Fortean Times

TALES FROM THE NEW MILLENNIUM PART ONE

ANARCHIST MACAW

Barney, a five-year-old Macaw, once belonged to a retired truck driver who emigrated to Spain in 2002, after which he was acquired by the Warwickshire Animal Sanctuary in Nuneaton. His vivid blue and gold plumage and habit of saying “Thank you, big boy,” when given a digestive biscuit appealed to visitors. However, he was very fond of saying “bollocks!” and when a civic party came on tour, and he spotted the mayor’s chain and a woman vicar’s dog collar, his anarchist tendencies were revealed. “Fuck off!” he told the mayor before turning to the vicar: “You can fuck off too!” Also present were two policemen, to whom Barney said: “And you can fuck off, you wankers!” The pillars of the community took it in good part. The sanctuary’s owner, Geoff Grewcock, was attempting to reform Barney by keeping him alone in a special cage listening to Radio 4. “At night he likes to sit on my shoulder and watch documentaries and the news as well,” he said, “so hopefully his vocabulary should become cleaner.” Guardian, Metro, 27 July 2005. FT207:20

TALKING FISH

The story goes that at 4pm on 28 January 2003, Luis Nivelo – an Ecuadorean immigrant working as a fish-cutter at the Fish Market in New Square, NewYork, about 30 miles (48km) northwest of Manhattan – lifted a live 20lb (9kg) carp out of a box of iced-down fish and was about to club it in the head when it said something unintelligible. In shock, he fell among the slimy wooden packing crates that covered the floor. Then he ran into the front of the store screaming, “The fish is talking!” and pulled Zalmen Rosen away from the phone. Mr Rosen, whose family owned the fish shop, was a member of the Skver sect of Hasidim. When he approached the fish he heard it speaking in Hebrew. “It said ‘Tzaruch shemirah’ and ‘Hasof bah’, which essentially means that everyone needs to account for themselves because the end is near,” he said. The fish commanded him to pray and to study the Torah and identified itself as the soul of a childless Canadian Hasid who had died a year earlier, identified by local gossips as MosheYehuda Geshtetener, who had come back to Earth to perform (healing). Geshtetener often bought carp at the shop for the Sabbath meals of poorer village residents. A third fish-cutter, Zalmen Moshe Rosenfeld, also bore witness to the piscine utterances. Overwhelmed, Mr Rosen accidentally cut his thumb with the knife he was carrying and was taken to hospital. The fish flopped off the counter, back into the carp box. Attempts to identify it were fruitless and it ended up in a packet of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fortean Times

Fortean Times26 min read
Raider Of The Lost Monster Flicks
One long-anticipated cryptozoology-themed movie that I finally caught up with during lockdown was The Dark (aka The Relic aka The God Rat), originally released in Italy in 1993. Directed by Craig Pryce, it stars Stephen McHattie as a leather-jacketed
Fortean Times9 min read
Tiffany Thayer versus the Flying Saucers
Charles Fort’s books of anomalies advanced a philosophy that saw science as a small part of a larger system in which truth and false-hood continually transformed into one another. His work found a ragged following of sceptics who questioned not only
Fortean Times2 min read
Editorial
We were surprised when chatting recently to cryptozoologist, author and head keeper of FT’s Alien Zoo, Dr Karl Shuker, when he informed us that he had never, in all his years of writing for Fortean Times, been granted the honour of a cover story. Cou

Related Books & Audiobooks