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ANIMALS: The pets I’m thankful for

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nationalgeographic.com

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Thu, Nov 26, 2020 07:07 PM

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Revenge of the turkeys, saving the chinook, getting ready for hibernation Thursday, November 26, 202

Revenge of the turkeys, saving the chinook, getting ready for hibernation [ANIMALS]( [VIEW ONLINE]( [ANIMALS]( [National Geographic]( [TODAY'S BIG TOPIC:]( [THE ANIMALS THAT ENRICH MY LIFE]( Thursday, November 26, 2020 PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO ARK By [Rachael Bale]( ANIMALS Executive Editor Happy Thanksgiving, readers. As we approach our ninth month of practicing social distancing, today I’m giving thanks for animal companions. I am grateful for the Zoom Thanksgiving dinner I’m about to share with my family, but screens are no replacement for the feeling of sharing space with other living beings. Genie, our family cat, keeps my lap warm while I’m watching TV. Our dog, Sherman, sleeps by my side while I write and edit at my desk in the guest bedroom (unless my husband’s cooking, at which time I cease to exist to Sherman). Petting the cat or [walking the dog is an antidote]( when my anxiety about the state of the world starts to get out of control, and they make me laugh even when the news makes me want to cry. (Pictured above, a portrait of a part Basset hound, part blue heeler.) I am also thankful to be surrounded by urban wildlife: for the cottontail rabbits nibbling our frosty lawn every morning and the [bats flying over our neighborhood]( at dusk. For [the black-capped chickadees]( and [house sparrows that visit our bird feeder]( each day and [the white-tailed deer we see]( on nearly every weekend hike. Thanksgiving is a time even the most cynical of us can pause and look on the bright side. For me, a big part of that is the animals in my life. Do you get this newsletter daily? If not, [sign up here]( or forward to a friend. TODAY IN A MINUTE Discovering the spiders: Stuck at home during the pandemic, writer Sandy Hingston has discovered she is sharing space—with the spiders. One study says there are 131 of them every square meter. In recent months, bug-smashing Hingston has been on cobweb patrol, and is losing. To be fair, it’s not a united front. “When Doug [her husband] happens on a spider in our house, he does what the experts all suggest with such beneficial insects,” [she writes in Philadelphia magazine](. “He gently captures it and takes it outside and sets it free, like he’s Mahatma freaking Gandhi.” Barry the barred owl: Ethereal and majestic, an owl is the new celebrity animal of New York’s Central Park. The hawk-wary, chipmunk-eating bird delights onlookers by staring, preening, swooping into a shallow stream, and flicking his feathers, [the New York Times reports](. Excited birders, who have made Barry famous on Instagram, say the owl is roosting and putting on weight. It’s not known whether Barry will stay the winter, but there are plenty of chipmunks and rats to munch on. Coming attractions: Next week we’ll offer up a collection of wildlife victories of the year and our favorite animal photos of 2020. Can’t wait? OK, prepare by checking out the [best wildlife news from last year]( and [2019’s top animal photos](. YOUR INSTAGRAM PHOTO OF THE DAY PHOTOGRAPH BY [@STEVEWINTERPHOTO]( Apple-eating time: Most black bear cubs who lose their mothers do not survive. Luckily for these orphaned cubs, they were rescued and brought to the Kilham Bear Center in New Hampshire. The center has rehabilitated orphaned black bears for the past 25 years. Wildlife reintroduction—releasing wild animals reared in captivity into the wild—can be difficult and is not possible for all species. However, Ben Kilham, his wife, Deb, and his sister Phoebe have developed a successful method that has allowed hundreds of bears over the years to thrive in the wild—with very little human conflict. (Pictured above, the young cubs are eating apples within their 8.5-acre enclosure, putting on weight to gear up for winter. Cuteness alert: The accompanying video [in this Instagram post]( is adorable.) THE BIG TAKEAWAY PHOTOGRAPH BY COREY ARNOLD, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Saving the chinook: In Northern California, the numbers of chinook salmon, considered sacred by Native Americans who have fished them for centuries, have been on the wane. But a new agreement will allow California and Oregon to take over dams on Klamath River, and remove some of them to restore the spring salmon run. That's is raising hope for the survival of the spring salmon, [Nat Geo’s Alejandra Borunda reports](. (Pictured above, an alternative: holding tanks at the Little White Salmon fish hatchery keep spring chinook salmon until their eggs mature.) [READ MORE]( IN A FEW WORDS [QUOTE] The nave echoed with bleating. Sheep crammed into pews; shaggy Wensleydales, tidy Suffolks, Blue Texels, Portlands, Border Leicesters. Nigel King Animal Welfare Institute English poet, psychologist; from [The Good Friday Sheep]( DID A FRIEND FORWARD THIS TO YOU? Come back tomorrow for Whitney Johnson on the latest in photography news. If you’re not a subscriber, [sign up here]( to also get Debra Adams Simmons on history, George Stone on travel, and Victoria Jaggard on science. THE LAST GLIMPSE PHOTOGRAPH BY CRAIG F. WALKER, THE BOSTON GLOBE/GETTY The revenge of the turkeys? Vanishing forests and unchecked hunting had wiped out New England’s wild turkeys before the Civil War. But in 1975, a New Hampshire biologist released 25 wild turkeys from the back of his truck. “I never thought it would get beyond a few thousand turkeys,” that state biologist, Ted Walski, [told Nat Geo last November](. Instead, New Hampshire’s turkey population has exploded to 40,000 animals—probably the most the state can handle. Reintroduction efforts in neighboring states and around the country have created a similar story—60,000 wild turkeys in Maine, 45,000 in Vermont, and 25,000 in Massachusetts. (Pictured above, a female turkey pausing at a doorway on Mount Auburn Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Note: Your curator lives near here and can attest to the turkeys’ bold and occasionally disruptive presence.) Related: [Why did these turkeys circle a dead cat?]( This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, with photo selections by Jen Tse. Kimberly Pecoraro and Gretchen Ortega helped produce this newsletter. Have an idea or a link? We’d love to hear from you at david.beard@natgeo.com. And thanks for reading! [NGM]( [NGM]( [SHOP]( [DONATE]( [SUBSCRIBE]( [TRAVEL]( [READ OUR LATEST STORIES]( [SHOP]( [DONATE]( [SUBSCRIBE]( [TRAVEL]( [FB]( [Twitter]( [IG]( Clicking on the Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and National Geographic Channel links will take you away from our National Geographic Partners site where different terms of use and privacy policy apply. This email was sent to: {EMAIL}. Please do not reply to this email as this address is not monitored. This email contains an advertisement from: National Geographic | 1145 17th Street, N.W. | Washington, D.C. 20036 You are receiving this email because you elected to receive marketing communications from National Geographic under the terms of our [Privacy Policy](. [Manage all types of email preferences]( with National Geographic Partners. [Unsubscribe]( from this type of email. © 2020 National Geographic Partners, LLC, All rights reserved. //

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