Stuff You Should Know - Porcupines: Little Stabby Cutie Pies
Episode Date: October 15, 2020We love animals. A lot. Especially underrated ones like the darling porcupine. Listen in today to learn all about these stabby little boogers. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpo...dcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryan
over there, and this is Stuff You Should Know
about porcupines, which this is a great idea, Chuck.
Good job.
You know, the porcupine, when you take away all those quills,
is just a cute little guinea pig, basically.
A giant one.
Yeah, a cute big guinea pig.
Speaking of cute porcupines, dude,
do you remember Teddy Bear the Porcupine?
Kind of went a little viral a few years ago.
No.
You have to watch Teddy Bear the Porcupine,
specifically, Teddy Bear the Porcupine
doesn't like to share on YouTube,
and it is this porcupine eating corn on the cob
and making all these sounds like cousin it,
and it is one of the cutest things
I've ever seen in my entire life.
Yeah, we're gonna shout out Live Science,
Smithsonian, Mental Floss, the San Diego Zoo,
and a couple of other websites that I coupled together,
this wonderful bit on one of our wonderful
animal friends in the world.
We'd love to do these shows.
It just made me think,
have you seen the octopus documentary thing yet?
No, I haven't.
I haven't either.
It's been kind of popping up in my periphery,
but I don't really know what it is.
Is it just about octopi?
Well, it's called My Octopus Teacher.
I haven't seen it yet,
but I just know the deal is this guy
kind of gets to know one octopus,
and that's a nice story ensues, is all I know.
That's neat.
We'll have to watch that.
Yeah, I can't wait.
And I mentioned that because we've long said
that the octopus is our favorite animal,
but I feel like almost every time
we've done one on an animal,
it's on something that we love.
And boy, do I love the quill pig.
I do too.
Yeah, apparently that's what their Latin name means, quill pig.
I love that.
That's great.
That is fantastic.
And it turns out, Chuck,
that there are basically two groups
that porcupines get lumped into.
There's a bunch of different geni, yeah, that's right,
and species, but they basically fall under two categories.
It's Old World, which is Europe, Africa, Asia,
and the New World,
which is North, South, and Central America.
And if you saw a porcupine in South America
and you saw one in the Himalayas,
you probably would be like, that's porcupine.
That's porcupine too.
They're not radically different,
like some Old World and New World's animals are.
Yeah, but something I saw that was interesting
was that they evolved separately.
What?
One of those, what is it called, co-evolutions or whatever?
No, I didn't see that.
That is crazy.
I saw that, and I only saw it in one place.
Oh, I think that might've been a personal hypothesis
of somebody who got themselves a website.
I saw it somewhere though.
And then the two actually,
the Old World and the New World have less in common
than they do individually
with some other rodents in their area.
Yeah, so I'm actually not surprised to hear that,
but the one thing that they do have in common
across the board is that they have quills
and that they use their quills defensively.
Now, what their quills look like, how they use their quills,
there's a lot of other distinctions and differences
between Old World and New World,
but they all have quills, they're all porcupines.
That seems to be the thing that binds them.
It's the tie that binds that family.
Yeah, and it's just,
it's easy to take the porcupine for granted, I think,
and just say, yeah, the little animal with all those quills,
but when you take a step back and look at it
and think about the evolution of the porcupine,
that like I said, it sort of would be a very large,
sort of cute little fluffy guinea pig,
but it probably got eaten a lot.
And then, you know.
They said nuts to this.
Nature steps in, it's like, all right, how about this?
What if we were just animal pin cushions
such that if he came anywhere near us,
you would be stabbed repeatedly if you tried to eat us?
Like it's one of the most amazing evolutionary adaptations
I've ever seen.
Yeah, and I mean, they can really use those things too.
There's a longstanding myth that they can shoot them,
which is not true, but apparently even Aristotle
fell for that one.
What a dummy.
But they can use them in some pretty interesting ways
and you hit the nail on the head when you said,
you know, step back.
If you see a porcupine, that is good advice.
