tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26340714709500796102024-02-08T12:13:17.312-08:00The Moose NoseThe Moose Nose KnowsMoosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.comBlogger31125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-80326342848306872472017-10-20T18:43:00.001-07:002017-10-20T18:43:17.223-07:00Spiders and the shrew brain
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<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
What can I tell you about
spiders? Spiders have eight legs. Spiders' legs need vascular pressure to
straighten. Their natural, relaxed state is bent. That's why their legs curl up
when they croak.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
We’re supposed to like spiders.
Spiders are good. Spiders eat bugs that bug us. Spiders recycle sewage into
rainwater. Spiders give us spider honey and spider silk. Spiders make friends
with barnyard pigs.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
But. Only. There's a
spider-shaped set of linked cells in the visual cortex. Linked by a web of connections
all the way down to the part of the brain that's left over from when we were
the size of shrews, running around under the feet of tyrannosauruses. The
spider-shape triggers that spider-shaped set of cells, which sends a spike of
action potentials (if you could detect them with a Geiger counter the clicks
would blend together in a hum)—sends that spike signal down into the shrew
brain, and the shrew brain says, "Squish it! Squish it <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">NOW</i>!"</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
You can override it. Your big
folds, Mr. Cortex Guy, they can override the squishing reflex. Tell you that
the spider is your friend, etc., etc., blah, blah. The cortex does drone on a
lot. Can let you look at pictures of wolf spiders with all their hair and rows
of black, beady eyes staring at the camera. Lets you pet tarantulas, if you're
the type that pets tarantulas. But underneath, your
shrew-monkey-cretaceous-mammal brain is screaming, "Squish it squish it
squish it squish it <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">now </i>before it
kills you!" Because the little shrew-monkeys <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">without</i> arachnophobia all got eaten by spiders. Only the others
reproduced. Or reproduced more.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Eventually it causes problems,
this dissonance between the outer and inner brain parts. Makes your eyes start
to vibrate. Makes you squish other things, since you can't squish the spiders.
There was an arachnologist once who got arrested for squashing all the
kiwifruits at the Safeway. "They were looking at me," he said as they
hauled him away. "All furry, with their beady little eyes. Had to squish
'em before they sprouted legs. Once they do that, they crawl into the heating
ducts and you can never get 'em all out."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
I know this about the
shrew-monkey brain because it happens to me. The side of the house is
Spiderville. Spider City. Especially toward the end of the fall. They're
orb-weaver spiders, mostly. Big webs that look just like your textbook,
comic-book spider webs. The owner hangs upside-down, right in the middle.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
I was out there one night last
fall, poking around in the bushes and spider webs with a flashlight, looking
for the breach where some itchy little squirrels were getting into the walls and scuttling
around. I felt something on my arm. It was a spider. Big, <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">fat</i>
spider, abdomen the size of a grape, where you could see stripes and segments,
see the row of little holes the spider breathes through—spiracles?—in the
small circle of light from the flashlight. Feel the touch of eight brushing
legs. Feel, I swear, the prick of venomous fangs testing my skin for the tenderest spot. I shuddered. For real, and
I'm not a shuddering kind of person. Shuddered, flailed at the spider. Brushed
it off, and my shrew brain had me stamping on it over and over in the rain.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
I'm sorry now. A little bit. But
my shrew brain keeps telling me I did the right thing.</div>
Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-6524433165786877952017-10-17T09:38:00.004-07:002017-10-20T18:44:19.685-07:00New mysteries no. 1: mice<style>
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<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">First
mystery, number one in the new case book: What’s making that squeaking noise in the
car? Squeak squeak squeak.</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“What’s
making that squeaking noise in the car?” I asked.</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">Steve
says, “Maybe it needs oil.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“What?”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“You
know. Oil. If your bike squeaks, if the door hinges squeak, you need to oil
them.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Doesn’t
work that way with cars.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Hell
it doesn’t,” said Steve. “How come you have to go have your car oiled every
three months or whatever it is? It’s because if you don’t, it’ll squeak.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">Steve’s
not much good for solving mysteries. I took the car to a private car
detective. Mechanic. Whatever they’re called around here. You leave it there in
the morning, they call you at noon with the results. They said, “We’re going to
refer you to a vet.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Vet?”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Yeah.
It looks like you’ve got mice.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Mice!”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“That’s
what’s squeaking. They’re in the fuel lines and the exhaust system. We don’t
have the equipment to get ’em out, so you’ll have to go to the vet.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“The
vet.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Yeah.
The vet’ll have a mouse extractor. Sort of like a plumber’s snake with a grabby
claw on the end. They’ll run it through the systems and pull out all the mice.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“Can’t
you do anything?” I couldn’t believe they couldn’t do anything.</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“We
can oil ’em. That’ll make them stop squeaking, but they’ll still be in there.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">I
took the car home again. There had to be some way to get them out.</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">Steve
said, “You could oil them.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“I
know, I know,” I said. “It’ll make them stop squeaking, but they’ll still be in
there.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">“No,”
he said. “I mean you could make them slippery. Then you start up the engine,
and they’ll all come squirting out the exhaust pipe.”</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">So
we tried it. Poured a quart of mouse oil in through the air filter. You get the
stuff at the pet supply store in the mouse section. Three-in-one mouse oil, for
mice, rats, and voles. General purpose, to eliminate squeaks and promote
frictionless rodents.</span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">We
let the stuff soak in for a couple of hours. Fired up the engine, and about a
dozen mice came squirting out of the tailpipe.</span></div>
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<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino";">Steve
may not be any kind of detective, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a genius.</span></div>
Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-38293188417932447482017-10-13T12:46:00.000-07:002017-10-13T12:48:26.359-07:00Friday Thirteen come on Friday this month (to quote Mr. Churchill LaFemme)<style>
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<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Friday the thirteenth. I'll start
writing here about bad luck.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
It's bad luck to move to a green
place. Where do you think all that green comes from? It's because it rains and
rains and rains and rains and rains and rains and rains and rains. Move here
and it's seven years of rain.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Bad luck comes in sevens. Dwarves
are very bad luck. Days of the week, too. If something bad happens, chances are
it will be on some day of the week.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
It's bad luck to walk into a car
backwards. Bad luck to walk into anything backwards. You could hurt yourself.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
One of my imaginary friends doesn’t
believe in good-luck charms:</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"If it works, it's not
luck."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"What do you mean?"</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"If something good happens
because you're carrying a monkey head, or whatever, it's not good luck."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"Sure it is."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"Uh-uh. It's not any kind of
luck at all. The good thing happened because you had your dried monkey
head."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"Yeah, good luck."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"No, cause and effect. The
monkey head caused you to find a quarter on the sidewalk. If there's a cause,
it's not luck."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"What are you, some kind of
determinist?"</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
"You're the determinist.
