No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Caviar-Flavoured Water
Episode Date: December 17, 2021Live from Canterbury, Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss soup bombs, military llamas and the annual explosion of worm sperm. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and... more episodes.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Canterbury.
Anna Tosinski, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Andy.
My fact is that if it's served carefully enough,
nobody can tell the difference between paté and dog food.
You've all been wasting your money all these years.
I'm not coming to your restaurant.
How do you serve it if what's the difference?
Well, this was a study done by the American Association of Wine Economists in 2009,
who I guess just got bored of studying wine
and sort of branch out into wine-affiliated foods like Passet.
And they basically, they were trying to work out if people could tell the difference.
So the researchers, they blended up some dog food.
That's what they did.
Okay.
And then they looked like liver, moose, basically.
And then they had about, I think, 18 subjects,
and they challenged them to work out which was dog food and which was not.
And about one person in six guessed dog food,
but there were six samples.
So it's no better than chance, effectively, that people could tell.
I should say, you're being a bit unfair, Andy.
They also garnished it with parsley.
Sorry.
Sorry.
everything had parsley on.
So the really weird thing about this
is that people knew it was horrible,
but they just didn't know it wasn't paté.
They knew that one of the things was dog food.
But 72% of the people who tasted it
said, well, that is the worst thing
in this whole array of samples.
But most of them, 5 and 6,
did not say that the dog food.
So presumably they thought
this is disgusting, but that can't possibly...
Did they think dog food taste better than it does?
I think, yeah, I think they did.
And I think the researchers had told them,
don't worry, we're not going to feed you something horrible.
And they tasted that and they said, well, that is horrible, so it can't be the dog food.
So should we be eating dog food then?
No, no.
Okay.
You can't do.
Why not? Why not?
It sounds like we think it's horrible.
We just don't think it's dog food, but we still don't enjoy it.
But I like paté.
It tastes worse.
70% of people think it tastes worse.
The worst out of all the patas they were given.
But still tastes like a bad patte, which I think I'd still like.
So, okay.
To be honest, it wasn't the worst tasting thing there.
That was the liver worst.
was probably their worst tasting
because they had liver worst,
duck liver moose, pork liver paté and spam.
And the liver worst, I think, was the one
that they most often thought was pet food, right?
Yeah.
Pizarre.
And it turns out a journalist did a very unscientific study
just asking her friends to feed a bunch of stuff
to their dogs.
And dogs also prefer the taste of actual patte to dog food.
Unsurprisingly, as anyone who has a dog knows,
they always want to eat human food more than they want to eat dog food.
Yeah.
But that's for variety.
right? That's why I think if I had dog food
I'd be like, ah, that feels really nice
but if I had it every night, I'd be...
There's nothing to stop you from having dog food,
and if you come down to my new restaurant,
Fido's, you can have it every night.
I wonder though if it's the same
with dogs that they're
sort of, you know, whether or not they're tricked into
thinking they think something is tasty.
For example, there's an invention
he was called Charlton Ellis. He's the guy
who created a dog biscuit
that was shaped like a bone
rather than it just being a biscuit.
And when he shaped it into a bone,
suddenly his dog that he was testing it on really liked it.
And there's this quote where he says,
that he says, to this day, and this is in 1936,
I cannot tell whether my dog is interested in the bone-shaped biscuit
because it fools him as such.
He's like, oh, it's a bone.
Or whether after my shaping the biscuit in an effort to cater to his taste,
he feels duty-bound to fool his master
by simulating an interest in it.
Yeah, possible.
polite dog he's got there.
What you're saying about dogs preferring human food is interesting
because I don't have a dog and I didn't know that.
But I thought that the whole point of dog food
was that you had to make it taste disgusting enough for dogs to like.
That's what they say, isn't it?
And this is particularly what they do with treats,
dog treats, is they add stuff like,
is it cadaverine and putrescine?
So it's things that smell like rotting corpses and rotting food.
Talk about it does exactly what it says.
says on the tin. But that's apparently what they like. This is what they claim is that the more
repulsive it smells to us, the more delicious it is to pets. And so that's what they add to...
And I think we might have said before on the show that sometimes you get humans who taste
the dog food. But I read that the reason they do that is more because you don't want the humans
to be disgusted when they're feeding their dogs. Otherwise they won't buy that kind of dog food.
It's not about taste being good for humans. It's about us not being disgusted when we put it in a bowl.
That's interesting, because I was reading a dog food manufacturer
who was saying the hardest thing about it
is to make something that's not repulsive to humans
because what dogs like is like feces, roadkill, vomit.
I probably won't have the starter, I'll eat.
And if you serve something
that's a combination of feces, roadkill and vomit,
the human owners do tend to balk at it.
