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Really not hitting those big moments right now - but one day I will. I hope.

Friday 20 January 2012

HAMSTERS EAT MEAT

These are the words of prophecy displayed upon an unjustly expensive packet of hamster food, given its tiny dimensions which are like a shrinky dinky in miniature. But let us not read this blog in the style of Billy Pilgrim’s life giving away the punch line in the first paragraph, darting from Dresden to Tralfamadore and back to Ilium quicker than you can say postmodern metafictional novel (or the full title of the book). Scroll with me, if you will, back to the beginning.

the carcass of an animal downed by feral hamsters

A while ago we promised our children hamsters. We attempted to buy some from ‘a lady who doesn’t give her name and will only sell them from a car park if you give her the secret code’, and failed. Fortunately we found somebody who breeds them in a happy and clean environment. Nearly 3 months ago we purchased them. They are neither Russian nor Syrian, what they are is open to debate……….


Day one: The petrol burned in the trip to and from the hamsters’ birthplace had a greater value than the collective cost of all the equipment needed, food and RRP of the hamsters. This should have been the first warning sign.

Hamsters were named. Put into their separate boxes. Driven home. Blondie has the cutely named Harriet ‘The’ Hamster and Ginger has plumped for the more culinary moniker, Pumpkin. They girls handled them, handling them regularly is the key to a symbiotic rather than parasitic relationship. They were popped into their lovely clean, scented sawdust carpeted, Guardian Newspaper lined homes, complete with big tube to scamper through and strawberry huts to sleep in. They were then put in Ginger’s room.


Day two: All good. Although the upset of moving seemed to have given Harriet ‘The’ Hamster a bout of dysentery. But we have all been there haven’t we. Sadly – this case of the hamster squits occurred as she ran through her tube – leaving a lovely brown stinky trail across the top of the set of drawers. The cat wandered in to take a look, was screamed at by the girls and exited rapidly with the words ‘Tabs you are banned from my room’ ringing in her ears.


Day three, four and five: Nothing too much happened here, except the two adorable little rodents refused to be handled – they hid, jumped and skittered away from any attempt at human contact. Pumpkin then seemed to spend the next week stuck in her tube.


Day six: Or halfway through the night of day five. Ginger and Blondie climb into bed with us, weary and teary from the inability to sleep through the Harriet ‘The’ Hamster and Pumpkin’s nocturnal routines.


Day seven to fourteen: A repeat of three, four, five and six, with some cage cleaning. Girls are losing interest in them rapidly. My wife and I are feeding and watering them. I am cleaning out the cages and flinging the windows open in an attempt to rid the room of the putrid smell of hamster.


Day fifteen: We buy some new hamster food that has ‘I EAT MEAT’ emblazoned on it. My wife discovered this to her great discomfort, first hand. Whilst reaching that ‘first hand’ into Pumpkin’s cage clutching a tray of the new hamster meat, the vicious little shit launches itself at her in an American Werehamster in Leigh, John Woo slow-mo style. Claws out, eyes rolled back, teeth bared and ready to sink themselves deep into her hand, fur rippling in the eddies of its our airstreams. I think someone had crossed-bred this creature with a mosquito because the bleeding would not stop. It was only 24 hours later that the tiny yet significant wound ceased bubbling forth; blood only to be replaced with bruising.


Days sixteen and onward until last week: The girls have moved out of the bedroom (the largest bedroom we have) and moved into the box room (a room so small that Her Majesty’s Prison Service would refuse to use it). The girls are also not even looking at them for fear they will somehow enter their minds and telepathically persuade them to set them free and subsequently get eaten alive. We continue to clean and feed them, our reluctance to do so growing daily.

Day, just before last Sunday: Blondie screeched out, 'Daddy, come in in here! There is something really important you have to see! This is really serious DAD! REALLY SERIOUS! COME NOW. JUST GET OUT OF THE BATH AND COME HERE - IT IS SO SERIOUS!' I arrived in the room, towelled up, to find a daughter in tears and Harriet 'The' Hamster's cage bust open and no fat little rodent in there. Tabs was prowling the room no doubt thinking, 'It isn't only hamsters that eat meat you know'. Cat ejected, door shut, and so began a day of listening on hands and knees for rustling. At one point I was wearing an Early Learning Centre doctor's stethoscope listening like an expert safe-cracker to the base of various wardrobes and chest of drawers. Giving up on stealth I purchased a long seaside fishing net and just started scooping at all the dark parts of the room that my arms could not reach. In ten minutes I had caught the rotund rodent and I think it actually swore at me. It certainly eyeballed me. And yes I was wearing gardening gloves the whole time.

