Category Archives: I Heart Animals
366 of Me: Day 141
We’ve got baby bunnies! Here’s a baby and momma pausing to chat with a cardinal.
366 of Me: Day 121
This is a photo I took while visiting a cemetery while in Dyersburg this past weekend. This pasture was adjacent to the cemetery and since I had my camera with me, I couldn’t resist a few snapshots. Sadly, the horses had loose chains around their necks. Even sadder, besides the barbed wire fence between us, a large ditch separated me from them and it was filled with trash. It was still peaceful to have a moment with them and take their picture.
Life Everlasting and the NecroPhorus Beetle
Yesterday I received my advanced copy of Bernd Heinrich’s new book, Life Everlasting, which is not due out until June.
Here’s the synopsis from the book itself:
When a good friend with a severe illness wrote, asking if he might have his “green burial” at Bernd Heinrich’s hunting camp in Maine, it inspired the acclaimed biologist/author to investigate a subject that had long fascinated him. How exactly does the animal world deal with the flip side of the life cycle? And what are the lessons, ecological to spiritual, raised by a close look at how the animal world renews itself? Heinrich focuses his wholly original gaze on the fascinating doings of creatures most of us would otherwise turn away from—field mouse burials conducted by carrion beetles; the communication strategies ravens, “the premier northern undertakers,” use to do their work; and the “inadvertent teamwork” among wolves and large cats, foxes and weasels, bald eagles and nuthatches in cold-weather dispersal of killed prey. Heinrich reveals, too, how and where humans still play our ancient and important role as scavengers, thereby turning—not dust to dust—but life to life.
I immediately read the first chapter last night which covers the peculiar behavior of the necrophorus, or burying, beetle (the one with the red markings on the book’s cover). The male beetle hunts for a dead mouse and once he finds one, he emits a scent to attract a female. A female arrives and the two carry the dead mouse to an appropriate location where they bury it.
They strip the mouse of its fur and cover it with an antibiotic fluid to preserve its meat. They then mate and raise their young inside the mouse’s body just as if it were a nest, feeding the young beetles pieces of the mouse until its gone. The young then bury into the soil and come out as adults the following year. The author, Bernd Heinrich, observed the beetle activity and later dug up one of the mice only to find a clean skull and a ball of fur, with no decay or maggots. He also discovered mites that live on the beetles which serve to clear the dead rodent of any maggots or eggs if they are present.
Of course, I found all of this to be completely fascinating!
I’ve always been interested in death. I was not the “poke a dead possum with a stick” sort of kid, but I would often bring my bike to a screeching halt on a country dirt road to ogle over the occasional roadkill raccoon. When my pet hamster, rabbit, pigeon, chicken, dog, cat, or whatever other pet died, I usually put it in a box and buried it under a dogwood tree in our yard after saying a little prayer to bless its soul into Heaven.
There was quite a little pet cemetery at one time with crosses made from sticks or moss-laden bricks marking each grave. It’s funny how I can remember almost every animal I planted there, even some of their names. I still remember my black kitten PJ and the vibrant blue color of his eyes, hanging from their sockets like marbles, when I picked him up from a roadside ditch one morning after he’d gone missing.
For a few years while I was in high school, my father worked in a funeral home. He dug graves, moved flower arrangements from the chapel to graveside, buried people, mowed the cemetery lawn, and did other odd jobs as an undertaker’s handyman. He never brought his work home with him, but he did have some marvelous “spooky” stories to tell about things he witnessed – a dead man letting out a moan while on the mortuary table, another one urinating, a massive head wound completely concealed by the mortician’s artistic use of cosmetics.
Later, after I left home for college in Memphis, I spent my financial aid refund money on a superb Canon 35mm camera one year. My roommate and I liked to spend hours in Elmwood Cemetery photographing the grand monuments and statuesque memorials. I still have numerous black and white photos from those shoots.
We later took a trip together to Savannah, Georgia to do the “book tour” of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil which consisted of a trip to the infamous Bonaventure Cemetery which appears on the cover of the book. Cemeteries still intrigue and entertain me to this day, despite the fact that I myself wish to be cremated and sprinkled when I’m gone, rather than being planted in the ground and memorialized with a grand monument of my own.
