Animals Rule!

Animals Rule!

NBA Quiz: Only two players have ever won the Rookie of the

Year and MVP Awards in the same season. Name them. [Hint:

Both are pre-1980.]

Wild Animals…Saving Lives

Folks, we like to have some fun here at Bar Chat but the deeper

meaning of this particular part of StocksandNews is to save lives.

Sadly, the message is not getting through. Case in point, taking

pictures of elephants.

Just last September 6, I told the story of the American tourist

killed in Namibia by some very smart desert elephants. You”ll

recall that this person and a friend decided to leave their safari

vehicle and walk between two groups of pachyderms from the

same herd. I wrote:

“Now everyone knows.don”t they teach this in first grade these

days?…never, ever, do this. Experts say that moving between

two groups can appear threatening.”

Well, last weekend, New York resident Natalie Waldinger, in

Tanzania for a two-year Peace Corps stint, went off on a private

safari with a buddy. Once again, the two left their truck to take

pictures of some elephants. The elephants suddenly charged and

Natalie was trampled to death. Her friend made it back to the

truck and was O.K.

So that means we have had recent attacks in Tanzania and

Namibia. As I look at the map, I would be careful going on

safari in Botswana or Zambia, because I suspect that the two

elephant herds that were involved in these cases may try to meet

somewhere in between for the purposes of comparing notes.

[Source: New York Post]

Cougar Attack!!

Just last Tuesday, January 2, 30-year-old cross-country skier

Frances Frost (no relation to Jack) was soaking up the fresh air

near the resort town of Banff (in Alberta) as she cruised the

trails. It was about 1:30 in the afternoon. Little did Frances

know that she was being stalked.

According to evidence gathered afterwards by tracking experts, a

130-pound cougar was hiding behind a tree, waiting for Frances

to ski past before attacking. The animal pounced on Ms. Frost

(no relation to Robert) from behind and bit her on the neck.

Frost (no relation to Congressman Martin Frost of Texas) was

just 100 metres from safety.

The chief warden of Banff National Park commented, “I suspect

she might not have even known what hit her.”

This was the first recorded cougar attack on a human in Banff.

Couple this with the elephant attacks in Africa and it doesn”t take

a Jim Fowler to know that there is something serious going on.

It”s payback time…which means the zookeepers should be

particularly careful about those new pandas in Washington. I

fear the worst.

Anyway…back to Ms. Frost (no relation to Scott of the New

York Jets), another female skier came upon Frances”s body as

the cougar hovered over it. She skied away, sounding the alert.

By the time wardens arrived, the cougar was still doing its thing.

They shot it dead.

The resort community of Banff is in shock. Earlier that same

morning a woman and her dog were stalked by another cougar

near the Banff Springs Hotel (they were unharmed). And a dog

had been attacked in another separate incident the same day (the

dog survived).

It turns out the cougars are in competition with a “healthy, 11-

member wolf pack for deer and elk,” according to the National

Post”s Robert Remington. The deer and elk are creating a real

problem in downtown Banff as they try and hide from the

carnivores by fleeing into the taverns and drug stores.

Now Remington has some good advice if you come across a

cougar while strolling down to the post office or taking in the

milk. [And I do realize that in parts of California this can be the

case. A girl was killed by a cougar a few years ago while

jogging.]

“Experts say a person encountering a cougar should stare it in the

eyes and try to establish dominance by making themselves

appear larger through opening their jacket. They also advise

people to fight back, rather than playing dead as they should in a

bear encounter.”

“With a cougar, you fight like hell and hope you are never in that

situation because they are very smart animals,” one park official

said.

This, of course, is a cheap shot at bears. Yes, they”re stupid

(Yogi Bear was no brain surgeon, for example…neither is Yogi

Berra, for that matter, though he”s street smart) but it all has to

do with their surrounding environment and proper schooling.

My friend Harry K., our resident Canadian expert on all things

wild, recently wrote his friends the following after the cougar

attack had been reported.

“I have seen a few large cats in the wild during my years as an

explorationist. Once I saw a mountain lion, or cougar, which

fortunately was lying in wait on a tree branch for unsuspecting

hikers while I passed by unnoticed in a canoe some yards away.

And several times I have encountered Lynx in the woods. But

despite these relatively benign encounters, there”s not much to

add beyond the advice in today”s paper, namely make yourself as

big-looking as possible, don”t run away or they will chase you,

and don”t play dead or they will eat you.

“Personally, for dealing with mountain lions, I have always

found that a large-bore automatic weapon is the best defense. A

rifle is heavy and bulky, so you may want to go the Clint

Eastwood route, and get yourself a Ruger .44 Magnum. While

not an automatic, it does have remarkable stopping power, and

can blow a hole right through a telephone pole, or a pesky

cougar.”

Harry also notes that those of you who live in New England

should be aware of the new plans to reintroduce wolves into

heavily populated areas, such as near Faneuil Hall in Boston.

All of this means it”s a good time to bring back a Bar Chat

classic, seeing as it”s winter and all, that being the story of the

wolverine…

…Da Wolverine

The wolverine has the scientific name of gulo gulo, or “glutton,”

for its insatiable appetite. Weighing in at 18-42 pounds, trappers

hate wolverines for their cunning in stealing bait from traps –

even traps meant for them – without getting caught. In his

classic book, “The Complete Tracker,” author Len McDougall

adds that wolverines also have the habit of eating already-trapped

animals, “marking anything they couldn”t eat with foul-smelling

urine that not only destroyed the pelt but also made it necessary

to boil every tainted trap before it could be used again.”

