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Daily Bread for 11.11.21: Ron Johnson Wants It All

Good morning.

Veteran’s Day in Whitewater will see morning showers with a high of 52.  Sunrise is 6:43 AM and sunset 4:34 PM for 9h 51m 35s of daytime.  The moon is in its first quarter with 49.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1918, Germany signs an armistice agreement with the Allies in a railroad car in the forest of Compiègne.


Patrick Marley and Bill Glauber report Ron Johnson calls for having Republican lawmakers take over federal elections in Wisconsin:

MADISON – U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson is calling on Wisconsin lawmakers to take over elections and tell local officials to ignore the work of the bipartisan Elections Commission they set up six years ago.

The Oshkosh Republican on Wednesday met privately for an hour with GOP legislative leaders in the state Capitol, less than two weeks after telling the Journal Sentinel in an interview that lawmakers should set aside the commission’s work. He repeatedly declined to say afterward whether he’d discussed his views on taking over elections, saying only that he had talked about many issues.

In the earlier interview, Johnson accused the state commission of “systematically” violating the law with the advice it gave to municipal clerks during the coronavirus pandemic last year.

He contended Republicans who control the Legislature could unilaterally take over federal elections and said Democratic Gov Tony Evers couldn’t stop them.

“There’s no mention of the governor in the Constitution” when it comes to running elections, Johnson said. “It says state legislatures, and so if I were running the joint —and I’m not — I would come out and I would just say, ‘We’re reclaiming our authority. Don’t listen to WEC  anymore. Their guidances are null and void.'”

He added: “I think the state Legislature has to reassert, reclaim this authority over our election system.”

Attempting to overtake elections without the sign-off of Evers would all but guarantee a legal challenge. The Elections Commission was created by state law and the normal process for replacing it would be for legislators to pass legislation and the governor to sign it.

In the interview with the Journal Sentinel, Johnson focused on how he believed lawmakers could take control of federal elections, such as those for Congress and the presidency. He said the situation may be different for elections for state offices like the governor.

Johnson’s been plain that he may break his pledge to serve only two terms, but if he were confident of victory he wouldn’t need WISGOP control of federal elections in the state. The WISGOP created the bipartisan Elections Commission in 2015, but that creation isn’t enough for Johnson in 2022.

Ron Johnson wants it all: he wants an election he can’t lose.


Crypto boom strains Kazakh energy grid:

Daily Bread for 11.10.21: Cougar Visits West Bend, Wisconsin

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 56.  Sunrise is 6:41 AM and sunset 4:35 PM for 9h 53m 52s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 39.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Pedestrian and Bicycle Advisory Committee meets at 5 PM, the Community Development Authority meets at 5:30 PM, and the Police and Fire Commission meets at 6:30 PM.

 On this day in 1674, as provided in the Treaty of Westminster, Netherlands cedes New Netherland to England.


 Paul A. Smith reports Trail camera picks up image of cougar on West Bend property:

The cougar sighting was confirmed Monday by Eric Kilburg, a senior wildlife biologist for the Department of Natural Resources in Washington and Ozaukee counties.

Kilburg said the West Bend trail cam image fits a pattern of other recent cougar observations in the state.

On Oct. 22 a cougar was captured on a trail cam in Waupaca County and then one was photographed Nov. 3 near Fond du Lac.

“This new image in West Bend falls into the trajectory of those earlier sightings,” Kilburg said. “So it could be the same individual continuing its travels.”

Cougars were native to Wisconsin but extirpated in the 1800s.

In recent decades they have started to expand from a population in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The species has been documented in Wisconsin for at least the last 13 years.

In each case DNA evidence could be recovered, the animals were young males that originated from the Black Hills, according to the DNR.

Cougar sightings in Wisconsin are uncommon but are no longer unexpected. From 2017 through this year there have been 76 confirmed or probable cougar sightings in the Badger State, according to DNR records. It should be noted many are likely reports of the same animal in a different location.


La Palma lava flows into the sea:

Daily Bread for 11.9.21: Mitch McConnell Closes as Trump’s Fool

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 59.  Sunrise is 6:40 AM and sunset 4:36 PM for 9h 56m 11s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 27.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1867, the Tokugawa shogunate hands power back to the Emperor of Japan, starting the Meiji Restoration.


