Showing posts with label winged cat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winged cat. Show all posts

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Victorian collection raises £100,000 at Dorchester auction

9:00am Thursday 15th April 2010
By Joanna Davis

PEOPLE with a penchant for the bizarre, the unusual and the downright grotesque crowded out an auction house for a sale with a difference.

They came from all over the country to buy their very own oddities from an eclectic Victorian collection.

Objects from a recession-hit museum on the Isle of Wight went under the hammer at The Grove sales room of Duke’s of Dorchester.

A winged cat, one of the highlights of the auction, was the subject of a price war from bidders.

The 1860s stuffed feline, primed for flight with bird wings fixed to its back, made £2,800.

A shrunken human head believed to be a genuine Javara Indian head of a man from Ecuador fetched £2,400.

An elephant-headed boy in a red velvet coffin, reputedly found living wild on the banks of the Congo, went for £1,900.

Torture items from the Brading Collection – formerly the Isle of Wight Waxworks – were particularly popular with bargain hunters.

Paul Birch successfully bid £1,100 for a man trap, complete with a life-size human ankle dripping with fake blood.

He said: “I saw one like this on TV and I thought ‘I’ve got to have one of those’.

“I think it’s just what every home needs and I’m going to put it in the living room where everybody can see it. This has been a really fun auction with a lot of good characters, normally people at auctions are very hoity-toity.”

Brave Paul, of Portsmouth, also bought a scold’s bridle for £300 and handed it over to his girlfriend Tegwen Owen.

The scold’s bridle, or brank, was an implement designed to be fitted on to a female head, apparently for the punishment of nagging women.

Museum owner Robert Ball also auctioned off the collection’s main draw – its taxidermy section.

A komodo dragon went for £1,200, while Battling Bruno – a brown bear wearing boxing gloves – went for £1,000.

Bruno was said to have fought all comers at rodeos throughout the mid-West and was stuffed when he died by request of Queen Victoria.

The stuffed animals were thought to have been collected by Professor Copperthwaite in the 1800s.

The sale fetched more than £100,000 and attracted around 300 people.

http://www.dorsetecho.co.uk/news/8099286.Victorian_collection_raises___100_000_at_Dorchester_auction/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

On feline wing and prayer

Published: 2010/01/19 06:26:48 AM

AN EXTRAORDINARY cat has been found in Qingyan province, China — it sprouted a pair of angel-like, fur- covered wings from its back during a spell of hot weather.

The weird kitty has become something of an attraction for visitors to the region, as well as female cats, according to its owner.

Online magazine Cryptozoology reported experts as saying the wings could be leg deformities, huge mats of hair or a condition known as feline cutaneous asthenia, which causes cats’ skin to grow in heavy folds on its back or shoulders.

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=91464
(Submitted by Caty Bergman)

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Mysterious winged cat baffles animal experts

White moggy grows fluffy wings out of its back - but can it fly?

China Foto Press / Barcroft

by: Kris Mullin
26 May 2009

ANIMAL experts have been pussy-footing over the explanation for a cat that has developed bat-like wings on either side of its back.

The long-haired white feline was born a normal kitten, but started to develop furry wing-like appendages on either side of its back when it was just a year old.

Scientists believe the growths may be the result of a genetic mutation caused by chemicals during its mother's pregnancy. Alternatively, the cat which was discovered in Chongqing, China, may be a freak that developed from two embryos.

However, the puss does not seem to be bothered by its wings, and it was quick enough to swoop on any cat biscuits dished up.

Chongqing is known as one of China's hottest cities and, following the discovery of this cat, the air there is certainly getting a bit moggy.

http://www.thelondonpaper.com/thelondonpaper/weird/odd-news/mysterious-winged-cat-baffles-animal-experts