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Posted By: Wordwind Mexican Gray Wolf - 03/01/03 10:31 PM
Not. It looks like a Mexican Calico Wolf to me. Wish I could send a link, but I can't. How could anyone call something a gray wolf that is definitely tri-colored? It's near-extinct according to the e-mail I received from a wildlife group. Fewer than four hundred remain on Earth.

Posted By: Faldage Re: Mexican Gray Wolf - 03/01/03 10:34 PM
http://www.southwestwildlife.org/Animal Photos/images/Mexican Gray Wolf 1.jpg

Posted By: wwh Re: Mexican Gray Wolf - 03/01/03 10:44 PM
http://www.kaet.asu.edu/wildaz/wolf/slides/slides.html

Posted By: Wordwind Re: Mexican Gray Wolf - 03/01/03 10:52 PM
Thanks for posting all those photos, guys. You see? It should be called the Mexican Calico Wolf. The calico wolf. Works for me, although I suppose you could argue that it's actually four-colored. What would that be? Quadra-colored? Tetra-colored?

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: Mexican Gray Wolf - 03/02/03 12:00 AM
it seemes to be more gray in the winter time, so perhaps it was named then. what a beautiful animal.

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Red Squirrel - 03/02/03 01:33 AM
http://makeashorterlink.com/?F60A156A3

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: Red Squirrel - 03/02/03 01:36 AM
is that lunch for the Mexican Gray Wolf?

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blue Whale - 03/02/03 01:38 AM
http://www.condorcruises.com/blue whale story.htm

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 01:43 AM
(oh yes it is!)

http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/chf/pub/surveyreports/mar-apr00/blackbird.jpg

Posted By: tsuwm Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 02:21 AM
you can't fool an OPP (olde prairie person); that's a yellow-headed blackbird!
-ron obvious
Posted By: tsuwm purple finch - 03/02/03 02:25 AM
http://www.holoweb.com/cannon/purikple.htm

-joe (a picture is worth a thousand yarts) friday

Posted By: tsuwm blackbird? - 03/02/03 02:29 AM
here's a blackbird of another color:
http://www.slivoski.com/birding/blkbird.htm

Posted By: wwh Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 02:39 AM
Or a black bodied yellow bird?

Posted By: wwh Re:red squirrel - 03/02/03 02:45 AM
I remember seeing a story in Readers' Digest about fifty years ago, that said the red squirrels
were going to drive gray squirrels to extinction. How? By gnashing their knockers off, biting
their gonads off, gelding them, deprivi;ng them of any posterity.. But it never happened. I wonder
why. I never saw a gray squirrel wearing a tin jock.

Edit: From the Internet. I can hardly believe it, the Readers' Digest printed a lie!

"The breeding season for red squirrels begins in late winter, with 3-6 young born in April, May or June after a 40-day
gestation period. Reds have strong territorial instincts, often defending food sources and den
trees against intrusion. The story that red squirrels castrate gray squirrels is untrue, although reds will aggressively drive off trespassing grays. "

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 05:48 AM
you can't fool an OPP (olde prairie person); that's a yellow-headed blackbird!
-ron obvious


Dat's right...but then it can't be a blackbird...it would have to be a yellow-and-black bird, wouldn't it?

-W'ON not-so-obvious





Posted By: bonzaialsatian Re:red squirrel - 03/02/03 08:40 AM
Here in the UK, grey squirrels are blamed for driving off the red squirrels, which is why we hardly see any red squirrels anymore. Though apparently, due to a difference in their feeding habits, the two types of squirrel shouldn't really affect one another as the red squirrels spend most of their time in the trees, with quite a specialised diet and the grey squirrels will eat anything.

Posted By: bonzaialsatian Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 08:43 AM
Blackbird...
http://www.lincsbirdclub.co.uk/images/white_blackbird.jpg
Redsquirrel...
http://www.suprmchaos.com/albino-squirrel.jpg

Ha!
Posted By: Wordwind Re: purple finch - 03/02/03 10:54 AM
I'd call it a raspberry finch.

Posted By: Wordwind Re: Blackbird - 03/02/03 10:57 AM
Oh, bonzai, what remarkable photos! The albino squirrel looked as though it had fallen into a flour bag--and the white blackbird? Whudda thunk?