You should probably step back because depending
on the species or whether it's old world or new world,
those quills can mess you up pretty good.
Yeah, but also, you know, get nearby and take a look.
Like they're not gonna come after you.
The porcupine is a very kind-hearted animal.
And those are 100% for defense.
A porcupine is never going to charge you
and leap at your belly to put quills all in your stomach.
So take a little look, admire it for what it is.
I think, you know, to talk about porcupines,
a lot of this is talking about the old world
versus the rush version.
Yeah, so the big differences that I saw,
and there's lots of differences
between different species within each of these groups,
but the old world versus new world
have some big differences between them.
And one of them is that old world
are typically terrestrial porcupines.
They spend most of their lives on the ground.
They live in burrows or caves or rock dens.
And new world porcupines, they live on the ground too.
They live in burrows,
but they're also very capable of climbing trees.
And they'll spend a significant amount of time
and sometimes nests in trees.
And there are some species that spend virtually
their whole lives in trees, almost like sloths.
Yeah, quill-wise, the new world porcupines,
quills are gonna be shorter and smaller in general.
I think they're about four to 10, four inches, 10 centimeters.
The old world dudes and ladies, they can get very long.
They can have quills up to 20 inches long.
They can be marked with black and white bands.
And what they can do is these old world guys
can puff them up so they stand up
and they're more intimidating.
And look also, I mean, it's weird
because it's like multi-fold,
like four or five different things they do by doing this.
They look larger, so that's always something
that vulnerable animals try to do in the wild.
They look like a skunk a little bit
because of the black and white marking down their back.
They actually have a defensive musk,
kind of like a skunk, but just not nearly as bad.
Yeah, so they try to imitate a skunk a little bit.
They look bigger, they rattle,
they can shake those things and rattle them,
which is another great adaptation
to say like, get away from me, don't try and eat me.
And supposedly that works pretty well too.
Yeah, totally.
And then if all else fails, they're stabby.
They are stabby.
So sometimes the old world ones will actually charge
backwards toward a predator if they're feeling
like they wanna stand their ground.
And that's usually when they're caught out in the open.
If they have a place to hide,
they'll stick their head in that place to hide
and then puff out their quills
and make themselves hard to get at.
But if they're out in the open,
they may decide that they're going to fight off
this predator and they'll charge backward.
And one other adaptation I saw,
which I thought was awesome,
they'll have the predator chase it
and then they'll stop all of a sudden
and the predator will run into them in their quills, for real.
And then you hear the sound effect.
Yeah, exactly.
And then it's too late.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting
because those quills, even though they puff them out,
they are pointy generally in the reverse direction,
which is why they have to back up into something
to quill them or like you said, bury them,
just throw on that parking brake real quick.
And all of a sudden that fox has got a face full of quill.
Right.
So that old world contains a couple of species
that are called crested porcupines.
And they basically look like,
if the quills were like an umbrella,
it opens at the back of their head.
Yeah.
And just kind of sticks out like that.
And like you said, it makes them look a lot bigger.
They're a lot more dangerous.
The big difference with quills
between the old world and the new world,
in addition to being shorter,
is old world porcupines are covered in quills.
That's all they have.
They have, like, I don't know if we said or not,
but quills are just modified hair.
They're made of keratin.
They're just like hair.
They're just way stabbier than hair that you and I have.
Well, it's like hair meets fingernails.
Basically, yeah.
That's a great way to put it.
And old world porcupines,
that's all they have are quills.
New world porcupines have quills
that are also mixed in with fur,
like an undercoat, longer hairs.
And their quills kind of stand up and are used for defense.
It's not all that they have.
And the other thing about their quills
is that they have little barbs.
And new world porcupines, barbs,
make the new world quills way more dangerous
than old world quills.
Yeah, it's like a little fish hook, basically,
and instead of just poking right into you,
it'll actually snag in your flesh
and makes it, like you said, way, way tougher to get out.
A much harder time removing a new world quill
than an old world quill.
Right.
But those new world guys are,
because their quills start further back,
you get the feeling if you just,
I wouldn't recommend this,
but if you just go very gently and just say,
hey, little guy, never do that.