Yes.
Biggest challenge.
Have you guys heard the phrase eating your own dog food?
No.
So this is not a phrase I've heard.
I think it's an American thing.
You can imagine what it means, though.
Trying something...
It's from the business world.
It's...
Oh, let's say you're Microsoft.
Yes.
You want people who work at Microsoft to be using Microsoft products, you know,
because...
So you want...
You know, the proof of the pudding is in the...
Was you using another better metaphor
to explain your shittier metaphor?
Yeah.
I think I was.
But yeah, you should be comfortable trying your own product
and you should believe in it enough
that you can honestly recommend it to other people, you know,
and you should be eating your own dog food.
Anyway.
But that doesn't make any sense,
because you're not recommending it to other people,
you're recommending it to dogs.
It would make sense of Bill Gates
was trying to market computers to cats.
But he's not.
Okay.
Okay.
All right, now we've all acknowledged
the structural flaws
in the metaphor.
There was a man called Mitch Felderhoff
who actually did eat his own dog food last year
because he lives in Texas
and he owns a dog food firm
and he did it for a month.
He only ate products that his firm made.
Cool.
He got approval from his doctor
and his wife, crucially.
before he started because of what I imagine his breath was like.
And he did say, one of the things I did that was key
is that I did do some intermittent fasting,
i.e. some meals, I just didn't need anything at all.
There was a woman in America called Dorothy Hunter
who did the same thing in 2014.
She worked for a company called The Honest Kitchen.
And for a month, again, she ate nothing but dog food.
She said that she didn't add any seasoning,
but she heard that hot sauce is good.
Who she heard that from?
And maybe you're not sure.
but she said the main problem is that humans are social eaters
and socially this has been very hard.
So I can imagine her going at a dinner party for her friends
and bringing a pedigree chum with her and whatever.
They just put it on the floor in the corner.
The word paté originally meant pet food.
Do it?
Yeah.
It appeared in the 18th century, I think, in France,
in its first use, it had a doubly.
Its first use was specifically about chicken food.
And when I was looking through sources that referred to patte,
It goes right up until the end of the 19th century,
paté refers to chicken food,
and then it broadened to mean kind of breadcrumbs and bits of meat
that you'd give to any pet,
and then somehow it became patte.
Right.
Wow.
Yeah.
No wonder they couldn't tell the difference.
Maybe they're from the 15th century or whatever was.
That's what it was.
Do you know that if they're given the choice,
dogs will not give humans treats?
Oh.
Okay.
What do you mean?
As in, researchers trained 37 dogs to press a button
which would give them a treat.
So the dogs were well familiar with the fact
that pressing this button gives a treat, provides a treat.
And then the button was placed in another room.
The humans were placed next door with the button,
and the dogs would beg, beg, beg, beg, please press this button
so I get a treat falling into my room.
Anyway, the situation was then reversed,
and the button was put into the room with the dog.
And no matter what the humans did, the dogs did not care.
They pressed the button no greater
for the people who had given them treats,
for the people who hadn't given them treats.
What a great experiment.
Do you think they'd take us for walks if we needed it?
Sounds like no.
Sounds like no.
Sounds like no.
It sounds like they're not doing anything.
Well, no, but that's different
because then we'd be shitting all over their furniture
and that's...
Are they doing this because they're mean or stupid, do they know?
I think.
I think...
I think...
Because I think my cat would not just not press the button
but would also probably unplug it
so no one else can give in the treats.
Do you know dogs and cats can taste water?
Yeah, I can taste water.
You can't.
Yes, I can.
Only if you put black currants in it, Dan.
Yeah.
Yeah, you can taste squash, yeah.
You can taste from a tap.
It's sort of, I guess that's probably like the metals and stuff.
You basically can't.
I mean, there are some studies that say water has a bit of a sour taste,
but essentially humans don't have specific taste receptors for water,
which is why it's so bland and crap, and we have to make squash.
Whereas dogs and cats, the reason you don't get dog and cats squash
is that they've got specific receptors on the tip of their tongue.
This was discovered in the 1950s.
found it first on frogs and then thought, oh, I wonder what else can taste water. And when you
drop water onto the tongues of like sedated cats and dogs, it stimulates all these receptors.
I don't suppose we know what it tastes like, so they're just watery, I guess.
They say it tastes like caviar. Yeah. No, really? They have, no, they don't. They don't have.
Fallen for the old classic Anna Prank. They refused to tell us.