Thinking that a monkey head can affect where the molecules go."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Maybe the good-luck charms are
really anti-bad-luck charms. But there's conservation of luck. Didn't you know?
If the bad luck doesn't happen to you, it lands on someone else. If you <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">don't</i> step on a crack, you'll break some
other kid's mother's back. It all has to balance, add up in the big accounting
book.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
That's the reason some people
have such awful luck. Everyone around them is loaded up with rabbits' feet and
St. Christopher medals, and so the bad luck has nowhere to go but onto the poor
bastard who hangs around with them.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
So what you have to do is take
your lumps, suffer the bad luck for the good of society, so no one person gets
too much of it.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Or maybe it works this way: rabbits'
feet absorb good luck. Down in that soft fur between the toes, by the little
claws. You need one from a young rabbit, unfortunately. The older ones have
spent too much time walking around, sucking up bad luck from the ground into
their feet.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Bad luck soaks into the ground.
Flows downhill. Collects in sidewalk cracks.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Anyway, the rabbit's foot soaks
up all the bad luck that was headed your way. Eventually it fills up, an you
have to get rid of it at the hazmat site. If you just toss it in the trash, it
could break open.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
Eric's brother Todd tossed a
rabbit's foot in the trash. He didn't know. Went into the garbage truck, and
when the truck hit a bump there was a broken mirror inside that sliced the
rabbit's foot right in half. All the bad luck came spraying out, the garbage
truck lost control, spun into a bus full of nuns and schoolchildren, the bus
ran up the sidewalk and through the door of the warehouse where the electronic
voting machines were kept, smashed the breaker box in a shower of sparks, sent
a power surge into the machines that were all plugged in getting their
batteries charged up, and Trump got elected. Four years in the hard luck house.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
My grandmother saw a guy on TV
who had been struck by lightning four times. Once it knocked his hat off. Once
it welded the zipper shut on his jeans. Once it curled his hair. Once it turned
all his fingernails and toenails black, and they all fell out a month later.
The interviewer asked him, "So you've been struck by lightning <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">four</i> times! <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Four</i> times, and you lived to tell the tale. How do you explain
that?"</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent: 22.5pt;">
<span style="font-family: "palatino"; font-size: 12.0pt;">"Just lucky, I
guess," said the guy.</span>
</div>
Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-42974198617413904012010-06-02T10:20:00.000-07:002010-06-02T10:25:53.443-07:00How to Taste WineOkay, see, this is a ritual. With prescribed actions and a litany. Just so you know.<br /><br />Hold the glass up to the light. Swirl the wine around. You're checking the legs. Watch out for wines with six legs. These are insect wines. None is any good, except the one made by stamping on those honey ants, the ones with the swollen abdomens full of nectar. It's a sweet wine. When properly strained there should be no legs, nor thoraces, abdomens, or jaws. Just wine.<br /><br />"Nice gams," you say.<br /><br />Next, place your nose over the edge of the glass and take a good sniff. Try not to snort any of the wine into your nostrils. If you do, don't blow it back out. This ruins the taste of the wine.<br /><br />"Smells like wine," you say. "Does it come from ants?"<br /><br />There are other places wine can come from besides ants. Italy, for instance, or Trader Joe's.<br /><br />After smelling, look at the wine carefully again. Check for insect parts and whole insects, such as fruit flies. Fruit flies flock to the stuff. They're enormous lushes, which is why you never, ever give money to fruit flies if asked. They just blow it on wine or a box of those honey ants, which they take home and turn into wine.<br /><br />While you're at it, check the wine's color. Is it red or white? You should know that white wine is really yellow. If it's white, there's been a mistake, and you've been given milk. They do make something in Mongolia by fermenting mare's milk, but this should not be confused with wine, which is made from grapes or ants. By the way, the Mongolians also make stronger booze by distilling the fermented mare's milk. It's nasty, nasty stuff. Horse brandy. Stay away from it if offered.<br /><br />Sniff the wine again. Classify the aroma. Wine has four basic aromas: sweet, sour, salty, and ant. This wine, for example, has an anty sweetness. (The nose, they call it, if they're being all snooty. Technically this only applies to that portion of the wine that you have snorted up your nose.)<br /><br />Now, carefully, tilt the glass and let a small amount of wine dribble out on your tongue. Hold it there and breathe in and out a few times. You should feel the fumes clear your sinuses, just behind the bridge of your nose.<br /><br />Add a bit more wine. Swish it around in your mouth. Be sure to get it between your teeth. There should be no grittiness, no ant parts, no fruit flies.<br /><br />Now, tilt you head back and let the wine run down the back of your throat.<br /><br />Next, gargle. Try to gargle a familiar tune. For red wines "The Star-Spangled Banner" works well. When you get to the rockets' red glare, it is now safe to swallow.<br /><br />Take a moment to reflect on the taste of the wine. It should be winy. Beyond this, look for flavors in the mix. Does it taste like oak, or more like maple or walnut? Does it have floral hints, or is it like musk or vanilla? Check for notes or thorns of blackberry, peach, durian, or ants.