Strange Animals Podcast

Episode 351: The Bunyip and the Kelpie


Listen Later

Thanks to Will and Henry for their suggestions this week! This episode is two bats out of five on the spookiness scale for monster month, so it's only a little spooky.
Further reading:
Does the Bunyip Really Haunt the Australian Wetlands?
A map and drawing of the original earth carving of a bunyip, from the mid-19th century:
An elephant seal can really look like a monster:
So can a leopard seal [photo by Greg Barras and taken from this site]:
Show transcript:
Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw.
This week, as we get closer and closer to Halloween, we’re taking a break from spooky bigfoot monsters. Instead, we’re in the water with some spooky monsters suggested by Henry and Will! This episode is rated two bats out of five on our spookiness scale, so it’s not too scary.
We’ll start with Will’s suggestion, the bunyip. We talked about it a long, long time ago in episode 36, so it’s definitely time to revisit it.
The bunyip is supposed to be a monster that attacks and eats people who come too near the waterholes or lagoons where it lives. It’s sometimes said to be gray and covered with feathers, or is described as a humongous starfish or snake, or is supposed to be yellow with black stripes, but the earliest reports in English, back in 1812, describe it as looking like a huge black seal. It was supposed to warn people away with a terrifying bellow or roar.
By about the 1850s the word bunyip had been adopted into Australian English as a term meaning something like humbug or poser. As early as 1933, at least one non-Aboriginal person suggested that the bunyip was inspired by seals that sometimes come up into rivers. If someone who had never seen or heard of a seal before saw one up close, it would definitely look like a monster.
That’s mainly what we talked about in episode 36. An Aboriginal sacred site near Ararat, Victoria once had the outline of a bunyip carved into the ground and the turf removed from within the figure. Every year the local indigenous people would gather to re-carve the figure so it wouldn’t become overgrown, because it symbolized an important event. At that spot, two brothers had been attacked by a bunyip. It killed one of the men and the other speared the bunyip and killed it. When he brought his family and others back to retrieve his brother’s body, they traced around the bunyip’s body.
The bunyip carving was 26 feet long, or 8 meters. Unfortunately it’s long gone, since eventually the last Aborigine who was part of the ritual died sometime in the 1850s and the site was fenced off for cattle grazing. But we have a drawing of the geoglyph from 1867. A copy of it is in the show notes. It’s generally taken to be a two-legged sea serpent type monster with a small head and a relatively short, thick tail. Some people think it represents a bird like an emu.
But if you turn it around, with the small head being the end of a tail, and the blunt tail being a head, suddenly it makes sense. It’s the shape of a seal.
The Southern elephant seal lives around the Antarctic, but is a rare visitor to Australia. It’s also enormous, twice the size of a walrus, six or seven times heavier than a Polar bear. The males can grow over 20 feet long, or over six meters, while females are typically about half that length. The male also has an inflatable proboscis which allows him to make a roaring or grunting sound, although he usually only does this when he’s about to fight another male. This is what it sounds like:
[southern elephant seal sound]
The leopard seal also lives in the Antarctic Ocean but sometimes it’s found around Australia, especially the western coast. It’s not as big as the elephant seal but it can grow up to 11 ½ feet long, or 3.5 meters, the size of a walrus although it’s not as heavy. It’s an active, streamlined animal with large jaws. Its teeth that lock together to allow it to filter small animals from the water by pushing the...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Strange Animals PodcastBy Katherine Shaw

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

236 ratings


More shows like Strange Animals Podcast

View all
MonsterTalk by Blake Smith

MonsterTalk

1,120 Listeners

Imaginary Worlds by Eric Molinsky | QCODE

Imaginary Worlds

1,989 Listeners

Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages by Starglow Media / Wondery

Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages

12,435 Listeners

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast by I KNOW DINO, LLC

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

500 Listeners

Myths and Legends by Jason Weiser, Carissa Weiser, Nextpod

Myths and Legends

23,367 Listeners

All Creatures Podcast by All Creatures Podcast

All Creatures Podcast

489 Listeners

Creature Feature by iHeartPodcasts

Creature Feature

877 Listeners

Forever Ago by American Public Media

Forever Ago

5,686 Listeners

Just the Zoo of Us by Ellen & Christian Weatherford

Just the Zoo of Us

409 Listeners

Radiolab for Kids by WNYC

Radiolab for Kids

971 Listeners

Relax With Animal Facts by Stefan Wolfe

Relax With Animal Facts

603 Listeners

The Atlas Obscura Podcast by SiriusXM and Atlas Obscura

The Atlas Obscura Podcast

1,626 Listeners

Mysteries of Science by Fun Kids

Mysteries of Science

108 Listeners

Amazing Wildlife: A San Diego Zoo Podcast by iHeartPodcasts

Amazing Wildlife: A San Diego Zoo Podcast

191 Listeners

Smologies with Alie Ward by Alie Ward

Smologies with Alie Ward

212 Listeners