Elk Stuns Idaho Zookeepers
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
contentReading-- Devil's Food Cake by Josi S. Kilpack
Listening to-- NCIS on tv
I found this...article?, blog post?...through a friend on Facebook, and I thought it neat enough to share. Animals are so awesome (in nature)...and surprising sometimes.
Elk stuns Idaho zookeepers...
reposted from N7QVC's blog
Zookeepers at Pocatello Zoo, [in] Idaho, were worried when they noticed Shooter, a four-year-old elk, acting strangely at his water trough. Baffled, they watched as the animal–-which is so massive some keepers are afraid to even enter his enclosure–-tried to dip his hooves into his drinking trough, before attempting to dunk his whole head in the water. But they were amazed as 10ft-tall Shooter lifted his head from the trough clutching a tiny marmot-–a kind of large squirrel-–between his jaws.

Mammoth: Shooter the elk stands 10-feet-tall from his
hooves to the tip of his antlers.

To the rescue! Shooter pulls the hapless marmot from his water trough.
The gentle giant placed the hapless rodent down and nudged it with his hoof, as if checking it for signs of life, before calmly watching it scamper off into the bushes.
Zoo staff caught the entire rescue on camera. "It really was amazing," said Kate O'Conner, Pocatello's education co-ordinator. "Shooter is such a huge animal-–he stands at six-feet-tall without his antlers-–which are another four feet, and he's pretty scary.
"Some of the staff don't like going in his enclosure with him–-he's punctured car tires with his antlers before, so to see him being so gentle with a little animal was heart-warming.
"We all know he's a real character, but I think he must have a soft side we didn't know about.
"He was trying to dunk his head in the water, but his antlers kept getting in the way.
"Nobody could figure out why he was trying to get his head in, and then he started dipping his feet in. We were all completely confused, until we saw the marmot in his mouth.
"I think he had nudged the animal away from the edge of the bucket with his antlers and hooves so he could reach it with his mouth without his antlers getting in the way. It was very sweet."

Down you go: Shooter gently lowers the tiny rodent to the ground.

Safe, but soaked: Somewhat shell shocked, the lucky
marmot seems happy to be back on dry land.
Zookeeper, Dr. Joy Fox added: "We think Shooter sensed that the animal was in distress and decided to help. The zoo plans to auction off Shooter's incredible antlers when they are shed later in the year."

Yesterday
02-09-2012
Thursday 13: Netflix02-10-2012
Rainbow Crow02-11-2012
My Crow Project02-12-2012
Crow: Keeper of All Sacred Law02-21-2012
My Book List for 2012|
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