriting.  Even so…

…at a time when Hitler still had support in America, ERB’s scene of an Amptorian city’s sidewalks lined with fanatical Zani Party followers all trying to stand on their heads in a ludicrous heil-fuhrer salute to their Strongman Leader — well, it made a kind of Marx Brothers statement.  That scene still breaks me up.  I often wonder if there was more to that scene and it was cut by dunderheaded editors.

Beautiful Martian women who lay eggs.  Brokol children who grow on trees.  “Is dat Johnny Weissmuller?”

Dude had a great sense of humour.

And, as I’ve said, there are exceptions.  My fave novel of his is TARZAN THE UNTAMED, his darkest and most violent story.  When Lord Greystoke learns that the Great War has started, he rushes home to discover his estates burned to the ground by German soldiers, charred bodies among the ruins.  Believing Jane to have been murdered, Tarzan sets out on a path of bloody revenge, and some of Burroughs’ most memorable scenes. [6]

Action, love, loyalty — all in worlds where Nature is still alive, eternally Green (and sometimes red) — and his best work a kind of Groucho reality or H Rider Haggard adventuring… Fondest love and remembrance to you, Edgar!

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

Did You Like This Post?

Th Boy Who Was Raised by Bears Animal storyIf so, you’ve got to read my popular short story “THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS.”  A Traditional Native American Animal Story & Folktale Retold.

Tales of feral children — humans raised by animals — inspired our ERB.

Talking bears and human children adopted and raised by loving mama bears are common story themes in both Old and New World oral traditions.

“Loved this beautiful Animal Tale.  Perfect!”  Free to Read ==> CLICK HERE  THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS

 

 

NOTE ON TARZAN ART: The cover artist of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan #66, DELL Comics, March 1955, at top of this page is George Wilson.  Wilson painted numerous covers for comic book titles such as Tarzan, Korak Son of Tarzan, Turok Son of Stone and the original Star Trek — as well as hundreds of paperback covers.

And the line drawing above of Burroughs surrounded by his most popular creations is by artists Al Williamson and Reed Crandall, from Richard A Lupoff’s wonderful book EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS: MASTER OF ADVENTURE.

[1] At the time, I wondered why Sir Charles G D Roberts’ marvelous adult tales were hidden among the child-level Dick and Jane drivel of school readers.  Later, I discovered that Animal Fiction is automatically put on the Child Lit shelves.  And reprinted in school readers.  Jack London’s red blooded, tragic stories, for instance.  Years later, when I asked a bookstore clerk if they had any books by Charles G D Roberts in stock, explaining that he wrote animal stories, she said, “Oh, like Beatrix Potter?”  I’m not complaining — in the case of Roberts, grownup ignorance allowed his wonderful wildlife literature to reach real boys and girls when we most needed it.

[2] Krenkel’s cover for PIRATES inspired my first published short story, ORNITHANTHROPUS IF Magazine, Dec, 1971.

[3] And hopefully Disney Inc hasn’t buried the Science Fantasy genre with their ill-conceived remake of that story, retitled “John Carter” — there’s still news floating around about a PIRATES OF VENUS movie, to be renamed “Carson Napier.”

Here’s my own two cents worth on what happened with JOHN CARTER.  The original Mars Trilogy was a wildly adventurous journey across one of the most creatively imagined worldscapes ever written.  But in the hundred years since ERB first introduced his swashbuckling Uncle Jack, so many writers have done their own versions (from Otis Adelbert Kline and Alex Raymond to George Lucas and James Cameron) that a modern movie version of the Trilogy will somehow look old and familiar.

Perhaps if some of ERB’s own later works — in which Burroughs himself tried to go beyond the genre story lines he had created years earlier — were filmed.  LLANA OF GATHOL.  TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN.  And, yes, PIRATES OF VENUS.

[4] Other fave ACE Books writers included Andre Norton, Leigh Brackett, H Beam Piper, Clifford D Simak, Gordon D Shirreffs, Tom West, Nelson Nye, Giles A Lutz.

[5] In a letter to his daughter Joan, Edgar described his final Amptor novelette, THE WIZARD OF VENUS, as “another goofy Venus story,” going on to say that the villain was “something of a hypnotist, and he has every one in his valley buffaloed into believing that he has turned all of their friends and relatives into zandars (Amtorian pigs).  One family keeps their daughter in a pen back of the castle…”

[6] It looks like the only thing that director David Yates’ 2016 movie version of TARZAN THE UNTAMED has in common with Burroughs’ original novel is the title.  Too bad.  Edgar Rice Burroughs was often accused of glorifying violence.  His UNTAMED presented the realities of modern warfare with brutal honesty and historical accuracy.  The first half of his novel reflected what actually happened in colonial Africa during World War I.  The second half showed Tarzan’s descent into madness caused by grief and rage.  And then there’s that wonderful ending of hope…

UPDATE: Since posting the above, Warner Brothers has announced a title change of Yates’ film to THE LEGEND OF TARZAN.

As of this writing, here’s the scoop: The film stars Alexander Skarsgård as Tarzan, with Samuel L Jackson and Margot Robbie.  Lord and Lady Greystoke are invited to leave their English estate to serve as British trade emissaries in the Congo of present day (or past?) Africa.  But treachery is afoot.  As Skarsgård explains, “This is about a man who’s holding back and slowly as you peel off the layers, he reverts back to a more animalistic state and lets that side of his personality out.”

If it’s set today, nothing wrong with a Tarzan tale in the 21st Century: both Tarzan and Jane had taken life-extending potions long ago in the lost city of Opar.  All of Burroughs’ major characters live looooong lives.

 

Tarzan illustration by Roy Krenkel

Edgar Rice Burroughs: A Tribute to Tarzan’s Creator, A Personal Hero.

For more, see ERBzine.com.

See my Tribute to Andre Norton –  Animal Communication: Pet Stories, Whispering, Telepathy & Andre Norton

Andre Norton, David Yates Tarzan, ERB, George Wilson cover artist, Leigh Brackett, Lin Carter, Hal Foster, H Rider Haggard. Edgar Rice Burroughs and golf. Legend of Tarzan, space opera, sword and planet, Tarzan 2024, Tarzan 2025.

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Saving Great White Sharks: Next Species Extinction?

Saving Great White Sharks…

Walking the beach - watching for Great White Sharks

Watching For Great White Sharks
 

Saving Great White Sharks: Next Species Extinction?

Recently, we tweeted “We love Humans. Don’t get us wrong. But with all this Human greed & Mass Extinctions — maybe Mother Earth would be happier without ’em!”

We had a number of spirited replies, including this from TigerMothGirl: “@civilizedbears No doubt about that! We should be guardians, but instead we’re a plague!”

Our anger was in response to the alarming news from Canadian experts that the Eskimo Curlew was “officially” extinct.

