Archive for the ‘News’

Why is this not considered Animal Cruelty?02.13.10

If someone were to do this to a puppy or kitten it would be considered animal cruelty. Why not for rats?

A Winston-Salem woman used a plunger and an empty container of kitty litter to wrangle a rat back into her toilet before flushing it.


In this video she says, “I was as scared of it as it was of me.”

Somehow I doubt that. I mean, what is so scary about a tiny little rat? Can you imagine how the poor rat felt having a giant after it.

And, yes rats can swim up into your toilet though sewers, but flushing it back down would be like taking your average person and dropping them in Grade 6 white water rapids.

Posted in Movie/Video, Newswith 6 Comments →

Rat Sighting Closes School02.05.10

How sad is it that one rat sighted warrents the closing of an entire school!

I mean, do the parents really feel like a rat is going to decend from the air vents and attack their children?

Read more about it:

Rat sighting closes Saugus school, again

Posted in Movie/Video, Newswith 2 Comments →

Giant Wooly Rat Caught on Video09.11.09

Remember me posting a couple of days ago about a new species of rat being discovered?

The Giant Wooly Rat, or Bosavi wooly rat, was discovered in an unexplored crater in New Guinea.

Well, now there is video of this rat, at night, in its natural habitat.

What I want to point out is around 1:27 in the film.  The people are PETTING this wild rat, scratching it like a pet.  Remember, this is a WILD rat, it is a GIANT rat as large as your average housecat, it has no fear of humans, and yet its letting itself be scratched.

More proof that rats are not vicious evil little demons.

Posted in Movie/Video, Newswith 5 Comments →

Mice Levitated in Lab09.10.09

“Scientists have now levitated mice using magnetic fields.

The researchers first levitated a young mouse, just three-week-old and weighing 10 grams. It appeared agitated and disoriented, seemingly trying to hold on to something.

“It actually kicked around and started to spin, and without friction, it could spin faster and faster, and we think that made it even more disoriented,” said researcher Yuanming Liu, a physicist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. They decided to mildly sedate the next mouse they levitated, which seemed content with floating. “

READ MORE HERE

Posted in Newswith 3 Comments →

Giant Wooly Rat Discovered09.08.09

The Bosavi woolly rat had no fear of humans when it was discovered.

Click here to listen to Naturalist Steve Backshall on the exploration of a lost world in a crater in Papua New Guinea, containing 40 undiscovered species.

Posted in News, pictureswith 3 Comments →

Six Pound Rat02.23.09

Big rats, Super Rats and Giant rats are all in the top 5 search words that bring people here, because of my old post titled Giant “Super” Rats and Rat Kings.  It was because of a Monster Quest episode about giant rats that I wrote it to begin with.

Since so many people seem to be intererested in the idea of GIANT rats, I just had to share this news story I got in an e-mail.

Giant Rat Caught in China

Hows that for a big rat?  Weighing in at 6 pounds, it was found in a residential area in China.

Mr Xian, who caught the rat, was last seen swooping it, still alive (HORRAY FOR LIVE CAPTURE) into a bag.

“I did it, I caught a rat the size of a cat!” he shouted out afterwards, according to the reports.

The kitty sized rodent has been identifyed as being a Bamboo rat.

From the wikipedia article on the species:
Bamboo rats vary in size, from the Lesser Bamboo Rat which is typically 15 to 25 cm long (head and body: tail length is 6–8 cm), and weighs from 500 to 750 g, to the Sumatra Bamboo Rat, which can reach lengths of nearly 50 cm with a 20 cm tail, and weighs up to 4 kg. However they are all bulky, slow-moving rodents that live and forage in extensive burrow systems and rarely spend much time above ground. They feed on the underground parts of plants. They live at altitudes of 1200 to 4000 m and, except for the Lesser Bamboo Rat, feed principally on bamboo and live in dense bamboo thickets. The Lesser Bamboo Rat is more variable in its habitat, living in grassy areas, forests, and sometimes gardens, and eats a wider variety of vegetation.

Posted in News, pictureswith 10 Comments →

One of my rats on wikipedia12.15.08

Okay, he’s not MY rat, but he’s related to my girl Ezri, and was Luka and Enola’s daddy (or was that grand-daddy?) and he was my rat Buddy’s son.

I was e-mailed asking if I could change the copyright on Dax’s picture so it could be used to represent the hairless rat section of Wikipedia’s fancy rat article.

That is the picture.  You can see the article by CLICKING RIGHT HERE or searing for Fancy Rats on Wikipedia.

Posted in News, pictureswith 5 Comments →

Rat Chick Rescue in the News12.11.08

A Myspace friend of mine, Rat Chick Rat Rescue & Advocacy Group got a write up.

My favorite paragraph is highlighted in the story below:

It’s ‘Rat Chick’ to the rescue: They’re ‘underdogs,’ she claims

HER SOUTH Philadelphia home, with its burnt-orange Venetian-plaster wall and smooth concrete kitchen counters, reflects the sensibilities of its owner.

