Showing posts with label poo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poo. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Rootless: Of Poop

I was searching for the right photo for an article today, and as I perused the possibilities, I noticed how often I snapped pics of poop on my forays both domestic and abroad. 

Even ancient poop, as evidenced below: 

 

Ancient mammoth poop. UTEP Centennial Museum. March 2017. Credit: Mzuriana.
Ancient mammoth poop. UTEP Centennial Museum. March 2017. Credit: Mzuriana.

 

And written about it

2011: [Caucasus] Georgia: A Story of Poo

2013: Alamogordo, New Mexico: Unidentified Effluvia. Gosh, I can sure make myself laugh.  

2013: Valley of Cow Patties, erm Fires, New Mexico

2016: Colorado: Rocky Mountain National Park

2017: El Paso: Mammoth Dung

2017: Big Bend National Park: Of Poop and Circumstance

2018: Missouri: Ozark Scenic Roadways, Part 1: Echo Bluffs State Park

2018: Missouri: Three Creeks Hike

2019: Tucson, AZ: Humane Borders Water Run: July

 

On a related note: Toilets I Have Known

 

 

Poop, vodka, and jawbone. Mestia, Caucasus Georgia. May 2012. Credit: Mzuriana.
Poop, vodka, and jawbone. Mestia, Caucasus Georgia. May 2012. Credit: Mzuriana.

 

 

Thursday, April 20, 2017

El Paso: Mammoth Dung

Mammoth dung, UTEP Centennial Museum, El Paso, Texas. March 2017.


I felt right smug when I saw this dung display at UTEP's Centennial Museum. Imagine. An exhibit of poop.


Why, I've been collecting pictorial poop for years now.

Some unidentified effluvia here, outside the abandoned primate facility in Alamogordo, New Mexico.

I captured some fine excrement in Colorado here and here.

Have I told you yet about the jackalope poop I picked up in the cemetery on the far east side of El Paso?  No? Well, that's coming.

I have an epic story of poo here. It's my personal story of poo.

There's also a story of a geographic curiosity that looks like poop

Poop, vodka, and a jawbone in Mestia, Svaneti, Caucasus Georgia. May 2012.


I confess that the mammoth dung in the museum exhibit looks like fried chicken to me.