Park ranger captures rare video of elusive nocturnal creature: 'Amazing footage'
A ranger in an Australian national park happened upon an elusive species of wombat. The delightful images of the northern hairy-nosed wombat caused quite a stir when they were posted on Instagram, with the caption saying, "Ranger Sam captured this amazing footage."
According to Outdoors, the northern hairy-nosed wombat is the largest of the three wombat species residing in Australia. It's also the rarest, with only around 400 left in the wild. The Australian Wildlife Conservancy notes that northern hairy-nosed wombats are present in only two locations in Queensland.
Epping Forest National Park, where the sighting took place, is the larger of the two populations. Habitat destruction, overhunting, and predation by dingoes and other wild dogs brought the wombat to the brink of extinction. At one point, just 35 remained, but conservation efforts have helped those numbers recover.
Sightings, whether in person or captured using tools such as trail cameras, help experts monitor endangered species and the progress of rehabilitation efforts. Keeping all species thriving helps maintain ecosystems and our food supply.
The northern hairy-nosed wombat is the world's largest burrowing marsupial, tipping the scales at around 75 pounds. It's also a nocturnal creature, so seeing one during the day is an incredibly rare treat.
Hairy-nosed wombats make up for their poor eyesight with a keen sense of smell. Like their more numerous cousins, they play a helpful role in the ecosystem as eco-engineers. Their burrows aerate the soil and provide shelter for other creatures, helping mitigate the impact of wildfires. As One Earth notes, they're territorial creatures that mark their turf in a very unique way: with cube-shaped droppings.
The sighting of an elusive species offers hope and serves as a reminder that local conservation efforts can yield remarkable results.
Another positive step that can be taken is rewilding your yard to create a welcoming habitat for native fauna. While some critters may leave evidence of their visits, it probably won't be cube-shaped. Sorry.
The Instagram post's caption went for maximum whimsy by presenting it as a diary of the wombat's day, primarily sleeping. One commenter got into the spirit by suggesting an addendum: "You forgot 'poop cubes.'"
Another took a moment to offer heartfelt support, saying, "Thanks for sharing and all who are working to save Qld's most endangered mammal."
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Los Angeles Times
11 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
A Palestinian home kitchen reopens in Watts with falafel and fundraisers for Gaza
Mid East Eats — a popular falafel pop-up turned private dinner service — is now open as a fast-casual destination for homestyle Palestinian cuisine with an L.A. edge. It's also the first legally permitted home kitchen in Watts. Sumer and Andrew Durkee's nearly 700-square-foot home on Grape Street has a white banner stretched across the front gate, with blown-up photos of pita wraps, rice bowls, tacos and nachos topped with falafel. Enter the front yard, outfitted with a few tables, and maybe one of the home cooks will greet you, if they're not busy wrapping burritos or throwing meat on a grill. Business has kicked up since the Durkees relaunched Mid East Eats three weeks ago. The restaurant initially began as a private dinner service in February, when Sumer and Andrew offered Palestinian feasts in a decorated tent on their front lawn. For the July 12 opening, the pair added halal chicken and beef shawarma to their largely vegan menu — think fast-casual food like Shawacos (corn tortillas filled with shawarma, cilantro-lime hummus and feta) alongside dishes like the El Jifnawi falafel wrap, named after Sumer's father's Palestinian village, and the West Bank burrito, with fresh fries like the wraps served by street vendors in Ramallah and Jerusalem. From the ages of 9 to 12, Sumer and her family lived in Jifna — a village outside the West Bank city of Ramallah, where she and her brother went to school. The Maryland native recalls living through the Second Intifada, a Palestinian uprising against Israeli military occupation, which began in 2000. 'My brother and I saw a lot of terrible things just by crossing the checkpoint to get to school in the city,' Durkee said. 'When they would close the checkpoints, we'd have to travel over the hills. … We've been shot at.' For Durkee, being able to serve Palestinian food in L.A., sometimes to local Palestinians, is bittersweet. As an entire generation of Palestinian children suffer irreversible damage from starvation and malnutrition, Durkee grapples with her role and platform as an owner-operator of a Palestinian restaurant. A week after reopening Mid East Eats, she announced that she would stop posting pictures of her restaurant's food on Instagram until Israel ended its blockade of food aid into Gaza. 'It feels insensitive to hold a grand opening during these times, but the time has come to open consistent business hours. Mid East Eats is our only source of income,' read an Instagram post from the restaurant. 'Our grand opening is dedicated to all oppressed communities. We need each other more than ever now.' Before it opened as a microenterpise home kitchen operation (MEHKO) in Feburary, Mid East Eats got its start as a pop-up last summer. The Durkees served dishes like falafel tacos at events across L.A., sometimes up to five per week. It's the same food they now serve in Watts, where many residents live more than half a mile from the closest supermarket, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Access Research Atlas. 'I wanted to make food more accessible to our neighborhood — Watts is a bit of a food desert,' said Sumer, whose bubbly personality and warm hospitality has helped the restaurant maintain a flow of customers. 'There's a lot of fast food … there's no Mediterranean, Middle Eastern or Palestinian food.' Mid East Eats is one of the greater L.A. area's roughly 150 MEHKOs, thanks to a state program that was passed in 2018 and was implemented in L.A. County last November. It allows residents to cook and sell food out of their homes and plans to subsidize 1,000 home businesses through June 2026. MEHKOs are limited to serving up to 30 meals per day and 90 meals per week, with no more than $100,000 annual gross sales. Since its pop-up days, a common thread throughout the Durkees' business has been advocacy for Gaza. Many of the pop-ups Mid East Eats attended were fundraisers for families in Gaza, along with other causes such as local wildfire relief. The restaurant's reopening, which featured a few local vendors, raised money for two local community organizations and $100 for a family in Gaza. On the last weekend of July, Mid East Eats fundraised with sales of its West Bank burrito, donating $400 to two other families in Gaza. 'We [donate] direct to families that are unable or too far away from aid distribution,' Sumer said. 'Unfortunately, they have to buy food at inflated prices, so that's why I try to focus on rotating families.' Mid East Eats is best known for its herbaceous falafel, which Sumer stuffs with mint, cilantro and parsley. While she doesn't use an exact family recipe, Sumer said that it 'comes from my soul,' and tastes like the falafel her aunt would make. She and Andrew also take pride in cooking with olive oil made by a Palestinian family in Garden Grove. Vanessa Guerra, a loyal customer who discovered Mid East Eats through a fundraising falafel-making class the Durkees held last year, has no problem driving from her home in Northridge to Watts for falafel. 'They're amazing people — if someone needs help, they're there to help you,' said Guerra, whose great-grandfather is Palestinian, of the Durkees. 'I'm not just paying for the food. I'm paying for the service, everything. … It's very home-like. It's like going to your mom's house.' Open the Durkees' front gate to find tomato plants growing along the fence. To the left is another table accompanied by fig and lime trees. Next to the house, a young watermelon plant, and in front of it, the colorful tent where the couple formerly held private dinners for $95 per person. 'I really wanted to do the Palestinian experience — I wanted people to come over, feel like they're at home, come sit on the ground,' Sumer said. 'Back in the village, we would sit on the floor and eat. Most modern-day Palestinians don't do that anymore, but we did … I wanted to have that vibe, and I wanted to cook traditional food.' Though the Durkees have paused the private dinners until mid-August to focus on their fast-casual service, it remains a core aspect of Mid East Eats, according to Sumer. Now, for $195 per person, diners will sit inside the tent on colorful cushions around a circular wooden table, feasting on a selection of mezze and mint lemonade followed by Sumer's maqlubeh, or fragrant rice flipped upside down, revealing a layer of eggplant, cauliflower and tomatoes. 'When we do the private dinners, what I really focus on is the foods that we really eat back home — the stuffed grape leaves, stuffed cabbage, stuffed zucchini,' Sumer said. 'It's important to me to preserve my culture through food.' The Durkees continue to support both families in Gaza and their Watts neighbors however they can — which, after the reopening, most often manifests as falafel wraps and forearm-length shawarma burritos bursting with garlic toum, tahini and Andrew's homemade jalapeño sauce. 'Of course I'm gonna fight for Palestinian liberation. These are my people,' Sumer said. 'I want to bring people here, and I want them to come and experience that Palestinian hospitality, and that is important to me — to show people that we are humans.' Mid East Eats is open in Watts on Thursday through Sunday from noon to 9 p.m. 9613 Grape St., Los Angeles,


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
See pilot be rescued after making emergency landing into ocean
First responders treated a pilot who had to make an emergency landing in the ocean in North Carolina. See video of his rescue. Surfers came to the rescue of a pilot in North Carolina who had to make an emergency landing in the ocean after his small plane's engine failed. The landing happened just after 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 2, near the Oak Island Pier, administrators with the Town of Oak Island said in a news release. According to the town, the Beach Safety Unit already was in the area after a water rescue call, so help was quickly dispatched to the pilot, who was the only person aboard the plane. Beatrice Hair, who was in the area and witnessed the emergency landing, told USA TODAY on Tuesday, Aug. 5, that surfers also jumped in the water to help the pilot. First responders treated the pilot on shore for non-life-threatening injuries. Other than a small cut on his leg, he was doing fine, WWAY News reported. The plane was recovered and towed out of the water, the Town of Oak Island said in the release. When contacted on Tuesday, Aug. 5, the Town of Oak Island declined to comment further. See aftermath of small plane crash in North Carolina Pilot planned to land on the beach before emergency landing The pilot, Mark Finkelstein, told WWAY News he has been flying for 17 years. He left for a quick flight that day – only about 20 to 30 minutes in his single-engine aircraft. He left from Cape Fear Regional Jetport. The skies were clear and there were low winds, he told WWAY News. However, his engine soon began running oddly. Finkelstein tried to turn around and land, but his engine shut off, he said. He wanted to land on the beach, but there were too many people, so he landed in the water. 'I also, as per training, opened the door on my pilot's side so that it would be easier to get out, and that was my focus,' he told WWAY News. 'There wasn't time to be afraid, you know? It was just about trying to do the best I could under the circumstances.' Bangladesh plane crash: How did an air force fighter jet crash into a school campus? 'I thought he might have died' Footage captured by Hair that day showed part of the blue and white plane sticking out of the water as a jet-ski rider and a boat surrounded the area. In the footage, a surfer on his board could be seen reaching down into the water to get the pilot. His upper body bobbed in and out of the water as he tried to save the man. '(The pilot) left on the police water rescue jet ski,' Hair told USA TODAY. 'I missed it … so I thought he might have died.' She also learned the surfer who dove down and pulled the pilot out of the plane works for the water rescue service. 'They were hanging out by the pier and came over right when they saw the plane crash,' she added. What kind of plane was the pilot flying? The plane was a fixed-wing single-engine aircraft made in 2022 by Australian manufacturer Jabiru, per an FAA accident and incident notification report obtained by USA TODAY. Its model number was J230-D. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it is investigating, noting in an Aug. 4 report the plane 'impacted the ocean about 200 yards off the coast for unknown reasons.' Finkelstein often shares footage and photos from his flights on social media, including flights over Atlanta and Wilmington. He called the plane "Air Finky." According to a July 31 post on Facebook, the plane underwent 'a variety of modifications' over seven months. 'Nick, the head of the Jabiru operation in Tennessee, flew it down this morning, and reported that it performed perfectly,' he shared. 'The video shows his excellent landing here at the Oak Island airport. I plan to make up for lost flying time! Stay tuned for Air Finky Go-Pros!' Finkelstein told WWAY News that hundreds of people reached out to wish him well after getting wind of the emergency landing on Saturday, Aug. 2. 'That has been an extremely wonderful silver lining to this,' he told WWAY News. Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Email her at sdmartin@


Newsweek
a day ago
- Newsweek
Abandoned Dog Found Tied Up With Heartbreaking Note: 'Don't Want Him Back'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. An abandoned dog, found tied up at the park with a note, landed in the right hands, despite the unfortunate circumstances. Erica Loring received a call from a neighbor who found a pup tethered at the local park. As someone who has fostered countless canines, Loring knew she needed to step in and help. She arrived to find the dog, Juniper, calmly lying on the sidewalk, tied to the park's entrance sign. He greeted her with happy tail wags and sniffs. The note read: "Just got him and it was too much for me. Nice dog. Can't keep him and the original owner doesn't want him back. Please help." Loring immediately took Juniper to the car, and he hopped in, no questions asked. She said in her June 27 Instagram video to the account @super_scooty that the dog seemed to be thrilled about driving in the car. It was as if he knew a better life was in his future. Screenshots from a June 27 Instagram video of a dog tied up to a park sign, left, and abandoned with a note, right. Screenshots from a June 27 Instagram video of a dog tied up to a park sign, left, and abandoned with a note, right. @super_scooty/Instagram However, because no one was available to be an immediate foster to Juniper, Loring brought him to the San Diego Humane Society. A dog in her home prevented her from taking him back to her place. "I knew the SD Humane Society is the best-possible no-kill shelter in the country," Loring told Newsweek via Instagram. "We have an amazing program here. I dropped him off, but I went to visit him every day." Every day since then, Loring came bearing doggy treats and smothering Juniper with love. She posted daily videos about the pup, cautious that he wouldn't slip through the cracks and be forgotten, but, soon enough, seven families expressed their interest in adopting him, Loring said. One family got matched with a different pit bull, which freed up space in a foster home and allowed Juniper to move in once his stray hold time expired. "Because the families came from various areas of the country, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, northern California, etc., we didn't know how long it would take to actually get people to come visit him," Loring said. "We decided to foster him while we figure out who was the perfect home for him." Within a week, Juniper's forever family came and adopted him. She said they absolutely adore him and his "big personality." Juniper has especially taken to the family's child, with the two being inseparable. Viewer Reactions The Instagram video, which reached almost 1 million views as of Tuesday, instantly left people heartbroken, but they applauded Loring's selfless and quick action. "Glad you took that horrible collar off he was left with," posted a viewer. Another added: "I'm sick of this world. What a sweet boy. I wish I could take all the animals." A third person commented: "Can you imagine if someone tied up a baby to a tree and left a note? To me, it's literally the same thing." Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.