No Such Thing As A Fish - 535: No Such Thing As An Inside-Out Dolphin

Episode Date: June 13, 2024

Anna, Andrew, James and Helen Scales discuss curious cephalopods, destitute decapods, parky penguins, and munificent midlanders. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise an...d more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, welcome to this week's episode of No Such Thing As A Fish where we were joined by a special guest and that was Helen Scales. Now if you don't know Helen, she is a marine biologist, a writer, a broadcaster. We've known her for many, many years. She's so funny, so interesting. She loves her subject so much. Her books are absolutely great. The first one that she wrote was called Spirals in Time. I think that was the
Starting point is 00:00:28 first one which was all about shells and the history of shells and her most recent one is called What the Wild Sea Can Be and it is basically a look at the future of the oceans which you might think is quite negative because of all the news stories that are going around but Helen as is her want is very positive about what the future might be and how we can save the world. If you'd like to get her books obviously they're available from all the usual places but if you go to hellenscales.com you can visit her shop which is related to the online booksellers bookshop and if you go, then all her commissions will go to the charity Sea Changers. So you will help save the sea as well as learning about the sea.
Starting point is 00:01:13 There's also details on her website about a couple of shows she's doing to promote the book. So make sure you have a look at that if you like what you hear in this episode. And I know that you will. One more thing to say, you know, we have a tour coming up. There are still tickets for most of the UK dates and a couple of the Australia dates left for that. So do get your tickets ASAP and the people of Sydney and London do go back to nosichthingsofish.com forward slash live because there are details of new dates on there So if you missed out on tickets to Sydney or London then fear not because we have put some more dates on okay
Starting point is 00:01:51 That's it. That's all I have to say this week So really all there is left to say is on with the podcast so let's say it on with the podcast Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing As A Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hoban. My name is Anna Tuschinsky and I'm sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin and extra special guest today, Helen Scales. And we have gathered around our microphones with our four favourite facts from the last seven days. So in no particular order, here we go. Starting with Helen. My fact is you can play peekaboo with an octopus.
Starting point is 00:02:51 Wow. That sounds like fun. I think it was peekaboo. That's what I was doing. Because you've done this. Yeah. This is personal fact. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Exactly. How did peekaboo work? Because the game is quite loose rules-wise. I think so. Yeah. I mean, maybe it was hide and seek. No, I think it was peekaboo. So basically I was coming back from a free dive or a snorkel if I want to make it sound not as cool, but I'll say free dive because that does sound cooler. And I was literally just a couple of feet from the beach and the water was like knee high. And I looked down, I was floating and I looked down and there was an octopus behind a rock. And I was like, awesome, because I love octopuses.
Starting point is 00:03:27 And I see them occasionally, but it's definitely a special thing to see. Where were you in the world? Oh, sorry. I was in Brittany in France. Very nice. Yeah. So there was this octopus and I was like, awesome. Okay, fantastic.
Starting point is 00:03:38 And then generally when I see exciting animals like that, you have to be like, just looking as much as possible because any second now it's going to just fuck off, right? And you're left with like, oh, that was a lovely encounter, but it lasted like seconds. But this one didn't move and I was just hanging out with it. And how big are we talking? I mean, in my mind, it was like maybe a small melon sized thing. Okay, so first off, I did the My Octopus Teacher touching thing. Have you seen my Octopus Teacher? No, no. There's a bit basically where if you put your hand out, an octopus
Starting point is 00:04:12 will reach out and touch you with it. So it's like God and Adam in the Michelangelo. Exactly. Because I know they do do that. They basically they're tasting you to see what you are because their suckers are really sensitive and they can have you like taste the chemicals and stuff. So I put my hand out and it did like put its little arm out and it's tiny and thin at the end and it was like, nope, and it touched me and I was like, oh, that was amazing. And then so we did that and I was like, okay, so what else can I do with this octopus, you know, while it's got my
Starting point is 00:04:37 Kick it up a notch. So I was like, well, what if I just hide from it? Maybe it will try and come and find me. And so I moved out of its line of sight so that it couldn't see me. And it was just, it just like peered around the rock. You know, it was definitely like, wherever you go, you're over there. And I'm like, no, you go. But I just really had this sense of something a bit more intelligent and it's thinking about you and it's interacting with you.
Starting point is 00:05:03 And it was just really a really cool moment. So it didn't then hide from you or anything like that? No, it didn't hide from me. Then I think at that point I was like, I'm getting really cold. I need to get out. Can you do something a bit more interesting than to sit there? And so I think I was like, I'm going to get a bit closer. And at that point it was like, no.
Starting point is 00:05:19 And it went off and changed it. You know, you hear about how octopuses change colour and texture and stuff. And it really did. It had been like pale and smooth and then instantly it turned like really angry red and very bumpy and I was like oh wow sorry. Are the bumps real? Yeah yeah so their skin. It's not just that it looks bumpy. Yeah yeah so their skin has like loads of little muscles and they can pull up and make
Starting point is 00:05:39 little like warts and little bumps and then they can flatten themselves. And change the colour is also muscles too. They have these like bubbles of pigment which can open and close and they can change their colour. It's like pixels basically. Wow. I didn't know that's how they change their colour. I just sort of assumed that they... I didn't assume anything. I just thought they did it. He didn't really think about it did he? No, because he wouldn't really. Just by the way that you blush maybe they might just change colour.
Starting point is 00:06:01 They have layers in their skin. We can't blush lots of colours. I find that we could blush loads of different colours, like I could blush blue if I was sad. Exactly. That would be a really cool thing to do with GM, to give ourselves chromatophores. That would be good. It'd be easier for those, you know those parties where you have to go in a colour, like if you're available you wear green. Oh your swingers parties. I was just saying it's not always easy to find an amber shirt. They definitely do seem to be animals where you can have a bit of a relationship. I think so yeah I mean I'm not going to say I made friends with it but I just felt like for a moment we had a bit of a play and that was cool.
Starting point is 00:06:40 I mean I haven't ever played with a crab for instance that's never really worked out or a thief so yeah the crabs just don't go for the peek-a-boo. Well, sometimes the octopuses don't want to befriend. Like they seem to have such personalities that they're discerning about who they like. There was a person who worked in a New England aquarium who one of the octopuses there just completely took against him and used to squirt him in the room whenever he walked in. He hated him. And then I think he left and did a degree or something, left university and he came back and immediately the octopus was like,
Starting point is 00:07:09 not Barry again and went for him again. Yeah, they are a bit moody like that. I've heard stories about octopuses being given food they don't like and just being like this. And they hold it up to the person and go like, uh-uh, see what I'm going to do with this. And they'd swim across to the other side of the tank
Starting point is 00:07:24 and stuff it in the drain and be like, no, that's where that's going. Like a toddler. Yeah. I imagine there are all those sorts of studies of like intelligence that are about that kind of level of. I reckon, although toddlers can't play hide and seek. Can they not? No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:07:37 Oh, cause they just think you're not there when you close your eyes. They did a study where they gave a toddler a doll and they put a blindfold on the doll and the toddler thought that they couldn't see it. Wait, they put a blindfold on the doll and the toddler thought that they couldn't see it. Wait, they thought that the doll couldn't see the toddler? Yeah. But the doll can't see the toddler either way? No, no, they thought that the toddler thought the doll had gone invisible.