 Michael Kranish writes Mitch McConnell spent decades chasing power. Now he heeds Trump, who mocks him and wants him gone:

While seven GOP senators voted to convict Trump following his impeachment by the House for inciting an insurrection, McConnell supported acquittal, ensuring Trump would face no formal penalty for inciting an insurrection.

Ten months later, Trump is once again dominating the Republican Party, expected to run again in 2024 — and utterly disdainful of the Senate leader who helped save him.Trump dismissed McConnell as a “stupid person” and suggested his favored 2022 Senate candidates should oust McConnell from his leadership post when they get to Washington.

McConnell is not a “real leader” because “he didn’t fight for the presidency,” Trump said in an interview with The Washington Post.

….

Just two years ago, seemingly at the pinnacle of his power, McConnell could hardly have foreseen himself in such a precarious position. Midway through Trump’s term, the veteran lawmaker released a new version of his autobiography, which described his rise in the Senate in heroic terms. The book opened with a new glowing foreword penned by Trump, who lavished praise on McConnell as his “ace in the hole” and wrote that he “couldn’t have asked for a better partner.”

Except Trump never actually wrote those words — at least according to the ex-president, who now mocks McConnell’s role in pursuing his agenda. In an interview with The Post, Trump said McConnell actually wrote that foreword and simply used the president’s name on the passage.

Trump said he told McConnell, “Why don’t you write it for me and I’ll put it in, Mitch? Because that’s the way life works.”

McConnell, asked if Trump’s account was accurate, did not dispute it. “I really don’t have anything to add related to him,” McConnell said.

On this last dispute, Trump is undoubtedly right: Trump has never shown any ability to write coherently, and didn’t write even his own supposed autobiography.

This is the effect Trumpism’s rise: other kinds of conservatives, traditional or transactional, amount nearly to nothing within the Republican party. It’s Trumpists and everyone else, where everyone else is a softer term for nobodies.

The same is true in Whitewater, where older varieties of conservatives scamper to win the support, or at least hope they don’t draw the ire, of the populists. See The Kinds of Conservatives in Whitewater.


Highlights From SpaceX’s Water Landing of NASA’s Crew-2 Mission:

Daily Bread for 11.8.21: The War on Books

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 66.  Sunrise is 6:39 AM and sunset 4:37 PM for 9h 58m 31s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 18.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Planning Commission meets at 6 PM.

 On this day in 1895, while experimenting with electricity, Wilhelm Röntgen discovers the X-ray.


 Molly Hennessy-Fiske reports A ‘war on books’: Conservatives push for audits of school libraries:

In the Dallas suburb of Southlake, the school board voted to reprimand a fourth-grade teacher earlier this year for keeping an anti-racism book in her classroom after parents complained. Last month, leaked audio of an administrator in the district instructing teachers to present “opposing” views of books about the Holocaust sparked national outrage. In another Dallas suburb, a group of conservative activists, Respect Midlothian 1888, decried teachings they said support critical race theory and called for the district diversity officer’s removal.

In the Fort Worth suburb of Keller, school officials removed “Gender Queer: A Memoir” from a high school library “pending investigation” after parents complained it contained graphic images.

In the Houston suburbs, school officials at Spring Branch district removed “The Breakaways,” by Cathy Johnson, a graphic novel featuring a transgender character, after parents in the Spring Branch district petitioned and complained it was sexually explicit and contained “political propaganda.”

On Monday, Gov. Greg Abbott — running for reelection against two conservative primary challengers — sent a letter to the Texas Assn. of School Boards and several state agencies demanding they investigate “pornographic” books that parents had complained about at public schools, despite the agencies’ lack of authority.

Hennessy-Fisk further reports that

Liberal parents have also pushed to remove books from schools in recent years: Burbank schools last year removed the classics “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “Of Mice and Men” after parents complained their depictions of race and racism were harmful to students (they were among the top banned books nationwide last year).

There is, of course, nothing liberal (in the broad, proper sense of preserving individual rights) of book banning from left or right.