McDougall related a personal tale from his childhood.

“When I was a boy and camped alone in the deep woods of

northern Michigan, I can recall spending an anxious night after

hearing on my transistor radio that local conservation officers

had reported a pair of mating wolverines headed in my general

direction.”

Now, first off, I don”t think I want to know McDougall that well.

Anyone who goes camping by themselves as a little boy is rather

weird. Second, I”m having trouble picturing two mating

wolverines making such headway, let alone having time to stop

for a beer with some conservation officers. Anyway, I guess

McDougall survived.

A single adult wolverine requires up to 1,000-square miles of

undisturbed wilderness in which to live. It has a ferocious

willingness to fight that”s unmatched among North American

animals. For instance, it has been known to take kills away from

brown bears (though now we”ve learned how stupid bears are).

And a 40-pound wolverine can kill a moose (30 times larger).

[Evidently, this would only take place in deep snow where the

moose may find the going slow while the wolverine is able to

kind of glide on top of the snow because of the distribution of its

weight.]

In fact, Harry K. once told me that because of this gliding factor,

wolverines can actually outrun rabbits in the snow. And last year

Harry added:

“Wolverines are interesting because they are one of only a few

species (humans being the other one that springs to

mind.particularly NFL ballplayers, added the editor) that kills

things for sport. A wolverine will kill a deer, spray it (so no

other animal can eat it) and then go kill another one. They will

also break into and trash a cottage or cabin. Bears will do this

too, but bears will wreck your place because they”re big and

clumsy and looking for food, while wolverines will wreck your

place merely to amuse themselves – they won”t eat anything, just

trash it.”

Harry concluded, “Cool critters, wolverines…Still, pound for

pound, there is probably nothing as vicious and foul tempered as

their little cousin, the mink. Thank God they aren”t the size of

wolverines, or they”d probably be hunting us for sport!”

And one last thought from your editor.

The wolverine is also a true dirtball (after all, it is a weasel). It

mates for a few days (perhaps at Club Wolverine), then goes off

to find a new mate, taking no part in the rearing process.

Wolverine young stay with their mother for two years,

incidentally, which Len McDougall points out displays just how

intelligent these creatures are.

Mini Cooper Update

I profiled John Cooper in this space on 1/3/01. Cooper, who

recently died at the age of 77, was the engineer behind the

popular Mini Cooper car of the 1960s.

Well I just wanted to pass on some more information concerning

the rollout of the “new” Mini Cooper, which is being built by

BMW for unveiling in the U.S., March of 2002.

BMW hopes to emulate Volkswagen with their updated Beetle,

as well as the Chrysler PT Cruiser and the just unveiled new

Ford Thunderbird.

The Mini, designed to compete directly against the Beetle, will

be a two-door, 4-passenger auto with a sticker price of around

$18,000.

In 1959, the first Mini sold in Great Britain for $786, without a

radio or heater. They were only 10 feet long, 4 feet tall and 4

feet wide. The new Mini is thankfully 18 inches longer and 14

wider. This will be a guaranteed smash success.

The Pope and Bill Clinton

According to the Washington Times, in an interview published in

the Italian weekly, Oggi, the surgeon who operated on the pope

in 1994 said Pope John Paul II had told him:

“The only leader I did not manage to have a proper conversation

with was Bill Clinton. I was speaking, and he was looking at one

of the walls, admiring the frescoes and the paintings. He was not

listening to me.”

I hate to think of what was really on Clinton”s mind at that

moment. The frescoes depict angels of indeterminate sex,

wearing little more than angelic expressions.

Top 3 songs for the week of 1/12/63: #1 “Go Away Little Girl”

(Steve Lawrence.hey, where”s Edie? Actually, Steve Lawrence

is a pretty fair entertainer) #2 “Telstar” (The Tornadoes) #3

“Limbo Rock” (Chubby Checker)

NBA Quiz Answer: Wilt Chamberlain (1959-60) and Wes

Unseld (1968-69). Chamberlain averaged an astounding

37.6 ppg plus 27 rebounds! Unseld is an interesting story in that

his scoring average was only 14 per game. But he averaged 18

boards and he immediately became a huge presence in the

league. In addition, Unseld”s Baltimore Bullets went from 36-

46, the year before he arrived on the scene, to 57-25 in his rookie

year. Unseld is also the only player in NBA history whose last

name begins with “U” to average in double figures in scoring for

any single season. [Now where else will you get that tidbit?!]

–Johnny Mac tells me that Alonzo Mourning still has a

comfortable lead at center for the East in the voting for the NBA

All-Star game. Grant Hill remains second among forwards.

Neither will have played a single game this season due to injury

or medical condition. J Mac says we should honor the moronic

fans and let the East squad play with 3 players. We also agree

that Mourning, hooked up to his dialysis machine for his kidney

problem, is probably more effective than the fellow currently

residing in second place in the vote for center, Theo Ratliff.

Next Bar Chat, Monday…Theo Ratliff takes off on the editor.