Not the only animal we’ve put on that list.  There are so many more already gone.  So many more endangered…

Here, from Klaus Jost, is a guest blog about Great White Sharks:

“The Great White Shark (Carcharodon carcharrias): Is It Nearing Extinction?” A Guest Blog by Klaus Jost

“They come up with the energy of an express train and they hurl themselves right out of the water”.

It’s late in the afternoon. The water is dark and an especially large amount of plankton reduces the underwater visibility to a minimum. Some time ago it occurred to me that with such poor underwater visibility I could probably forget about the object of my visit, to take underwater photos of the Great White Shark.

Like many previous occasions, I am sitting at the boat’s stern between the two 80 HP outboard engines, the camera levelled. Through the viewfinder I am watching the neoprene seal-dummy which our little boat is pulling behind it on a fishing line.

I support my arms on my knees, to ease my tense muscles. In the past I have often had to remain in this position from the early afternoon until sunset, through heavy swell, rain and storms, just to take the picture of my dreams – a breaching white shark, leaping for prey. Until now, all my efforts have been in vain.

Dyer Island is located six nautical miles off the coast of Gansbaai (170 kilometres south-east of Cape Town), on the opposite side of which is the small island known as Geyser Rock which is home to an estimated 60,000 South African Fur Seals (Arctocephalus pusillus).

As long as the seals stay ashore, they are safe. But when they leave for the open sea to catch fish, they have to negotiate a dangerous shark-infested channel between the islands called “shark alley” which, not surprisingly, is reputed to the best place in the world to watch white sharks.

The sharks patrol mercilessly here, and there is no way to escape them. The seals run the same gauntlet when they return to the island, and those swimming alone, and very young seals swimming close to the surface, face the greatest threat.

This is the scenario we have attempted to reconstruct in this case, with the hope of luring a white shark to reveal itself to the camera. For hours I have been keeping my lens pointing at Koekie, the artificial neoprene seal bobbing along behind the boat. Suddenly, a huge and very heavy body is rocketing out of the water like a torpedo. It has “Koekie” in its mouth. Everything happens in a split second.

It’s a precise attack with a fatally perfect timing.

Every single square centimetre of this exquisite creature is vibrating energy. An unforgettable sight. The incredible dynamic of the leap is captured in the picture.

The great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) has been around for at least 3.5 million years, but now it is acutely threatened by extinction. It remains to be seen whether the species is already “genetically extinct” – in other words there are so few individuals left that the survivors are genetically very similar to one another and are less likely to be able to withstand other insults that nature can throw at them.

The number of sharks, of all kinds, caught every year is estimated at 100 million. Half of it is ‘bycatch’, which is thrown away. With this overfishing the shark population is irreparably damaged. Due to the decimation in their numbers, which has lasted for decades, and their low reproduction rate, the prospects for the great white shark do not look good.

I’d like to focus my efforts on helping the sharks because they are really under threat now. The increase in wealth of the Chinese people is of course great for them but conversely it’s not good news for the sharks because shark’s fin soup is a Chinese delicacy that is becoming more affordable as those people become richer.

So there is a thriving and growing export trade of shark’s fins to the Far East. The worst thing is that the sharks are caught, their fins removed and they are thrown back into the sea alive to only die a terrible death. No animal should be subjected to that. So through my work I’m trying to draw attention to this to stop it. Otherwise in in few years some species could be extinct.

About the Author: Klaus Jost is a nature and underwater photographer. You can see Klaus’s photos and learn more about his work at his website http://www.jostimages.com You can view photos of breaching great white sharks here: http://www.jostimages.com/galerie/sharks/breaching-great-white-shark.html

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

Saving Great White Sharks: Next Species Extinction?

Keywords: animal rights, mass extinction, shark week, species extinction, what is extinction, white sharks

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Kindle Writer vs Ultimate Ebook Creator – Which Is Best?

Kindle Writer or…

Kindle Writer vs Ultimate Ebook Creator – Which Is Best?

 

Kindle Writer

 

Yes, Brian.  Kindle Writer vs Ultimate Ebook Creator – Which IS Best?

Of the number of Kindle Writer Software programs now out there, these are the Top Two by far — the two getting all the best reviews.  So it comes down to: which is the best one?

Well, the answer is — I like ’em both. They’re both top notch and good at what they offer.

I’ve made a tentative decision and it’s based on what I needed the most.

My ambitions were always more literary than culinary, so when this old chef gradually morphed from cook back to writer, I happily embraced the new reality of online publication.

First with articles and website content about cooking (including recipes) and then quickly to other areas of interest — dog training and behavior — natural and human history — animal rights — our endangered Wilderness — helping freelance writers…

Through Demand Studios, I sold articles over a wide range of subjects. Put some free short stories out there, too.

At the request of many old-time pulp fiction fans, my articles on the literature of our Canadian Mounties and the dog stories that came out of classic Mountie fiction, as well as my short science fiction, fantasy and animal stories (such as “Wolfblood” — a Northwestern yarn in the Jack London Tradition), were gathered together to become CivilizedBears.com.

But when the time came to tell some stories of my Civilized Bears in a full-length novel format, I needed top notch Kindle writing software, so I looked at the two most popular Kindle writing programs.

KINDLE WRITER 2

(“Software to write Kindle with…”) is divided into a number of modules, including a plain text word processor that allows you to write your book one chapter at a time. Another module is a Cover Maker which I really like. Downside is that the word processor still needs an end usage of HTML.

ULTIMATE EBOOK CREATOR has a WYSIWYG plain text processor. Just type in your text and let the software format it for you! But not much in the way of a Cover creator. Although since they are constantly updating the software, that may soon be coming.

Their spiel goes like this: “Professional Built In Wysiwyg Editor Allows You To Craft 100% Accurately Formatted Ebook For Amazon Kindle (mobi), Barnes & Noble Nook (epub), Sony Reader And Any Other Ebook Reader Device! No Need For MS Word, Calibre Or Any Other 3rd Party Tool.”

I decided to go with CREATOR since, although I’ve learned to work with HTML, this is a long manuscript and I wanted to focus completely on the creative process — let their Kindle writing software do the behind-the-scenes work…

kindle-writing-software2

Ultimate eBook Creator – eBook Creation Software MOBI, EPUB, Word, PDF – format eBooks and print books for Amazon Kindle self publishing, iBookstore, Android Devices, Smart Phones, Tablets…

…Includes FREE Lifetime Software Updates!  It’s creator will answer all your questions by Email.  Yes!  All of them — he quickly gets back to me, with patience & warmth…  If you’re interested, you can find the program through your fave Search.

UPDATE:
Q. Is Kindle Publishing still profitable in 2020?
A. Yes!  Amazon continues to grow.  It just keeps expanding as the world’s biggest e-retailer.  And, as I write this, more people are again searching for and purchasing Ebooks instead of paper…
Q. How recent is the latest UEC program?
A. There’s a Brand New 2020 UEC for Windows 10.