I just wanna give you a scratch under the chin.
And I think you might enjoy it.
And I'm gonna move very slowly.
Just don't turn around and you'll have a really good time.
I'd like to include a disclaimer here.
Don't do it.
You guys should not listen to Chuck right now.
He's doling out some really terrible advice.
Yeah, it's just because those quills start further back,
they got that cute little head and face
and it just makes you wanna give him a scratch.
Yeah, no, totally.
Like if you watch Teddy Bear videos,
Teddy Bear the Porcupine,
you will wanna go get one as a pet.
There's another one I saw called Diva.
She's a baby porcupine.
She's adorable.
Yeah, you totally wanna do that.
You totally wanna do that.
And I'm sure there are ways to handle them.
But I also saw one of those zoo guys on a late night talk show
and he had I think an African crested porcupine on his lap.
And that thing was not at all worried or scared
or in any sort of defense mode.
And that dude was in pain
just letting this thing sit on his lap.
Cause I don't know, you said,
they look like guinea pigs.
And I said overgrown guinea pigs.
Some of these things can get really big.
There's a Cape porcupine.
I think it's the biggest one.
They get up to like 65 pounds.
65 pounds is like a large dog.
Yeah.
And with quills though.
With the quills puffed up?
No, like they're 65 pounds year round.
And then imagine a 65 pound dog with those quills.
That's dangerous.
Yeah, what I meant,
I know they don't actually weigh more when they puff up,
but they can, when they puff those quills out,
they can look two to three times their size.
So.
Right, yeah, yeah.
That thing looks enormous.
And actually I don't do this much,
but I'm watching that thing eat that corn on the cob right now.
Isn't that adorable?
Yeah, I have to have the sound down.
So I'm going to go back and watch it.
You have to hear the sound.
Like the sound does it,
but even without the sound,
he's just awfully cute, huh?
Yeah, it kind of,
they kind of look like beavers a little bit too.
And they are related as fellow rodents here.
I think we should take a break.
So I'm getting kind of worked up here.
And we'll come back and talk more about these cute little
stabby suckers right after this.
["Paydude the 90s"]
On the podcast,
Paydude the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show,
Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it,
and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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friends,
and non-stop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
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Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
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So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s,
called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass,
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The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
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Okay, Charles, we're back.
And we've been talking mostly about quills.
Yeah, so one more thing about quills,
and there's gonna be more than one more thing
about quills, let's be honest,
but we said they couldn't shoot them.
What they can do, these things do fall out,
just like hair, and they grow just like fingernails
and will eventually fall.
So when they shake, if they have loose quills,
they can fly off, but they're still not like shooting
like Aristotle said, like deadly needle darts.
No, but they can be problematic,
like these things can puncture the sidewalls of tires.
I was reading the blog of some tire company, KAL Tires,
I think up in the Yukon, and they said that it's actually,
it can be a problem.
Like if you run over one?
Like on some roads, yeah, that,
like if you're out in the middle of nowhere
and you run over a porcupine quill,
you're probably going to get a flat.
That's how tough those things are.
Well, that's sad.
What, for your tire?
No, for the porcupine.
For your afternoon?
Well, no, you're not running over,
are you still watching teddy bear videos?
No, I thought you said if you run over a porcupine,
it can-
Porcupine quill.
Oh, well being, what, is it just a loose quill on the road?
Yeah, exactly, that's what I'm saying.
Like just a loose quill laying on the road,
if you run over it, it goes into your sidewall,
you're probably going to get a flat tire.
That's how tough those things are.
Okay, I thought you meant
if you actually run over a porcupine
and you have like a bunch of quills.
I, that would probably do it too,
especially if the porcupine was in a defensive procedure,
but the porcupine doesn't have to die in this case
for you to go flat tire.
So regardless of that sadness,
there is sadness in that despite this great adaptation
and this great defense mechanism,
they still can be hunted.
Lions can still hunt them.