<br /><br />Now you say, "'Tis an elegant wine, with an aquiline nose, with hints of maple and pomegranate, with a glossy finish and a kick like a mule." That's what you're drinking it for, right? Because when you take away all the trappings, at the very bottom wine is booze. Unless it's been transubstantiated, in which case it's blood. Look for transubstantiated wine in the meat department. Sorry. Don't know why I wrote that.<br /><br />Next time: How to taste horse brandy and live to tell the tale.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-71194225700117681262010-05-07T11:27:00.000-07:002010-05-07T11:39:29.352-07:00So you want to be a gladiator? Two.So I was writing about things to do instead of the things you're supposed to be doing. Like writing.<br /><br />Look at that dust along the top of the baseboard. I bet I could just wipe that off of there. Find a cloth or maybe haul out the vacuum cleaner. And since you have it out, you might as well do the floors.<br /><br />That's the thing. If you ask me to vacuum the floors, good luck to you.<br /><br />"Weren't you going to vacuum?"<br /><br />"Oh, right. Sorry. I had this writing to do."<br /><br />But when I'm supposed to be writing, <i>that's</i> when I'll vacuum. Probably mop while I'm at it, since once you've got all the loose crap up off the floor, it's in perfect shape for mopping.<br /><br />I didn't get any writing done. Couldn't get to my desk until the floor dried, and by that time there was only half an hour left until it was time to go.<br /><br />But, see, there was this deadline. Monday. Sixteen two-page spreads about gladiators. The editor was waiting. Her name's Katie. We've never met, but she looks like your standard editor—bald, with a cigar in her mouth. Piles of manuscripts teetering all over her office. A fat dictionary on a stand, just in case. A rack of blue pencils on the desk, lined up in a dispenser like the one the straws are in at McDonald's. Push down on the bar (ever notice how it works like a Skinner box?) and a pencil pops out the bottom.<br /><br />Katie gets on the phone. "Moosenose, I need sixteen spreads about gladiators, and right now I got dick-all. Where's the stuff?"<br /><br />I didn't say, "Well, see, there was dusting. And I thought I'd play a few scales, just to free my brain up. And then it was lunch time."<br /><br />Okay. Since I'm writing here anyway, let me tell you about gladiators.<br /><br />Being a gladiator, as they'll tell you, sucked. Except apparently some of them were popular with the ladies. But the ladies always go for the bad boys.<br /><br />Say you're a Roman lady. You're married to an important senator or a knight. But you've got eyes for a gladiator. Why? Could be the oil. All those gladiators in the movies are oiled up slicker than okra.<br /><br />But why do you have eyes for a gladiator? They're the lowest of the low. Got no rights. Ranked by law down there with thieves, prostitutes, and actors.<br /><br />So. You have your various types of gladiators. Your Russell Crowe gladiator, all done up in medieval science-fiction armor. Your Kirk Douglas gladiator, all done up in olive oil and leather. Your Warner Brothers Martian gladiator, like a bowling ball with legs and a Roman helmet.<br /><br />But here are some real gladiators:<br /><br />Your retiarus—a guy with a net and trident for catching people and poking them till they're dead.<br /><br />Your thraxes—Thracians—which I guess would be modern Bulgarians. Guys with helmets, shields, and swords for poking people until they're dead.<br /><br />Do you see a theme here? Lots of poking until death.<br /><br />You <i>know</i> someone's going to put this on TV soon. America's Dumbest Gladiators. Twelve people in a group. They all signed releases acknowledging that they stand an eleven in twelve chance of getting poked with a trident until they're dead.<br /><br />They oil them all up with olive oil, then put them in an arena and let them go at one another. At the end of every show there's the Wild Animal Challenge, where they let some lions and elephants loose in the ring.<br /><br />The PETA people will complain, of course. Don't you think it's wrong to feed people to lions? The poor lions are going to be malnourished. Not to mention how dangerous it is for them to eat swords and tridents. You should feed them soy protein, or maybe Gardenburgers.<br /><br />Next time: Intermission, when they do the executions. Then the afternoon program, with trident-poking.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-23489953914300910422010-04-07T12:37:00.000-07:002010-04-07T12:38:13.359-07:00Squirrel wavesAt Louisa's Café, back by the bathroom where the pigeons usually come in, there was a squirrel. The cook knows this squirrel. Its name is Loretta. Loretta was hovering around the doorway, shifting in those squirrel instants from just outside to just inside, back again. Left, twitch a bit. Right.<br /><br />Over small distances squirrels move instantly. Something to do with quantum physics—they're here, then six inches to the right without ever passing through the space in between.<br /><br />Over longer distances they move in waves, their tails half a wavelength behind them.<br /><br />I waved to Loretta and went into the bathroom. When I came back out, the squirrel was still there, this time along with a pigeon. The squirrel shifted left, right, forward, blink-blink-blink, that quantum teleportation thing.<br /><br />The pigeon walked, one foot in front of the other, pigeon-toed, head going forward and back with each pigeon step, saying to itself, "Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh."<br /><br />They had a plan of some kind. Raiding the kitchen for baked goods. Loretta whispered to the pigeon, "We'll split everything. You can have the sesame seeds, the poppy seeds. I get all the nuts—pecans, walnuts."<br /><br />The pigeon said, "Uh-huh, uh-huh."<br /><br />That's when I came out of the bathroom and surprised them.<br /><br />"New plan," said the squirrel. "You distract him by flying at his head and flapping your wings in his face. I'll grab his wallet."<br /><br />The pigeon said, "Oo."<br /><br />I said, "Squab." The pigeon hurried out the door, still walking, wings a little way out just in case, like a gunfighter's hands twitching above his holsters.<br /><br />I said, "Brunswick stew."<br /><br />The squirrel said, "What?"<br /><br />"Brunswick stew," I said. "It's made of squirrels."