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Lucy Cooke

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Unlikely Cute Animal of the Week: Sid the Baby Pangolin

Posted: 07/30/2012 9:05 am

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Sid the baby pangolin sucks down his special smoothie of termites and milk

Ladies and gentlemen, this week's unlikely cute animal is Sid, a baby pangolin. I'm guessing most of you have never heard of a pangolin before, and if you have you probably thought it was some sort of medieval musical instrument. But it is in fact an extremely shy anteater from Africa and Asia whose name comes from the Malay word 'pengulling,' which means 'something that rolls up.' When under attack, this walking pine cone curls himself into a tight ball, protecting his soft underbelly with his scaly, razor-sharp armor.

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I met Sid while filming my new series Freaks and Creeps for National Geographic Wild. He was a resident of the SanWild sanctuary in South Africa where he'd been recently rescued from poachers. In the last few years, pangolins have become a fashionable cure-all in Chinese medicine -- a spurious practice that's fueling a massive illegal trade that led to over 40,000 individuals of these highly endangered species being slaughtered in 2011 alone.
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The closest I get to cooing over a cutie: Lucy and Louise fuss over little Sid

Fortunately Sid and his mother were rescued by Louise Joubert, who promptly released them. But Sid's mom, no doubt suffering extreme stress, went on to reject her month-old baby so now Louise is Sid's surrogate mom. Not being a pangolin herself, Louise has had to figure out some of the mysteries behind one of nature's most enigmatic creatures. Her first mission was how to keep Sid calm and warm. She'd seen baby pangolins cling to their mom's back in the first few months of their life. So Louise created a somewhat fluffier facsimile: a hot water bottle stuffed inside a teddy bear. Fortunately Sid immediately took to snuggling up against his toastie teddy and began to cheer up considerably.

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This is what a happy baby pangolin looks like

The next step was what to feed him. Adult pangolins have no teeth but an extremely long tongue, stickier than a cinema carpet, which they use to hoover up thousands of termites every day. So for baby Sid, Louise conjured up a very special smoothie: milk with a sprinkling of termites whizzed up in the blender.

When I arrived for filming, Louise decided it was time to give Sid his first taste of live termites. We drove out into the bush and located a massive termite mound. It was my job to break it open and get the bugs. But termite mounds are tough as concrete, which goes to show how strong pangolin claws are, and in the process of trying to crack it open I smacked myself in the face with the pickaxe. Ouch. After considerable effort I managed to release a single termite, but Sid was more interested in snuggling up on his teddy than eating it.

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This is what a happy pangolin fan looks like, even after a fight with a pick axe

Louise tells me that a few months later Sid did catch and eat his first termite and is due to be released back into the wild later this year at a secret location. Fingers crossed he manages to stay hidden this time around as pangolins are in serious danger of becoming extinct in the next ten years if the poaching doesn't stop. The world would be a far poorer place without this magical creature that looks more like an extra from Star Wars than a mammal from the African bush.

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From Louise's sofa....
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...to the wild. Sid has had a most peculiar journey for a pangolin

Meet Sid in 'Freaks and Creeps: The Freaky Five' on Tuesday July 31st at 10pm and repeated on Saturday August 4th at 10pm on National Geographic Wild

To follow Sid's progress head to SanWild's facebook page and check out the photo's of Sid's journey

 

Follow Lucy Cooke on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@amphib_avenger

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Sid the baby pangolin sucks down his special smoothie of termites and milk Ladies and gentlemen, this week's unlikely cute animal is Sid, a baby pangolin. I'm guessing most of you have never heard o...
Sid the baby pangolin sucks down his special smoothie of termites and milk Ladies and gentlemen, this week's unlikely cute animal is Sid, a baby pangolin. I'm guessing most of you have never heard o...
 
 
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04:21 PM on 08/12/2012
I've never seen an animal quite like this (until seeing the show of course)! Very interesting.. and sad at the same time. I really like the idea of having a chinese scientist actually analyze some of these "ingredients" to show that they have no medicinal value. Unfortunately, that probably won't be proof enough for everyone. Often "mythical" cures have little or no factual evidence.

Really like the show though.. and it's great that shows like these bring attention to such problems. I look forward to watching this each week and love seeing the strange animals that you search for!
08:33 PM on 08/09/2012
Again with the Chinese and some mythical cure. I'm so tired of seeing this. I love this story and am so grateful but 40,000 killed just last year for no reason.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Annette Hammond
Don't like it--Lump it!
05:21 PM on 08/01/2012
Watched this 2day.Great show.Love Lucy,she's a fuuny gal.ALSO---So sad about the Pangolin.The chinese eat these creatures as a delicacy.It's ashame. And when Lucy went into a small town in S.africa,they were selling all kinds of animal parts.Their belief about some things are just nuts!
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Lucy Cooke
03:54 PM on 08/08/2012
Thanks Annette! Glad you liked the show. And thanks for spreading the word about the pangolin. They are so amazing and becoming so endangered for such stupid reasons. They need all the help they can get.
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Pilatunes
Best described as miscellaneous
06:55 PM on 07/31/2012
I have no direct interest in SanWild, but they do great work, and they really need some financial support. On bended knee I ask people here to help them out if you can. Please!
11:02 AM on 07/31/2012
Wow.. that is cool.. nature is so amazing
11:52 PM on 07/30/2012
SanWild is one of the most respected and stellar sanctuaries in South Africa for hundreds of animals. The have big cats, elephants, hippos and much more. They have had trouble with the mining industry trespassing, ruining fencing and costing thousands in legal fees. Through it all the care has never dropped despite true hardship with fundraising. The story runs deeper than little Sid. I hope you will visit their Facebook page link in this article and their website.
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GirlUsingBrain
The most dangerous animal in the forest is man.
05:50 PM on 07/30/2012
I love pangolins! I have been to Africa twice and so wanted to see a pangolin in the wild ... but alas, they are nocturnal! Maybe some day ...
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Lucy Cooke
07:45 PM on 07/30/2012
They are the most amazing animals. Thrilled you think so too.
03:46 PM on 07/30/2012
The use of Pangolin's skin, Rhino horn, Lion & Tiger bone have already been proven to have no medicinal value whatsoever but the Asian countries, in ignorance, continue to rape our wildlife. I truly wish they would wake up to reality and stop this madness.
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JeanRR
09:36 AM on 07/30/2012
Traditional Chinese medicine has a lot fo answer for. I am saddened that so many Westerners now seem to think it is a good thing.
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Lucy Cooke
01:38 PM on 07/30/2012
I think it would be interesting to get a Chinese scientist to run proper tests on a pangolin scale that would hopefully show that they contain Keratin (the same substance that out fingernails and hair are made of) and not much else. Nothing that would cure impotence or any of the things they are reputed to cure.