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tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves.

This author has written 3287 posts for Hoyden About Town. Read more about tigtog »

9 responses to “Chris Clarke wants marsupial tales”

  1. hexy

    Awwww, I had a few great experiences with echidnas and wombats. Love those wacky dudes.

  2. Theriomorph

    LOVE the wombats and flying foxes especially.

  3. Animemes « Unbork

    [...] 28th, 2007 I got tagged by Tigtog (try saying that three times [...]

  4. coz

    Awesome.
    What a cool meme.
    I spent 2 weeks volunteering at Scotia Earth Sanctuary, middle of no where NSW. Got to hang out with Numbats, Woylies, Boodies and Bilbies, among other endangered beasties.
    Was great to see and help out with rare Aussie marsupials.

  5. amphibious

    Mostly birds but I’m also host to macropods, possums and echidnas. I see wombat trakcs but never th best theselves. Oddly during the worst of the drought a mob of grey ‘roos came to my mountai9n propoerty – never been seen before and for the year or so they were in resdience I didn’t see the usual rufus wallabies. A huge male, at least 6ft tall, 3 or 4 females and some young out of the pouch. They left when the autumn rains came and the rufus are back back, grazing around the house and even peering in the window at night (why would bright light not bother them?)
    The echidna have a very set route which takes about 15 months to complete but as predictable as any clock. Possums I mostly just hear, dancing on the roof or fighting in the attic.

  6. Blogger on the Cast Iron Balcony » Blog Archive » Animeme

    [...] Tigtog tagged me… [...]

  7. Zahri

    My favourite pet would be the blue tongue lizard that lives at the bottom of our garden. I don’t see him often enough these days, but on warm days I’ll see him scrambling into the grevillea tangle, after sunning himself on the back patio.

    Most interesting eaten? I’ll nominate that I eat roo fairly regularly, as in at least once every 3 months, here. Moreton Bay Bugs or yabbies probably count as ‘interesting’, I suppose, to overseas types, too.

    It’s not in a museum, but there was a stuffed platypus at my school that I am still very fond of, who I got along with quite well. He was much friendlier than the copulating cane toads in jars that decorated several of the other science rooms.

    Ummm… the blue tongue moved house with us, once, though we did only move two doors down. Wallabies have an extreme like for assisting in the washing up, I’ve found – they’re usually after a drink out of the wash tub, and a chance to stick their nose into everything, in case there’s something good to be found. Also, a family of ducks moved into the shelter area of a friend’s tent one torrential camping trip, after they lined the ground with pine needles to keep the mud down. There were 7 fluff balls wandering around, almost getting tripped over.

    We have lots of birds and flying foxes locally. The best bit of my day is walking down to the train station and seeing which birds are out and about – lots of rainbow lorikeets, of course, as well as crested pigeons, sulfur crested cockatoos, corellas and galahs. There are occasionally crimson rosellas, willy wag tails and red-rumped parrots, but they’re a lot more rare to spot. Fun stuff I’ve seen in the bush – lyrebirds, crocs, wombats and echidnas, roos and wallabies endemic, glow worms, bower birds with their nests are always a huge treat, many birds, snakes, cicadas…

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