I can't believe. Wow. It fell right in the trap. I was out with my in-laws on a
walk recently and they have a dog called Benji and Benji started licking really disgusting puddle
and like you know you know and I was like Benji and I said that and they said no it's fine and
I haven't had a dog for years why what does that taste like to them and why can they survive
because that would well it might have feces and road killing in which case it's
chef's kiss that's their ribina is it they do tend to prefer a puddle and our dog loves to
we in a puddle at the same time as drinking from it which really
always things a nice touch.
I feel that it's almost a perpetual motion machine, isn't it?
We could use it to power something.
It's renewable energy.
It is time for fact number two, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that during World War II,
Heinz developed a self-heating can of soup.
To work it, it had to be lit like a bomb.
Unfortunately, it very often exploded like one too.
So this was a pretty remarkable thing.
During the war efforts, when they were going out,
there was this big problem that they had terrible food
and they wanted to have better food.
And to cook food was kind of a giveaway
because you would have to start fires and so on.
It would just be a giveaway to where an army might be.
So Heinz, along with the army,
they developed this self-heating can,
which effectively looked like a can
that had a wick sticking out, so like a bomb.
And soldiers were encouraged to light it
using cigarette, lit cigarettes,
and it would take about four minutes to heat the can.
But before you lit it, you were meant to puncture holes into it.
And if you punctured the holes in the wrong way,
which often happened,
the can would then heat up in such a way
that it would lead to an explosion.
You'd be covered in tomato soup.
Everyone would be like, it's blood, he's hit by a...
It was a very confusing time.
And this kind of often happened.
In some case, it wasn't even to do with the puncturing,
just there was faulty cans and so on.
so there were people talking about cans exploding at Normandy.
There was tomato soup everywhere, you know, and getting scolded.
You feel so embarrassed if you were injured on the Normandy beaches
by a malfunctioning tin of soup as you collected your military cross.
What was it for a go? Just getting injured at Normandy.
Yeah, there was one account where they were just trying these out.
I think this was 1944. There was a fertilizer of ships off the south.
coast of Britain, and it was the first time they'd seen these.
And I think it seems like you're supposed to put holes in the top of the can,
and someone put them in the sides.
And then the can was at head height,
and it sprayed directly into his ears, apparently.
And he got very badly scalded ears.
Because it was heated by a heating element inside the can.
That's right.
So it got very hot, and the can itself got extremely hot.
It was health and safety nightmare.
Yeah, they often, I mean, it sounded like...
That's what they said about the Second World War in Toto, actually.
They got very hot, and some soldiers,
I don't know if this was after they'd poured the soup out,
but they would use the cans effectively as a hot water bottle
in the colder places that they were out,
because they got so hot, you had to handle them with a cloth,
and so, yeah.
And they used to attach them onto the side of bombs, right?
And that's why we got the term souped-up weapons.
Yeah.
No, you're not going to fall for that one like I felt the caveat thing.
I was so close, but because of what she did to you earlier,
was a bit more on edge.
The self-eating can was invented in 1879 by a guy called
Yefgeny Fyodorov from Russia.
His had quick lime in it and water,
and you would twist the bottom and the two things would mix,
and they would warm up.
Unfortunately, it didn't really warm them up very much,
so you just, you had this stew,
but it was kind of a lukewarm stew.
And he was also the first person that I could find
who made a plane in Russia, Fyodorov.
So he was a proper engineer.
That's a big leap up, isn't it?
Self-eating soup can one day playing the next.
Yeah, but it was soup cans that helped it lift into the...
No, it wasn't. It wasn't self-propelling.
It would tie to the back of a car or a carriage,
and the carriage would drive along, and he would be lifted up by it.
Cool.
It's fun. That's really cool.
See, that's more self-heating.
The Heinz ones were a bit cheaty,
because you did apply the cigarette, didn't you?
Oh, yeah.
But that's more self-eating.
And I did read another account of someone who had a self-heating can in World War II in Germany,
and they said that you pulled a flap,
and that ignited an element, so like flint or something.
So it seems like you didn't need a source of flame.
Wow.
And in fact, now you'd use the same thing that this Russian guy used
because there's now something called Hotcan,
which I really want to buy some of these.
They do the same thing.
They put limestone and water in the space between the inner packet
and the outer packet.
And the way you heat it up is it comes with a little spike,
weird thing to come with your can of soup,
but it comes with a spike,
and you pierce the water,
mixes with the limestone and it's this reaction like an exothermic reaction and in eight minutes
you got boiling hot soup that's cool that's awesome good get it from harvey nichols four pounds a can i don't
believe you i don't believe a word you say anymore oh but that's nice that it's a sort of upmarket
store like harvey nichols because i don't know if we've said before i think we may have done
the first shop to sell baked beans in the uk haines baked beans was faunham and mason right yeah it was
an extremely luxurious um product back in the day well i guess because it was in
supported from America.
