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A sett or set is a badger's den. It usually consists of a network of tunnels and numerous entrances. It usually consists of a network of tunnels and numerous entrances. The largest setts are spacious enough to accommodate 15 or more animals with up to 300 metres (1,000 ft) of tunnels and as many as 40 openings.
Sightings, pictures and distribution maps of European badgers in the Netherlands. Badgers in France, L'assiociation Meles. A video of an adult european badger. This is a close up video showing their behavior; Video of a European Badger feeding on peanuts by its sett; Video of an evening's badger-watching in mid-Wales, U.K.
Badger Trust, formerly the National Federation of Badger Groups (NFBG), [1] is an animal welfare charity operating in England and Wales. It represents around fifty local badger groups dedicated to the conservation and protection of the European badger . [ 2 ]
Franklin the Turtle books by Paulette Bourgeois: An otter that was friends with Franklin. [citation needed] Sredni Vashtar: Polecat–ferret hybrid: Sredni Vashtar by Saki: Ambiguously the pet or vengeful god of a sickly 10-year-old boy. [15] Tarka: Otter Tarka the Otter by Henry Williamson: An otter living in Devon. [16]
This honey badger is part of a group of the animals living in captivity in Ohio. In the wild, honey badgers live alone and have enormous ranges whose territory is marked with their stinky anal glands.
Incident at Hawk's Hill is a 1971 children's book by naturalist and writer Allan W. Eckert.Supposedly based on a true event, [1] it is a historical novel centering on a six-year-old boy who gets lost on the Canadian prairie and survives for two months thanks to a mother badger.
The Crazy Nastyass Honey Badger is a YouTube viral video and Internet meme that first appeared on the Internet in January 2011. [1] The video features commentary by a narrator identified only as "Randall", dubbed over pre-existing National Geographic Wild footage of honey badgers .
Natural history programmes began as live outside broadcasts on BBC television in the early 1950s, when West Region's only television equipment was a mobile camera unit. The origins of Springwatch can be traced back to the 1970s, when the development of image-intensifying cameras enabled animals to be filmed in the dark.