<br /><br />"That some kind of Depression-era thing, or did you grow up in a trailer park?" the squirrel asked. "This is the big city, Clem. We don't eat squirrels here. Besides, you'd have to catch me first."<br /><br />Then—blink—she was four feet away in the parking lot. Gave one of those squirrel laughs and tossed an acorn at my head.<br /><br />I went back to the writing table.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-35246060857261480172010-04-04T23:39:00.000-07:002010-04-04T23:55:39.886-07:00So you want to be a gladiator!Here's what you'll need: something to whack people with. A stick, maybe. Some big muscles. Some oil. You see 'em in the movies, all oiled up. Takes a lot of oil. Olive oil, because they're Romans, right? Well, mostly captured enemies, but it's still Rome. So they get themselves all oiled up, then someone shoves them out into the circus.<br /><br />Hooray! It's the circus! Here's the program:<br /><br />First up, music. An overture. Johannes Philippus Sousus. On those big Roman trumpets that curve round like serpents. And a lyre. You can't hear the lyre outdoors in the middle of all the trumpets with the crowd blabbering away, munching on popcorn and guzzling beer. But it's in the contract with the union. There has to be a lyre. You think maybe he's lip synching, anyway.<br /><br />Next, lions.<br /><br />It's not a circus without lions. They keep the lions downstairs in the maze of passageways. Whole place reeks of lion piss, and there's no way to get the stuff out of the rocks.<br /><br />So they open up the doors to let out the lions, but it's hot, bright, and noisy, and the lions are more interested in sleeping. They do that—you can read about it on the panel at the zoo. Lions sleep something like 20 hours a day. Get up and eat someone, then go back to sleep. So the lions are all sleeping in a big pile at the back of the room, and they have to send an old guy with a stick to poke them. It's a reasonably prestigious job, lion poker. The trick is to run inside, poke them once or twice, then hightail it out of there while the lions are still rubbing their eyes and making those morning smacking noises with their mouths.<br /><br />Properly poked, the lions come galloping out of the door. Run around the ring a few times, eat a couple of Christians, then go back inside for a nap.<br /><br />Next, some clowns. Nobody likes the clowns. "And now," says the announcer, "the hilarious clowns!" He has to say that, or nobody would know they were funny. A chariot pulls up, pulled by a sad looking donkey who stops in the middle of the arena, sits down, and yawns. The chariot door opens, and a river of clowns pours out. You've got your Emmett-Kelley-style hobo clowns, your Bozo-style clowns with blue eye shadow, your cigar-smoking housewife clowns in drag, and a jailbird clown in a black and white striped suit.<br /><br />They run around doing clown shtick. One tries to pick up his hat while kicking it just out of reach every time. One hits another on the head with a big mallet. Two clowns in a goat costume butt a third clown in the butt. There's polite applause, then some more lions are released to eat the clowns. You've probably already heard the stupid joke that says lions won't eat clowns because they taste funny. But in this case, given the general lack of funniness, the lions are only too glad to eat them, leaving only a couple of pairs of oversized shoes.<br /><br />There's a standing ovation. The lions take a bow, then go back inside for another nap.<br /><br />Next, it's Gladiators, Round One: bare-handed rassling. They're all oiled up with olive oil—first pressing, extra-virgin. So the oiled gladiators come out and do some rassling. Mostly there's a lot of slipping around. One wrestler rolls in the sand and comes up looking as if he's been dipped in breadcrumbs. A lion wanders out long enough to eat him, then go back inside.<br /><br />The rassling goes on for a while until the gladiators are all rassled out, then they go back inside for a costume change, and it's Intermission.<br /><br />The audience stands up. Stretches. Buys some bread, traditional accompaniment of circuses. The kids get souvenirs—those popguns. Little gladiator helmets. Tridents. Then they spend all their time poking each other. Parents threaten on the way home. "If you don't stop poking your brother with that trident, I'm stopping this chariot right here. Don't make me feed you to the lions."<br /><br /><br />Next time it's Gladiators, Round Two: the cutlery.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-35600515834195019552010-03-11T22:03:00.000-08:002010-03-12T11:49:04.180-08:00Beast #933: the Deer<span style="font-style:italic;">[Parental advisory: some strong language, but nothing your kids haven't been hearing on the playground since third grade.]</span><br /><br />Last week at the writing table Anne said, "More people are killed by deer than any other animal."<br /><br />"You mean from hitting them with their cars?" someone else asked.<br /><br />Then things went on.<br /><br />Really there are several species of deadly deer out there, and that's not including mooses, the deadliest member of the deer family.<br /><br /><br />Deadly deer no. 1: The Bambi-eyed razor deer.<br /><br />Looks cute. All spotted. Has these big eyes like Bambi in the cartoons. Each eye takes up a third of the head.<br /><br />The Bambi-eyed razor deer raises its head up from grazing. Bats its big Bambi eyes at you.<br /><br />"What a cute little deer," you say. "I wonder how close it will let me get to it." You approach slowly. One foot carefully in front of the other. A twig snaps. You say, "Fuck!" The deer looks up, startled. Dips its head back down to the blueberry bush and continues stripping the leaves off.<br /><br />You get closer. Closer still. Hold out your hand, palm up, because someone said you're supposed to do that with dogs.<br /><br />"Hello, little deer," you say in a low voice, quiet voice.<br /><br />The big-eyed deer looks up again. Braces its legs to run away, you think. Another twig snaps under your foot. You look down, and it's not a twig. It's the metacarpal bones of a human hand, bleached white. The grass all around is full of bones, all down where you can't see them. The corner of a pelvis. A curved spine. Half of a skull, the rest sheared off in a straight line.