Live Free, Mon Ami!  Brian Alan Burhoe

 

Updated April 12, 2020

Create Ebooks, Print Books (Createspace).  In Mobi, Epub, Word, PDF Formats.  Format For Amazon Kindle, Android, Ipad, Tablets.  And Any Device That Supports The Ebook Epub Standards.  No Need For 3rd Party Tools.  Fiction, Non Fiction, Fixed, Trivia, Poetry.

WANT TO READ MY STORIES, BOOK REVIEWS & ARTICLES ON YOUR MOBILE CELLPHONE OR TABLET?  Go to my Mobile-Friendly BrianAlanBurhoe.com

Kindle Writer vs Ultimate Ebook Creator – Which Is Best?

Amazon author central, amazon kindle, ebook creator review, ebook kindle, is Kindle publishing still profitable in 2020, kindle books, kindle writing software, kindle writer review, top books, writing kindle books.

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Endangered Animals List Most Endangered Species in World

Endangered Animals List…

Endangered Animals List - Northern Right Whale

Endangered Animals List Most At-risk Species

 

It’s more than just an emotional response — this passionate call for Animal Rights.  We are all such a part of Nature.  And need each other for our very physical survival.  Not to mention our emotional and spiritual well-being.

Can you imagine?  There are actually people in our world who call themselves soulless “Consumers.”  They’ve abandoned any thought of a spiritual life.

And yet, if we are to survive, that’s what we must restore.  Our Spirituality.  It’s about finding the Earth Spirit within us.

We must save ourselves — and all our fellow animals.

What are the Most Endangered Species on Earth?  The Most Endangered Animals?  On the Endangered Animals List.

Siberian Tigers

Siberian Tigers are considered Critically Endangered with the Chinese and Korean populations nearly extinct. Currently they have reduced to less the 200. It’s also been estimated that on earth, tigers have lessened to an extent of 7%. Not enough efforts are done to get back the Siberian tiger’s population to normalcy. However, tigers since long have been chosen as national symbols for many countries. Right now, animal rights activist have become vigilant of this impending issue.

Amur Leopard

The Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) is a leopard subspecies that is classed as Critically Endangered. It is native to the southwestern Primorye region of Russia. Amur or Far Eastern leopard is world’s most endangered cat with as few as 25 to 34 left in the wild. Amur leopard’s habitats are continuously threatened by encroaching civilization, exploitation of forests, poaching, climate change, and new roads.

Northern Right Whale

Northern Right Whale numbers around 350 that travel across the Atlantic coasts of Canada and the US. And are the most endangered of the entire world’s whale species. These whales are still living but there is a growing concern that they are continuously being hunted to the level of extinction. The two greatest threats to their recovery are the entanglement in fixed fishing gear and vessel strikes. Northern Right Whales are protected under US animal rights, the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 and the U.S. Endangered Species Act of 1973.

 

endangered sea turtle

Leatherback Sea Turtle

Leatherback Turtle have survived catastrophic asteroid impacts and outlived the dinosaurs. They are the longest-living marine species to ever ply the world’s oceans. Scientists question whether the animal will survive into the next decade, as this one of the largest turtle species in the world, is subjected to animal cruelty. Their numbers have declined in excess of 95% over the last twenty-two years. This beautiful species has been pushed to the verge of extinction by large-scale hunting and poaching of sea turtle eggs. Animal rights activist have been on guard.

To those, here are the next 11 species that complete most endangered animals list:

  1. Greater Bamboo Lemur
  2. Northern Right Whale
  3. Hawaiian Monk Seal
  4. Mountain Gorilla
  5. Rhinoceros
  6. Giant Panda
  7. Mako Shark
  8. Hawksbill Turtle
  9. Polar bear
  10. Angel Shark
  11. Chinese Giant Salamander

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

WANT TO READ MY STORIES, BOOK REVIEWS & ARTICLES ON YOUR MOBILE CELLPHONE OR TABLET?  Go to my Mobile-Friendly BrianAlanBurhoe.com

Endangered Animals List Most Endangered Species

Keywords: whales, wildlife, wilderness…

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How the Bear Lost its Tail & Other Bear Stories

Bear Stories…

 

Tiger and the Bear - Korean bear stories

Bears are beloved worldwide, even in animal stories and folk tales…

How the Bear Lost its Tail & Other Bear Stories

From the classic “Silver Hair and the Three Bears” (which morphed into the kinder, gentler Goldilocks story) to the realistic, often tragic, animal fiction of Sir Charles G D Roberts, bears have shambled and fumbled and interacted with humans in our literature.  And we love ’em all.

Even today, new Bear Tales find an avid new readership.  My Civilized Bears are drawing appreciative followers.

Here, from Author Joan C is a look back at some of the most popular Bear Tales of yesterday around the globe…

 

“Bears Through Time: A Short Collection of Bear Stories” A Guest Blog by Joan C

I was doing research on legends and folk tales not too long ago when I found that there are many such stories featuring my favourite animal of all time.

There’s the story with similar versions from Germany and North America — How the Bear Lost its Tail.

In this story, the bear is not a pleasant character. In fact, he’s a downright obnoxious show off!

The story goes that the “bear once had a beautiful long tail which he is really proud of. He would stretch it out behind him and proudly say to the other animals, ‘Don’t you think my tail is beautiful?’ The other animals took one look at his claws and agreed whole-heartedly that his tail looked fabulous. It’s no wonder that he didn’t have many friends….”

For the complete retelling of this story, with a kinder, gentler bruin for a hero, see Brian Alan Burhoe’s marvelous retelling of the tale of a tail: How the Bear Lost its Tail – A Classic Bear Folktale – Forest Folklore

Yes, this animal tale is still told worldwide, especially in Northern European households and among First Nations people.

And There Are More — Other Bear Stories…

 

Bear Stories: “The Tiger and the Bear” 

Here’s a myth from Korea where the bear played an instrumental role in the founding of that country.

The myth begins in Heaven where the god Hwanin resided. His son, Hwanung, had the habit of peering over the clouds and looking at the chaos that was Earth below. Hwanung saw the terrible plight of the people below and would feel sad and shed tears for them. When Hwanin found out why his son was so upset, he allowed Hwanung to descend to Earth to rule so as to bring about peace.

And that’s what Hwanung did.

He ruled over 360 human affairs (such as good, evil, life and illness) and was a great success. At this time, two animals, a tiger and a bear, approached him, wishing to become humans. Hwanung brought them to a dark cave in which they were to remain for a hundred days with only a handful of mugwort and twenty cloves of garlic for food.

The tiger was very impatient and ran off after a while. The bear was made of sterner stuff and on the twenty-first day, much to the bear’s delight, was transformed into a woman called Ungnyeo.

However, no one wanted Ungnyeo as a wife as she had once been an animal.

Sadly, she sat under a holy tree and prayed for a child. It was then that Hwanung pitied her. He transformed himself to human form and through him, Ungnyeo gave birth to a son, Dangun. Dangun later became the founder of the Korean people.

 

Bear Stories “Two Travelers and a Bear”

Here’s an Aesop tale in which the bear is wise. I enjoyed the fable as a child but forgot about until I re-encountered it the other day.

