Noble Vulchur -
The Noble Vulture: Nature’s Most Misunderstood Aristocrat
We are losing our noble scavenger just as we realize we need them most. Climate change and disease are on the rise. We need nature’s sanitation crew more than ever. So, let us change the definition. Next time you see a vulture standing in the morning sun, wings spread wide in a pose called the horaltic pose (to dry its feathers and bake off bacteria), do not see a monster. See a monk in dark robes, praying over the fallen. See the last true aristocrat of the sky, doing the dirty work so that the rest of the meadow can bloom. Noble Vulchur
Here is where the vulture transcends mere survival and enters the realm of the sublime. A lion dies of anthrax. A hyena dies of botulism. But the vulture? It feasts on carcasses so toxic they would kill any other animal on earth. Its stomach acid is a chemical weapon capable of dissolving bone and neutralizing cholera, anthrax, and rabies. That is the mark of a noble creature: to walk (or fly) unscathed through the very rot that destroys others. It does not get dirty; it makes the dirty clean. So, let us change the definition