From time to time I suddenly remember the dodo with pedals, a weirdly vivid memory dating back to a time from which few memories survive.
I can't be sure how old I was at the time, but I was living in New Hampshire and had not yet started kindergarten, so somewhere in the two-to-four range. My little sister and I were drawing pictures in crayon to send to "Auntie Lane" (whose proper name, I was later to find out, was actually Aunt Elaine).
"What should we draw next, Chris?"
"I don't know."
A sudden inspiration: "Let's draw a dodo with pedals!"
"Okay! That's a pretty good idea."
So I drew just that: a dodo bird with a pair of bicycle pedals instead of legs. Somehow I had gotten the idea that a dodo's beak pretty much looked like the mouth of a trumpet, flaring out and ending in a big circular opening. All my information about dodos came from a picture book based on Disney's Alice in Wonderland cartoon, and dodos were also connected in my mind with a picture I had seen of Donald Duck somehow puckering his beak to blow out a candle. (I always said "beak," never "bill," even referring to hadrosaurs as "duck-beaked dinosaurs.")
(Looking up the Disney dodo now, I see that, yes, the dark bit at the end of its beak could easily be mistaken for an opening. It also has a normal mouth underneath its apparent trumpet-mouth, but I'm pretty sure my drawing had a trumpet only, with no articulated jaw.)
Looking over at Chris's picture, I saw that she had completely misunderstood my idea and had drawn her dodo with petals. Girls!
Tam multa, ut puta genera linguarum sunt in hoc mundo: et nihil sine voce est.
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3 comments:
I can't picture this - do the pedals power a wheel? Or does the dodo somehow walk by using the pedals - perhaps rotating (rapidly, one assumes)?
Yes, it walks by rotating the pedals and using them as feet. The dodo itself doesn't rotate. Perhaps I should try to replicate the original sketch so as to clear everything up.
No need - I think I can imagine it now! (At least in a cartoon situation.)
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