“Two Travelers and a Bear” tells of two men who were going on a journey together. While trekking through a forest, a ferocious bear crashed through the trees, straight into their path.

The travelers raced to a tree and started climbing it. One was sprier than the other and managed to scramble onto a high branch in record time. He refused to give his companion a hand for fear of his own safety. The other traveler had no choice but to lie on the ground at the bottom of the tree and play possum.

The bear lumbered over and sniffed at the ‘dead’ man for a few seconds before heading back into the trees. After several minutes, sensing that the coast was clear, the man stood up while his friend climbed down the tree.

The friend said, “The bear looked like it was whispering to you. What did it say?”

The other man looked at his friend and candidly replied, “Oh, he told me not to travel with anyone who would desert me in order to save his own skin.” With that, he picked up his knapsack and walked off, leaving his friend standing there dumbfounded.

Now, isn’t that a nice note to end with? 🙂

About Our Guest Talespinner: Author Joan C is “a bear collector and hosts a website for bear lovers to share pictures.”  Her collection of bear stories has been a treat.  At the time of this update, Joan’s story-link is no longer active.  As soon as we learn of a new one, we’ll put it here…

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

Do You Love Traditional Bear Stories?

How the Bear Lost its Tail – A Traditional Bear Folktale RetoldIf so, then you’ve gotta read my own retelling of the oldest known Bear Story of them All!  Listen!

“Long ago — when our Sacred Green Earth was young and much more alive — Bear, like his cousins the Wolf and the Fox, had a long beautiful tail.

“One chilled winter day, Bear shuffled down to the lake and saw that Fox was feasting on some fish.  Licking his chops, Bear asked him, ‘Fox, ol’ friend, how did you manage to catch all those fish?’

“The cunning fox saw his chance to make a fool of Bear…”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE COMPLETE BEAR FOLK STORY:  HOW THE BEAR LOST HIS TAIL

 

NOTE ON ARTWORK: Top image, “Two Travelers and a Bear,” painted by Milo Winter.  Second image, “How The Bear Lost His Tail,” by Paul Bransom.  Both from Project Gutenberg.

Updated Friday, Sept 29, 2023.

See Us on Our CELL PHONE FRIENDLY Format: BrianAlanBurhoe.com.

Keywords: animal stories, bear stories, civilized bears, famous bears, folk tales.

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Top 10 Most Popular Dog Breeds – most affectionate dog breeds

Most Popular Dog Breeds…

Most Popular Dog Breeds

Top 10 Most Popular Dog Breeds – most affectionate dog breeds

Most of us don’t pick a dog breed by fashion or current trend.  We pick the kind of canine that fits our self-image and practical needs.  Still, it’s nice to know if what we like matches the tastes of others…

“What are the most popular dogs?”

Popularity, of course, varies by region.

Although there is some change from nation to nation, there is a greater change between regions. Because apartment-dwellers often want smaller pets.  A list of the Top City Dogs would include such smaller dogs as the Miniature Schnauzer, Pomeranian and the Pug. The Most Popular Country Dogs are larger dogs, including the Collie and Siberian Husky.

When LASSIE COME HOME appeared in the 1940’s, first as a novel and then as a movie, the Scottish-bred Collie became extremely popular as a family pet.

In the 1970’s, the movie BENJI became an immediate hit.  It starred a lovable mixed breed dog that was adopted from an animal shelter.  The original Benji was the dog Higgins who had worked on the TV show “Petticoat Junction.”  The movie started a popular franchise: five Benji movies, television programs and specials, comics, and even Benji merchandise. Dog breeders were deluged with requests for “Benji-like” terriers.

Hollywood and celebrities continue to popularize certain breeds.  Sometimes creating new Most Popular Dog Breeds.

What, then, are the Ten Most Popular dog breeds overall?

Top 10 Most Popular Dog Breeds – most affectionate dog breeds:

NUMBER 10: The SHIH TZU.

The Shih Tzu (pronounced “shidzoo”) has been known and loved as a small companion dog for at least 2000 years. It was developed in China. This little “lion dog” is a happy, outgoing and intelligent character. Zsa Zsa and Eva Gabor brought the breed into the public spotlight in the 1960’s. When they were photographed walking through the hot spots of Beverly Hills with their pet Shih Tzus. The breed has had an enthusiastic following ever since.

NUMBER 9: The BOXER.

The Boxer originated in Bavaria, Germany, as a medium-sized security dog. The breed combines the blood of the English Bulldog with European mastiff-type breeds. With its deep chest, broad back and smooth coat (white with fawn or brindle) it makes a striking appearance. This Boxer was introduced to North America by returning soldiers after World War I.  The boxer has gained a reputation as a spirited, lively, pugnacious pet, but affectionate with its family and kind with children.

NUMBER 8: The CHIHUAHUA.

The Chihuahua is the world’s smallest dog.  The tiny breed was named for the Mexican province where it first appeared. This breed may well be the descendant of an ancient toy breed of an earlier culture, perhaps the Mayan. They come in smooth and longhaired breeds. Both breeds are easy to groom and care for. They are bright, inquisitive, affectionate and courageous.

When Madonna was photographed with her beloved Chihuahua, Chiquita, she was just one of many celebrities sporting a pet Chihuahua.

Noah Wyle, one of the hot stars of ER, was recently photographed with his Chihuahua while on holiday. Jennifer Lopez has also joined the exclusive club of famous Chihuahua owners. Younger celebrities like Britney Spears, Hilary Duff, Paris Hilton, Christina Ricci, Reese Witherspoon and members of Simple Plan have been seen with their Chihuahuas. The breed just increases in popularity.

NUMBER 7: The YORKSHIRE TERRIER.

The Yorkshire Terrier has been a favorite among the ladies of the European aristocracy for almost a hundred years. Then Audrey Hepburn was shown with her adored Yorkie.  And the breed gained popularity in America. The breed was created in the Leeds and Halifax areas of Yorkshire, England. It was bred for a much more mundane purpose: to catch rats in the coal pits and cotton mills. Its long coat of dark steel blue and bright tan requires daily brushing. But the results are worth it. With its strong terrier instincts, the Yorkie makes for a courageous, intelligent and lively companion.

NUMBER 6: The POODLE.

The Poodle (or Caniche) is a very ancient breed.  It was originally used for hunting water game, such as ducks. Its thick coat was originally given its distinctive trim to aid it in swimming. The Poodle has been bred in three sizes: Toy, Miniature and Standard. Although its thick coat and long, thickly feathered ears make it a high-maintenance dog, its disposition make the Poodle a beloved pet. It is a well-mannered, eager to learn, obedient and happy breed.

Top 5 Most Popular Dog Breeds…

NUMBER 5: The BEAGLE.

The most famous Beagle, of course, is a cartoon animal: Snoopy. The breed is an old one, its name coming from the Celtic word “beag,” meaning “small.” The smallest version of the hunting hound, it was developed in England to hunt rabbit and hare. The Beagle makes a good family pet, being lively, friendly and affectionate.

