The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: lj
Date: 2007-10-10 23:49
I'm reading "The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story" by naturalist/poet Diane Ackerman (it's the true story of a Polish zookeeper's wife, based on her diary and other sources, about how she and her husband helped save over three hundred people--resistance activists and refugee Jews--during Hitler's reign), and I came across a very evocative description. She discusses the zoo's odors, "some subtle, some almost sickening at first," from the quite disgusting hyenas to birds with tangerine-smelling feathers. Right about in the middle of the spectrum comes this: "The kakapo, a black-feathered flightless parrot with a shocking white eye and orange beak, smells like an old clarinet case."
Just thought I'd share that. Have any of you ever smelled a kakapo?
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Author: Katrina
Date: 2007-10-11 01:16
Hmmm...I guess if I've smelled an old clarinet case I've smelled a kakapo, eh?
;)
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Author: denner22
Date: 2007-10-11 09:42
There are meant to be fewer than 100 Kakapo in New Zealand, so I do not know if they smell like an old clarinet case. I have an unused old Yamaha case that does not have any smell that would be like a parrot...... still I guess it was a good story!
David
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Author: BobD
Date: 2007-10-11 14:37
Jack Benny was born in Waukegan too. Diane is obviously a gifted writer and I also associate the family name Ackerman with a clarinet player. Maybe she has first hand experience with old clarinet cases and their smell is not unpleasant for her.
Bob Draznik
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