To celebrate my new book, Skyway, this week let's learn about sky animals! They're fictitious, but could they really exist? And what animals are really found in the high atmosphere?
You can order a copy of Skyway today on
Kindle or other
ebook formats! It's a collection of short stories published by Mannison Press, with the same characters and setting from my novel
Skytown (also available)!
Further reading:
"The Horror of the Heights" by Arthur Conan Doyle (and you can even listen to a nice audio version at this link too!)
Charles Fort's books are online (and in the public domain) if not in an especially readable format
Further Listening:
unlocked Patreon episode
The Birds That Never Land
Rüppell’s vulture:
The bar-headed goose:
The common crane:
Bombus impetuosus, an Alpine bumblebee that lives on Mount Everest:
Show transcript:
Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw.
This week we’ve got something a little different. Usually I save the weirder topics for Patreon bonus episodes, and in fact I had originally planned this as a Patreon episode. But I have a new book coming out called Skyway, so in honor of my new book, let’s learn about some sky animals!
Skyway is a collection of short stories about the same characters in my other book Skytown, so if you’ve read Skytown and liked it, you can buy Skyway as of tomorrow, if you’re listening on the day this episode goes live. I’ll put links to both books in the show notes so you can buy a copy if you like. The books have some adult language but are appropriate for teens although they’re not actually young adult books.
Anyway, the reason I say this episode is a little different is because first we’re going to learn about some interesting sky animals that are literary rather than real. Then we’ll learn about some animals that are real, but also interesting—specifically, animals that fly the highest.
Back before airplanes and other flying machines were invented, people literally weren’t sure what was up high in the sky. They thought the sky continued at least to the moon and maybe beyond, with perfectly breathable air and possibly with strange unknown animals floating around up there, too far away to see from the ground.
People weren’t even sure if the sky was safe for land animals. When hot-air balloons big enough to carry weight were invented in the late 18th century, inventors tried an important experiment before letting anyone get in one. In 1783 in France, a sheep, a duck, and a rooster were sent aloft in a balloon to see what effects the trip would have on them. The team behind the flight assumed that the duck would be fine, since ducks can fly quite high, so it was included as a sort of control. They weren’t sure about the rooster, since chickens aren’t very good flyers and never fly very high, and they were most nervous about the sheep, since it was most like a person. The balloon traveled about two miles in ten minutes, or 3 km, and landed safely. All three animals were fine.
After that, people started riding in balloons and it became a huge fad, especially in France.