<br /><br />You look up, and the Bambi eyes are staring right into yours. Black, all black, and down inside, a tiny, orange, dancing flame. You stare, still, like a chicken hypnotized by a squiggle drawn in the sand.<br /><br />You hear, "Look out!" at the same time that something hits you hard in the side, right at the bottom of your ribcage.<br /><br />There's a whistling noise as the deer's silver-tipped, razor-edged hind hoof slices through the hair at the top of your head in a roundhouse kick.<br /><br />You land hard, crunching down on a skeleton's ribcage, and someone heavy lands on top of you. "Run. Now," she says. And you run. Now.<br /><br /><br />Deadly deer no. 2: The November mist deer.<br /><br />You're out hunting. You and your friend Clem set up camp. Drank some beers, got a good night's sleep. Out at the crack of dawn. You and Clem split up to try your luck in different spots. It's damn cold. Your breath swirls out in big clouds. The morning's coffee hits your bladder, and you stop to take a piss. Lean your rifle up against a tree trunk. Set your gloves down in the snow. Unzip your two layers of pants. Your pee splatters down into a deepening yellow hole in the snow. Steam rises up.<br /><br />You look up, and there, not thirty feet in front of you, is the biggest buck you've ever seen. Ten points on the rack, head turned toward you like a Hartford Insurance commercial.<br /><br />You're still pissing. At the same time, you reach out slowly, slowly for the rifle against the tree. Just reach it with the tips of your fingers, and it tips right into your hand. You're not sure whether you've pissed on your boots, but you don't care.<br /><br />You raise the rifle slowly. It's a little awkward with the deer straight in front of you there, but you don't want to move too much. You get the rifle up to your shoulder. Get a nice bead right on the buck's chest.<br /><br />In the instant that you squeeze the trigger, the November mist deer thins, dissipates, and vanishes like the clouds of your breath. There, facing you, is Clem. With his dick hanging out of his pants, aiming a rifle at your heart.<br /><br />There must have been a lightning instant of hesitation—one of those reflexes that goes in a circle through your reptile brain without ever reaching the mammal part. So you're still alive, and so is Clem, but now both of you have to sit down to pee.<br /><br /><br />Deadly deer no. 3: The carnivorous flypaper deer.<br /><br />There's not much to say about this one that's not already there in its name. There was a bad incident when one of them ended up in a petting zoo. They'd filed off its fangs so it couldn't hurt anyone, but every kid who touched its fur got stuck there.<br /><br /><br />Anyway, be careful. More people are killed by deer than by any other animal.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-72156408718110397092010-02-23T15:23:00.000-08:002010-03-10T16:17:53.261-08:00Two Cases from the Mystery PileCase no. 1: Who keeps leaving bags of dog crap in my trash can?<br /><br />It might be a dog. Eager to please. All twisted up because he's got to go, and there isn't time to get home. Someone has left one of those newspaper bags, the plastic ones they stick over the newspaper even when it's not raining, left by a pile of leaves. The poor dog looks left, right, discreetly excretes in the little bag, ties it in a knot, and drops it in the trash can.<br /><br />I put on one of those deerstalker caps, grab a magnifying glass, and canvass the neighborhood.<br /><br />"I'm investigating a case of illegal dumping," I say to the dog.<br /><br />He puts his head down, looks up at me from under his dog eyebrows, says, "Sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry." Tries to lick my hand. Rolls over and exposes his vulnerable belly.<br /><br />I think he was framed. Sure, there's the the knot thing, I see that. And how did he get the lid off the trash can? I don't buy it. There's a deeper mystery here.<br /><br />I'm afraid to put a note on the trash can. "Take your dog crap home," it would say.<br /><br />"No thanks," the perpetrator would say. "I'll just leave it here on your doorstep if you don't want it in the trash can. I think I'll put it in a paper bag and set fire to it."<br /><br />So now it's a case of illegal dumping and arson.<br /><br />But I can be pretty sure it wasn't the dog that did it. Maybe fire ants. Or a small dragon.<br /><br />I'm going to leave this case for someone else. Recuse myself. I'm too close to it. There's a conflict of interest.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Case no. 2: What are those dark, skittering shapes I keep seeing out of the corners of my eyes?<br /><br />Here's what I think. I think they're dust mice. All the little balls of dust and cobwebs from the corners, all piled up under the bed.<br /><br />There was a power outage last week. A surge when the power came back on, and a little spark went rocketing around the room. Passed from corner to corner, and all the little dust mice came to life.<br /><br />I can tell they're there. There's a smell of dust and ozone. Something's been chewing through the vacuum cleaner bags.<br /><br />But you can never catch them. Out of the corner of your eye—zip! Gone when you look. Only detectable by the rod cells in your retina, the light-gathering, low-resolution ones, so when you look straight at them with all the cones in the center, you don't see anything. Only a disturbance in the air, like a golf-ball-sized patch of heat shimmer over a hot sidewalk.<br /><br />You have to catch them with a trap. Put out little piece of wheat, grains of rice. The dust mice will come. Start nibbling. You can't see them straight on, so use a reflective surface. Look at them reflected in an old VW hubcap, Perseus style, then suck them up in the vacuum cleaner. Take the bag out immediately. Go over to the neighbors' and leave it in the trash can with that newspaper bag full of dog crap.<br /><br />Case closed.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-81157487947556842542010-02-19T11:08:00.000-08:002010-02-19T11:19:36.902-08:00Beast #65: The RaccoonThere's a recipe in my copy of <span style="font-style:italic;">The Joy of Cooking</span>—the edition from the mid-60s—that starts this way:<br /><br /><blockquote><br />Skin, clean, and soak overnight:<br /><br />1 Raccoon<br /><br />In:<br /><br />Salt water<br /></blockquote><br /><br />It goes on from there.