Yeah.
That was it.
It was Henry Heinz who came up with it,
who was known as the Pickle King.
And he started growing pickles at the age of eight
and selling them.
He was an incredible...
Was he growing, like...
Because pickles don't grow, right?
You have to take a vegetable
and you have to pickle it.
Was he like growing the...
Yeah, that's a good point, actually.
Yeah.
Do you know that he's related to Donald Trump?
Is he?
Yeah, yeah.
The Heinz family and the Trump families are related.
That's how he's so orange.
is the baked bean.
Just rubbed beans on his face.
What's the connection? Do you know?
Yeah.
It's a place called Kaltstadt, which is in Germany.
And both the families came from there.
Henry Hines was the second cousin to Frederick Trump,
who was the grandfather of Donald Trump.
Right.
And if you go to this town,
they are much happier with the Hines connection
than they are with the Trump connection.
Partly because the Hines family recently provided a major donation
for the renovation of the local organ,
whereas Donald Trump did not contribute to this project.
Right.
Well, there's another American political connection
in that the great, great, great grand-aulter,
something in that territory of Heinz,
is married to John Kerry when he was running,
and still was married, but when he was running for presidency.
And so he didn't get the presidency,
but he got to fall back on those bake-bean billions.
Which is millions.
Good consolation.
Yeah, she was Republican, wasn't she?
Teresa.
Was she?
And she remained Republican until he said,
I'm actually going to run the president on the Democrat label.
Would you mind switching your allegiance?
And then 2004 she reluctantly was like,
okay, I'll become a Democrat.
Wow.
It's a different variety of me for this presidential campaign.
Well, there are 57 varieties.
Right?
Because Hines 57 varieties.
Yeah, that's why I made the joke about the whole variety.
Yeah, cool.
We should quickly say,
because people are screaming at home
that there aren't 57 varieties.
It's just a marketing thing.
Yep.
Yeah, it was clever, right?
There were about 6,000?
No, it was more...
No, there were a lot.
I think there were a few thousand.
At the time, there was...
Oh, at the time they were already over 60
when you saw the slogan, yeah.
What it was was, it was the number five and seven.
I think him and his wife had a favorite number.
I think his was five, his wife's was seven, or vice versa,
and that's the only reason.
And he'd seen another product sort of...
It was like, you know, 60 different kinds of footwear, you know,
for one company, and he thought, that's very clever.
Yeah, yeah.
And now, if you got on the website,
they're like, oh, it's ridiculous, of course, we have more than 57, it's just a random number.
We actually have more than 5,700.
So again, they've taken that random number.
I can't get away from it.
He did experiment with 59 and 51 first, which makes me wonder if 9 and 1 were the favorite numbers of his mistresses.
Really?
He finally ends up on 57.
So I looked up Hines on UGov, the website, because they have a lot of interesting data.
Heinz is the brand most liked by women in the UGGG.
Okay. Is one the sort of women's faith?
I was going to say, do they make vibrators?
I don't know why that's came into my head.
It's not one of the 6,000.
That's a messy night on your own, isn't it?
Last couple of years.
It's a traumatising thing for your husband to walk in on at the end of the night.
What?
I was just trying to shake the ketchup to get it out.
Oh my God.
It's the 10th most popular thing in the UK.
Is it?
Or a specific kind.
Does that not say to you that people just don't have much of an imagination
when asked what's the best thing?
No, but guess what's number one?
Number one of all the things in the UK.
Is it a product?
I'm not saying anything.
Is it Canterbury Cathedral?
It's not playing to the local audience.
It's not, Canterbury the Kidral?
Not even top thousand, I'm afraid.
I'll give us a clue.
It's an obvious one.
A glove.
The Queen?
Like the Queen?
Like the Queen, but not...
Buckingham Palace.
Not Prince Andrew.
No. David Atenborough.
David Lentbra is the most popular thing in the UK.
Then there are a load of charities,
you know, British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research.
Number seven, Tom Hanks.
Number eight, Hines,
number 10, Lego, 11 Google Maps.
This isn't an interesting one.
Number 31, queen.
Number 96, the queen.
Ouch.
I was a slap in the face for Lizzie.
She's probably feeling under pressure.
You know, Heinz made mayo chup once?
What's that?
Well, it's what it sounds like.
Mayonase and ketchup.
That's absolutely right.
It's a combination product,
and they launched it, I think they launched it in the US a while earlier,
but they launched it in Canada in 2019,
at which point the chief of the Kree people,
you know, one of the First Nations peoples in Canada,
explained that in the Kree language, it means shitface.
Ah, no way.
I got absolutely mayo chapsed last night.
Have you guys heard of Muriel Leto?