Starting point is 00:07:55 The doll had gone invisible because they don't think that. Because I feel like I've heard that kind of thing and obviously the study was done, but I've heard that kind of thing where like they think if you close your eyes and you've gone, but when you do it with kids they don't think you disappeared. I literally did it yesterday and it worked. Did you? Yeah yeah. So they just think, but they can see your body? I said to her, I said look at me that took a while, because she doesn't really do what I tell her, but then eventually she looked at me and I covered my eyes and I said can you see me and she said no. Does that mean that she thinks she can't
Starting point is 00:08:21 see you though or that she thinks the thing to say in this game is no? Well because... It feels like if you vanished, then children would be like, what the hell just happened? But the other evidence is that if you play hide and seek with a child, if they cover their eyes, they think you can't see them. That's where just in the middle of the room, eyes closed, I'm hiding. That's great. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Yeah. The really interesting thing is it works for voices as well apparently. Although I tried this with my daughter and it didn't work. But apparently there was a study where experimenters put their hands over their ears and said to the child Can you hear me and the child said no I can't I'm not sure if that means she's too smart or not smart enough A different voice will she think that for, Bruce Forsythe is in the room? And she's like, nice to see you. I can't see you. Octopuses, I think, have they been reclassed in Britain in terms of their intelligence?
Starting point is 00:09:16 Because they're so, literally, they're so clever that the government has now classed them along with vertebrates. They're way cleverer than most, not most, lots of vertebrates and they are classed as sentient beings. That's good news. It is good news. It means, well, hopefully it means now we have to be nicer to them. Because there are all sorts of discussions about, oh, should we farm them? Should we farm these really intelligent, amazing, weird creatures? That don't like living together and they're generally cannibalistic and you know, all sorts of stuff like that. You don't want to farm like where all the cows are eating each other.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Well exactly, you don't want just one great big octopus left at the end. I mean that's really not going to be possible. You might get the same number of steaks from one enormous cow that's eaten all the other cows. And it's easier to herd isn't it if you just got one. You need a big dog. Very big dog. It's tragic. They can't write, but they do produce ink. Oh, that is tragic.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Is that in the Alanis Morissette song? Is it wasps or bees that can make paper? Yeah, wasps can make paper. If they could get together. Never the twain! If you give a wasp a snorkel, an imagine the two species could reek. Was it Alanain. Oh, that's tragic. If it was a snorkel, an imaginary thing would have it for two species could reek. Um, what did Alanis Morissette say? Ironic. Yeah. Yeah, but they weren't very ironic. No. Most of the things were very ironic. There was someone else who wrote, Avril Lavigne. No, it was, it was. You're
Starting point is 00:10:37 thinking of Skater By. Yeah, I confused the two the other day in a social situation and I haven't had the end of it yet. Anyway. He was a wasp, she was an octopus, can I make it any more obvious? They're very strong octopuses as well. Every sucker is so powerful, isn't it? And I think I worked out, so if a sucker touches an object, it changes shape to form this seal around it and I realized that the common octopus, if it's hanging off the ceiling, the four of us, and I've done some vague weight estimates, and I think it wouldn't be true if Dan was here, but I think the four of us... Dan is no heavier than I am, for sure.
Starting point is 00:11:21 But James, who does Dan have to be heavier than for this to work with the four of us, but not if Dan was here? No, I do see that. I do see it. But it did sound like a slam on Dan's weight. Look, I think we can safely say that Helen is a few inches shorter than Dan try, but they're both in great shape. But Dan probably weighs a few pounds more. Once I was in the ITV studios on the South Bank, and there's a load of people in the lift, and I walked into the lift and it went beep, beep, beep, please leave the lift because I was the person who put it over the level and I felt awful like it was a really low moment in my life. But imagine that if all your mates are hanging off an octopus and you're the one that pulls him down. And they're just like, no, that's it, I'm letting go. Do you know what happens if you
Starting point is 00:12:02 cut the arm off an octopus? So this is, you know, if you wanted to eat it. Does it live? Yeah. So fishermen will like chop the arms off and stick them in the bucket and they try to climb out basically. So octopus have like 500 million neurons, but half of them are in their arms.
Starting point is 00:12:17 So they have a very different kind of nerve system to ask where they have a, it's not all in their brain. So the question is like, do they think for themselves, these arms? Are they actually able to make their own decisions? But what we think they're doing is that their kind of response is to pass food towards the mouth. So if a bit of food goes to the end of the arm, the suckers are passing it to the next
Starting point is 00:12:35 one and to the next one. And actually that same motion, if you've chopped an arm off in a bucket, is climb out of the bucket. Do you see what I mean? So they're just trying to pass this to the mouth? This is the thing we do. So it's not, there's not necessarily any thought in it, but they will basically walk off. Oh, yeah. The other thing, if you cut the very tip of an arm, it will still respond to like nasty chemicals. So people who like doing science and they'll take just a little
Starting point is 00:12:57 bit of tissue off and then you try and put the little tip of the arm into a pot of alcohol and it goes, Oh no, ow. Oh, are we calling alcohol a nasty chemical? Oh, sorry. Well, I guess very high concentrations of alcohol used to preserve the tip of an octopus's arm. 100% scientific stuff. Unfortunately for you, Helen, that's what Anna likes to do. My limbs have cut off, go towards the glass of tobacco. Just a thumbs up from Anna removed and... You don't eat octopus's, right? No, I don't. Do you eat other fish? Not much anymore. I did for a long time. I gave up eating meat years and
Starting point is 00:13:34 years ago and I kind of kept on eating sustainably caught fish. But definitely octopuses, you would have. No, not since meeting one. Definitely not since playing peek-a-boo with one. I couldn't. Something else that needs to avoid eating octopuses is the dolphin. Although, I mean, they do like to sometimes and octopuses are really good food for other sea animals because I guess they're very meaty, but they're quite dangerous to swallow and I think when dolphins do eat octopuses, they have to really work hard on cutting up their food to tear them to shreds because they did did I think they found a dead dolphin recently in the last couple of years which had an octopus in its mouth and you can see its
Starting point is 00:14:09 tentacles like flopping out of its mouth. So if I'm a dolphin and I have an octopus and it sort of clings onto the inside of my throat as it's going down because I haven't chewed it properly. Does it pull me inside out is what I'm trying to say. Why would it do that? I think I had a dodgy octopus last night because it's attached to the inside of the tube that is me. Yes, it has done that. And it's gone all the way through. I don't think the dolphin was inside out when they found it. I'm afraid that would be even
Starting point is 00:14:35 more grotesque than the already the truth, which is like you say, it suckers onto their esophagus until it chokes them to death, which is quite clever. Can they be trained? I mean, the CIA are always training dolphins and things, aren't they? Are you thinking, Andy, that we can defeat the CIA for whatever reason we might want to by sending an army of octopuses to turn their dolphins inside out? Oh yeah. That'll send a strong message, won't it? Britain is back on the global stage. We've inverted every dolphin you see our heads on a train. Stop the podcast! Stop the podcast!
Starting point is 00:15:16 Hi everybody, just wanted to let you know that this week's fish is sponsored by Squarespace. Absolutely, Squarespace, if you don't know what the internet is, then why are you even listening? How are you even listening? How are you even alive? If you don't know what a website is, how are you even alive? But you might not know how to make a website and that is where Squarespace comes in very, very handy.
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Starting point is 00:16:37 for heaven's sake. On with the podcast. On with the show. Okay, it's time for fact number two and that is my fact. My fact this week is that I'm On with the show. Okay, it's time for fact number two, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that during winter, the ground is too cold for male emperor penguins' feet. So they spend two months leaning back and balancing on their heels. That's great. It's just so painful and uncomfortable.