Human people, there's the bush meat trade
for the old world porcupines that is, you know,
just, you know what that means.
And they're, you know, they're owls, wolverines,
pythons, there's something called a fisher
that looks sort of like a weasel bear fox or something.
Did you look that thing up?
Yeah, I think it's related to otters and weasels.
Okay, but it had a little sort of a bear face.
It was interesting.
They apparently stink too.
Well, they stink in more ways than one
because they learned to flip these porcupines over
where they have that soft belly meat and no quills
as a way to attack them, which really makes me mad.
Yeah, I don't like fishers for that reason either.
I'd never heard of them until recently
until we started researching this.
I hadn't either.
They're on my hit list.
I don't like them.
Nope.
I just don't like them.
Eat something else.
Yeah, leave the porcupines alone
because they're actually pretty nice.
Yeah, and they don't eat, what do they eat?
They eat vegetables and fruits and berries
and nuts and cucumbers and roots.
Yeah, so they eat all those things.
They'll also eat crops,
which is porcupines are considered a nuisance,
especially if you're a farmer
or even a gardener in the suburbs
because they will eat your root vegetables.
They will eat corn, love corn apparently.
But they'll also, they have another thing too
where they need sodium in their diet.
They actually need a pretty even ratio
of one to one of potassium to sodium
for their electrical conductivity in their body to work.
But they don't get much sodium in their diet.
Plants have lots of potassium, not much sodium.
So they have to go find it elsewhere.
And it turns out we humans have a lot of stuff
that has sodium in it.
Apparently plywood glue contains a lot of sodium.
So they love eating wood structures we build out of plywood.
The salt that we put on the roads
gets kicked up on the underside of our car.
So you might find a porcupine chewing on the tires
or the hoses or belts or wires under your car.
Yeah, I thought that they would even,
because the humans sweat so much salt when they're working,
that they'll go at like,
if you have some wooden pruners in your shed,
they'll go in there and they'll start eating
the handle of your pruners
because it just has residual human salt leftover on it.
Right, you just walk in, you're like, are you nuts?
What is wrong with you, you porcupine?
Just set up a salt lake for those fellas.
Yeah, well, they'll find,
anywhere they can find a natural salt lake,
they'll definitely eat that too.
But yes, anything that has human sweat on it,
even trace amounts of human sweat,
they'll go bonkers for it.
How they'd love me.
Like they eat ores, paddles, that kind of stuff.
So, but yes, typically they eat leaves, stems,
they eat shoots and leaves.
They also though, and this is another reason
why they're considered a nuisance,
they eat the bark off of the tree.
So they're considered generalists,
they'll eat just about any kind of vegetation,
which is actually, and they're also super adaptable,
which is why you'll find porcupines
almost anywhere there's vegetation.
But that's what they eat in spring, summer, fall.
And then in winter, they don't hibernate,
which actually makes them kind of unusual as well.
But they go from being generalists
to what's known as faculative specialists,
meaning their diet becomes very limited
to just one or two types of trees,
and not just one or two types of trees.
During the winter, they may just feed
on the inner bark of one tree.
And that can be problematic because the inner bark
is where nutrients in water moves from the roots
to the rest of the tree.
And if that porcupine eats all the way around it,
what's called girdling a tree,
it can kill or seriously damage that tree.
Yeah, so if, I mean, if you have a problem,
if you live in the woods and stuff and you see a tree,
it could be a beaver,
but either way you kind of handle it the same.
You can wrap like chicken wire around it,
around the bottom or some sort of aluminum
or something sheeting to keep the beaver
and or porcupine from gnawing on that thing.
Yeah, and I would guess you'd want to wear work gloves
because the salt from the sweat in your hands
is just going to attract them to that chicken wire.
Yeah, they eat, they're nocturnal.
So they're mainly doing this stuff at night.
They're patrolling around.
They're defending their areas that they feed.
I saw both.
I saw that they're territorial.
I saw that they're also not territorial.
Yeah, it probably depends with, you know,
so many different species
because they will travel outside their home range
if they want to get a mate or if they need that salt.