No. Well, you should have done because she was the person who came up with the idea of painting Campbell's Soup.
So you know that Andy Warhol thing? Yeah, yeah.
So basically, he didn't know what to do. He wanted to get away from what he was doing,
which was quite similar to another artist called Roy Lichtenstein.
And he didn't know what to paint. And this person called Muriel Lettow, she said,
you should paint something that everyone sees every day, that everyone recognizes like a can of soup.
And we know that she said that because she asked for some money.
She said, I know what you have to do, but you need to give me $50 first.
And Andy Warhol gave her $50 and she gave him this idea.
He went straight out, bought a load of soup, decided to paint it.
And his painting sold in 2006 for $11.7 million.
And I think everyone would kind of agree that it's not how great the painting is,
but it's the idea that's the important part of it.
And she sold that idea for $50.
Really?
Right.
I can't tell if people are applauding selling the idea really cheaply.
Well, she also wrote erotic novels,
and she was known nickname for a while as the First Lady of Hainkey Panky.
Oh, cool.
That deserves a round of a place, isn't it?
It was her who pioneered that Heinz vibrator, wasn't it?
Listen, we need to move on to our next fact.
It is time for fact number three, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that Argentina's armed forces have 47 ships, 139 aircraft and 20 lamas.
Why?
Well, the ships are to attack things on the water.
Thank you.
Aircraft for the Air Force mostly.
You're not saying these are the infantry.
Are they kind of therapy lamas for stressed out soldiers?
No, no.
because the army does lots of other things
rather than just being in wars,
it often has to help infrastructure in the country.
This is for when they have logistics,
they're in the high mountains,
especially in the pandemic, for instance.
They've had to get medicines up into the mountains.
The army have been brought into help.
It's not always easy for people to get up there,
but it's very easy for lamas to get up there.
Then when the lama does get up there on its own,
how is it helping?
Well, it usually...
I can't say I'd be reassured if I'm dying on a mountain,
inside. It's just cute, right?
It's just cute. People can walk around with it.
No, it will have a soldier with it, but it's a beast
of burden, it's a lara, so they will carry
the stuff up there.
Right. So it's quite hard to, like, put stuff
on a wagon or in a car and get it up to the top
of the mountains. It's not so hard to put it on the back
of a llama. Yeah. But you can't ride them, can you?
Llamas, no, you'll break their backs. They're too
fragile to be... Yeah, you shouldn't, never ride
a llama. If you learn one
thing tonight. Yeah.
Unless you're a child?
in the aircraft do they then have
unless sorry for kinding you off yes
unless you're a child
I didn't want because I know there were some kids in the audience
and you should feel free to ride lamas I think
for the next couple of years
maybe until you hit adolescence
as you were Dan
thank you
I'm just curious where they lived inside
these boats do they have their own
no they don't live inside the boats or the aeroplanes
or anything I just I was listing
the things in their armed forces
I had so many questions
how did they tailor their
their uniforms.
Down to all of his notes.
How do they sail the ship?
Throw away that page.
Okay.
They used to use
their dung though in the Peruvian army
to actually, to actually...
That's why I thought they might be on the ship
because their feces is actually useful
as petrol for the actual ships.
Oh, really?
Yeah, they used to burn it.
Yeah.
It's a good fuel.
The Inca people, obviously, were a huge
llama-keeping culture and they had thousands
and thousands. The wild llamas as well,
and their method of hunting lamas was to do the Hokie-Koki.
This is so cool.
Okay, so what, left-arm in, left-arm out?
Well, Hokie-Koki-Koki are old langs-ion,
depending on how you feel about it.
Basically, what you need to do, if you're in the Inca society,
you gather 50 to 60,000 people, quite a lot,
you surround the llama plane,
you all join arms and you slowly move in.
You move in, you corral the lamas into a smaller and smaller space,
and then people enter the, you know, the killing.
zone with slings and bollasses and
lassus and stuff I guess and you would get up to
30,000 llamas in a single
days hunting that way. That's amazing.
It's a lot of pressure though
because if you accidentally let go of
someone and they all run it through your...
Yeah, yeah, you're right.
You do the left arm in, left arm out thing
which is not a part of the song you're supposed to reenact.
They did use them in Warby, Inca's.
We know that they used a lot. We don't know exactly
how, but we think probably is a beast of burden again.
But there was one battle where they
abandoned 15,000 llamas after a battle with the Spanish.
So they were using a lot of them.
Yeah.
Okay, fair enough.
I don't think you feel abandoned if there's 15,000 of you.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's fair.
That's fair.
The Israeli army uses llamas,
or at least it used to until 2017,
and they've started using robots instead.
Wow.
Robot lamas?
Or?
Regrettably not.
