Anything relating to pets and animals: Interesting and bizarre animal news and pet news. Pet related information, animal related web sites, stories about pets and wild animals. Humor,photos, and videos of animals and pets. Useful and unusual pet products, merchandise and pet supplies.
Friday, February 29, 2008
Try another excuse
Fight to the death
This is the moment a sparrow hawk swoops on a starling before flying away with its prey gripped in its talons - captured by an amateur photographer in his back garden.
(more photos)
Source: Daily Mail
Billy the boxer adopts a kid
Leap (frog) Day
What Are You Doing for Leap Day?
Starting February 29th more than 70 members of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) will be celebrating "the Year of the Frog!" and holding fun, family-friendly events and programs to educate people about amphibian conservation.
Why Year of the Frog? One-third of all amphibians on the planet are threatened with extinction. Amphibian declines are now attributed to a new cause - chytridiomycosis - a disease that wipes out frogs, toads, and salamanders. Zoos and aquariums, with strong public support, will play a major role in preventing the amphibian extinction crisis - one of the most sweeping wildlife conservation challenges of our time.
I think in honor of the Year of the Frog, today, February 29th, should be known as Leapfrog Day!
"Just a little froggie" uploaded by corsi photo
Frog Tape Dispenser
You can be the envy of everyone in the office with this adorable frog tape dispenser. With his bright red tongue, he'll dispense the perfect amount of tape for any project.
$15.95 from Patina
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Frog solar light
Frog solar light glows when the sun goes down. Enhance your yard or patio (and make your neighbors green with envy!) with this alluring amphibian. He turns on automatically in the dark and turns off in the morning. No wiring needed.
$9.98 at Taylor Gifts
"He's... Crushing Me" uploaded by michellecollinz
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Look, even Google is participating:
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Is that a frog I hear?
Advertisement calls are the loud calls that male frogs make to attract females. These are the familiar calls most people are familiar with. Some frog species have aggressive calls made by males towards other males, some have distress calls when bitten by a predator, and some have release calls.
Sample some frog sounds on this page.
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Have fun, enjoy the extra day!
Thursday, February 28, 2008
I disagree
Robert at Environmental Graffiti is way off base! He has selected five totally cute, harmless and totally lovable baby animals and has accused them of being ugly.
Ugly?
Shar-Pei Puppies?
Look at those floppy little folded ears. Look at that smooshed little nose, those stubby little paws, those squinty, sad little eyes. Look at those soft, puffy wrinkles. Who in their right mind would call this ugly? Even Robert wouldn't sink this low.
Ugly?
A baby sloth?
So what's not to love with this little guy? Smooth, blond hair - sweet little eyes, fuzzy little curled feet. A cute button nose. Totally adorable!
Ugly?
Baby Pandas?
This I don't even have to defend, do I? Everybody in the universe knows that pandas are the most irresistibly adorable creatures ever created. What a travesty to even think "panda" and "ugly" on the same day.
Ugly?
Naked Mole Rats?
Oh, naked mole rats, these poor little things. Always maligned, always made fun of, always pointed to as a perfect example of ugliness. Don't they look scrumptious? A little tomato sauce, and lunch is served.
Ugly?
Robin chicks?
Robert says baby robins are gross and disgusting. That's because Robert has never observed a robin's nest and taken a photo each day and waited eagerly for those beautiful little blue eggs to hatch. I have.
Ugly?
Baby hedgehogs?
I love the translucent teensy nails. The pink wrinkly skin looks so soft and silky but then juxtapose those dangerous looking quills. Here's the thing: baby hedgehogs are dangerously cute!
Photo 1: Lauren's Shar-pei
Photo 2: Carlen Altman
Photo 3: the Cute Project
Photo 4: verabee
Photo 5: The robin's nest
Photo 6: Dark Roasted Blend
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Seeing is believing in case of orange raccoon
Crowds flock to monkey 'wedding'
Python Eats Australian Family Dog
A 16-foot python stalked a family dog for days before swallowing the pet whole in front of horrified children in the Australian tropics, animal experts said Wednesday.
The boy and girl, ages 5 and 7, watched as the scrub python devoured their silky terrier-Chihuahua crossbreed Monday at their home near Kuranda in Queensland state.
Stuart Douglas, owner of the Australian Venom Zoo in Kuranda, said scrub pythons typically eat wild animals such as wallabies, a smaller relative of the kangaroo, but sometimes turn to pets in urban areas.
Source: AP
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Bear Hunt in Orland Park, IL
Video: Flocke takes a walk
She's ten weeks old and weights 16 pounds. Watch the video of cute little Flocke.
U.N. Conference Promotes Insect-Eating
German Police Dogs Issued With Boots
Monday, February 25, 2008
Check local laws on ferret ownership
According to estimates from the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association, about 500,000 people own some 2 million ferrets. Ferret folks claim the real numbers are much higher.