They're usually, they're fairly solo flyers,
although sometimes you'll see a couple of them.
They may be mated, they may be siblings.
I don't think we mentioned that the Old World porcupines
are actually really good swimmers.
Both of them are, from what I understand.
Oh, really?
Mm-hmm, okay.
Yeah, and New World will actually go swim out
to gather aquatic plants.
They swim more than the Old World does,
but they just swim to collect plants
and then they bring it back to the shore to eat.
Yeah, and they're living in,
they don't, they'll like sleep in trees sometimes.
The climbers will, but it seems like they make use
of other animals' dens when they're not around
and they have left.
Like they'll go to an aardvark den
that has been abandoned or a hole
and they will change it around,
maybe knock down some walls, open up that floor plan.
Yeah, put an island in the kitchen.
Yeah, of course, gotta have that big island.
Sure.
And then, you know, they'll just adapt it to their needs
because obviously they're a little puffier than the aardvark.
Yeah, and in doing so, Chuck,
a question that I kept running up against
was what role do the porcupines play in the ecosystem?
And they think that one of the big roles they play
is by basically disturbing stuff.
They disturb the soil when they're digging
and burrowing and everything.
Oh, interesting.
They found that they, through that,
they propagate way more seeds
than would otherwise be propagated if they weren't around.
So forests are much more diverse with them in it
than without them because of all of their scratching
and moving and all that stuff.
Yeah, and it seems like for rodents,
they live a long time.
They can live in the wild.
I mean, I sort of saw a wild range anywhere from
I did too.
Three to five years in the wild to like 10 years in the wild.
I saw one that lived to be 18.
I saw the record was 25,
which I think was second only to a beaver.
As far as the rodent record,
I think there was a 28-year-old beaver once.
I saw one in Brazil can live up to 27 years in captivity.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, so that's, I mean, that's long lived,
but yeah, I saw three to five years too.
And I guess it just depends on the species, you know?
Yeah, and the other thing about their feeding habits
is they eat seasonally.
They're little hipsters.
They eat seasonally and locally.
So depending on what's there,
they will, I think in the winter,
they'll eat more evergreen needles
and like sort of the inner bark of the trees
and stuff like that.
Right.
And then, you know, when those sweet berries come around
or when that corn crop is coming in, just look out.
Then they turn back into generalists.
That's right.
So I feel like we cannot go any further.
Can't dance around the fact that porcupines copulate.
And when they do copulate, they produce offspring.
And we should talk about that.
Yeah, should we break or should we do this and then break?
I feel like we're gonna need to take a break after this.
Okay.
So porcupines have stabby quills.
That's that point backwards.
That's right.
And if you know how a rodent and a mammal like this
would have sex, it is from something,
a male approaching the female from the rear.
Yeah.
Right where those things are pointing.
And so you think, how do they do this?
What happens is the males are gonna,
they're gonna vie for the female like so many animals.
They have these sort of noisy battles
and they whine and they stomp when they win
and stomp their tail and try to impress the lady,
puff their quills out.
And if the lady says, all right,
I think you might be a good match for me.
What does he do?
He sprays urine all over her.
That's right.
And she goes, that was wonderful.
Let's go big boy.
Yeah, I'm gonna lay down my quills.
Yeah.
And move the tail to the side.
It's business time.
Right.
Yeah, cause the tail is barbed.
I don't think we said that either.
No, like all the quills are barbed, right?
Well, no, I think the actual tail is barbed.
Oh, good Lord.
As well, which can help with the climbing and stuff.
Right.
So I think it would take being sprayed with urine
to, you would wanna reach that level of commitment
to make sure that you could trust
that barbed tail is going to be kept to the side.
Are we really in?
Are we in?
Right.
And then yes, that definitely says, yes, you're in.
You're in, get it?
Yep.
I told you we would need a break.
Let's take one, shall we?
All right, and we'll talk about
porcupettes right after this.
On the podcast, HeyDude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of the
cult classic show, HeyDude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use HeyDude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and dive
back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends, and non-stop references to the best
decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper, because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia
starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy, blowing
on it and popping it back in as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to HeyDude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
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I'm Mangesh Atikar, and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India.