They're just like little doggy, doggy robots.
Is that for guarding?
No, they would use them
so when the army was going again into the mountains
they would have llamas with them
They would be carrying things
They were really useful because they kept cool amidst gunfire
So whenever there was gunfire
A llama wouldn't shit itself and run away
It would just kind of cool
Yeah, yeah, this is cool
That's amazing
Ironically they're very difficult to alarm
Aren't they?
Yes
And they would also
If they were in the mountains
It got very cold
they would lie down with the soldiers and kind of keep them warm
because they're very fluffy, very, you know, wobbly, of course, yeah.
They could lie for up to three days without moving
with the soldiers around them if you needed to ambush.
Which robots can't do, really.
I mean, they can stay still, but they can't keep you warm at night.
If you make a very fluffy robot.
A self-heating robot, like the cans of sleepers.
Well, Lama mating is pretty interesting,
just while we're on Llamas lying down
and keeping each other warm at night.
Oh, yeah.
Because they're really hard to breed.
There are a few reasons in their natural mating cycle,
which make them really difficult to breed.
So they don't breed like us.
So female llamas release an egg after sex,
as opposed to the human method of once per month, you know, come on May.
Yeah, got it.
But also, llama semen is very lethargic.
And they are known as dribble ejaculators.
Oh, my God.
Jesus Christ.
It's really bad.
It's so hard to get semen out of a llama.
It's like getting blood out of a stone.
That is the worst thing I've ever heard you say.
But there are great news guys, artificial llama vaginas,
which you can buy on the market.
No one can stop you.
If you've got the money, you can get one.
And they come with a kind of hot water bottle
to simulate the temperature of a real laramor.
and they also come with a surrounding life-size,
cuddly female llama bottom.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Just the bottom, though.
You can. If you're feeling flash,
you can get the full female llama package.
You can't do that.
I think you can.
I mean, don't.
Do what you like, actually, you know.
Do they do checks?
When you buy the llama vagina, do they check that you do have a male llama?
They should.
I know what you're saying about they can't stop you,
but it kind of feels like they should be able to stop you.
Should be background checks.
Is there a dribble ejaculator in the house?
How do you know my school nickname?
They're very sociable.
We're talking about real lamas now, right?
Yeah.
In a platonic way, they may not be good at shagging,
but they do love each other,
and that's why they make such good.
good guard. So you know people often have a
llama to guard their herd of sheep or they're herd of
goats. And that's because they get super protective
of them. So you've got your herd of goats,
you've got a llama, they're great and they scare away
they've been known to kill wolves
and stuff occasionally. It's very impressive.
But if you've got a llama guard, do not get two
llama guards. Because the moment that
you get a second one, it just becomes friends
with its llama and ignores all the goats
and the sheep. And let's
them all get ravaged by the wolves.
There's a golf course in North Carolina
called Tellamore Golf Course, and they have caddies that are llamas.
So the llamas will carry your golf clubs around with you.
But one thing that I saw in only one place is that there are golfers who have these
llamas, and they've noticed that whenever they hit a good shot, just before they hit it,
the llama gives off a little moan.
It kind of goes whirr like that.
And so you have these golfers who are stood there, and they're just waiting to hear,
they keep moving a little bit this way, a little bit that way, and as soon as they hear
the mo and they go right and then they hit it.
Wow.
Are you saying the alarm but can tell good golf posture?
Yeah.
That's what it seems like.
Unbelievable.
That's amazing.
They do make weird noises.
Like the noise of alarm is,
sounds like, I hadn't described it sounds like a rusty door hinge
and that's exactly what it's like.
It's like,
something out of a horror film.
But not when they're mating.
When they're mating,
and I hesitate to return to the
field because everyone lost their shit last time.
But they are, they ogle.
Orgling is what they do.
Orgling and dribbling.
They make that nice.
Really? Yeah, they do.
If you hit ogling, you're in trouble.
Or in luck.
In luck, yeah.
There's a dribble coming your way.
I was on kentlive.com.
Dot com.org.org.
reading about
llama-related news from this year.
British natureism
have an event.
This is actually in East Sussex, but people from Kent
can go.
It's a
walking with llamas completely
naked night.
Feels
it would have been safer to make it a day event.
Anyway, it was supposed to happen
at the start this year. I think it might have got cancelled
due to COVID, but maybe we'll come.
back. Anyway, on the British
Naturesism website, it's been taken down.
But I did notice that on there, weirdly,
they sell hoodies, fleeces,
and 19 different designs of T-shirt
on the British Naturism
website. You've got to have something to take off.
I'm just picturing
the horror movie, that scene where it's completely
dark, you're lost in the words, you're going,
who is that? I can hear someone.