Starting point is 00:17:04 They sound like kind of relaxed dads. You know, they're leaning back. They've got their tail, like they prop back, they lean back on the little sort of... It's like a hunting stick, I guess. Is that what it... you know, those things you have on like... Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, a shooting stick. Shooting stick. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:17 More like one of those seats that an old lady sits on on the beach. Yeah. So yeah, I'm guessing you're very familiar with this, and we should just say why they have to do this. Because it's cold. Because it's cold. Because it's cold. Really cold. It's freezing. They're in Antarctica. It's at minus 40 Celsius and the female essentially lays her egg, I think this is right, and it's in the middle of winter because they need to start
Starting point is 00:17:38 incubating the egg so that it's born in nice springtime when there's lots of food. So middle of winter, cold as possible time, the females laid the egg, plopped it in front of the male, disappeared for a couple of months. And they have this incredible pouch that they plop over the egg and the egg balances on his feet. But then if his feet are flat on the ground, then they just get super, super cold. And so, as you say, he leans back and like a tripod balances on his tail. It's amazing.
Starting point is 00:18:04 For two months. I'd vaguely seen that they did this. I had no idea about the details and how difficult it is. The dads can only eat snow for those months. They get pretty skinny, don't they, by the end? They do. They lose half their weight sometimes, or 40%. And the dads basically had an enormous mega barbecue the summer before.
Starting point is 00:18:19 All the dads hang out. They put on lots and lots of weight because they know they're going to need it. They use it all up. Oh, that's interesting. So when am I going to lose this weight that I thought I'm going to have to be in a dead-bed? You need to head on down south and spend quite a bit of time on the sea ice. They just lose no heat. Scientists did the sort of, you know, those heat map body things that you do, you know, you see where someone's losing heat. And I think they found that the
Starting point is 00:18:41 only places they're losing heat are through their eyes. Really? You know, in Dune, the film Dune, and the book Dune, they've got these still suits, which allow them to lose zero moisture. They're basically in the desert. We're on the planet Arrakis. We get the idea. Yeah, but they've got these suits, which means they lose no moisture. And the penguins, emperor penguins are basically that, bodily. They just can do it and not lose heat.
Starting point is 00:19:09 Yeah, they get so hot. Like, you know, they do that huddling thing, the males, when there's a blizzard and they all cuddle together, they can be like so hot they have to break apart and be like, oh, God, and they just end steaming. Yeah. Yeah, it sounds like more. It sounds more of a thing, which you wouldn't think, because you see them in documentaries and you feel so sorry for how cold they must be. But actually it seems like overheating is more of a problem.
Starting point is 00:19:27 Actually potentially more of a problem, yeah. And I always thought that those big huddles were, you know, hundreds of them, as you say, clumped together, don't they? And they rotate who's on the inside. I always thought they lasted for ages. That was kind of how they stood. But apparently it's about 50 minutes each one last. I think so.
Starting point is 00:19:42 And it's really like, yeah, whenizzard blows through and it's really cold. Do you think they don't feel cold then? I think they would if they got cold. It just sounds like that they don't. The threshold is just way lower than humans. So I think it's down to minus 10 Celsius. They're basically comfortable. Well, that's actually that same as someone
Starting point is 00:19:59 from Newcastle, I think. That's why the black and white is the end of it. They're still a bit chilly then, I think. That's why the black and white is the end of it. They're still a bit chilly then, I guess. If minus 10 they're comfortable, minus 40 they're probably like... That's when they're like, oh, let's all, you know, let's get together a bit. Do they have human conceptions of discomfort in the way that we do? Well, that comes back to the whole sentient thing, you know. That's kind of the big thing of that is like, are they suffering?
Starting point is 00:20:21 Is the first penguin dad to suggest a huddle looks on as a bit of a wuss? Yeah! Or is everyone secretly hoping someone's going to suggest it but no one's going to be the first one? I'm not going to hug you! Touch me mate! One thing I like about the whole penguin feather thing is if you've seen the video, if you've seen kind of on Blue Planet or whatever it was of the emperor penguins whooshing up underwater and jumping out, like they do this kind of leaps, right?
Starting point is 00:20:46 They basically, that's like, need to get out of the water because there's probably something coming to eat me, but my little legs aren't gonna be very good at clambering off onto the ice. So they swim up from deep down and it's skin, it's their feathers. So basically as they go down, they hold their contour feathers, the outside ones in place,
Starting point is 00:21:00 they lock them in place so that the air is trapped. And then as they're coming up, they basically let that air out and it all comes fizzing out of the little under fuzzy bits and forms a stream of bubbles and it's called air lubrication and it basically reduces the friction against the water. And so they go a bit faster and they go popping out of the water at the top and then they land on the ice and they've got even they've got a nice little tummy, their fronts are covered with more feathers so when they land, it's nice cushion. That is so cool.
Starting point is 00:21:28 They're like Iron Man, they've just got tricks for days. They're a real risk of climate change, aren't they? Yeah, sadly, yes. They live on sea ice and if sea ice melts... This bit, specifically this bit with the males and the chick rearing is on the sea ice. And it's all on the outside, isn't it? Yeah, exactly. Because theyaring is on the sea ice. And it's all on the outside, isn't it? Yeah, exactly. Because they need access to the sea.
Starting point is 00:21:47 If the ice melts, basically, then that means they, like lots of colonies, have had complete breeding failures where no chicks survive to the next year. And it's happened two years in a row now. It's really bad. It's really bad, yeah. And I think the idea is that if the world keeps to 1.5 degrees of warming, then the numbers
Starting point is 00:22:01 will hold up much, much better than if it goes far beyond that. So that is the thing. Yeah, no, it definitely matters. Like every degree, every degree we can avoid of heating, the better the Emper penguins will do. And you know, the cool thing I love about it as well is how we study numbers of penguins is from satellites. There's like once a week a satellite passes over Antarctica and takes photos.
Starting point is 00:22:20 And you can only do that during the summer because it's dark during the winter, obviously, and you can't see anything. But in the summer months, they pass over and take photos and then you can count the penguins and their poo, basically. The guano stains the ice and you can see where they are. So that's how you figure out how many there are. And so basically, the end of the winter, when the sun comes up again, it's like fingers crossed everybody,
Starting point is 00:22:42 like how many are still there? Like how many of these- You're looking for a huge poo on the ice. Basically, yeah. And then that's when we see. So basically this year we won't know till, cause it's just going dark now. We won't know till like September, October
Starting point is 00:22:53 how this year's clutch of penguins has done. I wondered, do they take into account the level of poo? By which I mean, like let's say your penguins are not eating very well for whatever reason. They might poo less. And I wonder, like, let's say your penguins are not eating very well, for whatever reason, they might poo less. And I wonder if when they look at it, they can take that to be honest. Yeah, I don't know whether they do the poo for individual numbers or whether they're just like, here's a colony that's generally there. And then you zoom in and you can actually see like a little shadow. That's how good the satellites are. You can
Starting point is 00:23:20 see, and they're so tall that you can see the penguins shadow in the satellite images and therefore count each individual. Yeah, and actually I think one really interesting thing is you can tell how many individuals there are in one of these huddles by knowing the size of the huddle and the temperature outside. Because they're really mathematically precise. They go into like hexagons. You know how hexagons are the best way of packing things. If you kind of take a big pile of penguins, you know how much they're huddling because you know how hexagons are the best way of packing things. If you kind of take a big pile of penguins you know how much they're huddling because you know how cold it is and you just put a load of hexagons on that grid that's how many penguins there are. Oh you mean if it's colder
Starting point is 00:23:53 they'll go closer that's something you tend to omit here instead of... I don't know whether to be more impressed by scientists or penguins than that as if working that out is unbelievable then working it out as penguins is unbelievable. I'm just saying, I swear to everyone, you know. They're really cool. Yeah. I didn't know that part of Scott's expedition was about penguin eggs, collecting penguin eggs. It's crazy, it's so crazy. Scott of the Antarctic. Scott of the Antarctic, that one.
