SO YOU WANT TO WORK WITH
ANIMALS…
“I get a lot of letters from kids—any
age from about five years old and up—telling
me they want to work with animals when they
grow up. Some of them want to know how they
can prepare themselves. Let’s suppose
that you are one of them. There are many things
you do—things that will teach you to observe
carefully and begin to understand more and more
about the true nature of nonhuman animals. You
can watch animals and see what they do. You
can write notes about what you see. And you
can ask those why, how, and what for questions
. . . Some answers you will find by watching.
Some you can find only by looking them up in
a book or asking a knowledgeable teacher. Whatever
you do, don’t do anything that hurts or
frightens the animal you are interested in....
Do you have a dog? Suppose he wants to go outside.
How does he ask? Does he bark or whine at the
door while looking at you? That’s easy
to understand. But dogs can ask in other ways.
Perhaps he or she comes up to you (or another
member of your family) and lays his head on
your knee. Or he looks at you, gives a tiny
whine, and wags his tail. Or he starts to pant,
getting louder and louder. Or he becomes restless
and walks about a lot. If he gives up in despair
because none of the dumb humans seem to understand
or care, he may lie down. But then, when you
do get up, he will probably become very excited
and start bounding about.
. . . Dr. Dolittle’s parrot, Polynesia,
tells us that in order to learn animal language
we must have “powers of observation.”
We must be able to notice “small things
about birds and animals—the way they walk
and move their heads and flip their wings, the
way they sniff the air and twitch their whiskers
and wiggle their tails.”
Of course, you don’t have to become an
ethologist to study or work with animals. There
are lots of other “ologists” to
choose from! You could become a zoologist, a
biologist, an anthropologist or an ecologist.
And there are even more. You can look up what
they all mean in a dictionary. Or perhaps you
want to become a veterinarian, work in a kennel,
or work with horses.
Just remember—if you are really and truly
determined to work with animals, somehow, either
now or later, you will find a way to do it.
But you have to want it desperately, work hard,
take advantage of an opportunity—and never
give up.”
This excerpt is from Jane’s book My Life
with the Chimpanzees, pp. 108-113.
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