Before these loud campaigns against books, however, there are likely to be local officials who, themselves, covertly restrict speech and books to placate activists in the hope of avoiding greater controversies.

In this way, there are two wars against books: the hot war one notices, and a cold war waged out of public notice.

Both are wrong; one is harder to spot.


Liar: Giuliani admits under oath he didn’t even check 2020 claim:

Daily Bread for 11.7.21: The 1,200 Year-Old Canoe in Lake Mendota

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 64.  Sunrise is 6:38 AM and sunset 4:39 PM for 10h 00m 54s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 10% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1916, Jeannette Rankin is the first woman elected to the United States Congress.


 Sophie Carson reports A scuba-diving archaeologist found a sunken 1,200-year-old canoe on a whim. Here’s how divers brought it to the surface of Lake Mendota:

A dugout canoe emerged Tuesday from Madison’s Lake Mendota for the first time in 1,200 years.

A team of divers and archaeologists carefully extracted it from lake sediment 27 feet underwater and pulled it to a beach in the city’s Spring Harbor neighborhood to the cheers of historians and nearby residents.

The moment was a historic one. Discovered this summer by a Wisconsin Historical Society archaeologist while she was scuba diving for fun, it is the oldest fully intact dugout canoe in Wisconsin.

“I’m underwater an awful lot,” said Tamara Thomsen, the maritime archaeologist who spotted it in June. “I’ve never seen this underwater (before) and I don’t think I’ll ever get to again in my career.”

The canoe was in use around A.D. 800, according to carbon dating the archaeologists did on a sliver of wood before it was lifted out of the lake. With it now out of the water, experts are excited by what the boat might teach them about the early Native Americans who lived in the Madison area at the time and built effigy mounds that still dot the landscape today.

“Ninety-nine percent of the archaeological record is trash — broken things, things people have thrown away. Rarely do we find something that was lost or deposited as a whole thing,” said James Skibo, state archaeologist.


The Rise and Fall of Milk:

Daily Bread for 11.6.21: Aaron Rodgers’s Rule-Bending

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of 58.  Sunrise is 7:36 AM and sunset 5:40 PM for 10h 03m 25s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 3.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1947, Meet the Press, the longest running television program in history, makes its debut.

Jemele Hill writes Why Aaron Rodgers Felt Free to Mislead People (‘The Packers quarterback correctly assumed that a star like him could get away with bending the NFL’s COVID-19 rules’):

When a reporter asked him in August whether he was vaccinated, Rodgers responded, “Yeah, I’ve been immunized.”

His subsequent comments about the issue were noncommittal. “You know, there’s a lot of conversation around it, around the league, and a lot of guys who have made statements and not made statements, owners who have made statements,” Rodgers said then. “There’s guys on the team that haven’t been vaccinated. I think it’s a personal decision. I’m not going to judge those guys. There are guys that’ve been vaccinated that have contracted COVID. It’s an interesting issue that I think we’re going to see played out the entire season.”

Rodgers’s use of the word immunized instead of vaccinated should have raised more eyebrows than it did at the time. In retrospect, his disingenuous comments hint at a specific kind of self-centeredness; he seemed to believe he was smarter than everyone else in the room.

….

The NFL is now investigating whether Rodgers violated COVID-19 protocols, but the quarterback and his team should clearly face serious consequences—such as a suspension for Rodgers and a significant fine for the Packers. Besides deterring players from potentially endangering others, the league has to single out those who deliberately make a mockery of such a serious issue. If the league lets Rodgers and the Packers slide, it will prove the quarterback right. He was smart enough to know that the rules didn’t apply to a star as big as him.

Turns out, Danica Patrick is better off; Rodgers is someone else’s headache now.


Get up close and personal with rhinos at this South African conservation lodge:

Film: Tuesday, November 9th, 1 PM @ Seniors in the Park, On the Rocks

Tuesday, November 9th at 1 PM, there will be a showing of On the Rocks @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

Comedy/Drama/Romance

1 hour, 36 minutes

Rated R (mild profanity) (2020)

A seventies-something retired art dealer (Bill Murray) is a happy-go-lucky flirtatious ladies man with a roving eye. His married daughter (Rashida Jones) suspects her husband (Marlon Wayans) is having an affair. She tells her Dad and both start spying on the activities of his son-in-law, with embarrassing and amusing results. An AARP Movies for Grownups nomination for Bill Murray.

