SCHILDPADDENFORUM.NET Welkom, Gast. Alsjeblieft inloggen of registreren.

Login met gebruikersnaam, wachtwoord en sessielengte
                                         
  172831 aantal berichten in 14134 topics door 3388 geregistreerde leden Nieuwste lid: tjvkooten
** STARTPAGINA FORUM HELP ZOEK WEBSITE FOTOALBUM KALENDER INLOGGEN REGISTREREN 

0 geregistreerde leden en 1 gast bekijken dit topic. « vorige volgende »
Pagina's: [1] Omlaag Print
Auteur Topic: WGBH (Boston, Massachusetts) A Cape Cod Notebook: Snapping Turtle (Robert F....  (gelezen 3156 keer)
schildpaddennetcrew
Moderatorteam
******
Offline

Berichten: 2797


« Gepost op: 22 Augustus 2008, 05:36:50 »


WGBH (Boston, Massachusetts) 09 May 06 A Cape Cod Notebook: Snapping Turtle (Robert Finch)
On the way home from town last week, I saw a large, dark object in the middle of the road. I stopped the car and got out to look at it. It was a snapping turtle, the first of the season, and a whopper. Nearly two feet long, it had a dark-brown, crusty shell, a large scaly head with a hooked, hawk-like beak, claws for feet, and a long, dragging, serrated tail. Its appearance was impressively ferocious, except for its eyes. The eyes - those deep, shiny, dewy-fresh eyes of reptiles, so startling in their ancient, scaly bodies - looked perplexed, not frightened exactly, but lost in an impersonal way, as if trying to get their bearings.
There, where the turtle straddled the road, a freshwater swamp lay on either side. In its twenty-five million-year-old trek from one swamp to another, it had suddenly found itself on a modern highway, an asphalt strip that bisected its world with no points of reference. It stood bewildered, its roots momentarily cut. It was queer to think that such a small and exploited land as ours can still harbor such apparitions as this strange and savage bit of reptilian life.
I went over and picked it up carefully by the back edge of the shell. I thought briefly of taking it to the Audubon sanctuary, and even more briefly of turtle soup. But as it turned its snake-like head and stared back at me with that impersonal, insulated gaze, I realized what I really wanted was to stay there and talk to it, to hold what converse we could manage across our vertebrate class lines - to talk turtle, for once. If nothing else, I felt that I might gradually absorb from it a patient readiness for thought, saying nothing, but suddenly striking out in purposeful action.
But as I held it there, like a divining rod above the heated highway, I realized how clogged our lines of communication were with myth, prejudice, and irrational fears. The snapping turtle, an American native, bears one of the most complex relationships to humans of any reptile. Iroquois Indians used the dried shells as rattles and drums in ceremonial dances. In New England it used to be common for families to keep a snapper in a hog swill barrel until it was fat enough to transfer to the soup pot. Yet its appearance and formidable striking capabilities have given the snapper an unfortunate and ill-deserved reputation. Turtle literature almost invariably describes it as "savage," "voracious," "mean," "sullen," - in a word, a bad character. For generations, children were taught that these "vicious" snappers drag cute, helpless ducklings down to a watery death, and chomp off the toes and fingers of unwary swimmers. In many areas such ingrained ignorance led to attempts to exterminate this reptile.
Fortunately, modern herpetologists have come to the defense of this much-maligned beast. This so-called "ravenous" carnivore actually consumes much more vegetable matter and carrion than animal life, and it's "ferocious" behavior exists largely on land - that is, when provoked while out of its normal habitat. In the water, the snapper tends to avoid humans. You are much more likely to be attacked by a swan than a snapping turtle.
But the snapper's eyes seemed to say to me that whatever moral I wanted from it, I would have to draw myself. So I set the turtle down on the other side of the highway and watched it zigzag off, dragging its Stegosaurian tail through the grass down into the sallow swamp, where it settled slowly from sight like a wide stone.
(Listen to an audio version of this essay at http://streams.wgbh.org/online/play.php?xml=cape/finch_turtle.xml&template=cainan).
http://www.wgbh.org/cainan/article?item_id=2814932&parent_id=0&blurb_item_id=2814952
Gelogd
Pagina's: [1] Omhoog Print
 
« vorige volgende »
Ga naar:  
Recent
[14 Oktober 2023, 17:31:00]

[ 2 Juli 2023, 13:50:40]

door Tom O.
[17 Juni 2023, 17:17:05]

[ 5 April 2023, 10:13:02]

door Wally
[16 Maart 2023, 09:45:27]

door Tom O.
[25 Januari 2023, 10:56:36]

door Dick
[11 Januari 2023, 17:21:48]

door TORO
[ 8 Januari 2023, 19:20:45]

door wim 2
[26 December 2022, 09:47:49]

door Marnix
[ 8 Oktober 2022, 13:24:50]

door andy_05
[26 Juli 2022, 15:11:36]

[15 Mei 2022, 14:37:23]

door Rikke
[21 April 2022, 19:43:36]

door Rikke
[29 Maart 2022, 21:10:06]

door andy_05
[27 Maart 2022, 09:31:08]

[ 5 Maart 2022, 19:05:31]

door TORO
[20 Februari 2022, 22:35:07]

door andy_05
[20 December 2021, 18:37:20]

door Rikke
[17 December 2021, 20:16:46]

door nielo
[ 4 November 2021, 21:38:45]

door Rikke
[ 6 Juli 2021, 11:10:44]

[ 1 Juli 2021, 16:49:53]

door Phil
[29 Juni 2021, 16:49:35]

door Dick
[27 Februari 2021, 19:46:28]

door Niels30
[24 Februari 2021, 11:39:52]

[22 Februari 2021, 17:16:02]

door nielo
[13 November 2020, 18:47:56]

door Lisa
[21 Augustus 2020, 19:19:58]

door Liene
[ 2 Augustus 2020, 17:00:34]

door Rikke
[27 Juli 2020, 13:48:55]

door eniya
[ 3 Juli 2020, 21:41:09]

[24 Mei 2020, 19:55:50]

[ 6 Mei 2020, 08:53:27]

door Rikke
[26 April 2020, 15:37:12]

door Rikke
[13 April 2020, 13:35:34]

door Liene
[ 8 April 2020, 17:02:25]

door Rikke
[30 Maart 2020, 11:10:26]

door Caline
[27 Maart 2020, 17:40:09]

door Rikke
[27 Maart 2020, 12:15:10]
Welkom, Gast. Alsjeblieft inloggen of registreren.
30 Juni 2024, 05:09:38

Login met gebruikersnaam, wachtwoord en sessielengte
geregistreerde leden
Totaal aantal leden: 3388
Laatste: tjvkooten
Statistieken
Totaal aantal berichten: 172831
Totaal aantal topics: 14134
Vandaag Online: 584
Ooit Online: 3488
(28 December 2022, 15:34:03)
Gebruikers Online
Gebruikers: 0
Gasten: 167
Totaal: 167
Artikelen

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines
Black22 / TinyPortal v0.9.8 © Bloc
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Pagina opgebouwd in 0.066 seconden met 25 queries.