Silly Safaris returns to the Lincoln Public Library with some special animals for final summer program

[July 18, 2026]  At the Lincoln Public Library Thursday, July 16, Jurassic Josh of Silly Safaris brought several special animals to show everyone.

Silly Safaris is an animal conservation animal show. Most summers, someone from Silly Safaris does the last program and it is very popular.

Jurassic Josh had ten animal friends with him. Some had fur, others had scales and one had feathers. As he showed everyone an animal, he gave details about them such as their names, where they came from, what they eat and what their personalities were like.

Before showing the other animals, Jurassic Josh brought out what he said was a ferocious animal that ended up being a little corgi. He placed the corgi in a wagon during the show.

First up was a bunny named T-Rex who steals people’s hearts. In the wild, Jurassic Josh said bunnies have to worry about wolves, foxes and other predators. Bunnies use their big feet to run to their burrows where they listen for predators. The “kitchen” in a bunny’s burrow has carrots and clover. Jurassic Josh invited two volunteers up to pet the bunny and get a bunny kiss.

Next up was a scaly animal named Godzilla, a blue tongued skink. Jurassic Josh said their tongues are blue due to deimatic display which tricks predators. Blue tongued skinks pretend their tongue is poisonous when they see predators. These animals live in the grasslands of Australia and move very slowly. Their favorite food is snails, which also move slowly.

Jello is a white tree frog who likes to climb trees. Jurassic Josh had two volunteers pretend to be trees for Jello to climb. He moved Jello back and forth between the two kids and described how Jello would climb them if they were trees. White tree frogs live in rain forests and drink water from leaves in trees, so they don’t have to climb down to the ground where there are lots of predators. Jello can change from green to a deep dark brown in order to camouflage himself and hide in the bark of a tree. When it is too cold and there are no bugs and grubs to eat, the white tree frog freezes and their heart slows down, beating once per minute. Jurassic Josh joked that if our hearts would only beat once per minute, we would “croak.”

Susan the curly haired tarantula was covered in hair and had tiny paws. Jurassic Josh promised not to take the lid off her enclosure or let her crawl on his hand. He then took off the lid and Susan climbed onto his hand.

Tarantulas use spider silk to decorate burrows with nets, then catch their prey and drink them like they are a juice box. Though Susan is venomous, Jurassic Josh said, she is only as venomous as a bee. Instead of biting predators, tarantulas flip hairs into a predator’s face which causes itchiness. Two brave volunteers got to give Susan a high five.

A baby Alligator named Ginger was brought out next. Jurassic Josh said when fully grown, she may weigh up to 1000 pounds and be over 15 feet long. Ginger has over 50 razor sharp teeth. During her lifetime, she will have more than 50 sets of teeth, numbering over 1000 total.

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Two volunteers got to pet her and said her back felt hard. Their hard back helps when other alligators try to bite them and shoo them away from their territory. The kids said her belly felt soft. A soft belly helps her slide along the riverbed. Ginger uses her tail to paddle through the river.

Edgar Allen Crow was an African pied crow. The black and white coloring gives him the name pied crow and makes him look a lot different than the crows we see in Illinois. Jurassic Josh said he is smart and can say several words plus do puzzles and solve escape rooms. In the wild, crows use a stick to get bugs or grubs that are in holes too small to get their beaks into. Edgar Allen Crow eats bugs, grubs, worms, mice and veggies.

Jurassic Josh said the next animal was a vicious predator with big claws and sharp teeth. She was a ferret named Mabel who had a flexible body. Ferrets protect cows by climbing down holes dug by prairie dogs cows can trip in. The ferret gobbles up the prairie dog. Mabel also likes to give people makeovers. Two volunteers got “makeovers” with Mabel being held up by their faces and heads to “create” sunglasses, a beard, a mohawk, a bun, a scarf and a mustache. Mabel’s dance moves include the worm, the hula and the tail shake.

Quesadilla was a three banded armadillo. These bands let her roll into a little ball. Jurassic Josh said she uses her pink nose to smell the ground searching for bugs. She uses her claws to dig for bugs and the hairs on her belly to pinpoint where the bugs are. Her shell is made of keratin which is what our fingernails are made of. Just like we can feel things with our fingernails, Quesadilla can feel everything that touches her shell. The texture of three banded armadillo’s shell makes it difficult for predators to get a good grip on it.

Twinkie, the last animal was curled up fast asleep. Jurassic Josh asked kids to raise their hands if they thought he was in one of the various corners he pointed to. It turns out Twinkie was curled up in every corner of his enclosure. Jurassic Josh said Twinkie was a 13 foot long, 50 pound Burmese python. Burmese pythons can get up to 25 feet long and 200 pounds. They can slither across the ground, swim and even climb trees. Though Pythons have sharp teeth, they do not bite their prey. Pythons are constrictors, so they squeeze their prey super tight. It took nine courageous volunteers to hold Twinkie.

Once Jurassic Josh had shown everyone all the animals, he got the skink, alligator and bunny back out and had the corgi in the wagon, so kids could pet them. His ground rules were that everyone had to use two fingers to pet the animals and only one person at a time could pet them. A long line of kids anxiously waited their turn.

Children’s librarian Donna Cunningham reminded the kids to turn in their final book logs. They will get their summer reading program t-shirts soon.

Silly Safaris visits the Lincoln Public Library photo slideshow

Jurassic Josh from Silly Safaris introduces Twinkie to the kids at the Lincoln Public Library video

[Angela Reiners]


 

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