Today I Learned

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Today I learned that cleaning a white hat can be done with bleach cleaner, but it’s important to rinse it before wearing it again. I also discovered that "oyster veneering," a woodworking technique from the late 1600s, is experiencing a minor revival despite its labor-intensive nature. Additionally, I learned that the factorial of 23 (23!) equals 25,852,016,738,884,976,640,000, which interestingly has 23 digits, a unique coincidence among factorials. I found out that medical specialists often spend less than 10 minutes with patients, and that watching TV can contribute to weight gain. Other insights included the fact that a kiss can transfer around 80 million microbes, and that bureaucracy can sometimes hinder employment opportunities. The discussion also touched on various trivia, such as the emotional sensitivity of barn owls and the complexities of gravitational lensing around black holes.
  • #6,811
fresh_42 said:
I wonder if a similar can be said about Germany. Raccoons have been counted as domestic animals for about a century here, and there are cities with considerable populations.
I wondered about this. What do you mean by domestic?

Donning my Googles, I see that the EU has legally classified raccoons as an "invasive alien species". There are legal restrictions on keeping them, even if found in an urban area.

I suppose, informally, they might be tolerated and accepted, like we accept squirrels?
 
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  • #6,812
BillTre said:
Beware, many raccoons in the US have rabies.
It's a good thing that rabies has been virtually eradicated in Germany thanks to large-scale vaccination campaigns.
 
  • #6,813
fresh_42 said:
I wonder if a similar can be said about Germany. Raccoons have been counted as domestic animals for about a century here, and there are cities with considerable populations. On the other hand, there is still a chance that foxes will win the race on self-domestication. I mean, what worked for cats ...
The response makes me wonder about possible vocabulary definitions differences between English and German. Like some words do not always translate exactly the way someone thinks it does; or the way "domestic" is used could be a regulational way of using the word.
 
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  • #6,814
DaveC426913 said:
I wondered about this. What do you mean by domestic?
In Germany, the spread of the raccoon began in 1934 with the release of four animals at Lake Edersee in Hesse. Further releases occurred after a bomb hit a fur farm in Wolfshagen (Märkisch-Oderland district). A negative impact of this invasive species on native species in Europe cannot be ruled out.

According to the Kassel Regional Council, nearly 28,000 raccoons were killed in Hesse during the 2015/2016 season, more than half of them in the Kassel administrative district. More than 18,000 were killed by hunting with firearms, and another 7,800 by trapping. Approximately 1,800 died due to traffic or disease.
DaveC426913 said:
Donning my Googles, I see that the EU has legally classified raccoons as an "invasive alien species". There are legal restrictions on keeping them, even if found in an urban area.

I suppose, informally, they might be tolerated and accepted, like we accept squirrels?

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This is domestic, and raccoons are no longer a neobiota. We also have greater rheas living in the wild, and we have wallabies and rose-ringed parakeets, too. The kangaroos survived several winters, which is the criterion to count as a domestic species, but I don't know whether they made it until now.

Personally, I hope for some Keas to escape ...
 
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  • #6,815
symbolipoint said:
The response makes me wonder about possible vocabulary definitions differences between English and German. Like some words do not always translate exactly the way someone thinks it does; or the way "domestic" is used could be a regulational way of using the word.
I used it to mean "inland" in contrast to foreign.
 
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  • #6,816
T.I.L

RIP Jimmy Cliff 1944-2025

 
  • #6,817
fresh_42 said:
In Germany, the spread of the raccoon began in 1934 with the release of four animals at Lake Edersee in Hesse. Further releases occurred after a bomb hit a fur farm in Wolfshagen (Märkisch-Oderland district). A negative impact of this invasive species on native species in Europe cannot be ruled out.

According to the Kassel Regional Council, nearly 28,000 raccoons were killed in Hesse during the 2015/2016 season, more than half of them in the Kassel administrative district. More than 18,000 were killed by hunting with firearms, and another 7,800 by trapping. Approximately 1,800 died due to traffic or disease.




This is domestic, and raccoons are no longer a neobiota. We also have greater rheas living in the wild, and we have wallabies and rose-ringed parakeets, too. The kangaroos survived several winters, which is the criterion to count as a domestic species, but I don't know whether they made it until now.

Personally, I hope for some Keas to escape ...
Yes, I read all those facts.

Perhaps domestication means something different there than here.

I mean, while coons may be ubiquitous, they seem to be no more domesticated than, say, city rats.
 
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  • #6,818
DaveC426913 said:
Yes, I read all those facts.

Perhaps domestication means something different there than here.

I mean, while coons may be ubiquitous, they seem to be no more domesticated than, say, city rats.
I haven't checked, but I said domestic as in domestic politics, not domesticated as for goats.

Raccoons are a domestic species in Germany, not a domesticated species. Cats are an example of a worldwide self-domesticated species. The news about raccoons in North America was that they are possibly on a similar way, and I added foxes, which - in Europe - also transmit to an urban species.
 
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  • #6,819
The word is now making more sense.
Domestic - what is found living in a place
Domesticated - selective breeding selectively bred to develop a specie in a form that serves our purposes.
 
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  • #6,820
Domestic as an antonym of imported, not as in an antonym of wild.
Got it!
 
  • #6,821
Today I realized that fahrenheit taken literally is the abstract noun "the activity of driving."
 

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