Starting point is 00:24:17 So 1910 to 1913 is Terra Nova expedition. A lesser known part of it, and I think 1911. It's 11, yeah. Was where three of them, so I think it was sort of the brainchild or the person who's most passionate about it was Edward Wilson, who was Scott's second-in-command. And then there was this other chap called Apsley Cherry Garrard. But they were there to go and collect emperor penguin eggs, weren't they? Because they believed it was going to be really evolutionary important.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Yes, that's right. A link between, yeah. Yeah, they thought they were the oldest birds and that there was this theory of recapitulation, which totally fell out of favor, but the idea that an embryo retraces its evolutionary heritage of its ancestors. So it would kind of basically start off in its egg as a little reptile and then turn into a bird as it was growing. And so it kind of totally comes back to this whole like crazy winters and the males with the eggs on their feet. Because the only way to get an egg with an embryo in it is to go in the middle of winter. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:25:11 And not only is it freezing cold, of course, pitch dark. They kept falling down like holes in the ice. It was ridiculous. You've also got to fight an angry dad. It's not in his fighting weight though, is it? So the three of them went and then the three survived. But Cherry Gerard got back and he We've also got to fight an angry dad. It's not in his fighting weight though, is it? That's true. So the three of them went and then the three survived, but Cherry Gerard got back and he was so ill from this expedition that he didn't go on the bit to the South Pole, which is where Fowars and Wilson died with Scott. But they did get the penguin eggs, but I mean, it sounds extraordinary.
Starting point is 00:25:40 So Cherry's teeth chattered so violently with a call that they shattered, apparently. Do you know how they kept warm as well? How? By burning penguins. That's dark. Oh, God. That's very dark. Hey, you do what you can.
Starting point is 00:25:54 I thought you were going to say they had a lovely hug and a cuddle together. And that was, oh, I'm not hugging you, I'm going to burn this penguin. I mean, that was when they went to the colony. They grabbed a whole bunch of eggs and they took some adult males and they burnt them because they're really oily. Yeah, I was going to say like skewers, they burn quite well, don't they? They use those as lamps in Scotland. Oh, they stick a wick up them.
Starting point is 00:26:18 I mean, how strong are your ethical principles when you are near the South Pole and suddenly you realize it's death or penguin burning. It was a couple of penguins. Yeah, it's only a couple. And it was, so it took him 45 minutes each night to chip into his frozen sleeping bag. They probably burnt like the novels that they brought with them in the Finnish before they burnt the penguins. I imagine so, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:40 We're not the Dickens because you need to keep holding the best ones. Sorry, it took 45 minutes to chip into his sleeping bag. Each night would be a block of ice and he said 45 minutes. And all I've got is one of these pieces of my own tooth to chip away with. Oh my god. That sounds... Well, I'm going to bed. You're going to bed early.
Starting point is 00:26:58 Yeah, yeah. Got the old sleeping bag chipping to do. There was also a thing where they had three sleds, I think, but they could only pull one at a time. So for every sort of mile they traveled, they had to do three back and forth. Oh my god. And they couldn't leave the chicken on the sled at the same time as the crane. We've got a penguin, an octopus and a dolphin. Okay, it is time for fact number three and that is Andy.
Starting point is 00:27:32 My fact is that when Queen Elizabeth II got married, the people of Leamington Spa clubbed together and bought her a washing machine. Oh. Yeah. That's nice. It's very nice. Clubbed together? How expensive was the washing machine or how little did each individual in Leamington's Park contribute?
Starting point is 00:27:47 Wow. Wow. I'm sorry, but that's less than one penny each, isn't it? Why have you taken everyone? I'm sure they were more expensive in 1947, I guess. Yeah. Yeah. It was also a time famously of massive deprivation after the war. Yeah. Bread was rationed at this point. They all used their ration cards to buy our washing machine did she have one already unclear I think out of diplomacy she was a famously diplomatic woman she would never have
Starting point is 00:28:12 said I have 16 washing machines in my different houses everywhere yeah so she was princess Elizabeth at the time because she wasn't yet Queen. That's how it works. And 1947, post-war, really poor time. So lots of gifts were food, you know? I mean, people, gifts from around the world. She got given lots of dresses, most of which she gave away to other girls getting married around her age, around the same time, you know? So, yeah. The list of wedding presents, this is so weird,
Starting point is 00:28:43 was published as a book, and you can buy it today. And I have ordered it, and it the list of wedding presents. This is so weird was published as a book and you can buy it today And I have ordered it and it hasn't been delivered yet So tune in next week. I'll be doing the same thing again Yeah, but it's like just weird present like 500 cases of tin pineapple I don't think I could Queensland I haven't had one tin this year. Haven't you? No.
Starting point is 00:29:08 Gosh. Maybe after this. Weirdly, I think I had my first tin pineapple of the year yesterday. That is a coincidence. Isn't it? That's bizarre. Yes, it was part of a Panang curry. People sent her stockings, which I find quite a personal thing to send someone. And she got over 100 pairs, I think, hundreds of pairs of nylon stockings, which I find quite a personal thing, to send someone.
Starting point is 00:29:25 And she got over 100 pairs, I think, hundreds of pairs of nylon stockings, which were a high value item. Nylon was a newly invented thing. What would the equivalent be to a Bitcoin, probably? The people of Leamington Spa chip together to get you one Dogecoin. Ryle wedding gifts are often quite weird, aren't they? Yeah. Grace Kelly, friend of the podcast, she got a yacht from Aristotle and Assis. Oh yeah, yes please. Which village club together to buy that?
Starting point is 00:29:59 Better than washing machine, isn't it? The interesting thing about that is it was a repurposed ship. It was a yacht. And then it got turned into a ship for the war and was used at Dunkirk to help evacuate soldiers. And then after the war, Anasis bought it again and turned it back into a yacht and then gave it to Grace Kelly as a wedding gift. That's sort of recycling. Sorry, which bin does this yacht go in?
Starting point is 00:30:27 Oh, that's great. That's much better than the one I felt. Prince Charles and Diana, when they got married, a council in Somerset sent one ton of peat. He's a farmer and you know, he's not a farmer as he but he owns lots of farmers. Yeah, but you know, that was a huge faux pas, really. We're not sending excrement to a wedding, is that a faux pas? Oh, Pete's an excrement. I need to do some basic lessons, okay?