One can find more information about On the Rocks at the Internet Movie Database.

Daily Bread for 11.5.21: Marketing Won’t Revive UW-Whitewater

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of 52.  Sunrise is 7:35 AM and sunset 5:41 PM for 10h 05m 51s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 0.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 1862, Abraham Lincoln justifiably removes George B. McClellan as commander of the Army of the Potomac.


UW-Whitewater has declining enrollment. The university won’t collapse, but it is gettting smaller. It’s unlikely these declines stem from a single cause, let alone a single manageable cause. As with so many other problems in Whitewater (at the city, the school district, and the university), a small group is sure — absolutely, positively, indubitably sure — that marketing will address these problems.  For the last generation, Whitewater has seen marketing plan after marketing plan, and yet… here we are, just the same. Whitewater probably leads the state, if not the nation, in task forces and marketing plans per capita.

UW-Whitewater is about to embark on yet another marketing plan in hope of stopping and reversing unfavorable trends. It won’t work, as past efforts haven’t worked. These men are convinced they can sell anything to anyone, even ice to an Inuit. They haven’t (as decline persists) and they won’t (as past is prologue). They overestimate themselves and underestimate everyone else.

No truth but truth.

See also From UW-Whitewater’s Administration, Too Many and Too Few Words, The Marketing of Misinformation: UW-Whitewater’s Use of a Counterfeit ‘Campus Safety’ Study, and UW-Whitewater’s Administration Covers Crap with Catsup.

The Enrollment Problem (a consequence of worse problems):

The Latest, Futile Marketing Plan:


 Growing Up in the Coldest Town on Earth (-96°F) Yakutia:

Daily Bread for 11.4.21: How Mequon-Thiensville Residents Saved Their Schools

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 48.  Sunrise is 7:34 AM and sunset 5:42 PM for 10h 08m 18s of daytime.  The moon is new with 0.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission meets at 6 PM.

 On this day in 1956, Soviet troops enter Hungary to end the Hungarian revolution against the Soviet Union that started on October 23. Thousands are killed, more are wounded, and nearly a quarter million leave the country.


The Mequon-Thiensville School District (MTSD) is a Republican area, and the conflict between those who wanted to recall four school board members and those who wanted to retain them was a conflict between traditional conservatives and populist conservatives. It is a district both more affluent and academically successful than Whitewater’s district. (Mequon-Thiensville is not so troubled with the problem of retaining students’ basic skills through high school, or of students’ enduring hunger, homelessness, or poverty.)

While the MTSD may have significant socio-economic differences with Whitewater, how residents in that community defended themselves against book-banning populists deserves consideration.

Charlie Sykes, writing in the Bulwark, shares an assessment of a resident who was part of the defense against the recall (subscription site):

One key was local leaders who stepped up, including a letter from former mayors opposing the recall effort.

I think earned media was also key. Exposing that thinly veiled agenda was important. Half of the candidates had crazy stuff on their social media that they didn’t think to lock down prior to running.

The [Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel] was really on it in that last month. The AP article (Tea Party 2.0?) was pivotal in getting further attention – including eventually NYT and Stephanie Saul.

There was so much disinformation. We had a small team of folks on social media who would correct disinformation when they saw it and hammer it home, including the inform Facebook group.

We didn’t allow the Democrats anywhere near this. They reached out to candidates and everyone declined. They dangled their voter software – we said no. (You can apparently buy data software as a 3rd party) – I think they may have mobilized their voters in their end. It required unifying fully against the recall.

The coalition is made up of folks who just last year were on opposite sides of in person vs. virtual debate…. We have varying political beliefs. We had to work together.

Redirecting folks with their own agendas back to the bigger threat was very important. At one point a few more liberal-leaning parents wanted to get involved in that Brewing Co class action lawsuits over masks. They were strongly urged by everyone else to stop.

I think the general demographics of our community helped too. We have resources. While conservative, most folks are not MAGA. Even those who did vote for Trump in 2020, did so holding their nose because they wanted tax cuts, etc…. That certainly did not equate to wanting Trump-like clowns near our district.

