Skip to main content


I just spotted my first wombats in the wild on Cradle Mountain in Tasmania.

These stocky little marsupials sort of look like a cross between a baby brown bear, koala & pig. They have a pouch like other marsupials, but it’s backwards which prevents dirt from entering as they burrow.

At just over 3 ft long, they’re absolutely charming. But millions of years ago, herds of giant wombats as large as rhinoceros roamed southern #Australia. #wildlife #photography #SharedPlanet
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

they also make square poop! I miss seeing them when i lived nearby 🥺
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I think we should start a campaign to resurrect thegiat wombat. Why should mammoths get all the research.
It would be awesome to see a herd if majestic giant wombats thundering across the landscape.
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

That Wombats were once as big as rhinoceros is just unimaginable. 🙃
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I heard in Puerto Rico where I'm from, we used to have meter tall owls walking around! How cool would that be to see!?
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

Fun fact. #PBSKids will premiere a new series called Work it Out Wombats on February 6th. The show will emphasize computational thinking and problem solving. It’s an interesting choice to use these charming creatures to educate young children!

https://www.pbs.org/about/about-pbs/blogs/news/pbs-kids-announces-new-series-work-it-out-wombats-debuting-winter-2023/
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

Only thousands of years ago, they were called diprotodons and they co existed with aboriginals for a few thousand years.

A guy a while back estimated the aboriginals only ate the small ones but they ate them at a rate larger than their birth rate so they died off after 15k years or so. The buffalo of Australia.
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I had one living in my backyard for a while. He was busily trying to dig a new burrow. Unfortunately, my fence was a bit, shall we say, approximate, and he'd chosen a spot that was patched with a sheet of corrugated iron. And about 5 metres from my bedroom window.
Around 1 or 2am, he'd get stuck into some vigorous digging. I'd sit bolt upright to the sounds of 'BANG!!!!! Thump thump thump thump!', realise it was the wombat, fall straight back to sleep, 'BANG!!!!! Thump thump thump thump!' By the third repetition, I'd be lying there wide awake waiting for the next one.
I was both sorry and hugely relieved when he moved on.
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

"...herds of giant wombats as large as rhinoceros roamed southern #Australia" When you post something cute that turns into Night of Lepus real fast.
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I had to look this up .. and they make cube-shaped feces. So I had to look that up, and now I'm not sure whether I'll be having my veggie meatballs for lunch
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

You gotta love these Wombats 🙂 I remember seeing a photo of one of these sitting on the lap of a person and I couldn't believe the photo was real...
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

"A furry brick with a leg at each corner" is how I describe them.

I don't have any decent photos of a wombat due to their habit of running towards the camera and getting to close to it before you've set up the shot.

Here's one that hadn't spotted me yet (yes, it's in a zoo):
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I wish we had videos of the giant wombats roaming the earth, wombatting in their wombatty ways......
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

"Millions of years ago, herds of giant wombats as large as rhinoceros roamed the earth."

Somehow I find that thought encouraging!
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

We used to read "Diary of a Wombat" to our kids when they were little, and yesterday, my 20yo told me her favorite animal was a wombat 😀
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I'm preparing for the inevitable clash between the fabulous fuzzy furry free(k) burrowers of the Mammal Kingdom; to decide who is The Cutest.

Capybaras vs Wombats

Rodent vs Marsupial

To the ... um ... er ... To the DEF!

( was running out of appropriate sillyness at the end there 🤓)
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

imagine giant herds of wombats! Cool and terrifying all at once.
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

I'll never forget how absolutely confused I was seeing these the for the first time at night in Australia, having never even heard that they exist. Trying to make out what on earth I was looking at on the half-dark campground...
in reply to Sheril Kirshenbaum

that wombat looks wonderfully healthy. Attached is a photo of Ash, as named by some of the volunteers for https://wombatrescue.com.au/. We only see Ash during the day when he’s suffering from manage. We’re fortunate to have some locals who are able to come out to treat him and put up flaps anytime we spot him. Haven’t seen him in quite a while, which is both sad and great.

Lo, thar be cookies on this site to keep track of your login. By clicking 'okay', you are CONSENTING to this.