This thread is inspired by two of the discussions I have been interested in reading whilst on ZooChat today...
This led to me trying to think of occasions I'd seen animals in the wild in habitats/places I completely did not expect them to be.
I thought of a holiday I had to North Wales roughly 2 years ago. I stayed in a cottage in the tiny village of Llanfair just South of Harlech. On one of the days we decided to walk the entire 4 mile length of Harlech beach (imo one of the best beaches in the UK) South to North. After an hour or so we had reached the mouth of the River Dwyryd whereupon, after a quick packed-lunch break, we saw a long line of badger prints. They were heading back in the direction we came, which was the route we had wanted to take back anyway.
We followed them for about half a mile through the sand dunes and back out onto the beach, then back into the dunes, then back out onto the beach again several times. At one point the tracks ventured quite far out onto the beach towards the sea. It was low tide and the sea must have been 300 meters away from the dunes at that point, so there was a vast flat expanse of sand in front of us. We then realised the tracks were heading towards an old carcass of a huge grey seal, but they didn't quite make it that far before turning around again.
It was a surreal experience. I never expected a badger to be in such a place. I found it so weird being in such a harsh, arid, atmospheric, open, cold, windy environment with nothing in the way of food or fresh water and find myself following the tracks of an animal I'd always associated with dark, quiet, damp, muddy woodland.



So there we are, this is a thread to talk about all the times you've seen, read about, heard about, or watched on television instances of animals in the wild being in habitats/places that you completely did not expect them to be in.
(Pets, domestic animals, escaped animals, and non-native/invasive species don't count).
- @gentle lemur, during a discussion about Bruce the echidna at Paignton zoo being apparently unperturbed by winter weather, mentioning a recent BBC nature documentary about Australian wildlife he had seen, which featured an echidna walking through snow in the mountains in broad daylight.
- News of badgers making their home and thriving under a vintage chairlift, at the top of a hill, in the middle of Dudley zoo.
This led to me trying to think of occasions I'd seen animals in the wild in habitats/places I completely did not expect them to be.
I thought of a holiday I had to North Wales roughly 2 years ago. I stayed in a cottage in the tiny village of Llanfair just South of Harlech. On one of the days we decided to walk the entire 4 mile length of Harlech beach (imo one of the best beaches in the UK) South to North. After an hour or so we had reached the mouth of the River Dwyryd whereupon, after a quick packed-lunch break, we saw a long line of badger prints. They were heading back in the direction we came, which was the route we had wanted to take back anyway.
We followed them for about half a mile through the sand dunes and back out onto the beach, then back into the dunes, then back out onto the beach again several times. At one point the tracks ventured quite far out onto the beach towards the sea. It was low tide and the sea must have been 300 meters away from the dunes at that point, so there was a vast flat expanse of sand in front of us. We then realised the tracks were heading towards an old carcass of a huge grey seal, but they didn't quite make it that far before turning around again.
It was a surreal experience. I never expected a badger to be in such a place. I found it so weird being in such a harsh, arid, atmospheric, open, cold, windy environment with nothing in the way of food or fresh water and find myself following the tracks of an animal I'd always associated with dark, quiet, damp, muddy woodland.



So there we are, this is a thread to talk about all the times you've seen, read about, heard about, or watched on television instances of animals in the wild being in habitats/places that you completely did not expect them to be in.
(Pets, domestic animals, escaped animals, and non-native/invasive species don't count).
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