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This blog is for dad on Father’s Day with a lot of love and appreciation, & hope you got the cheese. |
Mid-June in Jerusalem’s Botanical Garden is wonderful, but I say that mainly because of its huge pond full of lotuses and waterlilies. In the rest of the garden there are not as many flowers blooming as there had been in May. The hollyhocks are nice, and you can see some amazing huge magnolia blossoms:
It was late, drawing close to closing time, so we were winding our way down the hill toward the entrance, walking slowly, taking the narrowest of trails, when we reached a 3-way junction and started to turn down a stone paved path when we caught sight of it just a few meters away. It caught sight of us at the same time and let out a frightening low growl. My digital camera was turned on and in hand, so I had just enough time to snap one photo before it vanished:
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Double click on the photo and it ought to enlarge |
My first idea was that it was a fox, but over the next days, looking over the photo, I became convinced our friend Masha was right, and it must be a jackal, even a golden jackal, the type most common in these parts. I found some photos on the internet to compare, including this sample of a smiling golden jackal:
As I said, the jackal did let out a threatening growl, but it also had its tail between its legs. It absolutely did not express any friendly attitude, just the opposite. It was shocked by our sudden appearance. As far as we could tell it was not part of a pack, as jackals prefer to be, it looked somewhat weak and hungry. Jackals usually feed at dawn and dusk, I understand.
Its fear could have turned to aggression, but he wasn't cornered, and we didn't try to get any closer.
They say canids won’t attack anything bigger than themselves unless they are running with their pack. But exceptions take place when they feel cornered or have pups to protect.
A few years ago, I looked into dholes (Asian wild dogs) a bit because of somebody’s idea they are a kind of cat... I found the very idea that a dog could be considered a cat strange, it made me wonder. But... dholes are catlike in some ways...
Foxes have cat eyes with the vertical slit-shaped pupils. I had thought that jackal was a fox at first. But at second look, those are not cat eyes, so not a fox.
As wild dogs go, Jackals are so much less frightening than hyenas. I remember how packs of hyenas used to whip through the tall grass in Lumbini at sunset, not far from the library where we stayed, making a frightful racket. But in my mind hyenas might better belong in the family of bears. Well, there are ways of making categories, and human minds are always working on that. If fruits grow only on trees, doesn’t that make bananas berries? Are blackberries not berries?
There have been some news stories in the local papers in the last decade about how golden jackals have been gradually moving into western Jerusalem, in part attracted by the food kind people leave out for the street cats. I don’t feel like blaming anyone. Fault finding is another human tendency that so often gets us all worked up. On a day like today I’d rather contemplate the over-done beauty of the lotus pond.
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The Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel (SPNI) put in their online newsletter a brief story “Jackals in Jerusalem” (Nov. 13, 2013).
Moshe Gilad and Ofer Vaknin, “With Israelis in Coronavirus Isolation, Jackals Are Taking Over Tel Aviv’s Main Park,” Haaretz (April 8, 2020). Great photos give the impression of handsome and noble creatures with families of their own. Perhaps the stories about them occasionally attacking humans have been overblown. After all, even domesticated dogs have been known to attack humans sometimes, right? Relationships come with a certain level of risk, even among us humans. Excuse me my anthropomorphizing, we all commit pathetic fallacies every now and then.
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