Posted on 05/21/2006 8:49:15 PM PDT by Marius3188
MUNISING Mary Irish recently received the strangest birthday gift she ever could have imagined.
Mother Nature gave me a birthday egg, Irish said.
On May 7, Mary and her husband Elmer were driving along Old Indian Town Road in Munising Township in Alger County when they saw something lying in the mud at the side of the road.
The couple often drives the countys dirt roads picking up cans and watching for wildlife.
What Mary saw in the mud on her 59th birthday, roughly 2.5 miles south of Highway 58, was something she first thought was a ball.
We have a little dog at home that likes to play and so I told Elmer to go and get the ball for the dog, Mary said.
But the closer Elmer got, the more sure he was it wasnt a ball.
I thought it was one of those mushroom things, Elmer said. I thought it was one of those puffball things.
But what was lying in the mud, near the base of a hemlock tree, was a very large whitish egg. The Irishes took the egg home and measured it.
Ive been outdoors my whole life fishing and hunting and Ive never found one of those, Mary said. Weve been all over the U.S. without finding something like that.
The egg weighed more than three pounds and measured 19.5 inches around on the long side and 15.5 inches around on the short side.
Placing the egg in a cardboard box at their home in Christmas, the couple began to find out what kind of egg it might be.
I was hoping it wouldnt hatch out in the house, Mary said. Its a wonder coons hadnt tried to get it open.
The egg, which had an odor to it, perhaps from the mud,was discovered in an area of mixed forest, where water had recently puddled from spring run-off.
There are houses located within a couple miles of the site.
Elmer, , 68, who previously farmed hogs and beef cattle downstate near Battle Creek, said he didnt think the egg was anything hed seen before.
I thought maybe its an ostrich egg, but its too big for that, Elmer said.
Emu eggs are emerald green color and rhea eggs are smaller. Ostrich eggs are the largest of all bird eggs, but the smallest in relationship to the size of the bird.
Photographs of the Irish egg were sent by The Mining Journal to the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History in Los Angeles, which is home to a research collection of 112,000 specimens representing more than 5,400 species, or nearly 60 percent of the worlds modern birds.
The bird collections, among the largest in western North America, include 95,700 study skins, 2,000 flat skins, 10,450 complete skeletons, 3,000 fluid-preserved specimens and 2,500 tissue samples.
Ornithology Collections Manager Kimball Garrett said the egg found in Alger County indeed belongs to an ostrich a bird native to Africa which typically lays 15 to 20 spherical-shaped, cream-colored eggs.
Its certainly an ostrich egg size, color, and pitted appearance are just right, Garrett said. I dont have a clue what it was doing in the Michigan woods.
Garrett said ostriches are bred commonly in most states, but he wasnt aware of any feral populations.
Jack Miller, a Seney resident who has raised exotic birds including rheas and emus for nearly 30 years, agreed. He said its very unlikely an ostrich could survive the cold of the Upper Peninsula winter.
Even if on ostrich could make it through a winter by protecting itself from the cold in thick cover, finding food would be difficult, without someone feeding it, he said.
What would they eat to survive, up here in the jack pines and cedar swamps, Miller asked.
Jim Isleib, Alger County agent for Michigan State University Extension, said he thinks it would be very doubtful escaped ostriches could survive long enough to breed in the local area.
I have a hard time believing there are ostriches out there roaming the countryside, Isleib said. I absolutely cannot believe we have any breeding ostriches out there.
Miller said he doesnt know of anyone currently raising ostriches locally, and he said he likely would.
At this point, it is unknown how long the egg was sitting in the location before the Irishes found it.
Miller said usually after a couple of weeks, an egg would no longer be viable and incubating would not produce a chick.
Garrett said the most likely scenario is that somebody placed the egg at the location.
The normal clutch size is very large, so if there was just one egg, and no ostrich around, then it was clearly transported there from somewhere else, Garrett said.
Perhaps the egg is someones discarded conversation piece or was placed at the edge of the road as a joke or a hoax.
Mary said she isnt sure what to think about the egg now. She said she plans to keep the egg and wonders what an X-ray might show.
Meanwhile, the mystery remains of how the worlds largest bird egg wound up in the mud off an Alger County back road.
Yooper Ping Eh.
pong
What were you doing in Michigan? :)
"Garrett said the most likely scenario is that somebody placed the egg at the location."
No - just evolved. :)
L
Ostriches...laying the eggs Americans won't lay.
"Alien"
Stop me if you've heard it.
"Yooper Ping Eh."
The original name of Canada was CND, back around the year 1600. Once people settled in here and got to know America, they decided to check out what else was around. They found CND up North. They asked a guy up there - "How do you spell that?"
C ehhh, N ehhh, D ehhh. Result - Canada.
"Easy, someone was making a Yooper baloot."
Well, how many people on here have been to the Republic of the PI? Did you ever have a baloot? I never, ever got up my courage to do so. But that pre-pasteurization San Miguel was one fine beer!!!! Best on the planet in my opinion.
Some hunter simply 'passed' one of those pickled eggs
he ate at the Red Flannel Saloon in Paradise, MI.
It's Bush's fault. ;)
That egg is about 6.2 by 5 inches in size. I think the ostrich eggs I saw in a museum were almost twice that size. Could it have been an Emu egg? Then again maybe it was from that UFO they think crashed off South Africa.
It's Al Gore's clone.
O'lee wah!
1 It's an ILLEGAL ALIEN ostrich EEG!
2 It's George Bush's fault for not shutting down the borders to prevent this invasion of ostrich's!
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