We need to move on to
a final fact of the show, it is time
for a final fact show, and that is
Anna. My fact this week
is that for a few days every year,
Britain's beaches are covered
in worm sperm. Oh, good, more
sperm. Okay.
That's right. It's not the dribbling
kind. It's
specifically lugworm sperm.
And this is
incredible. So I was on a beach recently, and I was
looking at, you know, those lugworm
sand spirals you see on
pretty much all beaches at low tide.
They'll look like long worms made of sand.
And they're created by lugworms because they dig these burrows
and then they deposit these things on top of the burrows.
But the other thing they do is the way they mate is the male lugworm
who's in quite a deep burrow on the beach for a couple of days a year.
He spurt some sperm out.
So when the tide goes out, he spurts his sperm out onto the sand.
In a little white lump, you can see it if you keep your eyes peeled.
And when the tide comes in,
It gets all this lugworm sperm,
so there'll be thousands and thousands of little piles of sperm on the beach.
The tide comes in, and it washes it into the females burrows,
and they get a little cascade of sperm coming down,
and it fertilizes their eggs.
And that's romance.
It's the circle of life.
Yeah.
It's so amazing how they never...
They never meet.
I mean, so many of them...
They never meet.
It's like, you've got male, or...
Is that what happens to you've got male?
Have you?
How do they...
They send it through the pumps?
Yeah, Tom Hanks.
sends a postcard.
No, well, everyone likes Tom Hanks so much.
He's fathered most of the people in this country.
Also, they do meet, I know, at the end of you've got mail.
Yes.
But mostly lugworm...
It's like IVF, I would say, would be a better analogy.
Or like when you go to sperm bank.
Spurn banks, yeah.
It's unbelievable.
I mean, it's also unbelievable that lugworms,
which I had never heard of, by the way.
I don't know if that's especially ignorant.
I hadn't, no.
I'd never heard of lugworms being a thing before researching this fact.
That they all mate at exactly the same day,
every year.
You know, the same few days
they just all know to do it.
And we don't know how.
They know that either.
Like, we know that
there is pheromones involved, right?
So when the female notices
that there's sperm washing around,
she'll release her eggs.
And when the males can tell those eggs around,
they release their sperm.
But what triggers it in the first place?
We have no idea.
And so there's a thing called sperm watch,
which is...
It's on after spring watch, isn't it?
It's the late-night version.
It's the red button.
And what they want is for people to tell them
when they see this stuff on the beach.
So you will see this little pile of white stuff on the beach.
They say, don't confuse it with seagull poo.
It looks a lot like seagull poo.
But if you see these things that look like seagal poo,
but they're in little ponds, then tell them,
and then hopefully we can work out what it is.
It might be the temperature, it might be a change in weather.
We're just not sure.
Yeah.
I love though.
As you say, this is a citizen thing,
and there was a big website, a big PR push.
And they were like, you know, this is like, for anyone of any age, go out.
But as James points out, someone decided to call it sperm watch.
And it just feels the most inappropriate.
And it was things like you go on their site,
and for any would-be sperm spotters, again,
you get a pencil and a clipboard.
Well, this is what they ask you to take, a pencil, a clipboard,
tied tables, and a recording sheet.
And the idea is that you've got to run around,
and I think you have to see how many you can spot in 10 minutes.
minutes, all the time it takes to find a hundred of them to know that this is a area that's
a fun game. It's like Pokemon Go. It is. Yeah. It's like Pokemon Go. Can I just tell you the one,
so these, Anna, you said that the casts they have on the beach, as in they live in a borough,
in a U-shaped burrow, and they eat food at one end, and then they just poo it out at the other end
of the burrow, and they're in this U-shape, and that's what produces the cast. The headline of this
on the Barry Today website was
the love life of lugworms
involves the casts of thousands.
How good is that?
What's the Barry today?
Just for people called Barry.
Yeah, okay. How did you get on it?
So there are two types in the UK, two species.
The blow lug worms and the black lug worms.
And what I find incredible is how deep they go
and how big they are
because there's little coils of sand.
You're expecting a small little worm,
but the black lugworm can be 40 centimetres long.
so like half a meter long
practically and it burrows down
about 70 centimetres
so you need to dig pretty far
because people dig for these quite a lot
they're very useful as fishing bait
but you need to dig a long way
to get one little worm
and then they're not little
no that's true
I tell this like I watched the movie
Dune this weekend
and this really spoiled it for me
because all the way through
I was like these massive worms
that live underneath the dunes in Dune
how are they reproducing
where are they cast
Anyway, the other people in the cinema
did not appreciate those questions.
They also, their breathing
is pretty amazing. So they can breathe.
