Yesterday Richard Muirhead asked a rhetorical question. "What HAPPENS to all these preserved Fortean specimens?!" he asked angrily.
Well they don't all disappear forever. Some regional museums, for example, still have remarkable collections of exhibits of fortean interest. However many of these collections are just not in tune with current tastes, so they are kept off show, like these gloriously bizarre albino birds from Kendal Museum...















In November Sahar Dimus, our guide on four CFZ Sumatra expeditions, died of liver failure leaving a widow Lucy and four Children. On the 2nd November, Dezyama D. Sangma, wife of our friend and colleague Dipu Marak, our collaborator on the 2010 Indian expedition died, leaving her grieving husband and two small children.


2 comments:
there is an albino bird at the Collection in Lincoln, there's a sign under it saying they have 20 or so (i think) birds and animals which are albino or have other odd colour variations, but the one albino is the only one on display at the moment, as they are only a small (but v good) museum.
they also have an ace fossilised sea-thing (the one that begins with p which i cannot spell, heh)
There's a similar case of albino (and otherwise abberantly coloured) birds at the Rotschild Zoological Museum in Tring (which is now owned by the Natural History Museum).
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