Finally…

We canvassed (local parents) vs. the recall who used out-of -county young Republicans… I think having your neighbor tell you something is more effective than outsourcing to a college student who doesn’t even know how to spell Thiensville…

When the right-wing populists come for a place, residents who are diligent and industrious can push them back. The kind of energy that sensible residents showed in Mequon-Thiensville is rare in Whitewater. Aspiring — wishin’ and hopin’— won’t meet the challenge.


Whale-cams reveal how much they really eat:

Daily Bread for 11.3.21: Mequon-Thiensville School District Rejects Recall

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 43.  Sunrise is 7:33 AM and sunset 5:43 PM for 10h 10m 47s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 3% of its visible disk illuminated.

 On this day in 2014, One World Trade Center officially opens in New York City, replacing the Twin Towers after they were destroyed during the September 11 attacks.


Alec Johnson and Rory Linnane report Mequon-Thiensville recall fails to unseat any school board members after high-spending race with national attention:

A recall effort against four Mequon-Thiensville School Board members failed to unseat any incumbents Tuesday, a major loss for recall organizers who had raised nearly $50,000 and gained national attention in their months long pursuit.

Each of the incumbents won over 58% of the votes in their races, according to unofficial results posted by the district Tuesday.

The election marks the 16th failed recall effort against school board members in Wisconsin since the pandemic began, with many of the recall organizers citing frustration with pandemic safety measures.

The number of school board recall attempts this year is more than double any previous year tallied by Ballotpedia, a Middleton-based nonprofit.

Incumbents won their seats with the following vote totals:

  • Akram Khan won with 6,719 votes, over Kris Kittell who had 4,825 votes
  • Chris Schultz won with 6,816 votes, over Scarlett Johnson who had 4,748 votes
  • Erik Hollander won with 6,926 votes, over Charles Lorenz who had 4,641 votes
  • Wendy Francour won with 6,799 votes, over Cheryle Rebholz who had 4,768 votes

Over 11,600 ballots were cast. In the April Mequon-Thiensville school board election, there were 6,442 ballots cast, a turnout of about 30%.

Recall organizers had pushed the message that academic achievement was declining in the district, arguing that the district’s pandemic safety measures and commitments to equity were contributing to that decline.

They cited the district’s “seven milestones for success,” which have shown declines in recent years. Standardized test scores have declined statewide over the past two years as the pandemic disrupted classroom learning.

Two seats, those maintained by Khan and Schultz, will be up for election again in April. The others will be up in 2023.

After results came in Tuesday night, incumbents thanked supporters.

“My community of Mequon-Thiensville – the school district, the teachers, the staff, and most importantly, the students of the district, won tonight. It was never about us four. It was always about the students. And we are thrilled about the results,” Khan said in a phone interview.

“We are very happy with how the community responded to our message of rejecting lies and distortions. I am very grateful to the community that they rose up and they did not accept the distortions and lies,” Khan also said.

Most recalls in Wisconsin fail, and despite PAC money, outside canvassers, and national coverage, this one failed, too.

There are two key differences between Mequon-Thiensville and Whitewater (other than the obvious difference that Mequon-Thiensville is a wealthier area with fewer basic human needs). These differences made it easier for the MTSD to withstand a conservative populist recall effort.

First, in Mequon-Thiensville that community could point to good performance on fundamental measurements, and certainly better performance than most Wisconsin school districts. They gave their community something fundamental of which to be proud, and worthy of defense. (Administrators, including a ‘District Leadership Team’ in a struggling community, who spend millions on athletic fields via supplanted funds aren’t giving their residents something fundamental; they’re tempting the Fates. Worse, administrators who insist that what they did isn’t what they did drape themselves in evasion, and that’s a threadbare garment not worth wearing.)

Second, when the Kleefisch PAC endorsed a candidate in April in Whitewater, the incumbent sat on his hands. By contrast, when Kleefisch’s PAC went all in on the Mequon-Thiensville recall, residents of that community organized in opposition to her politicking.

The alternative would have been populist speech-banning and safe-space ending. That alternative would have been for Mequon-Thiensville, as its prospect should be for Whitewater, intolerable.