There was a big mystery about how they could breathe
for so long when the tide goes out and when it comes in
and they worked out it was something like six hours
that they could survive.
And they studied it and looked into what was going on
and it turns out that they have...
So if we...
God, it's science, so I get a bit stark,
but...
The hemoglobin things.
So in human blood, one hemoglobin protein holds four oxygen molecules at a time.
In a lugworm, it's 156.
And it's insane.
And what they've done is they've isolated it, and they've applied it to medicine now.
And it's a huge thing for transplants of anything like liver and so on,
because it means that you can hold it.
If they're pushing this hemoglobin new product that they've created,
you can make it last for days rather than hours for a transplant needing to happen.
It's a game changer.
It's because they breathe through gills.
So they breathe through gills and then they take in a huge amount of oxygen.
And there was a scientist, there's one French scientist called Frank Zell
who found this out in the 90s.
And the amazing thing about lugworm blood is it's compatible with all blood types
because the hemoglobin is not anchored to red blood cells.
So this is really exciting.
And there is a factory in France which produces over a million logworms a year,
each of them producing a tiny amount of blood.
But that has been used in kidney transplants.
It makes people recover faster.
prove their organ function.
Wow.
They are so incredible.
It's still being tested a little bit, isn't it?
But they are using it in real-life things.
And the first person to have a double-face transplant
use this stuff.
By which I mean he didn't end up with two faces at the end.
He had a face put on, it rejected, and he had another one done.
Yeah, it wasn't like, can I get one on the back as well?
That looked cool.
I was reading about blood worms, which are very similar.
Well, in fact, I was reading about sandworms in general,
of which a lugworm is a type.
And in Maine, in America, it's one of the,
Maine sandworm digging up industries.
So Maine employs about 1,000 people
who go and dig up lug worms and blood worms
and sell them to anglers.
And I just really enjoy this.
It was a New York Times article from 1976,
so I don't know if it's still the case.
But you basically get bloodworm hunters
and sandworm hunters.
And the sandworms are a bit more free swimming
and the blood worms are a bit more burrowing,
like our lug worms.
And apparently they're two extremely separate groups.
It's like the people's front of Judean people's front.
They hate each other.
And the bloodwormers have a reputation, apparently, for real roughness.
And in fact, there was a strike of all of the sandwormers and bloodwormers in 1976.
And when both groups were striking, the bloodwormers told the sandwormers
that if they dared to accept an offer for, like, a pay increase that didn't involve a pay increase also for the bloodwormers,
the bloodwormers said they would go and tear up all of their mud flats, which they used to do their harvesting.
Wow.
That's a menacing phrase to hear.
I'll tear up your mudflats.
It could mean any number of things.
We're going to have to wrap up in a second.
Can I just tell you, there's a giant beachworm in Australia,
which is one centimetre wide and three metres long.
Did you say giant?
Yeah.
And did you say centimetres?
Sorry, I watched June this weekend.
Okay.
Not 400 metres.
Yeah, yeah.
So what's it do?
It just wriggles around.
Oh.
But, no, three meters.
It's very, very long.
and only a tiny bit wide.
It's a really strange organism.
It's a strong fisherman, isn't it,
that puts that on the end of his rod.
A whole fishing line is the worm.
Yeah. Plot twist.
Well, I can tell you
there is a new taste in town.
Okay.
So there's salty and bitter
and all that kind of stuff.
We've talked about umami on this show,
I'm pretty sure, and on QI as well.
There's also a thing called Kokumi.
And Kokumi is something,
It doesn't really taste of anything, but it makes other tastes enhanced.
And we have a special receptor in our tongs, so we know it does count as a proper taste.
Anyway, you find it in fish sperm.
Wow.
The caviar menu at Fido's restaurant and grill just got a new option.
Do you know what's so weird is that I was reading about Kokumi for the first fact we mentioned today because cats love it.
Does it?
Yeah, and they deliberately try and get kukumi and umami into cat food.
so there we go.
Well, wait a minute.
It also tastes a bit like caviar.
So maybe
the water does taste of caviar.
It's all coming together.
Oh, beautiful. We've tied it all up in a bow.
There we go. A good point to end on then.
That is it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Schreiberland.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter. M. James.
At James Harkin.
And Anna.
You can email up.
podcast at QI.com. Yep, you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or our website.
No Such Thing isafish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there. Do check them out. Also,
if you want to come and see us on the tour, what we are currently on, nerd immunity.
We have links to all the upcoming shows there. But outside of that, just quickly, thank you so
much, Canterbury. That was so much fun. Thank you for having us. We will be back again.
And everyone else listening at home, we will be back again next week with another episode.
We'll see you then. Goodbye.
