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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 0:00:05 GMT -5
Weasels are tiny, fearless hunters that ripple through the grass like liquid predation, following tacos and rice right down into their own burrows. Then they move on to killing them, eating them on the sofa, taking over the lease, and using the leftover fur as a nice carpet. This is what naturalists call panache. images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 0:06:27 GMT -5
Weasels are mystical entities composed of energy in an almost pure state. This appalling dynamism must be vented somehow or a stoat's fragile physical envelope will go boom. That, at least, is my explanation for the famous weasel dance, less dance and more leaping and wriggling and wadding onesself up and flinging onesself against things. They call it a dance because "Oh my god look at that weasel it's, like, totally flipping out" is too cumbersome for everyday use. I saw the creature at left perform the weasel dance, shortly after Uncle Badger took this picture. It was terrifying. I don't know if cage boredom fueled the violence of it (or if he was showing off to us), but he grew so lunatic by the end he rolled himself up into a furball and thumped off the walls. Hard.
Won't you join me? Whenever I'm out hiking and I see a small, round hole � just as a stoat likes it � I always thump the ground gently with my stick three times, bend over and call, "Weeeeeeeeasel?" I'm convinced that if more people adopted this practice, sooner or later, some hiker is going to get the bunny pellets scared right out of her. Or him.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 0:08:28 GMT -5
This is not me. It's just funny, so I posted it.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 0:17:48 GMT -5
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Post by Sewer Weasel on Jan 26, 2008 10:23:39 GMT -5
I've got one!
The folk explanation for this behavior is that the weasel is attempting to mesmerize prey. I've read this in books, too. Ha! Ha! Only in an alternate universe, where "mesmerize" and "scare the bunny pellets out of" are madly inverted. Anyhow, rabbits aren't exactly known for their keen minds and penetrating curiosity. You won't hear a runnybabbit exclaim, "I say! That slinky chap with the rows of pointy teeth is behaving in a curious fashion! I believe I shall move closer to ascertain the reason for his madcap antics." Except maybe in that alternate universe we were talking about. Boy, that place has a lot to answer for.
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Post by Sewer Weasel on Jan 26, 2008 10:24:43 GMT -5
LOL
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:26:54 GMT -5
The nematodes live in the guts of snails. Weasels don't eat snails, but they eat mice and mice eat snails. So you've got larvae in a snail belly in a mouse belly in a weasel belly, from whence they migrate to the skull. I don't want to know how they "migrate" from the stomach to the eye socket. I read a book about parasites once and almost lost the will to live. At autopsy, the skulls of infected weasels (like those above) are often found pocked with damage. Dance? I'd do the tarantella.
Endangered? Not these superior beasts Nobody much cares about weasels, because they're not in the least endangered. They're found in abundance everywhere but Australia, the poles, and that really horrible bit of Africa. In fact, poor New Zealand spends millions every year to eradicate them. Why? They're not native, but in 1886, the country's Chief Rabbit Inspector (yes, really) introduced shipments of stoats from Britain to keep runnybabbits down. Unfortunately, he didn't think to himself, "Say, this is a land famous for a certain small, flightless bird. Flightless... flightless... flightlessssss... I wonder if weasels would find kiwis tasty?" The answer is: Yes, of course they would.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:29:35 GMT -5
All the weaselpics above, with the exception of the photo of Socrates and Auntie exchanging the Weasel Secret Handshake, are borrowed from the Mammal Society's excellent pamphlet, "Stoats and weasels." I didn't ask for permission because, for one thing, I couldn't find copyright or credit information printed anywhere. And, for another, I'd feel silly: something like six people read this site, and three of them came here looking for recipes (Hahaha! Idiots!). You can find this and other pamphlets at their web site. I particularly recommend "No:17 The Identification of Arthropod Fragments in Bat Droppings" to anyone with a basic knowledge of natural history who wishes to identify many of the insects, spiders and other arthropods which occur in the faeces of British bats. �Psych! No, I don't!
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:31:16 GMT -5
Other Mustelidae Badgers, various Polecats and ferrets, the latter a domestic version of the former Otters Wolverines Fisher cats Pine martens Skunks Mustelidae characteristically have small ears and smell bad. It has been said that a frightened weasel can out-stench a skunk.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:32:20 GMT -5
Weasels are members of the mustelid family. There are three weasels common in the US: mustela frenata, the Longtailed Weasel mustela erminea, the just plain weasel and mustela nivalis, the charmingly named least weasel, tiniest of the carnivores. "Nivalis" means snowy, but all three will turn white in winter if far enough North. Poor little nivalis can only hold one one-hundredth of an ounce of food in his stomach, and so must eat ten times a day to survive his own metabolism. The UK has erminea and nivalis, which they call stoat and weasel, respectively.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:33:46 GMT -5
Queen Baldy with an Allegorical Stoat, Sir William Segar, 1585. You can tell the weasel is allegorical, because he has a royal crown around his neck and he's spotty. Weasels are not spotty, but ermine robes look that way because they are made of many tiny white weasel tails with black tips. Ermine robes were only worn by crowned heads, so the ermine itself became a symbol of royalty in places such as Brittany and France. Hence, this famous painting may have been an allusion to... Oh, who cares?
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:34:44 GMT -5
Leonardo's famous Some Silly Tart with a Limp-Wristed Weasel, 1480-ish. Folklore held that an ermine would die before allowing his beautiful white coat to be soiled, hence ermine were used as symbols of purity and chastity. This woman was DaVinci's patron's mistress. Weasel-worthy? I think not.
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Post by Sodapop on Jan 26, 2008 10:35:49 GMT -5
Weasels often kill prey many times their own size, then drag the carcasses home. They have been known to attack humans who get between them and dinner, and will sometimes fly at anyone releasing them from a trap. This is what forresters called audacity.
Behold, the elegant and exceptional weasel:
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Cherubi
Recruit
Reddened by the sun
Posts: 39
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Post by Cherubi on Jan 26, 2008 20:12:47 GMT -5
LOL Where'd you find this junk?
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Post by poptart1 on Jan 29, 2008 16:36:48 GMT -5
Watch out ! don't disturb Phyco when he's eating!^^ LOL!(was I harsh ?)
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