A New Make Shift
January 12, 2007
It has been raining long & hard the past couple of days. The Auntie worries that the current make shift we have is not big enough for the trio.
So she made this. Inside is a A4 paper carton box that sits on top of a large ceramic tile & then she lined the box with small piece of carpet. For the finishing touches, she covers it with the garbage bag. It is big enough for the kittens to snuggle up together & it keeps the cold wind out.

Genius! I say.
Tua Tao – King of His Castle
January 12, 2007

Tua Tao has been hiding in this little make-shift shelter since yesterday.
He seemed to be happy to be in his new ‘home’ & is, I believe, a little possessive of it. But he still shares with home with the little ones.
He hissed at me a couple of times yesterday & this morning when I stick my hand in for him to smell & when I removed his stale foodbowl. But he remained calm & quiet when I spoke to him. He appeared to be listening & understanding me (rather that’s what I like to think he is doing!)
I am happy that he now has the confidence to protect his territory & the kittens instead of running off to hide.
His skin is clear now. He looks like a new cat & he has put on a little weight.
Some People Ignorant of Wildlife Around Them
January 12, 2007
I love this! It is true is usually our unfounded fears that cause innocent animal lives to be lost.
Straits Times Interactive
ST Forum, 12 January 2007
THE Sunday Times article on Jan 7, ‘Bee attack: Don’t fight back, just run’, is balanced journalism – educative and fair. This contrasts with previous fear-mongering reports on ‘killer bees’ which miscast unaggressive local species as their dreaded Africanised cousins in the Americas.
Competing literacies leave many ‘bio-illiterate’. Recent giveaways include a Channel News Asia presenter who ascribed the film, Gorillas In The Mist, about Diane Fossey, the late mountain gorilla specialist, to Jane Goodall, the chimpanzee expert.
A local article referred to chimpanzees, which are apes, as monkeys. Another writer feared that monkeys on one of the Southern Island might throw stones – they don’t, but apes might.
Another writer mislabelled the whale shark – a fish – as a marine mammal. Years ago, a reporter sensationalised the harmless, plankton-feeding whale shark as a potential maneater.
Some youngsters mistake the ubiquitous monitor lizard, which is much smaller and not life threatening, for the rarely seen crocodile. This may explain signs (still there?) at MacRitchie Reservoir that differentiate these animals pictorially – to obviate panic?
In the Dec 31 Sunday Times story, ‘Korean study mamas’, one of them complained: ‘Singapore is so clean, so why are there lizards crawling on the walls of our apartment? We are really scared of them.’ Why must non-humans always be filthy and threatening by default?
House lizards (geckos) don’t smell, whereas – unwashed – we and our pets reek and exchange bacteria. That creatures exist to attack us is self-flattering. Gecko droppings show their pest-control role. Cleaning up after them after initially being startled when they panic at our intrusion. Admire their adaptation to our environment – don’t fear or despise them.
American author Mark Twain said: ‘The more I see of people, the more I like my dog’. We have no monopoly on human traits. Some wild dolphins, summoned by drums, herded fish into tribal fishermen’s nets for mutual benefit.
Lacking muscles to access honey, the honey guide bird uses body language to lead animals or humans towards a beehive to share the spoils. Kamuniak, a wild lioness in Kenya, adopts several oryx calves for company instead of eating them which baffled zoologists no end.
Animals don’t deserve short shrift. Bio-literacising ourselves via documentaries, and so on will outgrow a distrust of – overwhelmingly less dangerous – non-humans. Don’t we owe our own species honesty, humility, edification and justice too?
Anthony Lee Mui Yu