But, so do the brass rat paperweight, the decorative bowl full of stuffed-animal rats, the rat clock, the rat artwork and the metal letters on the stairwell that spell R-A-T-S.

In case you hadn’t noticed, Maria “Rat Chick” Pandolfi is a fierce devotee of rats. She wants to ensure their well-being in a world where most people learn early on to fear the critters.

Pandolfi, 47, an art teacher at the G.W. Childs Elementary School, on 17th Street below Dickinson, founded the Rat Chick Rat Rescue and Advocacy Group about 10 years ago.

She has heard all the harsh words about rats. To her, those words cut deeply.

“When I tell people about the rat rescue, some people are interested, but more often they say, ‘Ewwww, rats! I hate rats!’ ” said Pandolfi, referring to her education-and-adoption group. “It’s so mean to say that to someone. You would never say, ‘Ewwww, I hate dogs!’ ‘Ewwww, I hate babies!’ or ‘Ewwww, your child is ugly!’ or ‘Your dog is ugly!’ “

That kind of passion has gotten her noticed. The American Anti-Vivisection Society gave her its 2007 Humane Award for Promoting Non-Violence to Students. And a year ago, Clint Eastwood and his wife, Dina, donated $1,000 to her organization.

Pandolfi, a graduate of the University of the Arts, brings three attributes to her group, says Douglas Buerkle, its vice president. “Her passion for the rats is probably the major thing,” he said, also citing her openness in educating people about rats and “her ability to get people to help out and volunteer.”

Pandolfi is “selfless,” said Laura Ducceschi, director of Animalearn, the educational division of the American Anti-Vivisection Society, which opposes the dissecting of animals.

“She engaged students over the summer on her own time” to design a mural sponsored by Animalearn, Ducceschi said. “Maria wanted to provide something to her students to build respect for animals and create a sense of pride in the students, something they could accomplish artistically.”

(For the record: The rats that Pandolfi saves - occasionally from pharmaceutical laboratories - are the cute, cuddly types, the kind that could be mistaken for gerbils or hamsters, except for the long tail. They are not the gray rats with large teeth living in sewers.)

But, back to the rat-haters: When she encounters them, Pandolfi asks, “Did you ever meet a rat?” They usually admit that they have not.

To those who haven’t had the pleasure of some rat-bonding, Pandolfi is prepared to sing the praises of the species.

“I love rats because of their personality,” she said recently, sitting on a pleather couch in her home. “I love rats because I know the truth about them, and they’re wonderful little creatures.”

Through the Rat Chick Rat Rescue and Advocacy Group, Pandolfi spreads the positive word about rats at fairs and at the nonprofit organization’s annual Fab Rat Festival in June at PetSmart, on Oregon Avenue. The group - primarily Pandolfi, Buerkle and volunteer Maria McAllister - has also organized and participated in protests, including at Monster Pets, for selling pregnant rats, Buerkle said.

As a teacher, Pandolfi uses rats to teach diversity and tolerance to the students at G.W. Childs. And even to some adults.

Buerkle remembers once when he and Pandolfi were discussing rat-carriers with a PetSmart employee, and an African-American couple couldn’t believe their ears. “The people had the ‘Ewww, rat!’ look on their face,” he said.

“Maria then explained how rats are prejudged as evil, nasty creatures” when they aren’t, he said. “At that moment they had an epiphany . . . they were doing the same thing that they were experiencing in their lifetime” with racial discrimination.

Back at home, Pandolfi proudly points out the animals in her residence. Two cats (Reds and Ralph), a parrot (Kramer) and 8 rats. She does not “own” them, she says, because people are not above animals. To her, they are companions.

Three of the rats are her pals - Peanut, Willie and Whittie. The five others await adoption. (In addition, another 50 rats are in foster care, waiting to be adopted.) The rats rest or explore silently inside one of four cages in the living room. Inside one cage, two rats relax in a makeshift hammock.

“They’re intelligent, they’re affectionate,” Pandolfi said. “I love rats because they’re the underdog.”

Posted in Newswith 3 Comments →

Mans NEW best friend?11.29.08

We already knew about the giant rats who sniffed land mines, but now in Tansania they are learning to sniff out tuberculosis bacteria in saliva samples.

Read all about it HERE.

Posted in Newswith 6 Comments →

Secret ingredient behind author’s book – rat pee!07.01.08

Posted in Books, Newswith 4 Comments →


    Rats are not just vermin anymore. For hundreds of
    people around the world they are family members, just like the cats, dogs and hamsters of the world.

    Rattitude hopes to help get rid of rattieism in the world and show just how great rats can be.

    Thanks for taking time to stop and read and I hope I spread some rat goodwill.

    *NOTE* Rattitude DOES NOT SUPPORT the use of GLUE TRAPS or RAT POISON despite what my ads may say.