Starting point is 00:30:53 But it was Sedgemoor District Council, they sent him a ton of Pete, and this was exactly about the time that Charles was banning Pete, because he is very environmentally aware, and has been for a very long time. And in the 80s, he banned Pete use on all of his of his farms because you know, it's a big biodiversity area. Also, it like sequesters a lot of carbon, doesn't it? Yes, although he knew that at the time, but he was very, you know, predicted. So Sedgemoor, you screwed up. One nice wedding gift I found is something that people get in Japan called the Venus
Starting point is 00:31:23 flower basket. Oh, yes, I know this one. Yeah. Tell us what it is. So it's a deep sea sponge. It's a glass sponge. They're made out of kind of silica basically. They look like a very ornate stocking. So a bit sort of like a woven knitted stocking. And then there are these shrimp that live inside them and they get inside them when they're larvae. So they can sort of go through the holes of this glassy sponge thing. And then they get trapped. And so basically have a male and a female that are trapped inside this sponge and can't get out. And that's like a marriage. Exactly. Exactly. And they send their babies off into the world through the holes of their sponge,
Starting point is 00:32:02 but they stay their entire life inside this sponge. Yeah, it is that, it's because like the male and the female stayed together the holes of their sponge, but they stay their entire life inside this sponge. But yeah, it is that, it's because the male and the female stay together the rest of their lives, isn't it? Oh, it's a claustrophobic concept of marriage, isn't it? Lovely. Gorgeous. What I also found is, because the glass sponge is in a framework, isn't it? It's like a lattice.
Starting point is 00:32:17 Yes. And they found that the currents go into it and they create a little vortex. And it means that when the male and the female release their sperm and eggs it's the perfect vortex to make them all sort of mixed together. That's quite romantic as well isn't it? It is, it's lovely. I've heard as well that they designed the gherkin in London around the skyscraper, around this sort of shape of a sponge as well and it was like rather than water and other things circulating around it, it's like, it's for air conditioning
Starting point is 00:32:48 and it pulls air in and it goes up the building. Do not release sperm around a girl looking for love. Just see what happens. Building security and the cleaning team will both be detached. That's so interesting. Wow, that's very cool. Yeah. We can do a washing machine thing or two? Washing machines? Yeah, they're bad. That's so interesting. Wow, that's very cool. We can do a washing machine thing or two?
Starting point is 00:33:07 Yeah, washing machines. Yeah, they're bad. Are they? Yeah, washing machines are bad. Synthetic clothes washing accounts for 35% of primary microplastics found in the environment. Wow, that's high. And they're trying to come up with a law where all new washing machines have to have a filter in them And it's already the law in France
Starting point is 00:33:28 I think but at the moment it's not the law in the UK and it needs to be the law in the UK And does that stop the microplastics getting out and into the water system? That's a filter. Yeah, and when you say synthetic fabrics, I don't know that t-shirt you're wearing I would say oh, it's cotton I guess I guess I think I think you're talking more like fleeces and yeah like polyester Okay, polyester fleeces are particularly bad because they just shed loads of fibers. Why would you ever wash a fleece? Yeah good point Next time don't I'm at the school of like if it's out if it's an outer layer you never wash it no Yeah, and if you're wearing your flee No? Unless you fall in a swamp.
Starting point is 00:34:05 Oh yeah, and if you're wearing your fleece you might be... What if a bird poo's on you? Just wipe it. Wait till it's dry and then a stiff hog's back bristle brush. Do you know that the first fleeces were called synthetic chinchillas? No, stop it. Yeah, yeah, I think that's right. When was that?
Starting point is 00:34:22 When? Yeah, roughly. 20th century. Get away. 20th century, yeah. Because before that people were. When was that? When? Yeah, roughly. 20th century. Get away. 20th century, yeah. Because before that people were wearing chinchilla. Real chinchilla. I think chinchilla was a name of a fabric
Starting point is 00:34:32 that was kind of similar to what a chinchilla was, but it was like, it was made of cotton, but it was cold chinchilla. That's so funny. And then it was synthetic chinchilla. I think that's right. Ironic, because actually they're sort of chin warmers, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:34:44 That's very right, yeah. Gosh. Good grief. Can I tell you a washing machine fact? Yeah. This is good. So you know the Samsung jingle? The Samsung jingle?
Starting point is 00:34:54 No. That's not one of the famous ones. When your washing machine finishes, it plays a little tune. And if you've got a- Samsung? This is the Samsung, yeah. No, I don't know it. There's a tune, well, lots of washing machines machine just goes beep beep beep when it's finished.
Starting point is 00:35:07 Oh, you're missing out. Or something. No, no, no. That's the announcement of the underground. You're thinking I installed the wrong thing in my mad. It was composed in 1817, the Samsung washing routine jingle. For this? With this in mind? It's Franz Schubert. Wow. I know. And it's a song. It's called The Trout. So there's an aquatic theme. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:35:41 And it's based on a poem, a different, confusingly, a German writer called Schubert. And it's about a trout that gets caught by a fisherman and it's a warning to young women to stay away from men. Well, there you are. Yeah. And this is the tune that is in every Samsung washing machine. It's a little sort of ceremonial ditty that plays at the end of, and I have one of those washing machines.
Starting point is 00:36:02 I hear that tune a couple of times a week. And your wife leaves the house. What a multi-layered fact. There are so many bits to grasp there. Well, I mean, to start off with, I didn't know Samsung made washing machines. I thought they made TVs. Right. That's the foothills of this fact. Yeah. Schubert and Schubart. I want to know about that comedy up. Can I ask you guys a question about your washing machines? How much washing powder do you tend to put in?
Starting point is 00:36:29 I just put one of those like, you know, those Tide Pod things that Americans eat. I put one of those. Oh, you do the Tide Pods. Yeah, just a scoop. I don't use powder. I use liquid from a refill shop. Well done. Yeah, just a cup of that. A lid. Good, but I'm afraid it's not quite as good as the old reusable egg full of dry granules
Starting point is 00:36:54 that I use. I've got one of those. You do have to fly down to the Antarctic to get the egg. That's why I've lost all these teeth, these front teeth have mine. Is that right? You wash with a reusable egg? There's a little plastic egg which is full of dry granules and they last about like a hundred washes or something. That's so wonderful.
Starting point is 00:37:13 And you just replace those dry granules. I wondered why you smelt so bad. No, like it works, it's really good. Oh cool. I've heard of that. Well that's a much better public service announcement than mine, which is if you're just using normal washing powder, you should never need to use more than really a tablespoon, which is much, much less than you're probably using. This was a New York Times expose. And it's really bad to
Starting point is 00:37:32 overuse it because it makes your clothes go all crunchy. Can I ask Anna, as someone who has a toddler who's currently potty training, and so I often have urine and feces stains on my clothing, is it different for me? It says for extremely heavy loads, you might want two tablespoons, but you're never going to need more than that. Okay, thank you. And they're lying to you, the companies, with their cups on the lids because they just want to get through it. Yes, exactly, and they give you a little scoop, don't they?
Starting point is 00:37:56 It's in their interest. Yeah. Big core. Big powder. But, because I've always thought the whole thing's a scam and what I've always thought is the whole, all the washing clothes thing, it's a scam., because I've always thought the whole thing's a scam and what I've always thought is the whole, all the washing clothes thing, it's a scam. The thing I've always thought is the draw thing,
Starting point is 00:38:09 gotta be a scam. So I've always put everything in the drum. Yeah, I do that as well. Well, what I've realized, if you use fabric softener, if you put that in the drum, which I always have done, it's completely pointless. And it's because it's to do with the charging of it. So fabric softener is partly there
Starting point is 00:38:24 to stop your static clothes sticking together. And it does that by being positively charged so that the negatively charged clothes sort of bind with it and become neutralized. So it's, there you go, that's kind of what it does. But it has the opposite charge to your washing powder. So if you put them in at the same time in the drum, they cancel each other out and it doesn't do any good.