<br /><br />I checked the pantry. There was a bucket of salt water that I had squeezed out of some oysters a while back. I figured it was still good. Salt water keeps for a long time before going bad. They've found jars of salt water in the tombs of some pharaohs. They opened them up, and they were as fresh as the day they'd been packed. You couldn't say the same for the organs in the jars, but you really shouldn't eat those things anyway. Cannibalism is still cannibalism, no matter how long you age the parts.<br /><br />I'm not sure about things like saints' bones. I think you can buy pills made out of ground-up saints' bones to cure whatever's wrong with you. You can also put a few of them in a dish on the windowsill to keep the locusts away. They're probably not real saints' bones anyway. With the number of pills they sell, each saint must have had a skeleton like a Brontosaurus. (Yes, okay, I know it's an Apatosaurus now, but that doesn't roll off the tongue the same way.)<br /><br />I went to the Safeway, to the back of the store to the varmint section. They had possums, all laid out in a neat row with their pink tails hanging over the edge of the counter. They had muskrats, previously frozen, on little foam trays wrapped in plastic. They had squirrels, whole ones, skinned ones, packs with the Best of the Rodent, and just the haunches, which are the only part that's really good to eat.<br /><br />There are, by the way, recipes for all of these things in my copy of <span style="font-style:italic;">The Joy of Cooking</span>.<br /><br />They even had some of the newer, trendy nutrias that all the foodies are eating. Things that look like beavers with giant rat tails. I wasn't sure one would fit in my oven, and they're too newfangled for my old<span style="font-style:italic;"> Joy of Cooking</span> to have a recipe. There's one for beaver tail, but the nutria tail is a scrawny thing you could barely nibble on.<br /><br />No raccoons. I went to find the guy behind the counter, in his white hat and the apron with the watery bloodstains on the front.<br /><br />"Help you?" he said.<br /><br />"I was looking for raccoons," I said.<br /><br />"Whole or steaks?" he asked.<br /><br />"Whole," I said.<br /><br />"Fresh out," said the man. "Yesterday was trash day, and we usually don't get any raccoons right afterwards. You could try again near the end of the week."<br /><br />"Rats," I said."<br /><br />"Those we got," said the man. "But just frozen ones, over in the frozen varmint section."<br /><br />It looked like I'd have to find something else to do with my bucket of salt water. I'd heard you could make taffy out of the stuff. I didn't know how good that would be with salt water you'd squeezed out of oysters, though.<br /><br />I stopped in at the QFC on the way home, just in case. But their wild game section is pathetic. Mostly pigeons, and I think they get those off their roof. God knows what they've been eating.<br /><br />The salt water would keep. If it worked for the pharaohs, it was good enough for me. I could wait a few days and go back to the Safeway.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-4017657388243222102010-02-14T09:22:00.000-08:002010-02-23T14:23:34.537-08:00Two ValentinesI.<br /><br />We had to give valentines to all the kids, even the ones we didn't like. Somebody in the family said store-bought ones were tacky, so I ended up staying up far past bedtime cutting out construction-paper hearts. Pasting heart-shaped doilies on them. Fingers worn completely sore by the scissors. Stuck together with glue.<br /><br />No namby-pamby glue sticks when I was a kid. We used Elmer's. Man's glue. Named after a man. Or a steer. Grins at you from the bottle. "Hi, I'm Elmer the steer. They boiled me to make this glue."<br /><br />So you used Elmer's manly glue to stick together valentines for the other boys in the class. Kind of strange. Do boys give the other boys valentines now? I suppose they've done away with the whole thing in school, just like Halloween. Offensive to fundamentalists to give out valentines, or maybe because of Billy's self-esteem.<br /><br />Rules of the worst self-esteem-destroying activity: Valentine dodge-ball. The class lines up. Two kids, by popularity vote, choose sides. Valentines are distributed. On either side of the gym the kids aim red rubber playground balls at the heads of the kinds on the other side. You get to take all the valentines of the kids you hit. At the end, the kids with the most valentines get to leave for recess first.<br /><br />So. You try to make the valentines for the boys boy-like. Happy Valentine's day, you big galoot! Put a truck on there, or some helicopters shooting aliens. Meanwhile, you also have to give them to the girls. Eesh. Maybe it's a good thing the fundamentalists have gotten rid of it. Witchcraft connections? No. It's because the little fat kid with the wings and the arrows is naked. If my kid sees a fat, naked baby with wings and arrows, he's going to ask me questions. And the last thing I want is a kid who asks questions.<br /><br /><br /><br />II.<br /><br />Lisa's boyfriend gave her a cat heart in a jar for Valentine's Day. She pretended she liked it. Thought it was a good joke. None of the mushy romantic crap. But secretly she wanted the mushy romantic crap.<br /><br />Ellen said it was important to get boys to do mushy romantic things and then say no. Thanks for the flowers. Bye. I have to wash my hair. I have to polish my cat. I have a lot of homework. I'll just give these to my mom. She loves flowers. Bye!<br /><br />Lisa kept the cat heart on top of the refrigerator. First as a joke. Then to remind herself what a dork Jared was. Her mother moved it every week. Said, "Lisa, could you keep this someplace else?" The joke became to sneak the jar back up there and see how long her mom would go before she noticed.<br /><br />Then Eric knocked the jar off one day when he opened the fridge. He pushed all the pieces underneath and didn't say anything about it. Turned out the thing hadn't been in formaldehyde or anything. Just sitting in water where Jared had stuck it at the end of anatomy class. For a week or more no one could figure out what the smell was. They thought one of Eric's gerbils had escaped again, had crawled into the heating duct and died like the last time.