NUMBER 4: The DACHSHUND.

The Dachshund comes in a number of varieties, including the Longhaired, Smooth and Wire. The Dachshunds were developed in Medieval Germany to hunt otter, badger and fox. They were also used to track wounded game. Their long bodies and short legs made them adept at following a trail through even dense brush. Coming in all colors, these popular house pets, while sometimes willful and disobedient, are intelligent, happy and love their families.

NUMBER 3: The GERMAN SHEPHERD.

The German Shepherd (or Alsatian) was little known in North America until the 1920’s, when movie dogs such as Strongheart (THE SILENT CALL, 1921) and Rin-Tin-Tin (THE MAN FROM HELL’S RIVER, 1924) received almost overnight acclaim.

The German forerunners of the breed were originally used to protect flocks of sheep against wolves. In the 1890’s, a German cavalry officer, Captain Max Von Stephanitz, perfected the breed that we now know as the German Shepherd. They have bright, intelligent eyes, large prick ears, broad chest, sloping body and long legs.  Giving them the very appearance of the ultimate versatile breed. Used as military, police and search dogs, they also make excellent family pets.

NUMBER 2: The GOLDEN RETRIEVER.

With its beautiful long coat of gold or cream, the Golden Retriever is considered by many to be the most perfect of dogs. The Golden’s dense, water-repellent coat can be wavy or straight. These dogs are of British origin, developed in the mid-Nineteenth Century by Scotsman Lord Tweedmouth as hunting dogs and water fowl retrievers.

The Golden Retriever’s intelligence and gentleness have earned it a well-deserved reputation as the perfect family pet. As well as being a reliable, gentle-mouthed retriever, this breed is obedient and easily trained.

 

Most Popular Dog Breeds - Labradors

NUMBER 1: The LABRADOR RETRIEVER.

This dog originated in the Northcountry of Labrador, Canada. Its forebears were the black water dogs which used to swim between boats and the shore carrying supplies. An excellent retriever of fish and game, the dogs became renowned for their intelligence and willingness to please. The coat is short and dense and colored fox red, solid black, dark chocolate or champagne (pale yellow). Easy to train, the Labradors make perfect family pets.  This breed is trustworthy, obedient, good-tempered and excellent with children.

Every dog, of course, is the “most popular dog” to somebody!

 

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Do You love Dog Stories?

Read this story of the Wolf who rescued a Husky!

wolf story - animal story - Bear StoryREAD WOLFBLOOD — MY MOST POPULAR ANIMAL YARN: “I LOVE THE HAPPY ENDING!”

“I JUST READ WOLFBLOOD AGAIN FOR GOOD MEASURE.  ONE FOR ANY WOLF LOVER.  ENJOYED IT BUT WISH IT WAS A FULL LENGTH NOVEL.” – Gina Chronowicz @ginachron

“GREAT SHORT STORY!  DOES REMIND ME OF CALL OF THE WILD, WHITE FANG…” – Evelyn @evelyn_m_k
An “entertaining and affectionate” narrative in the Jack London Tradition.  Story of a lone Gray Wolf and his quest for a place in the far-flung forests of the feral North.  WOLFBLOOD: A Wild Wolf, A Half-Wild Husky & A Wily Old Trapper

 

Top 10 Most Popular Dog Breeds – most affectionate dog breeds.

Most popular dog breeds, Maltese, Bullmastif, livestock guardian dogbreeds, most affectionate dog breeds, dog breeds that are good with cats, yorkipoo.

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WOLFBLOOD Animal Story in Jack London Tradition – Wild Wolf, Half-Wild Husky & Wily Old Trapper

A Wolf Animal Story for you…

“WOW!  This is a TRUE LOVE STORY — with wolves.  LOVE it!  Happy ending too!” – MiA @MiAKittyGirl

Dedicated to the Memory of my father, Albert Chester Burhoe, avid backwoodsman — rifleman in the Algonquin Regiment, Canadian Army in Holland — and wounded POW in Stalag XIB, Fallingbostel, Northern Germany.  He served King and Country, asking no reward.  He taught me the value of Freedom.  NE-KAH-NE-TAH.

 

WOLFBLOOD
A Short Northern Animal Story by Brian Alan Burhoe

 

LONE WOLF ANIMAL STORY

 

The lone gray wolf padded through the firwoods.

He stopped to sniff at a patch of icy snow in the long shadows, or rather the brown pellets that speckled it.  His stomach gurgled.  Rabbit!  He had eaten well of rabbit since he had entered this valley.  Soon he would eat again.

Good hunting and the discovering of new territory hid some of the young wolf’s loneliness.  He missed his family, especially his littermates.  It wasn’t that he had been singled out for exile.  The many growing pups born last spring had made the family too big this new spring.  Hunger and discord had driven him out — perhaps to create his own new family.

At times he yearned to go back.  To howl his feelings to his distant packmates.  To hear their welcoming chorus.  But he knew better.  They were gone.

Other times he had sung his loneliness in answer to strange wolf calls but heard no welcome in their replies.

A few days after entering this valley he had stopped howling completely.  Nobody howled back.

Through this day, he had been accompanied by some crows, dark companions following him noisily from above, watching for their share in a kill he might make.

Now they had gone with the fading daylight and he missed their company.

Marking the snow patch with a squirt of urine, he searched about for fresher spoor.  The only sounds were the patter of his paws on the leaf mould, the whisper of a faint wind in the evergreens, the splashing river off to his side, a few frogs beginning their nightsongs.  He sniffed the air then dipped his head to muzzle the moist ground.  He cast about through the rich aromas of rotting vegetation, mushrooms, sprouting greenery.  Foosh!  He had caught the hot scent of bigger game — deer!

The wolf scurried about, snuffing noisily.  He stopped and stood rock-still, ears cocked for deer-sound, eyes searching the quickly darkening forest, sensitive foot pads feeling the ground for the solid thump of hoof.  Deer!  He was shaking with excitement.  The wolf dropped a scat, sniffed its rabbity odor.  Deer!  His mouth watered.

And then a new scent struck him.  He almost fell back on his haunches.  A new scent — a strange but familiar scent that made the savage wolf whimper.

*
 

Johnny Akumi saw the wolf enter the moonlit clearing and smiled.

He knew of the approaching wolf from the earlier crow calls and later shifting silences in the riverside frog chorus.

Johnny was a patient man, being of the Tikah people.  He had not moved much in his cramped tree shack and did not move now.  His old HBC musket was already in place and pointing down.

Ah, it was a big animal, full grown.  Tall at the shoulder.  A broad, intelligent face.  Coat thick, dense and pure gray, darker around the head and back.  Two years old, maybe three.  It carried itself with the mixed ease and uncertainty of a young adult male.