But ferrets, those slinky, mink-y cousins of weasels, badgers, skunks and polecats, are outlawed in New York , Salt Lake City and numerous other municipalities, and the states of California and Hawaii and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
"It's because they believe they're wild animals and they believe they'll decimate the wildlife. These are neutered and spayed animals," said an exasperated Norine Barnes, president of the Greater Chicago Ferret Association, which has about 275 members and runs a shelter for ferrets, which are legal in Illinois.
The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals agrees. It opposed the 1999 ban on ferrets in New York.
Source: Chicago Tribune
Earthworms Found To Contain Chemicals
Earthworms studied in agricultural fields have been found to contain organic chemicals from household products and manure, indicating that such substances are entering the food chain.
Manure and biosolids, the solid byproduct of wastewater treatment, were applied to the fields as fertilizer. Earthworms continuously ingest soils for nourishment and can accumulate the chemicals present in the soil.
The chemicals investigated are considered indicators of human and animal waste sources and include a range of active ingredients in common household products such as detergents, antibacterial soaps, fragrances, and pharmaceuticals.
Source: Science Daily
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Does your dog need to diet?
The Naked Ape
Dine With Death - the Deadliest Delicacies
Eagle Eyes
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Tiger wanders out of cage at Honolulu Zoo
Video: Guinness Penguins
A new Guinness Draught commercial tells a tale of friendship through two penguins' tumultuous journey. The story follows the lives of two penguin friends as they battle for survival against their harsh environment including avalanches and a killer whale attack.
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Brooklyn welcomes rare red panda Mao Mi
Miami Metrozoo's pet amnesty day
Friday, February 22, 2008
How a cockroach put 30 people out of work
Dog Bone Paper clips
Give a Dog a Bone
Dog Bone Earrings
Bones Salt & Pepper Shakers
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Traveling Cats
Is this the feline version of Spring Break? If so, they're starting a little early, but they're traveling, for sure ...
Meatloaf, who took a 3-week cross-country ride locked in a storage container, is headed home to Florida. The 2-year-old gray cat apparently crawled into the large locker in Pompano Beach, Fla.
The container spent time in a Florida warehouse and on a semitrailer before being delivered to a company's Phoenix facility.
A worker heard a cat meowing inside the container late Tuesday and found him hungry and thirsty but unharmed.
Miko ran away from his burning home in Albuquerque, N.M., in December, and turned up in February, some 240 miles away in Pueblo, Colo.
It is believed that Miko hid in a truck, which then drove up Interstate 25 from Albuquerque to Pueblo. Miko's collar was missing when she was picked up by animal shelter staff, but her microchip identification put officials in touch with her owners.
Sam, an eight-year-old cat, got scared when his owner was taking him to the vet. He squeezed out of his cage and jumped out the car window.
Because of his microchip, Sam and his owner were reunited - three years later.
Clinton is another traveling cat reunited with his owners because of a microchip. Rescued by an animal shelter in Rhode Island, housed temporarily in a foster home and pending adoption, the cat was scanned and his microchip was identified.
It turned out that Clinton was actually Gizmo, who had been missing from his Pennsylvania home since last spring. Hey, nice vacation, Gizmo!
Learn to speak dog
Political Doggy Treats
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Art by Jeff de Boer
Jeff de Boer is a Calgary-based multi-media artist with an international reputation for producing some of the world's most original and well-crafted works of art. With an emphasis on metal, he is best known for such bodies of work as suits of armor for cats and mice, armor ties and sword-handled briefcases, rocket lamps and pop culture ray guns, and exquisite high art, abstract works called exoforms.
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The real ouroboros
The Ouroboros is an ancient symbol depicting a serpent or dragon swallowing its own tail and forming a circle. It is one of the oldest mystical symbols in the world. The serpent or dragon appears in Aztec, Middle East, and Native American mythologies, among others. (from Wikipedia)
xenmate at a near life experience has discovered the REAL ouroboros:
This is an Armadillo Lizard, which, if frightened, will grab its tail in its mouth and roll into a ball.
Photo: Cindy Shuttleworth
Look how cute and little they are:
Photo: Morelia Hunter
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Time for a bigger cat door
Sri Lankan Frogmouth
Nathan Yaussy at Endangered Ugly Things wrote about an intriguing bird:
Sri Lankan Frogmouth
ARKive says, "Distinctive in both its appearance and its loud laughing song, the Sri Lankan frogmouth is a tropical bird related to the nightjars. So called because of its large, gaping mouth, the Sri Lankan frogmouth's head is as wide as its body, and has a broad, flattened, hooked bill. The female is rusty red with sparse white freckling, whereas the male is grey and more heavily spotted with white. The tail feathers are long and narrow."
I think they're kind of cute.
Photo: Vijay Cavale