<br /><br />Eventually the smell went away. It was ten years before the new people moving in to the house pulled out the refrigerator and found the little dried-up thing. They threw it in the trash, but all night long they heard a little pit-pat, pit-pat. And their boy thought he saw a pale cat wandering the halls. But the next day the garbagemen came, and the pale cat never came back.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-8334029063200633322010-02-11T19:01:00.000-08:002010-02-11T19:12:34.711-08:00Beast #367: The NutriaJack says I'm writing a bestiary. So. Let's continue.<br /><br />Beast #367: The Nutria.<br /><br />Apparently this is the same thing as a coypu, which I'd already heard of.<br /><br />They make nutrias by taking a beaver and whittling down the tail till it looks like a rat's. Then they dye the teeth bright orange, and that's your nutria.<br /><br />They've worked their way up the coast, or maybe out from the interior, all the way to Washington. Reports conflict as to why they were brought here in the first place. It might have been as a food source. They eat them in South America. Might have been for their fur.<br /><br />"What kind of fur is this?"<br /><br />"Nutria."<br /><br />"Ah. Is that like a weasel or more like some kind of cat?"<br /><br />"It's like a beaver, but with a skinny tail."<br /><br />"You mean like a rat?"<br /><br />"Well, it's somewhat larger."<br /><br />"You mean like a giant rat? I don't think I want a rat coat."<br /><br />It's probably why they started calling them nutrias instead of coypu.<br /><br />"Coypu? That's vaguely obscene. We'll call 'em nutrias. Makes them sound nutritious. Healthful."<br /><br />"What's it taste like?"<br /><br />"A little like chicken, and a little like guinea pig."<br /><br />You see why this never caught on.<br /><br />They're running wild in Oregon, already in parts of Washington.<br /><br />Nutrias are aquatic rodents, like beavers and muskrats, without the industriousness of beavers and twice the size of muskrats.<br /><br />Chuck had a friend who kept one of them as a pet. It was a rescue animal. Rescued from the Coat-n-Burger, a place where you could pick your nutria from a pen at the front, then they'd skin it, make you a coat, and serve you a burger made out of the meat. A team of seamstresses and cooks worked in the back. They could turn a nutria into a burger and coat in 20 minutes. The secret is that they give you the burger to work on while they're tanning and sewing the coat.<br /><br />Nobody ever questioned how they could turn a nutria the size of a basset hound into a full-length coat. The nutria has the stretchiest skin of all the rodents. It's 30% Spandex. That, and the extra from the rats in the alley. Mostly for cuffs and collars.<br /><br />At any rate, Chuck's friend had a pet nutria. More or less housetrained. Nutrias will only crap in the water, so all you have to do is fill your bathtub up about halfway, and the rest is pretty much automatic.<br /><br />Thing is, the nutria is also the randiest of the rodents. Chuck's friend fell asleep with her arm stretched out to the side. She woke up to find that the nutria had climbed up onto the cushions and carefully placed its dick in her outstretched hand. She stared at it for a second, and the nutria raised its eyebrows up and down. Then Chuck's friend screamed—just a little scream— and ran into the bathroom to scrub her hand with a brush and spray it with Lysol.<br /><br />The nutria ran away the next day after chewing through five boxes of cereal and eating half of each one.<br /><br />Your nutria swims in lakes and rivers with only its nostrils and bumps of eyes showing above the water. You'd mistake it for a floating log until it was too late. It swims from a place of concealment near watering holes and places where people come to the river's edge to bathe and wash their clothes. It swims up next to you, then before you know it you've been rogered, and the nutria is hundreds of yards away under the water.<br /><br />All of the nutrias at the Coat-n-Burger were liberated one night in a lightning raid by black-clad PETA commandos. Half of them—the nutrias, not the commandos—got run over on the highway in front of the restaurant. The rest escaped to ponds and swimming pools in the neighborhood. Think about that the next time you're out sunning yourself, and keep those hands inside the deck chair.<br /><br />Next time: the Reeves's munjac, or perhaps Bosman's potto.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-62938039696656283472009-10-03T12:00:00.000-07:002009-10-03T12:57:07.652-07:00Buzzards for RentThe sign said, "Flamingoes and buzzards for rent." If that wasn't a sign from God and the fates, I don't know what was. I went in. There was as guy behind a counter reading the racing form.<br /><br />“Help you?" he said.<br /><br />"I need to rent a buzzard," I said.<br /><br />"Okay. How long?"<br /><br />"I don't know," I said. "I wonder if you'd have a recommendation."<br /><br />"Well," said the man. He folded the racing from, stuck it under the counter, took out a laminated card, and turned it so I could read it. "These are the buzzards we've got. Different sizes, sexes, it all depends on what you need it for. What do you need it for?"<br /><br />"Got a dead sheep on my property," I said. "It's been there a while."<br /><br />"And the buzzards?" asked the man.<br /><br />"I was hoping I could get a buzzard to eat it. So I don't have to haul it out of there. How long's it take a buzzard to eat a sheep?"<br /><br />"Oh," said the buzzard man. "You'd want several buzzards, I'm afraid. Just one, that'd take way too long. You'd really save money by renting, say, a half-dozen buzzards for a week rather than one buzzard for a month. We've got a volume discount. Unless this sheep of yours is in a confined space. Is it in a confined space?"<br /><br />"Well, I don't know—you mean like the trunk of a car?"<br /><br />"Is it in the trunk of a car?"<br /><br />"No… it's. Well, it's in the bedroom. I was hoping to get rid of it pretty quickly."<br /><br />"Ah," said the buzzard man. "You'll be wanting a couple of indoor buzzards. I've got just the thing." He disappeared through a beaded curtain into the back room.