Friday 23 August 2013

Salutations, fellow fauna fanciers:

     Even as I greet you in this way, I realize that it’s rather a liberty on my part to assume that each and every one of you shares my abiding fondness for the animals…or any other groups fronted by Eric Burdon.

     Hm…not exactly the rip-roaring start I was aiming to get off to. Let’s try again…

      We here in Funsville take a special interest whenever an animal makes the news. (The name “Checkers” is still enough to draw a crowd when whispered in a back alley.) So many of our citizens are animals themselves—albeit mostly of the talking anthropomorphic cartoon variety—that there’s always a fair-to-middling chance that some local resident’s distant relative may be mentioned in the dispatches.

     The previous week’s headlines, however, brought us a long-overdue exception to that rule. Before last Friday, no-one in town—even in the critter-crammed Animal Avenue district—had any more idea than the rest of the world what an “olinguito” was.
 

      Of course, the olinguitos have known what they were are all along, despite the bulletins proclaiming “New animal discovered!” and so forth. As far back as they can remember, they’ve been doing whatever it is that olinguitos do, and feeling perfectly at home while doing it, in the remote depths of Andean jungle country. If science wants to call them “new” simply because it never noticed them before, surely that’s not the olinguitos’ problem. They’ll just keep going about their business while the experts get on with deciding whether an olinguito is more like a raccoon, a bear, a cat, a fox terrier, a cacomistle, a toy panda you win at the county fair, or my Aunt Agatha’s genuine imitation plush Orlon cloche hat.

     In the meantime, the minor cause célèbre swirling around the discovery of the olinguito has spun off a small musical tribute, by Animal Avenue’s resident bard and troubadour, the house piano player and bandleader at the Ashcan Club, Professor DeLuxe. Like the olinguito itself, it’s not, strictly speaking, 100% new. The tune is that old standard “Mona Lisa”, familiar to fans of the late great Nat King Cole, if no longer to anybody else. If you don’t know the melody, google it and have a listen before proceeding to the lyrical content below:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     Touching, stirring, yet somewhat poignant, n’est-ce pas? As I write these lines, the Animal Avenue Newcomers, Immigrants, Refugees and Fugitives Welcome Wagon is holding a special emergency meeting to prepare for the expected influx of olinguitos looking to escape the inevitable flood of taxonomers, conservationists, documentary filmmakers, photographers from National Geographic, eco-tourists, exotic pet traffickers and the zoologically curious that’s about to come their way. We’ll do our best to help them keep a low profile, but there are never any guarantees. This isn’t the first time that a newly discovered member of Mother Nature’s menagerie has taken up residence in Funsville…but more on that next time.

     While you’re waiting (and who could wait for anything like that without something to pass the time?), you can listen to another one of Mr. Feeble’s Fables. This one is about a species at the other end of the “just been discovered” spectrum…to be more specific, The Last Passenger Pigeon.

Uncle Fun    
 
 

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