Strange Animals I Have Known

Strange Animals I Have Known

by Dr. Raymond L. Ditmars
Strange Animals I Have Known

Strange Animals I Have Known

by Dr. Raymond L. Ditmars

eBook

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Overview

To see the animals at the zoo on Sunday afternoon is one thing. To know them intimately, offstage, is quite another. In this book, which has delighted readers for two generations. Dr. Ditmars, who was curator of mammals and reptiles at New York’s Bronx Zoo, gives an extraordinary account of his lively encounters with hundreds of animals. “For over a quarter of a century,” writes Dr. Ditmars, “it has been my task to capture, transport, feed, nurse, soothe, fight, guard and cajole various specimens of the animal kingdom. I have been on intimate terms with snakes, bears, apes, monkeys, elephants, jaguars, tigers, buffaloes, giraffes, deer, kudus, hippos, wild horses, kiangs, rhinos, lions, cougars, leopards, kangaroos, beasts of almost every sort.” While many of his adventures seem too fantastic to be true, they really did happen.

“Rich in lore that will be fascinating to readers interested in natural history...Dr. Ditmar’s sense of humor augments, in no small degree, the engaging qualities of his book.”—New York Herald Tribune Books

“Genuinely vivid and exciting adventures…”—N.Y. Times Book Review

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787206724
Publisher: Muriwai Books
Publication date: 07/11/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 202
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Raymond Lee Ditmars (June 22, 1876 - May 12, 1942) was an American herpetologist, writer, public speaker and pioneering natural history filmmaker.

Born in Newark, New Jersey, he was fascinated by all animals, but primarily reptiles, obtaining his first snakes at age twelve. He left school at 16 with no formal qualifications but gained a deep understanding of zoology through his own personal study of snakes and other animals in the wild and captivity. Vacations were spent searching for new specimens, and he would eventually be regarded as the country’s foremost herpetologist.

In 1893 he was hired as an assistant in the Department of Entomology at the American Museum of Natural History. In 1898 he began a short stint as a court reporter for the New York Times, leading him to discover the newly created New York Zoological Society (now the Wildlife Conservation Society) at what would become the Bronx Zoo. In July 1899, four months before the zoo’s grand opening, he was employed as an assistant curator in charge of reptiles and would spend the rest of his career with the zoo. His own collection of 45 reptiles, representing 15 species, formed the nucleus of the reptile house, which proved an immediate success with visitors.

He wrote his first major publication, The Reptile Book (1907), while teaching himself still and motion photography. In 1914 he produced and released The Living Book of Nature, his first motion picture, to wide acclaim. Many other films followed, pioneering the latest available techniques including stop-motion animation, time-lapse, macro photography and, by the mid-1920s, sound film.

In the late 1920s he helped bring about antivenom centers in the United States and Honduras, and soon after launched a series of expeditions to Central and South America in search of tropical specimens for the zoo. He was formally granted the title of Curator of Mammals in 1926.

Ditmars died in in New York City in 1942 aged 65.
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