Posted By: consuelo Gray Wolves - 03/02/03 04:43 PM
I seemed to remember that Clinch Park Zoo had some Mexican Gray wolves, possibly on loan, so I went agoogling. Here are a couple of links for you. Looks like Traverse City's Clinch Park Zoo is going to lose out to the money-grubbin' "we need a bigger marina in downtown Traverse City" powers that be.

http://www.foranimalstc.org/clinchpark.html

And another take on moving the zoo:
http://www.ci.traverse-city.mi.us/services/nov2002.htm

A link for more info about wolves
http://www.defenders.org/releases/pr1999/pr101599.html
Posted By: of troy Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 01:08 AM
there are several albino squirrels that live on the mall in DC. In nature, they would be easy prey for hawks and other preditors, but on the mall they live on handouts from tourist, and breed, and pass on the gene.

burried somewhere, with all my other things packed for moving, i too have a photo of an albino squirrel.

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 01:23 AM
is there something about squirrels that they are more susceptible to albinoism?
what animals are most likely to be born albino?

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 03:17 AM
So, WW, hearkening back to your original question about the gray wolf not really being gray:

Is the red squirrel really red?

Is the blue whale really blue?

And blackbirds, evidently, don't have to be black.

Posted By: bonzaialsatian Albino animals - 03/04/03 10:09 AM
Mice and rabbits are supposed to be particularly suseptable, aren't they? And also a lot of reptiles, though in their case, their colours are often inverted or something like that.

Posted By: Wordwind Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 10:36 AM
Yes, I noticed that the naming of animals appears to be a little arbitrary. But in the case of the Mexican gray world, the naming is even more arbitrary. There's not much gray there that I can see, and certainly the Mexican gray wolf is at least as red as that red squirrel. However, someone above pointed out that the Mexican gray wolf is more gray in winter. Perhaps it was named in the winter. I suppose I'm grayer in winter, too, at least emotionally.


Posted By: Faldage Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 01:32 PM
When you live in a Mexican gray world everything is more arbitrary.

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 02:29 PM
Yes, in Gray World, everything is simple, everything is in black & white.

Posted By: Faldage Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 02:31 PM
everything is in black & white

Or either shades of gray, one.

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 02:38 PM
Or a whiter shade of pale?

Procol Harum...A Whiter Shade of Pale, Conquistodor. Great music!http://www.procolharum.com/

Posted By: Wordwind Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 04:30 PM
Oh, just shut up, guys!

Haven't you ever typed something quickly and didn't edit?

Bunch of steenkin' perfectionists!

Posted By: Faldage Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 05:00 PM
If it hadn't been so funny…

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 07:55 PM
Help me play along on the violin for WW here, Faldage.

Blackbird

(John Lennon, Paul McCartney)
Lead Vocal: Paul McCartney

Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings and learn to fly
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to arise

Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these sunken eyes and learn to see
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to be free

Blackbird fly
Blackbird fly
Into the light of the dark black night

Blackbird fly
Blackbird fly
Into the light of the dark black night

Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings and learn to fly
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to arise
You were only waiting for this moment to arise
You were only waiting for this moment to arise


© 1968 by Lennon/McCartney or make that McCartney/Lennon as Sir Paul would now prefer



Posted By: Wordwind Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 10:33 PM
I didn't see a single mention of any dadburned Mexican Gray World in the lyric... sheesh.

Posted By: wwh Re: Blackbird - 03/04/03 11:10 PM
Bye,bye, Blackbird!

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/05/03 12:15 AM
I didn't see a single mention of any dadburned Mexican Gray World in the lyric... sheesh

Look again:

Take these broken wings and learn to fly,
Into the dark of the Gray World night.



Posted By: Wordwind Re: Blackbird - 03/05/03 08:32 AM
Your eyes see what my eyes cannot see. I am blind. I see no gray world there except in what you wrote just above. All I see is black night--and I'm hearing quite a bit of rain, to boot.

What does "to boot" mean and where did it come from? Bootless means 'useless'--so perhaps 'to boot' means 'to put to use'?

Posted By: dxb Re: Blackbird - 03/05/03 01:35 PM
so perhaps 'to boot' means 'to put to use'?

To boot.

Meaning:
In addition to.

Origin:
From the Old English word bot - compensation.


Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: Blackbird - 03/05/03 03:31 PM
And remember, Dub-Dub, a Lone Wolf is never gray, just lonely...

Four and twenty blackbirds,
Baked in a pie...


Posted By: tsuwm Re: itsagreyworld - 03/05/03 03:44 PM
http://www.itsagreysworld.com/articles/about.htm

-joe (itsnotbloominresting) parrot
Posted By: Faldage Re: Graybirds - 03/05/03 04:27 PM
Then there's the Homestead Grays

http://www.northbysouth.org/2000/baseball/Homestead intro.htm

Posted By: WhitmanO'Neill Re: The Grayest of All? - 03/05/03 06:57 PM
Then there's that fabled denizen of Gray World:

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/6305807914.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

Posted By: dxb Re: The Grayest of All? - 03/06/03 07:25 AM
And then there's the Gray Mouser.

http://www.lankhmar.demon.co.uk/

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