It's like smoking.
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Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop.
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my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good.
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Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
So Chuck, the porcupines have copulated.
They were successful and the female has now just stated for 205 to 217 days.
And what did you say were just born?
Porcupettes.
Like E-T-T-E-S.
Yeah, not pets is in something you keep, but yeah, little porcupettes.
Like the 50s singing group girl version of the porcupines.
Randy porcupine and the porcupettes.
Right, exactly.
Yeah.
And here's where it got a little confusing because I saw different stuff depending on
where I looked.
And again, it may be according to species.
I saw that they rarely have more than one at a time.
I also saw that sometimes they have up to four.
But let's just say between one and four per litter.
And they stay with their mommies for a little longer than what I found.
It says, and I think from the San Diego Zoo just a few months, but I also saw anywhere
from 12 to 24 months and they at least need that mother's milk for like six months.
And I think it really depends on the species.
Like I saw those, the largest ones, the Cape porcupine, they actually stay in family units
of a mom and a dad and one to two kids.
Oh, interesting.
Because the dad's usually out of there with the porcupines.
Right.
Right.
So yeah, especially with North American porcupines, I feel like a lot, because we're in America,
a lot of the info we got was for North American porcupines and people just called it porcupines,
which required a lot more digging.
But I feel like with North American porcupines, it's like, hey, good luck with the kids.
And then the mom has the kid and is like, hey, I'm weaning you good luck with the rest
of your life.
And then they live this kind of solitary, happy existence, digging around and eating
tree bark.
Yeah.
And if you think the porcupine is as soft and cute as you would imagine, you are correct.
Those needle like quills start to stiffen up very quickly, but it kind of starts three
or four days later.
And then I imagine takes a little while to reach full, you know, kind of hard quill version.
Yeah.
And I saw conflicting information too.
I saw that they were born precocious, where they had a full set of teeth, their eyes were
open, and then it just took a few hours for their quills to harden into like adult quillage.
That was even take two, Chuck.
Yes.
Adult quillage.
Thank you for that.
Yeah.
I also saw that their eyes were closed for a long time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So don't know.
It's possible.
It's different species.
It's also possible the San Diego Zoo just got a bunch of stuff wrong.
Well, that's always possible.
Great zoo.
I've been there.
I mean, we did an episode on zoos and whether or not they were ethical, so you can go make
up your own mind about that.
And there where Jack Hannah hailed from was an San Diego Zoo guy.
I feel like that's probably true.
Well, let's just say it is.
I got something else on these quills.
They have an antiseptic...
Wait a minute.
I thought we were done with quills, you said.
I don't know.
Never done with quills.
Okay.
They have an antiseptic quality, apparently, in case of self-stabbage.
That's awesome.
I hadn't seen that actually.
And I think we should say too, just one more thing about quills.
I'm breaking my own rules here.
Because they're like modified hair, they grow back when they're shed.
They're like constantly shedding and growing quills.
Yeah.
And like I said, you should not approach one in the wild, but they may carry rabies, but
other than that, they don't really carry any other diseases that we need to worry about.
Yeah.
Like if you wanted to love porcupines anymore, there you go.
I think you could snuggle one and you don't have to worry about any diseases.
Yes.
But don't eat them like they do in some parts of the world.
They are in pretty good shape, but they have been exterminated in certain parts of Africa
because they do eat root crops.
So they're a nuisance pest, so they get rid of them.
People can collect, you like that?
They can collect the quills for ornamentation.
And I think there's a couple of them that are listed as vulnerable and it's very sadly,
of course, because their habitat is being lost.
Yes.
But globally, porcupines are considered of least concern, which itself is concerning
because they're considered pests in a lot of places, so they're eradicated.
I think it was the Maryland DNR, the Do Not Resuscitate Agency, said that on their site
that porcupines used to be in the southeastern United States, but they were eradicated.
