
Creatures furry and feathered have featured in the shipboard lives of sailors since ancient times. To celebrate the contribution of such creatures great and small, the museum is planning an exhibit for spring/summer 2008.
Sailors from Naden also adopted a variety of other animals over the years. When the crew of HMCS Thiepval returned to Esquimalt from the northern island of Hokkaido, Japan in 1924, they brought with them a living reminder of their travels, a higuma (brown bear).

HMCS Uganda (or possibly HMCS Quebec) was reportedly presented with an elephant during one of the ship’s hospitality visits. Signalman Tim Ryley of HMS (later HMCS) Shearwater purchased a parrot at as a pet while at Corinto, Nicaragua. The bird’s antics certainly kept Ryley and crewmates entertained. The parrot frequently features in Ryley’s 1906 journal. Here are some extracts:
“Had to go and get the parrot from aft because he was disturbing the Old Man by whistling and singing out”.
“The parrot also had a slight attack of sea sickness but bucked up immense by towards dinner time.”
For the full text of Tim Ryley’s Shearwater days, visit -http://www.navalandmilitarymuseum.org/resource_pages/chars/ryley_shearwater_memories.pdf
- Clare Sugrue, exhibit designer/organizer

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