Moo and Moo and the little calf too by Jane Millton
Ill. by Deborah Hinde. Allen & Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781877505928
Just after midnight on November 14, 2016, the earth under the
north-east of New Zealand's South Island started to shudder and
shake. Once again an earthquake was reshaping the landscape as
immovable forces fought for supremacy 15,000 metres below the
surface - not just a regular shake that Kiwis are used to, this one
was 7.8 on the Richter scale meaning widespread movement and damage.
Fast asleep in their paddock in the Clarence Valley on this bright
moonlit night were two cows and a calf, who soon found themselves
the subject of news
footage around the world as the shaking and quaking split
their sleep and their surroundings asunder and left them stranded on
an island two metres high and 80 metres from where they started.
Told in rhyme, Moo and Moo and the little calf too tells the
story of the three animals and how they were rescued, a story that
will fascinate young readers. Imagine if the chair or the carpet
they are sitting on suddenly moved and fell away and they were left
stranded so high they couldn't get down!
While there were many stories of the quake and its impact on the
landscape and the people, just as there are about recent devastating
weather events in Australia, we sometimes forget about the impact on
the wildlife that such phenomena have. The destruction of their
habitat, their dislocation from familiar food sources, their deaths
and injuries are often overlooked as the human drama plays out.
There was concern that the seal
colony at Ohau Point (where I had been with my grandchildren
exactly a year earlier) had been destroyed and with the seabed being
lifted 5.5metres in places, also concern for the marine life off the
coast.
So bringing this true story to life in a picture book that will
endure much longer than a short television news clip not only tells
the story of the cows but also puts a focus on other creatures who
endure the trauma as humans do. What happened to the sealife, the
birds, the kangaroos and all the other creatures during Cyclone
Debbie and the resulting floods? How do they survive during
devastating bushfires? What can be done to save them, help them, and
restore their habitats? What are their needs? Even kindergarten
students can start investigations along those lines, giving meaning
and purpose to the ubiquitous studies of Australia's wildlife so
they go beyond mere recognition.
While Moo and Moo and the little calf too might appear to
have a limited audience and timeframe, used as a springboard it
could be the beginning of something much greater. And that's without
even going down the path of the cause of earthquakes and how such
events give us the landscapes and landshapes we are familiar with.
Barbara Braxton