Friday 29 September 2006

Fish Forks - a serious matter


Puflet, as a small water bird who feeds mainly on sand eels, is very concerned about the kind of cutlery you need to use when dining in posh restaurants.

Here is a fish fork.

The rest of the cutlery will follow in due course, but, for now, it has been noted that fish forks are a pertinent subject for discussion in various places on the Web.

Puflet, as a small water bird with webbed feet, is generally very interested in happenings on the 'web'.

Thursday 21 September 2006

Rodent Jewellery

I started at Swindon College this week, my MA in Archaeological Illustration. I can't very well get any more hamsters to take with me, so Chris of the Raven Madness blog (see link on right), has very kindly given me a pair of gerbil earrings, with the recommendation that gerbils are more portable; that I'd get used to the wriggling, and that they'd enjoy it. This is what they look like, on.

If you want to see more of this gentleman's work, do take a look at his blog ...

Friday 15 September 2006

Illustration Friday - CHANGE


This is actually to illustrate Wayland's Smithy, a megalithic chambered tomb which was interpreted by the Saxons as being the work of Wayland, one of their gods, who was indeed a smith. Legend has it that if you left a horse tethered outside overnight, along with some small change (had to get that in somehow), the horse would have been shod by the morning.

There is another, extremely lurid tale also connected with Wayland the smith, but I won't go into that now.

Thursday 14 September 2006

All my hamsters have died in the last six weeks or so, and Herbert's the last of them.


I didn't have many photos of Pickwick and Filkins, the Russian hamsters, largely because they were very fast and were likely to get into trouble in the brief period of time it took to set up and point the camera. Herbert was a little bit better; and here's one of her having a wash, appropriately enough, in the bathroom.

I found her dead in her cage this morning; she was 25 months old, which is respectable for a Syrian hamster, but I'm really going to miss them all. I'll be constantly reminded of Herbert in particular, because once I left her in the bathroom while I took what I thought would be a quick phone call. It took longer than I'd thought, and when I came back I noticed that she had chewed holes in the carpet in the corners of the room. She'd obviously got bored with one before moving on to the next. She was an expert in finding bad things to do in apparently innocent situations, but she did know her name, and one time when she managed to get under the floorboards she did actually come out when called. Eventually. That was why her name remained 'Herbert' even when it became it was apparent that she was female - which was not what the bloke in the shop had told me.

I hadn't realised that hamsters could have attitude, or, indeed, pull faces, until I got Herbert. She had a penchant for hanging upside down from the bars, or, later on, the mesh at the top of her cage. This is not a naturally tenable position for a hamster, and I always used to worry that she'd get hurt when she fell (normally after 3.5 seconds), but she never did, or when she used to climb to the top of her water bottle and jump off.

I'm still half expecting to hear the sound of the little chirrups Herbert used to make, or the high pitched indignant squeaks which made the munchkins sound like squeaky toys, and the scrabbling and wheels going...