For several years now, I have followed the videos on youtube of a monkey called YoYo Jr and his family. The family has other pets, dogs, goats, and even ducks and chickens and they all interact together and the videos are little stories from their (supposed) life. Recently, when out for a walk “Grandpa” and YoYo find a little baby monkey tied up on a short rope, and they feel sorry for her and buy her from the owner. The new monkey is soon named YiYi, and she has the cutest little coos and squeals. She has a pet pig named UnIn that she rides around on and goes shopping in the plaza. The latest thing was she found a poor little monkey in a cage who was missing an arm, and she begs Grandpa to buy that monkey, too; so now “poor armless monkey” is part of the family, too. It is just an enjoyable video series to watch, and maybe my version of a Soap Opera, since something is happening new every day in the YoYo family. Here is an example .
No crows here, but we have ravens. They are incredible animals. Hunters here look upon them as good luck when they see them while hunting moose. We figured out that the reason they indicated good hunting was that they would lead the hunters to moose in anticipation of the gut pile left behind when the hunter departed with his or her meat.
I think all or most birds are pretty clever Apparently We don’t have any crows in suburbia …you have to drive out to barren / hot dry areas prob 4 / 6 hours drive from the city . Ravens get mistaken for crows around suburbs and close to the city It’s claimed the only crows we have are the football team called the crows ⬛ https://www.environment.sa.gov.au/g... are crows in South,of feathers on their neck.
Copied from above link 8 wildlife mysteries solved 23 Mar. 2022 4 min read Did you know the only crows in Adelaide are the footy players? Here’s some of our most commonly mistaken species. Many wildlife species call South Australia’s national parks home, but some of them can easily be mistaken for something they’re not. Here are eight mistaken identities of the wildlife world that you might find surprising: 1. Ravens aren't crows Did you know the big black birds you see around Adelaide are actually ravens? There are crows in South Australia, but you’ll generally only find them north of Port Augusta. So how can you tell them apart? Australian ravens – one of the most commonly spotted species in Adelaide – are bigger than crows and have hackles on their backs and a ruff of feathers on their neck.
Amazing how after a few seconds she just stands while he fights to get ILLEGAL trap off her foot, or eg. These traps are inhumane to all animals, hunting is one thing but many animals sie slow deaths or chew their feet off trying to free themselves and die.
Most of our rooms downstairs have pull-cord lights, because the house is 114 years old, and Bubba learned that he can turn the light on and off by pulling the cord. I've had to tie the one over my desk up higher so that he couldn't reach it because he'd spend the afternoon turning the light on and off. Now, whenever I pick him up near one of the pull cords, he'll pull it.
Man claims he sleeps with a family of Cheetahs. They don't believe him, so he installs a video camera.