Starting point is 00:38:42 So if you are like me and you're just tipping your fabric softener in the drum, stop it. And stop using all of it and be more ethical like these guys. Get the egg. Get the plastic. I swear. Get the egg and the cranials. Get the giant penguin egg. Shove it in the washing machine. Yeah. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:59 Closely one wedding present thing. So it's based on a fact I discovered, which is that in 2015, Cristiano Ronaldo bought his agent, George Mendez, and his wife, Sandra, Greek Island as a present. So they're best friends, I think he was best man at his wedding or vice versa. So they're very close, how sweet, bought him a Greek Island. And I was just like, how do you buy someone a Greek Island? And do you know there's a website called privateislandsonline.com, which just has loads of islands for sale. And this, when Greece went through the credit crunch, I didn't realize, but lots of economists advised, and eventually they went with it, advised that they put up a bunch of their islands for sale to make back some of the money.
Starting point is 00:39:35 I have been on this website, I think. Have you got an island? No, I think like if memory serves, you go on and it's like some of them are like not beyond the realms of possibility of someone like if memory serves, you go on and it's like some of them are like not beyond the realms of possibility of someone like me could buy, but it's always like a tiny island in a lock in the northernmost part of Scotland. And it says no electricity, no water, no ability to get to the island. You know, you'd be living a little bit off grid. Yes. But I still think the cheapest
Starting point is 00:40:03 Greek one I found was 5 million US dollars. So if you know, if we all club together, if we, if those bastards in Leamington Spa are actually chipped in, Doug D. Maybe I don't know what the mortgage offers are on this. It's Strogylo Island or Strogylo Island. It's got beaches around the edge. Okay, hear me out. No such thing as a fish island. Everyone is listening. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:27 Chips in a bit. Go on. And everyone gets to go there. Okay, lovely. I love it. Let's do it. We can get $5 million. It's 54 acres so we could all fit.
Starting point is 00:40:35 Is anything on it? Some trees. It's very green, very verdant. Sounds lovely. Oh, and it's got power in some way. I mean, there's no living on it. Power station. There is a nuclear power station in the middle and it had a little hiccup a few years ago,
Starting point is 00:40:52 but honestly, it's fine. Anyway, just something to bear in mind, I think. Yeah, get that Kickstarter going. Yeah, I think I will. Get Hannah on island. Lovely. Could I do animal gifts? Oh yeah. Wedding gifts. I will. Get her an island. Lovely. Could I do animal gifts? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:05 Wedding gifts. Can we do this? Yeah. Quickly. Technically known as nuptial gifts. And there are lots of animals that give each other a presence before mating. Did you know about this? Uh oh. That sounds saucy. So usually the males, but occasionally it's females that offer something. It's usually food. But the really cool one I found was the nursery web spider. So the males approach the female and give her a gift of usually an insect and he wraps them up in silk. And the females prefer the wrapped ones. They like the white, shiny wrapped up presents. But he'll give her the present and she will open it and start eating it. And meanwhile, he's getting busy with what he needs to do so they start mating while she's opening her present.
Starting point is 00:41:48 Right there. Yep. And generally... Just wait. Can you just wait? No, no. It's sort of the whole point and if she can... At least sing happy birthday.
Starting point is 00:41:57 No, so she's... No, he's mating while she's opening. So she's opening the present. But basically because it's wrapped up he can cheat and they don't always put something inside. No way. That's so funny. It's like deal or no deal. Yeah, so basically some of them are like, well, I'll just put this whole piece of shit in here. Like no one's going to know until she's opened it because it takes a bit of time.
Starting point is 00:42:20 And if she opens and she's like, what is the okay. And then basically, too late. I've done it now. Yeah. So, and so then she'd be like, no, ah, off you get, we're going now. But the male that they also do a thing where so Hickton, I mean, this is from the paper actually, there's a study of this. And I just thought this is a lovely sentence. However, if the female moves and attempts to terminate the copulation, the male may perform Thanatosis, which is death feigning behaviour. He stretches out his legs, which is unique to this species. The male then ends the insertion and grasps the gift with his chelicerae, which are his mouth parts, and then the female moves away
Starting point is 00:42:57 while holding onto the gift and the male is dragged along behind the female until eventually she'll give up and then he revives and resumes mating. Wait, I was going to ask what his end game is here because I thought he was just trying to get the present back. Yeah me too to re-gift it. I mean his end game is to basically try and mate with her as long as possible because you do like the more the longer they go the more chance they have of fertilizing. And so basically breaking like giving her a crack present is not a great idea because she will be like no I'm going to stop now because there's nothing in here and the better the present you get the more time but it seems that sometimes
Starting point is 00:43:34 they just don't have anything or they're really hungry and they eat the gift first so they take the insect, feed it. Honestly I did buy you a bottle of wine, but it was a long train journey. Anyway, here's the bottle. Exactly! Hannah, stop making me! And you've never invited me back! Hannah fading death-cleaning, punching the wine bottle in her mouth! Okay, it's time for our final fact and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that hermit crabs are facing a housing crisis.
Starting point is 00:44:16 Join the club. Oh, Satay Bell everyone. What do you mean? I think it's relatively self-explanatory in that hermit crabs, as you might know, don't have their own shells, so they go and find a new shell. And usually it's one that's discarded. But it turns out that there aren't as many shells as there used to be. There's various different reasons.
Starting point is 00:44:41 One reason is because gastropods, shell creatures are shrinking, the populations are shrinking. But the papers basically analyzed photographs of crabs online. Social media pictures of hermit crabs. Pretty much, yeah. They basically went on to Instagram and look for hermit crabs and found loads of pictures of them using bottle caps, soda cans, Lego bricks. The really scary bit is the broken end of a light bulb. So they're like the metal bit that you screw in. They used that. There's quite a few pictures of hermit crabs.
Starting point is 00:45:17 I guess those are very durable in the ocean, I suppose. They just last a long time, don't they? And I think that's one of the other reasons they're doing it just because it's what's there. Right. Yeah. And there was another study in 2019 that found that half a million hermit crabs are dying every year after getting stuck inside bottles and things like that. So it's bad news for hermit crabs. It is. I mean, it's kind of mad. Apparently as well, this plastic starts to smell like dead crabs. And that's one reason why they come towards them. So there's this stuff called dimethyl sulfide,
Starting point is 00:45:48 which is this molecule that does all sorts of important things like make clouds and it comes off plankton in the ocean. But it also, it's like, it's the smell of a rotting crab. And that, but it sticks to the outside of plastic stuff and plastic pollution in the ocean. So one reason possibly why these crabs are going for the Coke bottle lids and yogurt pots is because they think it smells like a dead
Starting point is 00:46:08 crab and therefore it's a shell that's just been left behind by another crab. Because you would use that naturally. Yeah, yeah exactly. These homo crabs will use whatever they can find. So in Madagascar there was a beach where there's a big cliff full of fossil shells, so really old shells, and the crabs will wait at the bottom of the cliff waiting for the fossils to drop out. And then they'll use those as their home. So cool. That's like buying like a period property. Like a listed building. They're not allowed to decorate though. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:46:37 That's amazing. So they will use all sorts of things. It's really interesting what you said about how they'll go towards the smell of a dead crab, because obviously in nature that's very unusual, isn't it? Like usually if a member of your species has died, you would usually give that a bit of a wide berth. Yeah, unless you want to eat it. Well, yeah, which is what they do, I think, as well, right? They might do, but yeah, you're right. It's not a good smell. Like carrion, rotting carrion is not.