I didn't know that and I've never heard that and I couldn't find it anywhere else, but
I don't know why the DNR would make that up.
I'm trying to think if I've ever seen one in the wild.
They do not live in the southeast, but the Maryland DNR is saying like...
I've traveled all over the world.
I'm not saying in my backyard.
Oh, I got you.
Well, we were talking about the southeast.
You can imagine why I fell for that one.
No, I'm just trying to think of if I've seen one like camping out west or anything.
I don't know if I've ever seen one.
I never have.
I would think you would definitely remember seeing a porcupine in real life.
Probably.
Armadillos everywhere.
Yeah, everywhere and they carry Hansen's disease, so don't get close to them.
Porcupines don't carry any communicable diseases that humans are concerned about.
Except rabies.
Yeah, they can be rabid, but all mammals can be rabid.
You know?
So, should we talk about what happens, you know, if you just Google porcupine and dog,
you're going to get a lot of very sad pictures of curious dogs who stuck their snout where
they shouldn't and are barbed all over the nose and snout.
Not good.
No, and there's a lot of things that you want to do and don't want to do if that happens
to your dog because it's actually really bad if that happens.
So if your dog, if you ever see a porcupine on a hike with your dog, get your dog away
from that porcupine.
Not just for the porcupine's sake, like if a porcupine goes into a defensive posture,
it's scared to death.
Yeah.
It's not, it might seem all tough and angry.
It's scared.
That's why it's doing that.
But also, it could really mess your dog up.
So for at least your dog's sake, get your dog away from the porcupine.
And if you fail to do that quickly enough and your dog does take some quills in its
face, in its neck, wherever, those things can, because especially in the New World porcupine,
that their quills have barbs, they can migrate further and further inward.
They're not going to work themselves out.
They're going to actually work themselves in.
So you want to take your dog to a vet, like your dog gets quilled, you get in the car,
you go to the vet.
That's the order of how everything happens.
You don't stop and get a double cheeseburger.
You don't like go home and like read the paper first, like you go straight to the vet
because your dog's going to need to go under general anesthesia to have those things removed.
That's how bad of a jam it is.
Yeah.
I'm actually going to amend that with your permission because what the first thing you
should do, and hopefully you're with someone else, if you've got, it really would be great
if you have two people in on this, one to drive and one to keep your dog from messing
with their face.
Yeah.
That's a big one.
Because they're going to, if there's quills poking into dog's face, they're going to
paw at it.
They're going to try and rub their nose on the ground and that is bad, bad, bad, bad,
bad because those quills are just going to go further and further in.
So you really, really need to do your best to hold onto your dog, hold their head up
and keep their paws away from their face.
And like you said, go straight to that vet because you don't try and remove them yourself.
No.
You're only going to make it worse and that's like guaranteed.
There's also supposedly a myth that if you clip the porcupine quill, it deflates it and
makes it easier to come out.
They don't, they're not inflated with air.
No.
So clipping, it's not going to deflate anything.
Is that aerosol?
Yeah.
And it actually can make the quill shatter because imagine like a really hard claw or
something like that being clipped with some scissors, it's going to shatter some.
And if enough of a piece shatters far enough down, it can reach the skin level and then
if it works its way in, all of a sudden you just made it that much harder to get out because
you just added a new barb, which is that shattered jagged edge that used to be intact
before you cut it like a knucklehead.
Yeah.
I mean, I could see the instinct if you don't know what's going on to be to clip them because
if they're really long and sticking out of their face, it looks terrible or to try and
just yank them out.
Do not do that.
Yeah.
Don't do either one of those things.
Another big reason why is the risk of infection is really, really big.
Yeah.
I mean, they have multiple, multiple stab wounds essentially.
And they, like you said, the only solution is general anesthesia.
I mean, it's not surgery, but it's not not surgery.
No.
And they, you know, some of these may not ever be able to come out and your pets is
going to have a lifetime of being monitored to make sure they don't migrate toward a joint
or an organ or the back of their eye, who knows, depending on where they got stabbed
with a quill.
So I think it was the ASPCA that said the best way to deal with this is to prevent it
from ever happening.