The wolf entered the clearing stiff-legged.  Its slanted gold eyes swept the area, looked up at the tree shack, seemed to gaze straight into Johnny’s eyes.  But it was only instinct that made the wolf look his way.  Johnny was hidden in shadow.  When the night breezes stirred, they wandered toward the river where the animal had come from — but those breezes were cold and lazy, carrying little scent this high from the ground.  It had been three days since Johnny had been on the ground in the clearing.  And the fresh sap-smell from the fir and spruce of his rough hut would mask his man-scent now.

The wolf lost its caution.  And turned its attention to Shossa.

Shossa was Johnny’s best lead dog.  A powerful Ungava husky, cunning, cruel, her master’s dog.  At two and a half years of age, she was almost as big as the wolf.  She had forelegs heavily boned and muscled.  Powerful thighs and hind legs.  Her head was as broad as a wolf’s, with a white face and black mask around her bright blue eyes.  She was chained now in the middle of the clearing.  She had been there three days and the ground around her was strong with the blood-spotted urine of a bitch in heat.

Shossa didn’t cringe.  She growled, her hackles raised.  Good.  A wolf would have killed a terrified dog outright.  When the wolf crept closer, ears alert, bushy tail wagging, she growled savagely.  At that moment she would have gone for its throat.

The trapper moved his musket just a fraction to cover the wolf.

Grinning, the timber wolf sat down.

The husky approached the stranger until she came to the end of her chain.  She curled her white plumed tail over her back and wagged it.  She barked once, whined.

The wolf stood up and when they sniffed noses, Johnny relaxed and watched the courtship.  He had done this before.  It was common practice among the People.  To tie out a bitch in heat and add wolfblood to their dog teams.  Shossa, he would keep this spring in the village.  Maybe the Sergeant would like that.  The Mounted Police complained every summer when the Tikah put their sled dogs on river islands to fend for themselves.  What was wrong with that?  Come winter, the toughest were always alive to pull the sleds.

And they would be all the stronger with new wolfblood in the pups.

The male and female courted through the night and when dawn was a scarlet belt beyond the coal-black conifers, the wolf made to leave.  When Shossa came once more to the end of her chain, the wolf sniffed at the iron links.  He pawed the chain.  Bit at it. Shook it violently in his muzzle.  And when he understood that Shossa was a prisoner in the clearing, the wolf was gone.

*
 

The gray wolf came back next evening.

He carried something in his mouth — a limp snowshoe rabbit — and dropped it at Shossa’s feet.  The husky fell on it with ravenous ferocity while the wolf sat watching, grinning.

The courtship continued.

Ever the patient man, Johnny scarcely stirred in his tree shack.  Pulling his fringed buckskin coat about him for warmth, he watched until dawn came and the wolf again tore uselessly at the chain.  You want her to go with you, don’t you, Maheeshtan?  But Shossa is her master’s dog.

The trapper watched the wolf leave.  He would let them mate one last time tonight.  He allowed three couplings to ensure pregnancy.

Dogs, of course, were promiscuous.  She would leave with her master and not pine for the male.

Wolves, however, mated for life.  This Maheeshtan would not give up Shossa.  He would search her out.

After the animals had coupled tonight, Johnny would kill the wolf.

*
 

The wolf brought a meal to her again.

Just a bushy-tailed red squirrel this time.  Game was getting scarcer.

Johnny waited.  Despite some cautious exercise through the day, and tending to food and elimination, his legs were beginning to cramp on him.  And though, in the way of his people, he had taken many light naps, always aware of the living forest around him, deeper sleep had snared him once or twice.  Pagh!  He was becoming an old man.

But the whelps that he would get from Shossa would make him the envy of the village.  Those whelps would be big, inquisitive.  And stubborn, of course.  The wolfblood would make them that.  Beatings with whip and club would finish that, too.  The North-West Mounted Police would chastise him again.  Do not treat your animals so cruelly, they would say.  Hah!  What did they know?  He had beaten Shossa until her coat was red with blood.  Yet she was his best dog.

The trapper jumped, realized that sleep had caught him, that dawn had snuck up on him. And — the wolf was gone.

Shossa lay alone in the misty clearing.  Her head rested forlornly on her front paws.

Johnny cursed in the white man’s tongue.  The wolf should not have left so soon.  He waited.  But Maheeshtan didn’t return.  When the sun was up, he stretched in the shack, snatched up his musket and climbed down to the ground.

Shossa cocked her ears at him.  Otherwise she didn’t stir.

“Hai, Shossa, get up.”  Shifting his musket to his left hand, he reached down with his free hand and unfastened the damp chain from the stake, scooped up lengths of it every few feet and unclipped it from around her neck.  She didn’t move, only whined.  Johnny kicked her in the ribs.  “Wicewin!”  Reluctantly, she rose.

He would have to use the chain as a leash, then.  She would be staked outside his cabin and when Maheeshtan came to claim his mate, the trapper would be waiting with his musket.  He flung the chain over her back and reached down with his empty hand to clip it together to make a collar…

 

Wild wolf animal story

 

The smell of freshly killed rabbit filled the wolf’s nostrils as he rushed for the clearing.

The memory of the feel and smell of his mate’s starvation tormented him and he wanted to bring her more than this.  He couldn’t understand why she was trapped in the clearing.  He hated the hard snake-thing that held her there.

The wolf was in the clearing and on them before he realized that she was not alone.

A strange creature stood over her on its hind legs like a starved bear.   That creature was covered in old deer skins.  The creature had the putrid smell he had detected faintly on his mate and on the snake-thing that tied her to the ground.

The wolf dropped the rabbit to growl at the figure that held his mate.

This creature — he sensed that this was what had been watching them from the big nest in the tree — made startled growlings and let go of his mate to swing up something in its other paw.

The husky saw the wolf.   She yelped in excitement and ran to join him.  Her ears back, she yipped in joy and bumped her eager muzzle against his.  She licked his mouth and he took her muzzle in his teeth in loving greeting.

“Shossa!”  The creature was growling something to her.  The sounds meant nothing to the wolf.

His mate whined.  She turned her head and looked back at the creature as if it were a pack leader.  When it spoke again, sharply, demanding, she slowly left the wolf’s side and walked back over to it, ears flattened, head down, tail down.

The wolf felt alone.

The creature lifted the long stick-like thing in its arms and pointed it at him.  The wolf looked into the dark hole at the end of the thing and shivered.

His mate was frightened.  She barked loudly at the creature and butted its leg with her shoulder.  The creature was knocked sideways.  Snarling, it kicked back at her.

The wolf raged.  He sprang at the creature.  He wanted to tear out its hot throat.  They fell to the hard ground together.  There was a sudden great thunder and flash of fire.

“Yiii!” The wolf jumped away.

The strange thunder hopped away through the trees.  Wings of smoke stinking of rotten eggs drifted around them, then chased the thunder.  There was a hissing in the wolf’s ears.

The putrid-smelling creature was sitting up, making sharp sounds at him, scrambling with a paw to pick up the stick-thing that had made the awful thunder.

His mate barked, ran toward him, took a nip at his shoulder, then rushed past him.  She was free!  The cold snake that had kept her tied to the clearing lay curled and lifeless on the ground — its grasp empty.

