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Ours: Treasures from Te Papa
RNZ
21 episodes
5 hours ago
Unveiling taonga from high art to pop culture, from the natural world to the frontline of politics, with Kiwis who hold them dear and the Te Papa expert who can explain what it's all about.
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All content for Ours: Treasures from Te Papa is the property of RNZ and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Unveiling taonga from high art to pop culture, from the natural world to the frontline of politics, with Kiwis who hold them dear and the Te Papa expert who can explain what it's all about.
Show more...
History
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Jeremy Wells and a Kākāpō ejaculation helmet
Ours: Treasures from Te Papa
6 minutes 19 seconds
7 years ago
Jeremy Wells and a Kākāpō ejaculation helmet

Before humans, New Zealand was a land of birds. Our recent efforts to save them have sparked some heroic stories... but also some, er, quirky ones. Such as the kakapo ejaculation helmet.

It's the story of a bird alone. A good keen bird, you might say, just not keen enough on the right things.

Sirocco the kākāpō became a star in 2009 when he tried to mate with zoologist Mark Carwardine, who was filming a BBC documentary with British actor Stephen Fry.

Sadly, this has been typical of Sirocco's tastes and he hasn't been terribly successful mating with his own kind. As the folk at the Kākāpō Recovery Programme have written:

"The call of the wild wasn’t so loud for Sirocco. It soon became apparent that, as a result of the intensive hand-raising and lack of kākāpō company, he had been imprinted on humans."

So in a great Kiwi tale of thinking outside the box, rangers tried wearing a "kākāpō ejaculation helmet". If it was a human head that turned him on, well... Te Papa's Vertebrates Curator Colin Miskelly takes up the story:

"The helmet was part of trying to make use of these over-sexed males and seeing if they could get them to leave their semen on the helmet".

Well, it was worth a crack, Sirocco.

For Seven Sharp host and bird fancier Jeremy Wells, a dimpled latex helmet was certainly worth the effort, because the kākāpō is such " a beautiful bird... beautiful plumage. You've got to say, next level plumage."

Humans, he says, were a huge blow to their species.

Once, they were a common sight in New Zealand - apparently in the old days you used to shake trees and out they fell - but they became a staple of the Māori diet and then suffered further when Europeans arrived with stoats and weasels.

As New Zealand children are routinely taught, kākāpō were nearly extinct, but they are making a comeback, if a rather fragile one.

The effort made to save the bird that Fry described as looking like a Victorian gentleman with sideburns has been massive, and the population at the time of writing is 149.

Given New Zealand is a land of birds - a country that before humans hardly knew what a mammal looked like - we could hardly tell the story of New Zealand without a nod to our efforts to save our birdlife from our own sins.

And the ejaculation helmet is a suitably 'just crazy enough that it might work' sort of idea that seems right at home here. The fact it failed is neither here nor there, it's the willingness to give it a go that speaks volumes…

Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Ours: Treasures from Te Papa
Unveiling taonga from high art to pop culture, from the natural world to the frontline of politics, with Kiwis who hold them dear and the Te Papa expert who can explain what it's all about.