Heinrich mentions in the introduction of the book how “undertaking” does not get rid of a body but rather preserves it for a purpose. That human purpose is usually for the sake of a memorial. His book goes on to explore other animals and species and their “way of death.”
Reviews of it have been mixed, and the religious aspect of death has already been mentioned in one review I read. So far, in my opinion, it’s a marvelous book, and at only 190 pages it’s sure to be a quick read. I appreciate it for its peculiar stories about animal behavior and in regards to death from a biological point of view, and I know enough to read it without judging it on a religious basis.
More about it later once I finish it.
What? Baseball season is over??
Top 10 Things Rally Squirrel Can Do When The World Series Is Over
Now that the World Series is almost over and the Rally Squirrel will be out of work, I thought a Top 10 list was appropriate. So, in David Letterman style, here’s the Top 10 Things Rally Squirrel Can Do When The World Series is Over.
10. Rally minority workers to finish that new bridge downtown!
9. Open a roasted nuts kiosk at the zoo or a faux fur store at the Galleria.
8. Hide in a Xmas tree at Ted Drewes and act out that infamous Griswold scene with Mayor Francis Slay.
7. Start a Door-to-Door Nut Drive to feed Hopeville for the winter months.
6. Build a Peanut Butter Factory in that empty lot by the stadium that the Cardinals aren’t using.
5. Sell hot nuts to stalled drivers during 5pm I-270 rush hour traffic.
4. Open a “beer and nuts” bar on Delmar with the Budweiser Clydesdales.
3. Donate the use of his tail as a weekend KSDK weatherman stand-in for Anthony Slaughter’s mustache.
2. “Flying Squirrel” Skydiving business at the top of the Arch.
1. St. Louis Bread Company Squirrel Meat Sandwich!
For The Birds
This past Saturday I stepped out back and got a pleasant surprise. There were two pairs of American Gold Finches sitting on the electrical wire across the back yard. J had spotted a pair of these several weeks ago in the neighbors’ yard and was able to snap a decent photo of them. I immediately grabbed one of my bird books to identify the species. The bright yellow is the male and the greenish colored one is the female.
I carefully stepped back inside and called to J to come to the window. When he saw them, he raced for the camera and I’m glad he did. The lil guys dipped down off the wire and began exploring one of our flower beds which made for some awesome snapshots. And to our surprise, we learned they like to eat the tickseed. One pair nibbled in the blooms for several minutes, allowing me to photograph them until I stepped a bit too close and they flitted away.
Its moments like these that bring new joy to all the hard work we’ve spent on the yard. I’ve always been a huge animal lover, especially birds, so I’m glad that my efforts are being enjoyed by our little friends.
For The Birds
I’ve been so busy posting about all the flowers lately that I almost forgot about the birds. We’ve seen our share of robins and cardinals this year, more robins than I have ever seen before. The occasional jay also stops by. And of course, lots of sparrows.
This year there is a new lil guy in town with a very distinctive looking cap. It’s a white cap with large black lines through it. This is the first year we’ve ever seen him.
After some research on the internet, I’ve identified him as being a White-crowned Sparrow. What’s interesting to note is that he doesn’t usually visit the state of Missouri except for in the winter time. Our current temp right now as I right this at 7am on May 16th is 43 degrees. Where is spring? Where is summer? Obviously, this bird is confused too or he knows something that we don’t.
These photos were taken yesterday. I stood at the kitchen window, hidden behind my Folgers herb garden and was able to snap a few good photos of the sprightly birds hopping around on the deck and enjoying the leftovers of seeds J had put out that morning for other birds.
I was proud that at least one photo of the two of them came out focused. In most of my photos at least one of them was blurred because they bounce around so quickly.
Spring Babies!
It’s a bird, it’s a plane….
Nope! It’s definitely a bird, and a big one at that. We’ve seen this guy in the neighborhood before. I swear I snapped a photo of him a few years ago when he got a bit too close in the backyard. And apparently he’s back. We’ve spotted him in our neighbors’ tree for 3 days straight.
Not good! We have small dogs, and so does our neighbor. So now we have to take even more precaution when letting the dogs out. Also, our backyard and the neighboring yards have been a haven for small brown rabbits, song birds, and squirrels. With this big guy hanging around, all the little guys are gonna be hiding and moving out.
So, besides the obvious choice of a pellet gun, how do we get this big guy to go away?