Spinning, the wolf followed her.

They ran in terror, in freedom, eyes wide, tails out behind them.

Ran together, side by side, until they came to the river.

They stopped, lapped the water noisily, sniffed one another, licked one another.  For a short time, they fell to the dank ground and panted happily.

Then the gray wolf and his mate stood up, stretched, yawned, and loped off into the firwoods.

THE END

 

Animal story of the forestNOTE: The basic concepts of this animal story in the Jack London Tradition came out of yarns my father told me about the Northern Cree woodsmen he proudly served with in the Algonquin Regiment.  Johnny Akumi is not Cree but of the Tikah People — or, as Americans like Cecil B DeMille called them, Tiger Indians.[1]

And by tales written by Sir Charles G D Roberts, Jack London, Grey Owl, George Marsh and Farley Mowat (NEVER CRY WOLF).  Not to forget the great pulp fiction animal stories of writers like James Oliver Curwood and Samuel Alexander White.

 

==>> I want to thank the many Tweeters who have given good feedback to my Animal Story WOLFBLOOD!  Just a few of my Faves are:

“EXCELLENCE RESIDES WITHIN YOUR STORY.  THANK YOU!” Fhaedra @fhaedra

“I JUST READ WOLFBLOOD AGAIN FOR GOOD MEASURE.  ONE FOR ANY WOLF LOVER.  ENJOYED IT BUT WISH IT WAS A FULL LENGTH NOVEL.” – Gina Chronowicz @ginachron

“THIS WAS A GREAT SHORT STORY.  MORE PLEASE!”  – Make It Beautiful @Create4Ever

“I WAS HOPING THE DOG WOULD BREAK FREE OF THE MAN TO RUN WITH THE WOLF.  THANKS FOR ALLOWING THAT TO HAPPEN!” – Kitty Lynn @kittylynn

“GREAT SHORT STORY!  DOES REMIND ME OF CALL OF THE WILD, WHITE FANG…  I WONDER HOW THOSE BEBÉS GREW UP WITH THE DOG MAMA AND WOLF PAPA?”  – Evelyn @evelyn_m_k

“CIVILIZED BEARS: THAT WAS QUITE A STORY.  EXCELLENT!” – A. R. Warrior @AAllen69

 

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

Did you like this Wild Animal Story?

Native American Bears Folk Tale Animal storyIf so, you’ve got to read my popular short story “THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS.”  A Traditional Native American Animal Story & Folktale Retold.

Talking bears and human children adopted and raised by loving mama bears are common story themes in both Old and New World oral traditions.  Even J R R Tolkien wrote about Beowulf and Bear’s Son Tales in European folklore.

“Loved this beautiful Animal Tale.  Perfect!”  Free to Read ==> CLICK HERE  THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED BY BEARS

 

[1] Here’s a great story of Cecil B DeMille, the Tikah People and the making of the silent movie The Call of the North: Cecil B DeMille, Call of the North & Tikah People – aka Tiger Indians.  To learn the meanings of some of the words used in this Animal Story, see Maheeshtan – What Does Maheeshtan Mean? HBC Trade Muskets & More.

 

 

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Note: The animal story “WOLFBLOOD” and accompanying written material on this page copyright © by Brian Alan Burhoe

WOLFBLOOD Northern Animal Story in the Jack London Tradition – a Wild Wolf, a Half-Wild Husky & a Wily Old Trapper

Best wolf story, Never Cry Wolf, Pulp Fiction, Western writer, Wolf Dogs, wolf story, furry fiction, wolf furry, wolf xenofiction, xenofiction.

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Happy Birthday, Farley Mowat! Tribute to a Hero. Dogs & Wolves

Farley Mowat Tribute.

Farley Mowat

 

Farley-Mowat-wolf-country

Tribute to a Hero

“I suppose that at some early moment of his existence he concluded that there was no future in being a dog. And so, with the tenacity which marked his every act, he set himself to become something else.” THE DOG WHO WOULDN’T BE

 

When Farley Mowat first announced that he had written his last book, I was mad at him.

“How dare you, Farley?!”

Not as mad as I was when Kurt Vonnegut made the same declaration.  Because I believed Kurt.

I didn’t know if to believe Farley.

And with reason.  Farley has written several last books since.  He can’t stop writing, God bless him.  According to Greg Quill in an online Star article (Farley Mowat’s Legacy: Our Supreme Storyteller), he’s working on another Memoir.  In which Farley says he finds himself “on the shores of Sicily in 10,000 B.C., heading north as the glacier retreats.  It’s not entirely based on fact.”  Great!

Not that Farley Mowat hasn’t earned the right to retire.

Unlike his other writings, I’ve only read SEA OF SLAUGHTER completely through the once.  And then one chapter at a time, interspersed with other, lighter, works such as murder mysteries and post-apocalyptic science fiction.  One chapter at a time: SEA OF SLAUGHTER was that painful to read.  And yet Farley LIVED with that book.  For how long?  I’d always thought that sportswriter Red Smith’s “open a vein” line was a bit over the top.  But not after reading SEA.  It took balls to write that book.  It must have cost Farley something…

My Discovery of Farley Mowat

From the beginning, I hated school.  I wanted to live my boyhood Outside.  Playing softball with friends on a woodchip playing field or cow pasture.  Eearning quarters by walking horses at the local harness racing stables.  And prowling old abandoned logging roads deep in the living greenwoods.

But early on I learned that schoolhouses held ONE Wondrous Thing: Personal Heroes waiting for a young boy to find them.  They hid away in elementary readers and school libraries where even bored teachers couldn’t stretch them out to dry on racks like cod fish.

There was Sir Charles G D Roberts, the first writer I was aware of as being an actual person who was telling these magical yarns.  I wanted to read everything he had written, wander his New Brunswick forests and meet his wild animals.  The little library held some of his old hardcover collections, with dramatic wildlife illustrations by Charles Livingston Bull.

Then came Grey Owl.

And Jack London.  Ernest Thompson Seton.  George Marsh.  In the real world, local newspaper comic strips, Dell Comics and Whitman Books offered Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan of the Apes.

Dog Who Wouldn't Be by Farley MowatAnd then there was Farley.

The school library had a shiny new copy of THE DOG WHO WOULDN’T BE and I found a lifelong hero.

One Saturday, I walked into Saint John (a three mile walk) and, instead of spending my saved-up paper route money on a Western matinee and fresh popcorn at the Paramount Theatre, went to a grownup bookstore and got a copy of PEOPLE OF THE DEER.

A few years later, I wrote a book report on PEOPLE and the teacher gave me a D, writing across it, “This is not what it is about!” whatever that meant.  And later, I read NEVER CRY WOLF and I knew, yes, this is exactly what it was about.

NEVER CRY WOLF is just one of those essential reads: just you and Farley alone in the North Country with a pack of wild wolves for neighbours.  This book inspired our avid interest in wolf watching and the Save The Wolves movement.

