Sunday, July 26, 2009

Silver, Book 2: A Bad Night For Felix Cranberry

Silver, Book 2: A Bad Night For Felix Cranberry


Endangered species acting in this scene:
Eritrean Warthog, Cambodian Ibis, Kemp's Ridley Sea Turtle



Threatened and Endangered species acting in second row, left to right: (click each name for interesting facts and photos!)
Babyrusa Pig, Colombia Basin Pygmy Rabbit; Solenodon; Jerboa; Giant Anteater; Golden Parakeet; Red Slender Loris

Fun fact about anteaters:
Anteaters have huge salivary glands and no teeth.
Anteaters, armadillos, and sloth are all members of the Xenarthra order.
Anteaters are in a suborder called "vermilingua" which means "worm tongue."
Learn more at The National Zoo site.

A few fact about Golden Parakeets:

The Golden Conure has been determined to be endangered, due to increased deforestation and now illegal cage bird trade. Locally it is considered a nuisance to agriculture and is used for food or hunted for sport. Golden Conures continue to be smuggled out of Brazil.

Breeding is apparently communal , with several females contributing two or three eggs to each nest and several adults caring for the young.

2 Facts About Smell:

Dr Stephen Lee, a ear nose and throat (ENT) specialist from Raffles Hospital, says variance in the sense of smell among people is greater than that of other senses - up to a factor of 1,000.

People recall smells with a 65% accuracy after a year, while the visual recall of photos sinks to about 50% after only three months. www.senseofsmell.org









The Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit - depicted with amazing scientific accuracy in row two, center panel of page 18, with the Babyrusa Pig - is now genetically extinct due to the muscle of the meat industry: From an article from Jan 2009:

This may be our best current example of a subspecies (“species”, by ESA definition) being stomped into extinction by Public Grazing...I had worked for years trying to get the cows off, because the grazing clearly was at odds with the rabbits (trampling burrows and eating grasses and forbs necessary for reproduction)....

It wasn’t long before I began getting calls ...reporting collapsed active burrows, scorched earth between sagebrush plants, and other insults in the relatively small area where the rabbits were holding out. But the WDFW had instituted an elaborate “monitoring” scheme that conveniently sidestepped reality, and their “data” showed “no impact” from the cows. When the rabbits were down to fewer than 20, the decision was made to take them all into captivity....

The rabbits sent to the Portland Zoo were fed nothing but sagebrush for at least months...when they should have been fed grasses and forbs as well. (I know this because some of my ex-students were hired to make the trip to eastern Washington to gather the sagebrush and care for the rabbits). ...The last known one of those died a couple of years ago.

...the captive breeding attempt could never have substituted for the application of responsibility that would have combined conservation with science, and no one was willing to act responsibly.

Grazing was not the only thing that contributed to the extirpation of the Columbia Basin Pygmy Rabbit, but it was a very major contributor ... sagebrush is mowed, chained, burned and otherwise manipulated on vast expanses of public lands, to be replaced with more productive cattle forage – mostly non-native grasses largely useless to wildlife.

Other human activities including development, energy transmission lines, roads, fences and others isolate small populations of pygmy rabbits from each-other... Fences and posts provide height for predator birds to prey on pygmy rabbits – height that otherwise does not exist in the vast Sagebrush Sea, and livestock crush pygmy rabbit burrows.

Although efforts to preserve the Columbia Basin gene have been supplemented with Idaho pygmy rabbits, the Idaho pygmy rabbit is also imperiled across nearly all of its range....

Unfortunately, things aren’t looking good for pygmy rabbits in the immediate future; Mega wind-farms and energy transmission lines planned for development across public landscapes are increasingly threatening some of the last, best pygmy rabbit habitats in the West.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Silver, Book 1: Felicity the Freak


Silver:  A Tale to Tell.  Cover Page


Slver: Page one: In which we see a tiny mountainside town and an ice-cream seller on a bicycle


Silver: page 2: In which we meet Miss Cranberry, who is about to learn something about herself

Silver Page 3: in which Miss Cranberry enters the Lakshmi cafe, and sees amazing statues and a jungle painting.  The cafe is dimly lit, and suddenly a dark figure appears in a doorway, laughing.



The Solenodon (doing the shopping in frame 1) is a rare venomous mammal, now on the edge of extinction. See the link for interesting notes on nipples. The critically endangered Pygmy Hog (humming cheerily) is the sole representative of Porcula,and there are only about 150 of them left in the world.
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The Slow Loris is an endangered primate which stores poison inside its elbows. The mother will suck up this toxin and lick it onto her babies to protect them from predators. Learn why their eyes are so dangerous by clicking here.. Can you find the Loris on this page?
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the last page of Book 1, in which we are about to meet Felix Cranberry, Feliticy's dad.



Friday, February 06, 2009

Monday, November 03, 2008

The 3 Letters: A true story. Almost.
The Complete Compendium (All Four Pages!)








Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Bean Feast

A Bean Feast is the middle-ages equivalent of the office holiday party. The landowner or baron would throw a big banquet for the villains - excuse me, peasants - and everyone would frolic and have a grand time, including searching for the magic bean hidden in the cake. Whoever finds the bean gets to be the Bean King!!!


To learn more about the game hidden in this Bean Feast, click the picture!

Friday, August 22, 2008

The Union Street Oyster House


Everyone seen here is an endangered species AND an artist.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Picture in Progress - Dance

This picture is under construction. Check back later and see what's been added!







Friday, June 20, 2008

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Stonehenge


An English Quintet (Bulldog, Pointer, Sheepdog, Mastiff, Setter) Play "A Little Night Music" after the shortest night of the year. It's Solstice on Salisbury Plain!

Friday, June 06, 2008

Twittens: A Forgotten Era


Appropriately enough for the theme of "forgotten" i forgot to post this illustration of bygone times last month. My cousin challenged me to draw the Twittens without my even knowing what they were, but my imagination ran inappropriately rampant. so in the end i looked online and found out that twittens is an old (english?) word for area of narrow alleyways. apparently many cities have twittens, and this one is based on a photo I found in York. i doubt anyone would recognise it though, as the place occupied by a nest of pigs in my illustrations is in fact an outdoor fitters store in real life.

For those of you with a bit of time on your hands, see if you can trace the love octagon. most of the people in the picture are in love with someone who loves someone else. You can tell whom they love by looking at their eyes. Happy mediaeval Friday!