Day, last Sunday: Fed up with everything we embarked on a gigantic clear-out of our kitchen and utility room (laughably name as the end of our kitchen which houses the washing machine and fridge) about 20 bags of crap that has been collect over the years, I use the term collected as a clear alternative to the words ‘not thrown out’, the hamsters now live above the washing machine. Tabs guards them as closely as Kevin Costner guarded Whitney Houston, the smell is expelled by a simple wafting of the back door, the girls can sleep in their rooms again. We continue to feed and water and clean them. Nobody, to date, has attempted to handle them.

Run little rodent run, your mortality depends upon
your ability to entertain your owners, and at the moment,
you ain't that funny.

Such is our warmth towards these rodents; we are now creating a doomsday clock for them. They are already hitting the snooze button.

Tuesday 3 January 2012

CHRISTMAS GIFTS

The crescendo that is Christmas has now happened. The excitement, the parties, the cards, the visitations from families, the presents, the meat (oh the quantity of meat!) the booze, the chocolate, the Festive TV and stamina all languish slightly spent at the bottom of our once overflowing Yule tin of Celebrations like the ten mini Bounty bars that have purposely been overlooked by greedy little fingers. Our cup runneth over and we gorged ourselves and now lie back contented.


There is a reason this is only half eaten, it is
summed up in this word DISGUSTING
The beauty of this year’s Christmas lay with our daughters and the realisation that we haven’t raised greedy spoilt little brats. Like most parents we ticked off the things that had been requested of Santa and passed them around the family as helpful hints:

  • Reyil* computer (no chance)
  • Reyil phone (when I get an upgrade you can both have our old iPhones to use as gaming and portable music storage devices – till then – no chance)
  • Moshi Monster Tree House (yes)
  • Barbies (yes)
  • Walkie Talkies (yes)
  • Stickers (yes)
  • Studio Ghibli Films (yes)
  • Rare imported Studio Ghibli soft toys, specifically Totoro and Jiji (yes)

*meaning real (although we do admire the innovative 6yo spelling of reyil)
This is a Totoro, cute huh?!

There were other little treats dotted about this list and including sweets, pens, Lady Gaga t-shirts…. But, and I am sure we are not the only parents to do this, we panicked, we thought this wasn’t enough, we thought we lacked a present each for them that had the WOW factor. We wrestled with ideas, Scalextric (it was decided that this would be a gift that was more for me than them), radio controlled cars (see Scalextric), bikes (not actually needed), iPad (well not an actual iPad but a cheap tablet that would undoubtedly prove to be a false economy, get broken and cause our girls to be identified as the kids who got a cheap iPad copy amongst their friends). All ideas came crashing down making us realise that maybe they don’t need and extra something. Mrs Magill struck upon a genius idea – the Golden Ticket. A hastily created pair of tickets, board-mounted, enabling the recipient to spend up to £(insert a figure commensurate to your budget) in a London Toy Shop were fashioned.


Well if it worked for Wonka. Also, I never knew that Charlie's
day at the Wonka Factory was 1 Feb.
Come Christmas day, following the stocking opening on our bed (the girls won’t allow the Big Man to come into their room(s) at night) and breakfast in our bed, we all creep downstairs to the locked front room where one of us has to check that Santa isn’t still in the room before we enter. You see, Santa has taken on the same status as God in our house. For those that believe in him he brings joy, light and happiness in their hearts, but to meet him would technically be the end of everything.
We move stealthily into the room safe in the knowledge that he has long since departed, inspect the giant sooty foot prints on our hearth, note that milk was a wise choice of drink and that he was indeed hungry for FOUR mince pies and that his reindeer do like the apples that have rested against the extra cold bit of the fridge and thus gone a bit manky on one side. The piles of presents are spied, the girls dig in, we write down which present is from whom in the vague hope that we will get round to thank you cards this year. 


How lazy is this? an actual Santa boot print stencil.
Santa leaves his own authentic sooty hallmarks in our house.
Three quarters of the way through I ask Mrs M if I should go get the ‘things’. She very wisely says, ‘hang on, we may not need them’ (scintillating piece of dialogue, I know). This is not said through a sense of miserly parent scroogeness, it is said because our girls have genuine delight and happiness at their little hoards of gifts. This simple moment filled our hearts with pleasure and pride. In many ways this was their gift to us.

I hope they continue to have this lack of expectation and delight at the small things in life, because there are far more small things than big things, and the cumulative effect of the small things is far longer lasting and far more enriching that any thing else.


A big thing.
a small thing - I know which one I prefer.

Long may our family Christmases last like this.