Subjects documented in six of my
all-time Top Ten ShukerNature blog posts (mermaid photo © Dr Karl Shuker;
Venezuelan poodle moth photo © Arthur Anker; giant sea serpent gaff photo ©
Takeshi Yamada; © of the other photos unknown to me)
Welcome to my 500th ShukerNature blog
post! To mark this momentous occasion, I have pleasure in presenting for your
entertainment and interest the following equally momentous list – the Top Ten
ShukerNature posts of all time, based upon hit counts. And here they are, each one
with its own clickable direct link to the post itself.
Posted: 12 June 2012
Hits count: 1,155,307
Posted: 1 August 2012
Hits count: 209,972
Posted: 22 August 2012
Hits count: 114,688
Posted: 13 February 2014
Hits count: 104,393
Posted: 16 August 2012
Hits count: 92,565
Posted: 3 August 2012.
Hits count: 76,659
Posted: 1 October 2012
Hits count: 58,418
Posted: 26 January 2014.
Hits count: 44,933
Posted: 20 September 2013
Hits count: 42,213
Analysing this list, several intriguing if not readily explainable facts swiftly emerge.
First and foremost, melanistic cats – most especially black lions – clearly hold an abiding fascination for ShukerNature readers. The popularity of my all-time #1 blog post, exposing various online black lion photographs as photo-manipulated hoaxes, is truly, outrageously, and – above all else – inexplicably phenomenal! What on earth is it about black lions that should have generated well over 1 million hits for this particular post since I uploaded it just over 3 years ago, far more than any other ShukerNature post, and continuing to add to that count by the thousands each week?
First and foremost, melanistic cats – most especially black lions – clearly hold an abiding fascination for ShukerNature readers. The popularity of my all-time #1 blog post, exposing various online black lion photographs as photo-manipulated hoaxes, is truly, outrageously, and – above all else – inexplicably phenomenal! What on earth is it about black lions that should have generated well over 1 million hits for this particular post since I uploaded it just over 3 years ago, far more than any other ShukerNature post, and continuing to add to that count by the thousands each week?
Collectively, ShukerNature's 500 posts have
garnered a total hits count of just over 5.1 million, which means that this one
single post has contributed more than 20% of that total all by itself! Nor does it
end there. A follow-up post of mine exposing a further black lion photo as yet another
hoax also makes the all-time Top Ten ShukerNature posts list (coming in at #8),
and my examination of the highly contentious issue of whether black pumas exist is at #5.
Equally perplexing is why four of the ten posts in
this all-time Top Ten list originated from the very same month, August 2012, bearing
in mind that I have been posting on ShukerNature from 20 January
2009 right up to the
present day, and on a regular basis throughout that sizeable time span too. What
was/is so special about that specific month, therefore, particularly as the
four posts in question from it deal with four entirely different subjects?
True, the poodle moth was attracting tremendous online interest at the time of
my post, so that would definitely have helped focus attention upon it here on my blog too. And the term 'penis snake', as invented by the media for it, no doubt
explains why a large but hitherto highly-obscure species of aquatic amphibian lacking limbs and
lungs has received such a high hits count on here.
Certainly, there is no doubt that photos of weird animals
that have gone viral online prove popular subjects for ShukerNature posts,
especially those posts that investigate what the creatures portrayed in such
photos are and whether such photos are genuine or fake. The success of my two
black lion posts exemplify this trend, as do those dealing respectively with
the poodle moth, the potoo, the alleged half-human half-rabbit hybrid, and the many
bizarre beasts created by Takeshi Yamada.
As for the two remaining posts in this list,
dealing with merfolk and giant snakes respectively, these are perennially popular
cryptozoological subjects. Consequently, their presence should come as no
surprise.
Looking back one last time at this all-time Top Ten list,
there is no doubt that I could never have predicted which of my 500
ShukerNature posts would have made the cut. And when uploading the first
of my black lion posts back in June 2012, a post that took no more than half an hour to
prepare, I never dreamed even for an instant that it would become the runaway
ShukerNature success story that it has done and still is, seemingly destined never to be overtaken
by any other post on this blog of mine, regardless of its subject, and continuing to increase its
count by significant amounts on a daily basis.
But what about the other nine posts in this list?
Will they still be in the Top Ten when or if a 1000th ShukerNature
post is uploaded one day? Who can say? If I've derived nothing else from this list, I
have definitely learnt from it to expect the unexpected – which only serves to increase
my passion for preparing further ShukerNature posts in the future, as well as my fervent
hope that you will continue to enjoy reading and re-reading them. So here's to
the next 500, and thank you all as ever for your continuing encouragement and interest in my researches and writings!
Subjects documented in the remaining
four of my all-time Top Ten ShukerNature blog posts (photo-manipulated black
puma photo © Dr Karl Shuker; giant python photo © Colonel Remy van Lierde;
penis snake photo © Matt Roper; © of photo-manipulated black lion photo unknown
to me)
Congratulations on five hundred posts Karl. I'm looking forward to seeing many more in the future!
ReplyDeleteThanks Tyler!
DeleteHi Tyler' I've just added your blog to my list of Links here on ShukerNature - it's a great blog.
DeleteThanks Karl! That's awesome!
ReplyDeleteWonderful stuff! I have been reading here for a long time. I always come Back!
ReplyDeleteThanks Donna!
DeleteCongratulations on your 500th post Dr. Shuker!.What a constant source of fascination, information, intrigue, humor, and sheer delight!
ReplyDeleteHow did I miss your blogs all these years? I discovered it a while back when I was looking for info on the mysterious and elusive giant salamanders of Northern California, but only now figured how to comment here. Thanks for all your work in making this blog available.
All the best to you!
Thank you so much, Monnie!
Delete