How Complexity Theory Helps Explain the Economic Recovery:

Daily Bread for 11.2.21: The Concerns of the Rittenhouse Jurors

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 45.  Sunrise is 7:31 AM and sunset 5:45 PM for 10h 13m 18s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 8% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Common Council meets at 6:30 PM.

 On this day in 1960, Penguin Books is found not guilty of obscenity in the trial R v Penguin Books Ltd, the Lady Chatterley’s Lover case.


 Bruce Vielmetti reports Potential jurors express fear, anxiety at idea of serving on Kyle Rittenhouse panel:

KENOSHA –  One man described a growing anxiety. A woman feared what her husband would say if she voted for a verdict different from what he expects.

Some people talked of moving their cars to backyards, boarding up windows, leaving town, or getting guns as violence wracked Kenosha last year in the aftermath of a police shooting.

One woman said she swapped out the blue porch light — normally lit to show support for police — as protests spread and grew violent.

Others expressed fear of damage to their cars, or people coming to their homes.

“Nobody wants to be in this seat,” said one woman.

Those were just some of the responses to questions Monday during jury selection in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, which ended around 7 p.m. He is charged with killing two men and wounding a third man on Aug. 25, 2020, during a night of protests that followed the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

Rittenhouse plans to raise self defense to charges of intentional, reckless and attempted homicide. He’s also charged with reckless endangerment, having a firearm as a minor, and was cited for violating curfew.

The trial is being closely watched nationally and internationally. But for the prospective jurors, it calls up a dire local chapter in Kenosha history.

….

By late afternoon, some people of the remaining panelists became more forthright about fears of serving.

“Believe me, no one wants to be sitting in this chair,” said one woman. “It’s scary. I live close to where he’s from.”

Rittenhouse was living in Antioch, Illinois in 2020, with his mother and sisters.

Another woman testified she took a Lyft to court Monday. She didn’t want anyone to see her car.

“Either way this goes, you’re going to have half the country upset with you,” said another.

Schroeder tried to assure worried panelists the degree of risk to them is probably far less than they think, and that security measures he couldn’t reveal will substantially address those fears.

“Maybe the country would calm down if they saw a verdict from a fair trial,” Schroeder said.

Around 7 p.m., lawyers from both sides had finished applying the seven strikes each to a panel of 34 jurors and arrived at 20 to hear the case, including an unusually large group of eight alternates. The group includes 11 women and nine men and one person of color.

The trial continues Tuesday morning with opening statements, followed by the state’s first witnesses.

These jurors are ordinary people serving in an extraordinary trial. It’s no easy task, and it’s understandable that they would have worries, both founded and unfounded.


Hundreds of dolphins stampede alongside boat in California:

Daily Bread for 11.1.21: Sometimes the Best Bird is… a Bat

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 47.  Sunrise is 7:30 AM and sunset 5:46 PM for 10h 15m 50s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 15.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 Whitewater’s Equal Opportunities Commission meets at 5 PM and Downtown Whitewater’s Board of Directors meets at 6 PM.

 On this day in 1870, the United States Weather Bureau (later renamed the National Weather Service) makes its first official meteorological forecast.


Eva Corlett reports Best bird a bat: tiny flying mammal wins New Zealand bird of the year competition:

In a huge upset to New Zealand birds, but a win for one of the country’s only native land mammals, a bat has swooped in “by a long way” to take out the annual bird of the year competition.

Forest and Bird, which runs the election, threw the bat among the pigeons as a surprise entry this year. The pekapeka-tou-roa, or long tailed bat, is one of two bats in the country and one of the rarest mammals in the world. It is as small as a thumb, and the size of a bumblebee when it is born.

The voting closed on Sunday night, which appropriately was Halloween. Forest and Bird’s Lissy Fehnker-Heather announced the win to RNZ’s Morning Report on Monday.

The pekapeka-tou-roa flew ahead of the avian flock by 3,000 votes, she said, adding that this year’s competition drew the highest number of total votes in the competition’s 17 year history.

“We had about 58,000 votes and they came from all around the world,” she said.

That’s one high-achieving bat.


Tonight’s Sky for November: