The Earth used to be one mega supercontinent, known as Pangaea. 200 million years ago (or so) this humongous chunk of land started to split up as Africa, South America, Antarctica, India, and Australia broke away to form a new chunk known as Gondwana. 50 million years later, Gondwana broke apart even further, and voila! The landmass that we now know as Australia was born!
Millions and millions of years of natural selection and evolution without influences from other habitats led to the development of a unique ecosystem Down Under. In fact, more than 80% of all the plants and animals native to the continent can only be found in Australia. (Click HERE to learn more!)
Seeing a platypus became a bit of an obsession of mine after hearing the tale of multiple sightings of one by the Hobart rivulet. Despite daily walks along the banks where this alleged platypus played, the odds of me catching a glimpse weren’t good.
Not only is my vision embarrassingly bad, even with my contacts in, but my eye to brain coordination is even worse. When I turn a corner, look at a piece of art, or watch a movie, my brain furiously gets to work taking in the scene, pondering the “whys” and “hows” while putting it into context of the bigger world. Details? Maybe I catch a few. But my brain usually is elsewhere.
Here’s an example of the chaos my brain goes through.
I’m on a hike and a turn in the bend reveals a massive tree.
For all I know there’s kookaburra riding a wombat fighting off a Tasmanian Devil to my left. But I’m too wrapped up in a tree-induced existential crisis to notice.
So the odds of me catching sight of a sly platypus bopping around a river are pretty slim.
The Platypus House is a center that was created to “advance public awareness and understanding about the magic of monotremes.” They rescue and rehabilitate both platypuses (yes the plural is platypuses, not platypi) and Echidnas, and they offer educational tours with a chance to meet the animals.
The platypus is an egg laying semi-aquatic mammal native to eastern Australian, and the best way to describe it is if a duck, lizard, beaver, and otter all had a baby that was injected with snake venom as a fetus, giving the males the ability to stab and kill predators. Sounds crazy? Well it is!
Here are the fun takeaways I learned:
The second part of the Platypus House tour involved a visit with three echidnas. An Echidna is kind of like what you would get if a porcupine, kangaroo, and lizard got together and had a baby. Like it’s fellow Platypus monotreme, the Echidna also lays eggs and has a backwards pelvic girdle.
Edward, Edwina and Thomas happily greeted us at the door, knowing food would soon follow. We all sat on the floor and our Platypus House guide put bowls of some sort of termite mixture in front of us so we could get up close and personal as she explained the fascinating creatures.
Absolutely!
While The Platypus House is a bit of trek from Hobart, we combined the trip with a visit to Launceston, a hike around Cataract Gorge, and a cheeky wine tasting from a Tamar Valley vineyard, which made for a full day of exploring.
Both the platypus and echidna are animals that are foreign to my North American upbringing, and it was fascinating to see the monotremes up close while learning cool, fun facts. What can I say? I’m a total nerd!
The best part? Now I can carry on with daily existential crisis over trees without worrying about missing a platypus sighting.
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I love fun facts! I learned some new things. Thank you 😊 What great adventures your having!! Enjoy them ❤️
Thank you for giving it a read!
Those are some funny looking creatures. Thanks for sharing all the interesting facts! ;)
Beauty Point to Hobart in 3 weeks - that’s incredible! A great read. There’s one hanging around O’Grady’s Falls for a few weeks now ;)
Oh thanks for the tip! I'll definitely be taking a wander up that way :)
It’s been seen at both the top and bottom of falls several times by my neighbours and daughter, but I haven’t been lucky enough to see it :(
I just had a sighting of one right along the rivulet last night!! I only caught sight because there were a few people watching as well!
That is so cool and I’m insanely jealous! Hope you got a good photo :)
the thing about echidnas is they are so adorable you want to hug them. but that would hurt! Thanks for giving some exposure to two of our less known but still very awesome animals!
Loved reading the interesting facts about these animals. Both are also foreign to me. Only ever heard of a Platypus from the cartoon show, Phinneas and Ferb.