NeuroTalk Support Groups

NeuroTalk Support Groups (https://www.neurotalk.org/)
-   Pets & Wildlife (https://www.neurotalk.org/pets-and-wildlife/)
-   -   Wombats anyone? (https://www.neurotalk.org/pets-and-wildlife/204411-wombats.html)

Lara 05-15-2014 03:21 PM

Wow, that's a great video. That is not the first time that groundhog has climbed a tree!

I just learned something new this morning.

All my life I wondered what a woodchuck looked like. :confused:

I didn't know that a groundhog was a woodchuck!

mrsD 05-15-2014 03:25 PM

Bunny jumping competition! very cute!
 
I am looking on YouTube today a bit and found this as a side subject:


.


Very cute!

Lara 05-15-2014 03:32 PM

Too funny!


A friend of mine in the USA had a beautiful bunny rabbit. He was a lot of fun but prone to eating through computer cables. ;)

$44,000 max fine if you keep a rabbit in my State.

mrsD 05-16-2014 04:29 AM

Wow... that is a big fine.... I know Australia had an epidemic of rabbits...so it is understandable.

I love your wombat babies in the new avatar... very cute!
I can't tell if they are wombats or koalas or whatever...but they ARE cute.

Groundhog=woodchuck=marmot All these names are used interchangeably here depending on what part of the country you are from. I've never actually seen our Moe climb a tree.
But our first experience with groundhogs was one summer when our nextdoor neighbor had a pile of wood chips delivered in the street. The very next day there were 3 baby groundhogs eating from it in the morning!

Lara 05-16-2014 03:00 PM

Oh yes...

That is Sky, Abinger, Bell, Elsa and Hercules. lol

They're flying foxes (or fruit bats).
Lots of people here dislike them, but I grew up in the North and they were just part of my life.
These days they carry a potentially deadly Lyssavirus so should not be handled by untrained people.

They're also implicated in the spread of another virus called Hendra.
Hendra is a weird one. It's not transmitted from the flying fox directly to humans
but appears to infect horses that have been in contact with droppings
or saliva and then the infected horses can potentially infect their human carers.

Unfortunately the extreme change in climate here has had some tragic results in recent times to all wildlife.


.

Killer climate: tens of thousands of flying foxes dead in a day
February 25, 2014

Anyway, sorry about the long tangent, but when I was looking at the Victoria Wildlife site yesterday regarding the wombat orphans,
I recalled I'd saved that really cute photo from last year.

A friend of mine years ago was a carer and she looked after a baby flying fox called Edward Scissorhands
until he was old enough to be sent back to the roost.

Kitt 05-16-2014 06:39 PM

Groundhog - woodchuck animal are the same. Here is a good site telling what else they are called.


.

Lara 05-30-2014 02:55 PM

On the subject of wombats...

mrsD, I came across some interesting artwork.
I was actually looking for images of wombats done by Sir Joseph Banks. He was the botanist and naturalist who accompanied Captain James Cook on his voyage that included Australia back in 1770.

Instead I came across something from Tate Britain and then from The British Museum.

It appears that Rosetti kept one as a pet. :rolleyes:
He apparently described his wombat as 'a Joy, a Triumph, a Delight, a Madness'.


.

William Bell Scott


.

Dante Gabriel Rossetti,
Rossetti lamenting the death of his wombat,
a pen drawing
England, 1869


.

"Mrs. Morris and the Wombat",
a cartoon by Rossetti

I still haven't found the Joseph Banks impression.

mrsD 05-30-2014 03:06 PM

LOL those are great additions to this thread. My second wombat book finally arrived.

Say, is it true that they really stink, once they mature into adulthood? I read that in the Jackie French blog. That odor could certain quench any interest I would have previously had for a juvenile!

I have never detected an unpleasant odor from our resident groundhog, Moe. But then, I don't really get a chance to get close to him most of the time! ;)

Lara 05-30-2014 03:36 PM

lol That I do not know.

Closest I've ever been to an adult wombat is around 2 metres and that was with a fence inbetween at Australia Zoo.

I just imagine they'd have a certain smell when they're mating.

They don't see very well at all so I guess they must make up for that by smelling badly so the other wombats know where they are? :cool:

They eat grass and plants so their droppings would also have a certain smell.

mrsD 05-30-2014 03:46 PM

Did you know, Lara, that Wombat droppings are SQUARE?

LOL yep....


.


10 things to do with Wombat pooh...

.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:27 PM.

Powered by vBulletin • Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.