And THE DOG WHO WOULDN’T BE affected me as it no doubt affected you and just about everyone who grew up with a dog.  Farley had Mutt.  You had your own.

My dog was called Pal.

Part Golden.  And he wasn’t even ours.  Pal belonged to an old couple next door and he decided that I’d be his best friend.  Pal followed me around, stayed with me as long as I kept within sight of his owners’ house.  That was his only rule.  Otherwise it was all about love and companionship.

Me and my dog Pal

Boy of Spirits.

After we moved out of sight of Pal’s house, I asked for our own dog.  No!  Dad’s decision.  He hated dogs.  I couldn’t understand why.  Dad had grown up on a farm in Nova Scotia.  They had dogs on farms, didn’t they?  Years later, Mum explained that it was because of things that happened during his stay in a quaint little Northern German town called Fallingbostel.  Stalag 11B.

Serving in the Algonquin Regiment, Dad had been picked off by a sniper, and came to being treated by a German soldier.  Our Canadian POWs got turnips and Red Cross packages to help battle their gnawing hunger.  The starving Russian POWs were abandoned by their own gov.  Some of the desperate, starving Russian soldiers went over the wire.  Equally desperate German guard dogs were waiting for them.

I never blamed Dad.  He was a hero of mine.  And, as a later hero of mine (another ex-POW) used to say, “So it goes.”[1]

For me, THE DOG WHO WOULDN’T BE is part memory, part what-could-have-been.[2]

And the wolves.  Not Jack London’s wolves, but more real.  Farley and his wolves grabbed hold of me forever.  And Farley himself grabbed our attention when he first appeared in public in his pugnacious, red-bearded renegade-in-a-kilt persona — Front Page Challenge and so on.

Further Farley Favourites?

CANADA NORTH.  One of dozens of great books put out by McClelland & Stewart for our Centennial.  Wise words — glorious photos.

WESTVIKING: The Ancient Norse In Greenland & North America.  As a kid, I’d been fascinated by the possibility that Vikings had once trod the very Maritime shoreline I was walking on.  Farley’s account of those wandering warriors Erik the Red, Olaf Tryggvason, Thorfinn Karlsefni and Bjarni Herjolfsson is powerful storytelling.  His THE FARFARERS: Before The Norse looked back even earlier to the Albans.  Spellbinding!

Farley Mowat Whale for the KillingIs it quite right to label A WHALE FOR THE KILLING as a “favourite”?

Not fun reading like OWLS IN THE FAMILY and THE BOAT WHO WOULD’T FLOAT and LOST IN THE BARRENS and CURSE OF THE VIKING GRAVE.  Just a book that catches all the love and wonder so many of us have for our fellow living creatures.

And because the “bad guys” were so familiar: Walt Kelly Pogo-style “they are us” people.  That scene, that image, of Farley and Claire in Onie’s dory by the bloated whale corpse — it still haunts, still haunts.

Farley to the Rescue!

At the time, RESCUE THE EARTH! (Conversations With The Green Crusaders) gave me hope for the future.  I read it first as a public library lend and have only recently got my own copy.  In 1990, Monte Hummel of the World Wildlife Fund spoke to Farley of accomplishing great things in “the next ten years,” concluding that it would be “political suicide if you are perceived as being anti-environment” if you were a politician.

And now, 23 years later (as of this writing), what’s been accomplished?  The selfish Suits have sold us out.  People of the First Nations speak about their “spiritual connections to the land” but their reverent words dissipate like frosty breath on the air.  “Jobs!” shriek the Suits.[3]

I enjoyed rereading his interviews with Michael O’Sullivan, Michael Bloomfield, Stephen Best and Elizabeth May.

I’d forgotten about Elizabeth’s “Gaia Women” which concludes RESCUE.  I shouldn’t have.

Farley Mowat sled dogsWhen things were said about Farley, I replied “So what!”  Farley gets the final word on the subject: “I’ve always said, half-jokingly, that I never let facts interfere with the truth.”  Subjective non-fiction.

My favourite Farley Mowat quote?  “There is no authentic report of wolves ever having killed a human being in the Canadian North, although there must have been times when the temptation was well-nigh irresistible.”

Well, come to think of it, maybe now it’s: “We have no God-given right to survive forever.  We have screwed up so badly in so many ways so obviously that only an utterly stupid species would consider that we have much of a future.”

This month, May 12, 2013, Farley Mowat turns 92.  Happy Birthday, Farley!  And thanks.  You are loved.

UPDATE: Wednesday, May 7, 2014.  While sitting in our family doctor’s crowded waiting room, this came over the radio: “Farley Mowat, one of Canada’s best-known authors, an environmentalist and activist, has died at age 92.”  Mary Lee and I shared an “Oh nooo.”  From a fisherman and his girlfriend to our right came, “He was a crazy fool.”  From our left came a woman’s, “My mother loves his books.  She’ll be devastated.”  Even on this sad, sad day, Farley’s still getting mixed reviews.

“Live Free, Mon Ami!” – Brian Alan Burhoe

 

lone-wolf-storyDo You Love Animal Stories?

IF SO, YOU’LL LUV “WOLFBLOOD” — MY MOST POPULAR ANIMAL STORY: “HAPPY ENDING!”

“I JUST READ WOLFBLOOD AGAIN FOR GOOD MEASURE. ONE FOR ANY WOLF LOVER. ENJOYED IT BUT WISH IT WAS A FULL LENGTH NOVEL.” – Gina Chronowicz @ginachron

“THIS WAS A GREAT SHORT STORY. MORE PLEASE!” Make It Beautiful @Create4Ever

WOLFBLOOD, a Northwestern yarn in the Jack London Tradition, Free to Read ==> CLICK HERE  WOLFBLOOD: A Wild Wolf, A Half-Wild Husky & A Wily Old Trapper

 

Formative Footnotes:

[1] I made up for my dog-less boyhood by bringing home kittens.  Always the lonely, leftover little kitten that nobody else wanted.  Like Hunter, a gentle and loving (with me) stub-tailed grey Manx cat, who liked to bring me mice from the horse barn next door.

[2] “…what-could-have-been.”  After reading Martin McKenna’s brilliant THE BOY WHO TALKED TO DOGS: A Memoir, I began to understand some things about my own life, and to realize what my boyhood would have been like with a full-time Pal in my life.

[3] UPDATE: March 27, 2023.  And, another 10 years since I wrote the above?  Nothing has been accomplished!  Farley was right: “…only an utterly stupid species would consider that we have much of a future.”

 

Farley Mowat Never Cry Wolf

Happy Birthday, Farley Mowat! Tribute to a Hero.  Dogs & Wolves.

 

Posted May 1st, 2013.  Last Updated March 27th, 2023.

Keywords: animal rights, books, Canadian north, dog wouldnt be, Farley Mowat 2023, Farley Mowat birthday, Farley Mowat wolf, Jack London, never cry wolf, save the wolves, Martin McKenna Dog, The Boy Who Talked to Dogs.

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