Starting point is 00:47:03 Yeah. So what happens is that sometimes they'll climb into a bottle and because the bottle's smooth they can't get out. So they'll die. And then the smell of the dead crab comes out and then the next crab goes, oh great, dead crab goes into the bottle and then they get stuck. Oh no, it's like a horror film. And then the next crab goes to find that dead crab. And then you've got a bottle full of dead crabs. Oh God. And another kind of crazy thing about this is that maybe it's actually kind of makes sense
Starting point is 00:47:29 from the crab's point of view, because if there's a ton of plastic around and you want to hide, then you hide inside the plastic. And then you might, and then predators might also not really have figured out that there might be crabs inside of yoga pots. And so they haven't kind of learned yet to go looking. So it could be actually an advantage for the crabs and they're also lighter. Yeah, yeah. As a shell. They take on with no energy to pick up. They're really clever.
Starting point is 00:47:55 The sort of the way they do it. So they they sometimes evict each other. So if you have outgrown your shell and you spotted hermit crab with a shell that will be perfect for your current size, they go over and bang on the shell with their claws. They do. And before the fight breaks out, they'll show each other their claws. Because if you've got the bigger claws, then generally you're the one who wins. So they try not to have a fight. They'll be like, look, I'm this big.
Starting point is 00:48:18 And the other one will, they'll compare claw size. And that can deflect fights. That would be good. You know, in boxing at the start before the boxing fight they always come up to each other and sort of like stand head to head and sort of talk to each other. It'd be good if every time one of them just went, oh no I'm gonna lose this. Is that the weigh-in James? Yeah. Are they actually weighed at that point? Yes they are because in most weights there's a maximum weight you can be and they try and get as close to that
Starting point is 00:48:44 as possible And now they both I've always wondered this about boxing Are they both standing on the same set of scales because they're standing right facing each other and looking at each other I always wonder if there's one big set of scales in the middle that they both have to get on As in like one of those balance scales No, it's one set of sales and they take turns all they do. Okay, you got to use the same set Oh sure. Yeah, but it would be nice if there was a joint set and they could both use it at the same time. And if it goes over the weight.
Starting point is 00:49:08 Just a seesaw. Exactly. And it has to be exactly balanced. Yeah. And it would be a nice, actually it would be nicer if in the middle of the boxing ring was a seesaw and whoever wins the seesaw. How do you win at seesaw? I was a very competitive child. Absolutely crush them on the little springy dogs at the
Starting point is 00:49:24 park today. Hermit crabs, hermit crabs. Hermit crabs. So they do actually decorate their homes quite well. And so we've talked about the way they move house, but when they're living in their house, they do various things. The anemone hermit crab gets anemones and sticks them to its shell. And I think it's because they've got stinging tentacles that affect other passersby and so it's a little bit of protection, the
Starting point is 00:49:48 anemone gets some food, but when they move shells, they do then take all the furniture with them. The flat doesn't come furnished and so I think they spend ages, is this right? They spend ages prising off the anemones. Yeah, yeah, there's a species of deep sea anemone that was discovered just last year and they got a couple into the aquarium and this was scientists in Japan. And it spent two days trying to move the anemone. Yeah, it was like pinching it and pulling it and like just generally trying to get it to let go. And then you've got to persuade it to cling on to the new one as well.
Starting point is 00:50:19 Oh my god. It just doesn't want to move. Yeah, the anemone, I don't know if it knows, it's basically just, I don't know. It just not cooperating. It just cleans on, right? It just cleans on. But the crab is like, well, he might not, they might not get another anemone and they're in short supply,
Starting point is 00:50:33 so you have to bring them with you. Wow. That's so funny. It's like the worst blue tack ever when you're moving out of a house. It's scraped away. Two days. Yeah. Why don't I put that poster up?
Starting point is 00:50:42 Have you heard of Aki Inomata? She's a Japanese artist. I don't think so. She does collaborations with animals. And one of the animals that she's done an art project with is a hermit crab. So she's 3 in on top of a shell and then lets her hermit crab move into that. It is cool. I mean, I guess it's also not a natural shell, which would be the best thing, but it's an interesting, you know, they will move into anything. Like you give them like, you can make them little Lego homes. They'll move.
Starting point is 00:51:20 They'll try that. And I looked a bit more into her work in a matter. She's done another project which is called, I wear the dog's hair and the dog wears my hair. Okay. And she and her dog wore capes made from each other's hair. Oh, okay. And it looks a lot nicer than you would think it would look. When you say collaboration, it's amazing.
Starting point is 00:51:40 It was the dog's idea. She said, I collected the hair of a dog called Cielo and my own hair over a number of years and then make clothes out of my hair for the dog and the dog's hair for myself so we could exchange coats. The two species human beings and dogs have developed together over the ages. This work examines the relationship between a human and her pet. What kind of dog was it? I just want to know what kind of patterning it had.
Starting point is 00:52:01 Small, it's a small dog. Oh wow. Was it spotty or stropey or? Just brown I think. I just wondered if it's a small dog, what kind of patterning it had. Small dog. Oh wow. Was it spotty or stropey or? Just brown I think. I just wondered if it's a small dog, what kind of outfit you can make really. It's wearing quite a natty little waistcoat. It looks good. Nice.
Starting point is 00:52:13 And she's wearing a kind of cool sleeveless jacket thing. So it's the dog's waistcoat is made out of her hair. That's right. So why don't we make more clothes out of human hair? Yeah, Andy. That's a good question. Oh I don't know. Let's do it.
Starting point is 00:52:25 Well, one creepy, I would say. Yeah. But I mean, you get a lot of, I mean, I guess they use, like, when you get your hair cut, like, they'll, if it's good hair, they'll use it for making wigs. Yeah, you know, for making wigs. That's good. That's true. So maybe we do that instead.
Starting point is 00:52:37 I don't know. Just one look. Probably. I mean, this woman's a very good artist, it sounds like, and probably most people who try to make clothes out of human hair would look like shit. Yeah. And also just think of all the head and shoulders you have to put in the washing machine. Do you guys know about, I really like historical manias and I think we often cover them on
Starting point is 00:52:55 the show and I don't think we've talked about conchilla mania or conchilla mania. In 18th century, people just got really obsessed with collecting shells, didn't they? I really did. And it sounds like a really fun time to be alive. And the... Cons, you'll die at 40. Pros, you'll have collected some lovely shells. Worth it. So I suppose like a lot of these manias, it's a time when people in the Western world or
Starting point is 00:53:23 in Europe are exploring more, so they're finding more exciting shells around the world. The most valued was this one called Glory of the Sea. Have you seen a Glory of the Sea shell? Yes. They're not that impressive, are they? Well, no, you're right. I've seen one that was like was from that time and it was collected by Victoria Collectors in the Natural History Museum. Oh cool. But yeah, it's because no one had one and so therefore, you know, the few that existed. Is that the one where there's a story about someone buying another one, he had one already, bought another one at auction
Starting point is 00:53:54 and then immediately smashed it to pieces. In order to up the value of the first one. And that might just be a powerful, I don't know if it's true, but it's that kind of level of, It was that vibe. Yeah, yeah. There's definitely one that sold for three times more than a Vermeer painting at the same auction.
Starting point is 00:54:09 And then there was this awful moment where we slightly got over the shell collecting obsession by the 20th century, but they were still really valuable. And I think in 1966, there were only 41 known specimens in the world. And then in 1969, we just found this habitat in New Guinea where they all live. And now there are tons of them. Scuba divers found them, didn't they? Yeah. I think. Yeah. And there's probably not so many left for hermit crabs now.
