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Enigmatic Echidnas & Raising Hares

Monday, 1 June 2026
The wildlife is often a big part of the travel experience. This year I’ve had black tip and white tip reef sharks when I’ve been snorkelling and scuba diving at Christmas and Cocos Keeling Islands, plus a very nice manta ray encounter. Birds have been a big part of the wildlife story, particularly boobies and frigate birds on Christmas Island and an amazing assortment of birds including gannets and guillemots, each on their selected level, on the wild cliff faces of the Orkney Islands. Christmas Island’s crab population has been the year’s big story so far, even though my visit was not during the prime November crab migration season.
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Of course books on animal life also regularly pop up on my reading list, like Gisela Kaplan’s book Tawny Frogmouth, which I read after a pair of the owl-like birds moved in next door to me. They seemed to be keeping a close eye on me from a neighbour’s tree.
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▲ A Flinders Island echidna
The Enigmatic Echidna by Danielle Clode starts with the idea that you simply don’t see them frequently – they keep away from us. Nevertheless I have encountered echidnas quite often, I have regular echidna sightings noted in my diary and when I search my photos I find echidna images on King Island, Flinders Island and Kangaroo Island and no doubt there are others which I haven’t labelled.
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The book underlines how long it took us to learn much about them. Did they really lay eggs, the only other monotreme – egg laying mammal – is the platypus, but it took western scientists a long time to prove that fact. Of course they could have saved a century of research and an awful lot of dissected echidnas if they’d simply asked Aboriginals, but facts aren’t facts without Western proof?
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Today we know a lot more about them, they’re extremely strong, they positively hate being penned up – echidnas are escape artists – and they have surprisingly big brains. But what are those brains for, apart from eating more ants what do echidnas think about? There’s lots more to learn including their hibernation habits, which seem to vary from place to place and echidna to echidna. Not just deep sleep hibernation either, echidnas are also masters of falling into torpor, shorter term hibernation, not just as an energy saving practice, but sometimes out of sheer boredom. I don’t like this situation? I’ll just fall asleep until it’s over.
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My other wildlife book of the past year is Chloe Dalton’s wonderful Raising Hare. The author comes across an abandoned baby hare, a leveret, and reluctantly takes it in. I’m a terrible stop and go reader, some books take me months to get through, but this one I raced through. Assorted reviews proclaim how good it is and I’m in agreement, it’s a simply wonderful book. It’s educational and thought provoking as well as touching and, as with those enigmatic echidnas, you learn all sorts of things you never suspected about hares. Starting with the simple fact that they are not rabbits, despite a superficial visual similarity in many ways they are nothing like rabbits.
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Nor, the author solidly emphasises, was her rescued hare a pet. For starters she never gives it a name, but if you wanted a pet it would clearly be a nice one to have! For starters it is 100% tidy, it never had to be house-trained and when she later finds herself sheltering two more leverets, courtesy of her original hare, they don’t need to be house-trained either, Hare One looks after that. There is clearly real contact between hare and author, when it has its own leverets it brings them to her as if to show them off and parks them in the house having clearly said to them ‘she’s OK, she may be big, but you can trust her.’ And they do. Check this video of Chloe Dalton talking about her hare story.

Enigmatic Echidnas & Raising Hares

1 June 2026 | Media

The wildlife is often a big part of the travel experience. This year I’ve had black tip and white tip reef sharks when I’ve been snorkelling and scuba diving at Christmas and Cocos Keeling Islands, plus a very nice manta ray encounter. Birds have been a big part of ...

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Piraeus – more than meets the eye

28 May 2026 | Places

▲ Approaching Athens Airport over Lemos – with my Greek Islands travel companion Nick Varian I’d flown into Athens and took a taxi to Piraeus ▲ Ferry activity in the port of Piraeus from the Hotel Mitsis N'U It’s the port for Athens and for most visitors that’s ...

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Orkney Books – The Outrun & An Orkney A to Z

24 May 2026 | Media

◄  Having been to the Orkney Islands and definitely liked that strange collection of windy Scottish outposts I read two Orkney books. I really enjoyed Amy Liptrot’s The Outrun – Orkney girl abandons dull island life, moves to London, gets into partying, clubbing and a...

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Greek Islands – Milos, Kimolos, Serifos

20 May 2026 | Places

I’m clearly on an island roll. First I was out in the Indian Ocean from Australia at Christmas Island and then the Cocos Keeling Islands. That was followed by a short visit to Hong Kong and a walk on Sharp Island. Next I travelled by train and ferry to the Orkney Isla...

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Orkney Islands – Part 2

5 May 2026 | Places

Part 1 covered Mainland, the largest island of the Orkney group with the ‘capital’ Kirkwall and the arrival point for many visitors Stromness. Plus the islands of Lamb Holm, Burray and South Ronaldsay, linked to Mainland by the causeways across the Churchill Barriers,...

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Orkney Islands – Part 1

1 May 2026 | Places

I’ve been meaning to go there for years and finally arrived on the scatter of islands just north of the northern tip of Scotland. Which is not John o’Groats, although that’s often looked upon as where Scotland ends, the other end of the country from Land’s End, 1407km...

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A Day in Hong Kong – Sharp Island & the Hong Kong Palace Museum

28 April 2026 | Places

I hadn’t planned to stop in Hong Kong, on my way from Melbourne to London. I had quite different plans until Taco Trump decided he’d have a go at starting WW III. Hold on, I’ll get around to my original travel plans in June. ▲ Sai Kung seafood – Meanwhile I flew in...

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Sherborne & the Travel Festival Weekend

17 April 2026 | Media

◄ Rory Maclean – author of numerous travel books including Magic Bus – puts on a magic annual travel festival in the very attractive little Dorset town of Sherborne. I was there for the recent weekend and if I say nice things about the festival perhaps Rory will invit...

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Cocos Keeling Islands – a colonial hangover?

2 April 2026 | Places

Having ticked off Christmas Island I continued another hour’s flight west across the Indian Ocean (and another 30 minutes time change) to the Cocos Keeling Islands, 1000km away. There are 27 islands around the Cocos Keeling Atoll, but only two of them are inhabited. W...

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Christmas Island – Red Crab Territory

29 March 2026 | Places

There are a number of Christmas Islands around the world, this one is an Australian territory technically part of Western Australia with a population of about 1700. Straight line it’s only 500km south of Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, but the only flights to Chris...

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