Just don't let your dog anywhere near a porcupine.
It's just not worth the risk.
Yeah.
You're going to scare the porcupine too.
Yeah.
And if you live in porcupine country, don't ever let your dog out of the house.
No.
As a matter of fact, just keep it wrapped in bubble wrap at all times.
Yeah.
So will it drain them?
Yeah.
Or just change the bubble wrap, let them pee in the bubble wrap.
Yeah.
Just get tons and tons of bubble wrap and then don't throw it away, don't recycle it.
Put it in a huge pile at the end of each season in your front yard and melt it with a blowtorch.
Yeah.
Okay.
Great.
Maybe mix it with acetone first.
Yes.
I've got two more porcupine facts if you will indulge me.
Let's hear it.
You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
In the 70s, the 70s in the UK was a swing in time for porcupines apparently because
there was a population of Himalayan porcupines crested I believe in South Devon in the wild
because they'd escaped from the zoo sometime in the 70s and lived on the land for a decade.
And the same thing happened in Staffordshire with a kind of crested porcupine where they
had a wild population because they escaped from the zoo too.
Is that near Stoke-on-Trent?
I don't know.
We'll have to ask Tom if that's near Stoke-on-Trent.
All right.
You got anything else again?
I got nothing else.
Okay.
Well, that's it for porcupines, everybody.
Go watch Teddy Bear videos.
You're going to love them.
And since I said Teddy Bear, it's time for Listener Mail.
Man, I can't wait to turn up the volume on this.
It's going to knock your socks right off.
This Teddy Bear is probably an Instagram, I would imagine, but I do follow that ground
hog on Instagram.
Oh, I think I know who you're talking about.
Yeah, chunk the ground hog.
It's good stuff.
Yeah.
All right, so here we go.
This is from, oh, this is from Don, the black cowboy.
Did you see this one?
Oh, yeah.
This is great.
It's fantastic.
We did a short stuff on black cowboys in history and how they have long been overlooked.
So for some weird reason, you don't listen to short stuff.
You should.
Yeah.
We never kind of promote that, but it's just like stuff you should know, but it's shorter.
Yeah.
What's your problem?
Listen.
Hey, guys.
I'm a 25-year-old black cowboy from Texas.
I, along with my brother, am also a second generation amateur farrier as well.
My father taught us after learning the trade growing up on our family farm, then later
going into horse shooing as a side career.
When I saw your episode about blacksmithing, I was eager to hear if you mentioned farriers
in it and thought I might finally write in.
Then when you came out with a black cowboy episode, all of my friends shared the episode
with me.
So I knew I had to write.
As a kid, our family did trail rides, rodeos, and horse races nearly every weekend.
Since leaving my hometown for college and beyond, I've often been the first introduction
to black cowboys slash farmers for most people.
There's a large community of black cowboys and farmers still surviving regardless of
the systemic issues we face.
Whenever it's safe again, I'd like to invite anyone hearing this out to our annual trail
ride Easter weekend to get a chance to experience the lifestyle.
Isn't that cool?
Dude, I so want to do this.
So we sent a flyer too and it looks super interesting.
It does.
It looks awesome.
Yeah.
So they hold it over Easter weekend and you just basically go live the cowboy life for
a weekend.
I love it.
And it's like 10 bucks or something like that too.
Yeah.
It's not like some city slicker scam.
No, Don doesn't stick it to you.
Don, I'll give it to you straight.
That's right.
10 bucks.
I love the podcast.
Really helped keep me company in these last few years in the Peace Corps.
So Don is my new most interesting man in the world, I think.
He is one of the more well-rounded stuff you should know listeners we've heard from in
a while.
Yeah.
And he says, P.S.
Yes, I did ride my horse to school.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
Well, thanks a lot, Don.
Hats off to you.
10 gallon hat even.
Literally.
Thank you for the invite.
We may see you one of these Easter weekends on your trail ride.
And if you want to get in touch with us, you can send us an email too to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
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dive back into the decade of the 90s.
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