Starting point is 00:54:36 No, that's true. Actually, I don't know if they're good for hermit crabs. They've got quite a small opening. They are very petite. It would have to be at the very lower end of the housing market. First time starter. You've written a whole book about shells. I have. Spirals in time. That's correct. Can I ask you, Helen, about periostracum? I say periostracum, but you know, I'm making that up as well. You're an expert in this field, so I'm going to go with what you're saying. Is it true that shells, this is like a skin? Yes.
Starting point is 00:55:08 Shells have skin in life? Some do, yeah. So it's like a hairy layer that grows on the outside. I think it's like probably camouflage, probably some sort of protective thing that makes them look less like a shell and more like a bit of weedy rock. Just amazing. All the shells that we see, well, like lots of them, will have had skin. That's weird isn't it? Yes. Isn't that weird? I find it a bit weird. It's quite weird, yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:30 And then things like cowries which are really shiny. You know if you've seen like big lovely shiny cowry shells? The reason they're shiny is because part of their body called the mantle, which is like the pink bit on a muscle when you eat muscles, that's the mantle. Anyway, it falls over the outside when they're alive so they cover themselves in like a part of their body, which means they stay nice and shiny and they don't have like stuff growing on them. That's the mantle. Anyway, it falls over the outside when they're alive. So they cover themselves in like a part of their body, which means they stay nice and shiny and they don't have like stuff growing on them. That's why they are so like porcelainy kind of shiny glassy. Is it porcelana is the Italian for cowrie shell, I think. There you go. Yeah. So that's why they, I think porcelain was named after the cowrie shell I think. Oh, that's cool and the
Starting point is 00:56:08 Cowrie shell was named porcelain because it reminded people of a pig's vagina Yeah, cowries have got a lot of that sort of stuff going on. You can see that when you picture a cowrie shell I mean, yeah, I could say first thing that springs to mind if you've if you've only ever seen a cowrie shell or a pig's vagina, basically you've seen them both. I think that's correct. Yeah, I would say for people at home. Is it true, Helen, that we don't really know how shells form when animals grow their own shells? The process of bio mineralization? Yeah, true. I mean, it's a bit of a mystery. It's still a bit of a mystery because it's one of those things that takes a very long time. I think there's a lot going on. There's like a protein scaffold that gets laid down
Starting point is 00:56:46 first I think and then the calcium carbonate, which is the hard stuff, gets laid down in that and it's all at the outer edge of it. They harvest the calcium ions and carbonate ions from seawater and then combine the two of them together and they make crystals of calcium carbonate which then go on this scaffold. Right. It sounds like we do know how it's made. Yeah. Okay, but... I mean, that's the...
Starting point is 00:57:10 We know what happens. But how? But... And also why? Exactly. And then it can be... But I just think that's insane that they can harvest... But they don't know they're doing it.
Starting point is 00:57:20 It's not under chemists. It doesn't make it less impressive. Well, it does make it a bit less impressive, but I do think it's... It's just it. It's not like they're Kenists. It doesn't make it less impressive. Well, it does make it a bit less impressive, but I don't think it's subtle. It's just amazing. It's pretty cool. The world's most exclusive textile is made from a bivalve.
Starting point is 00:57:33 I'd never heard of this. Have you seen this? It's made from the pen shell. So a bivalve is like a muscle, right? Or a... Yeah, I think with two shells. A snappy shell guy. The snappy shells, yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:43 A Pac-Man. A Pac-Man, yeah. There are only 60 items known to be made of this special silk from this special pen shell. And so you've seen one of these things. They're huge, aren't they? The shells, they're like a meter tall. Yeah, I mean, they used to be. Now they're not. They're doing quite badly now and they're not as big.
Starting point is 00:57:59 But yeah, it's basically like a beard. Oh, like when you have muscles, if you eat moulmagnères and you pull off the mossy beardy bits, the same stuff. The threads. Yes. And they use this hair to embed themselves in the seedbed, right? Exactly. Little roots. Yeah. And then you make this amazing silk out of it.
Starting point is 00:58:14 Yeah, you go through it. It goes through stages of processing. I went to Sardinia, which is really where the only people left to do it. What? And I saw them going through. In fact, I think there's one woman left I read. Did you meet one? I met that one woman. Oh, Chiara Vigo. Oh, wow, you've got's one woman left I read. Did you meet one woman? I met that one woman. Chiara Vigo? Oh, wow, you've got opinions on Chiara Vigo.
Starting point is 00:58:29 I don't know if I should be mean. No, I'm not going to be mean, but she claims to be the last living mistress of sea silk, as it's called. But I met several other people who do it. This is explosive news to me and probably no one else. No, and it's all in the book. It's in Spirals in Time. I talk about it. I met her and she's kind of all like very woo-woo about it.
Starting point is 00:58:50 And she can go into her little workshop and she does all this kind of, oh, and here it is. And I do all these things. But then, yeah, I met two other women who've learnt it from there. Because it's like it's handed. No one does it because you're not allowed to harvest these things anymore. Apart from the fact they're not doing very well because they've just been wiped out by a disease.
Starting point is 00:59:07 Pen shells are now protected so you can't go and take one to get there. So did you call the police on this one? No, because she claims that she can sustainably harvest them, but no one's allowed to watch her do it. That was the part where I was like, okay. Yes, because she says she does a car on the shelf. No, no, they're fine. They grow back.
Starting point is 00:59:24 And I'm like, they do grow back, but I don't know how fast and if it's fast enough. And she doesn't let anyone watch her while she's doing it. Oh, interesting. I will keep the pig alive while I make this bacon sandwich. But I must do it in a closed room and you can't come in. You might hear some squealing. That's me. I just love bacon so much. I love bacon so much.
Starting point is 00:59:51 Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening, everybody. And if you want to get in touch with any of us, you can find these guys on some of their social medias. Andy, you're on? Twitter, Andrew Hunter M. James? My Instagram is no such thing as James Harkin. Helen, do you have any online? I do. Twitter is Helen Hunter M. James. My Instagram is no such thing as James Harkin. Helen, do you have any online measures?
Starting point is 01:00:05 I do. Twitter is helenskales. And instead, it's Dr. Helenskales, because someone already had Helenskales. Dr. Helenskales on Instagram. Or you can email podcast at qi.com. Or you can go to our Twitter account at no such thing, or Instagram at no such thing as a fish.
Starting point is 01:00:24 Or go to our website, no such thing as a fish. go to our website no such thing as a fish.com where you'll find links to our brand new tour which is setting up fast so please get there because we have so much fun we're going around the UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, do come see us in any of those places. Way more important than that is please buy all of Helen's books they're amazing but definitely buy the latest book, which is... What the Wild Sea Can Be. Such a romantic title. I love it. I came up with it first. Normally the title comes last. Sparrows in Time was particularly painful.
Starting point is 01:00:57 That was last minute. But this one I came up first. It has optimism in it, doesn't it? Definitely. Yeah, that's kind of the point. It's like, let's not give up. And there's lots of things that's hopeful. And hopefully there's some fun things in there too. So do that and come back again next week to catch us again. We will see you then. Goodbye.
Starting point is 01:01:18 I'd never heard of that. I gotta look it up when I get home. It's fucking good. It's genuinely works. At what temperature as well? Because that's the other thing. Oh yeah, 150 Celsius. For three hours. I'm fine, fine, fine. Good, good, good. Let's check it.

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