Ochsner Park Zoo Platypus in Baraboo River?

birdsandbats

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5+ year member
I have a relative (who is now over 80) that claims when he was kid, a platypus was sighted in the Baraboo River! He said it was all over the news. I have searched around the internet, but found nothing. Anyone else heard of this? Was it related to the zoo? What about the circus?
 
It's probably just a very local urban legend. You'd think if the standard-local-zoo Ochsner Park Zoo actually held a platypus, it would be much more well-known in zoo circles?
 
It's probably just a very local urban legend. You'd think if the standard-local-zoo Ochsner Park Zoo actually held a platypus, it would be much more well-known in zoo circles?
I agree and admit it very well could be an urban legend. That seems like the most likely explanation.
 
I have a relative (who is now over 80) that claims when he was kid, a platypus was sighted in the Baraboo River! He said it was all over the news. I have searched around the internet, but found nothing. Anyone else heard of this? Was it related to the zoo? What about the circus?

Do you have any more information on this or an estimated date? Sounds very interesting.
 
People can get things mixed up or confused over time, My mother claimed she had seen a platypus in a zoo when she was younger and I went into a deep dive once and proved that it wasn't possible and she was still convinced she did. (She is in her 70s)
 
It's possible they could've confused a Beaver with a Platypus? Seeing one swimming from above, they can certainly look a little similar to a Platypus I guess - however, all considered it seems more like a 'myth' to me, or just a case of mistaken identity.
 
He never saw the animal, he just said it was a big story with the local news. I do find it difficult to believe that a common animal such as a beaver or a muskrat would have caused that.
 
He never saw the animal, he just said it was a big story with the local news. I do find it difficult to believe that a common animal such as a beaver or a muskrat would have caused that.
If it was such a large news story, it's interesting there seems to be absolutely no mention of this online. I've even tried old newspaper archives from the Wisconsin area.

The only basis online is other websites which mention this Baraboo River Platypus but only reference your post from 2019 as a source.
 
Years ago, at a zoo where I was working, I had a woman run up to me in a panic because "One of your birds is loose!" As I followed her to where she said it was, I tried getting a description from her of what it was, but all she kept saying was that it was a big, black bird - which, depending on your definitions of big and black, could cover a lot of species. Anyway, I finally got there and she froze and, with a trembling finger, pointed to... a Canada goose. Just like the dozens of others that were all over the park, and which she must have walked past in the parking lot to get into the zoo. When I told her what it was, she acted like she'd never heard of one before, and asked if I was *sure* it wasn't a zoo bird.

This was an adult woman, with no discernable accent to suggest she was from a foreign location, apparently sound of mind and body, who either was 1) an epic troll, or 2) had no idea what a Canada goose was.

Likewise, when I was in college, I had a classmate react in shock and amazement when an animal walked across the path in front of us on our way to class. It was a groundhog. My classmate, an ANIMAL SCIENCE major, who lived in New York state for her entire life, was unfamiliar with the species.

I guess what I'm saying is, the prospect of someone seeing a relatively common species such as a muskrat or beaver and not knowing what it is doesn't strike me as all that implausible
 
My ex-sister in law saw a dead otter and was convinced that it was a dead seal (there are no seals here and it was 25 miles inland....). I am on an animal ID sub-Reddit....the amount of people that post pictures of housecats and are convinced that it is a cougar/puma/mountain lion is astonishing. The same issue arises with possum/opossum pictures and videos.....people have no clue what they are.

What I am getting at is that even common animals are easily and frequently misidentified by the general public. I think that it is safe to say that whatever animal was seen was not a platypus, no matter how much public panic and news ensued. Almost certainly this was a beaver, muskrat, or otter.
 
I have a relative (who is now over 80) that claims when he was kid, a platypus was sighted in the Baraboo River! He said it was all over the news. I have searched around the internet, but found nothing. Anyone else heard of this? Was it related to the zoo? What about the circus?

The guy who saw the platypus had just come from an all-you-can drink tour of the local brewery and was walking (stumbling) home when he saw the platypus. Further along he saw some unicorns in a pasture with some dairy cows. It was the first day of April, and still quite cold, so he was grateful when a cab pulled up and his drinking buddy Bigfoot was driving it and gave him a ride home. If that guy had an iNaturalist page today, it would be one of the most popular on the internet.
 
The guy who saw the platypus had just come from an all-you-can drink tour of the local brewery and was walking (stumbling) home when he saw the platypus. Further along he saw some unicorns in a pasture with some dairy cows. It was the first day of April, and still quite cold, so he was grateful when a cab pulled up and his drinking buddy Bigfoot was driving it and gave him a ride home. If that guy had an iNaturalist page today, it would be one of the most popular on the internet.
Eastern Muskrat from Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, US on April 17, 2017 at 12:20 PM by dongminsung. Confirm? · iNaturalist
 
New My ex-sister in law saw a dead otter and was convinced that it was a dead seal (there are no seals here and it was 25 miles inland....)

I can understand this one - while driving I once passed what looked for all the world like a seal on the side of the road. Being as it was somewhere virtually impossible for a seal to be, I went back and had a look. It was a sizable otter that had fallen afoul of a car. Uncanny how pinniped-like it looked til I got upclose, just goes to show you can't pass judgement to quickly.
 
He never saw the animal, he just said it was a big story with the local news. I do find it difficult to believe that a common animal such as a beaver or a muskrat would have caused that.

I'm very interested in your story btw, thank you for sharing! I actually looked into every Wisconsin newspaper mention of a platypus from about 1940-1970, no dice so far
 
I am on an animal ID sub-Reddit....the amount of people that post pictures of housecats and are convinced that it is a cougar/puma/mountain lion is astonishing.
A perfect example from yesterday of a animal that is clearly a housecat:
https://www.reddit.com/r/animalid/comments/1jdknvt/is_this_a_panther_sw_florida_usa/

I can understand this one - while driving I once passed what looked for all the world like a seal on the side of the road. Being as it was somewhere virtually impossible for a seal to be, I went back and had a look. It was a sizable otter that had fallen afoul of a car. Uncanny how pinniped-like it looked til I got upclose, just goes to show you can't pass judgement to quickly.
That's true, my ex-sister in law is very intelligent and generally not prone to flights of fancy.
 
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I remember birding in Norfolk and seeing a distant long-tailed duck on a pool by the sea. It was only when another birder with a scope pitched up that it was revealed as a dead herring gull...
 
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