That's about four times older than the age of death of a typical pet rat.
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Magawa was an African giant pouched rat, not one of the ‘fancy rats’ (domesticated brown rat) that are kept as pets. They more commonly live 7-10 years in captivity. So he was old but not 4x older than average.
True, good point. That's wild. I wonder what accounts for that. Maybe he was just that happy with his life/job?
🫡
I got to see these guys in-person! Also bought a badass hero rat t-shirt from their gift shop to support them. Magawa will be missed 💔.
o7
Thank you Magawa and all the others.
They saved so many limbs and lives. Amazing what animals can do for us.
I know these are different then the domesticated rats people own, at least in the west, but rats are amazing.
Sure, they carry diseases, but so do humans, so that's a wash in my book.
Owning and training pet rats is definitely something I hope I get around to someday. They're just really interesting animals and well suited to being domesticated pets (if properly cared for).
So there's at least one rat in Valhalla. I'm not really sure how to feel about this.
He cleared 35 acres (0.14 km²), while clearing "a tennis court" (200 m²) takes only 30 minutes. Am I missing something? 140'000/200 = 700. 700x30 minutes = 350 hours. If he does only one per day (so 0.5 hours per day), that are still only two years.
According to his he did 56 acres not 35 as the article mentions (maybe the article only counts the area in a specific place or something). That'd be 226k sqm, so following your calculation 226000/200 = 1130, 1130x30 = 565 hours.
Based on the same page, his working career lasted 5 years starting in 2016. So 565/5 = 113 hours of work a year on average.
I'm gonna guess they don't work every day of the year (e.g. their handlers would not work every day) and potentially also can't work during extreme heat or rain or other adverse conditions. I'm not sure how long a rat is willing to work or keep focus or how fast they get tired but with travel times and having to set up for them/collect them I think it's believable that they can only do 1-2 of these fields a day, and that they can only work around 110 days per year.
My alternative explanation is that he mastered the "find mine" command easily, but didn't quite manage the "come back" and he was just out partying for a week after every day of work.
You can choose which one you want to believe.
Obviously the one with the party.
Some quick reading suggests your .5 hours a day and 2 years might not be so far off? He was used as a mascot for the program, so who knows how many of his 7.5 years were training and mascotting rather than active de-mining. Also if you look at images of the operation, it obviously requires human setup prior to the rats doing their job, and presumably the humans need to do the controlled detonations when mines are found.
Ah, interesting.