<br /><br />I had a look around the room while he was gone. The place looked like a rental car office, or maybe a shipping company. There was a large package scale on the counter, a couple of chairs in a waiting area, and a low table covered with magazines. I moved them around to have a look. There were a few reasonably current issues of <span style="font-style:italic;">Hawk and Handsaw</span>. <span style="font-style:italic;">Carrion weekly</span>. <span style="font-style:italic;">The Flamingo Times</span> printed on pink paper. And, strangely, something called <span style="font-style:italic;">Slots and Spinners</span>, with a picture of a shiny silver slot machine on the cover.<br /><br />I picked it up and had a look inside. There, in the first article, was a picture of the buzzard guy standing in front of a row of neon-lit slot machines. He held a flamingo under one arm, Alice-in-Wonderland style. There was a man in a suit with slicked-back hair, smiling and holding up one of those giant checks they give you when you win the lottery. It was made out in the amount of $200,000.00.<br /><br />"That was last year in Vegas," said the man. He was behind the counter again. "That's my lucky flamingo, Janice. I take her with me every time I go, and every time I win a couple hundred grand. She tells me which machines to play."<br /><br />"Mm-hm," I said.<br /><br />"She never misses," said the man. "Betcha can't guess where we stay when we're there."<br /><br />I laughed. "Bet I can."<br /><br />"How much?"<br /><br />"How much you bet you can tell me where we stay?"<br /><br />"What, for real?"<br /><br />"Of course for real. I'm a gambling man. Couldn't you tell?"<br /><br />"Well, I…"<br /><br />"Tell you what—" He bent down behind the counter and came up with a pair of plastic pet carriers, each about the size you'd carry a beagle in. He set them on the counter. "We'll make it a contest. You guess where we stayed, and I'll give you the first day's rent for Frankie and Johnny here for free. Otherwise you pay full price. Deal?"<br /><br />"Okay," I said, "give me a minute here."<br /><br />The man stood behind the counter, smiling. Rustling noises came from the pet carriers. Sounds like claws on paper.<br /><br />"Could it be," I said, "the Flamingo Hilton?"<br /><br />"Damn," said the man. "You're good. Nobody else has gotten that." He pulled some papers out of a tray next to the cash register. "Well, looks like you got yourself a free day of buzzard rental.<br /><br />"You know, we stayed at the Luxor once, but Janice got drunk on one of those drinks in an obelisk glass, and she made a spectacle of herself. They won't let us go back there."<br /><br />"I was wondering," I said.<br /><br />"Yes?"<br /><br />"The flamingo rental…"<br /><br />"You want to know if you can rent Janice, don't you?"<br /><br />"Well, I thought maybe…"<br /><br />"You could," he said, "but the luck doesn't seem to work if she's with anybody but me. Some kind of symbiosis, I think."<br /><br />I shrugged. "It was worth a try."<br /><br />"Sign here, then initial here and here," said the man. "We'll see you in a week."<br /><br />He held the door for me as I left with Frankie and Johnny. Time to get home. That sheep wasn't getting any fresher.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-48401342066724018932009-09-21T17:48:00.000-07:002009-09-21T18:06:13.454-07:00Possums and marblesThe thing most people don't know about possums is that they're hoarders. Worse than pack rats. Worse than magpies. Your magpie will go for shiny things—gum wrappers, engagement rings, what have you. Your pack rat likes soft, fuzzy things, along with seeds and objects with handles.<br /><br />The world's record pack rat, found in a den in Texas, had a burrow full of suitcases. Valises. Gladstone bags. Steamer trunks. They had no idea how the rat got all that baggage into the burrow, because the opening was only rat sized. But the pack rat is well known to be the most determined of the rodents. Like the expression, you know: "He'll stick to that problem like a pack rat."<br /><br />There's a paper that finally explained it. Measured the string-theory vibrations of pack rats in eleven dimensions. It's a lot of math and graphs, but you can really sum it up by saying pack rats can push things through walls. Shuffle the spaces between the atoms like riffling a pack of cards together, and the suitcase comes out the other side. Atomic interlacing, they call it.<br /><br />Possums, now, possums like to collect round things. Baseballs, eggs, croquet balls, and ball bearings.<br /><br />Al had a truck that he parked over by the laurel bushes. Took it out on the freeway one day, and all four wheels fell off at the same time. The truck skidded along on its belly, tossing up a rooster tail of sparks, until it finally stopped in the middle of the left lane.<br /><br />It turned out a family of possums that lived in the bushes had stolen all his wheel bearings. He found them when he went to trim the bushes, piled up in one of those pyramids they pile up cannonballs in. Shiny, bright, with all the grease licked off them. Which also explained why he could never catch the possums. They were too fast with all that bearing grease inside them. You know the expression: "Faster than a greased possum."<br /><br />Possums always look surprised, with those big, white circles around their eyes. "Yikes!" they say. "Look at all those ball bearings! So smooth and round. Gonna take those home and put them in the bearing pile." They pack their little possum pouches full of bearings and waddle home, dragging their lumpy bellies on the ground.<br /><br />Possums like marbles, too. They don't really care what they look like, as long as they're round. Not like little boys, who have a marble hierarchy. Or at least I did.<br /><br />Bottom of the list—and this is what's attractive to a second-grader, which is where my marble-appreciation sense is frozen—were the solid ones. Sure, they have interesting swirls and things. You might appreciate them now, but back then they just weren't cool. <br /><br />Then the cat's eyes. More interesting. Colored patterns inside clear glass.<br /><br />"You know where they get those?" said Rick.<br /><br />"No," I said.<br /><br />"From cats. All the cats at the pound, all those cats in the labs. They take one eye from each. Can't take both. They'd be blind."<br /><br />"That's not true at all," I said. "That's gross."<br /><br />"Okay, I was just pulling your leg. They make them <span style="font-style:italic;">for</span> cats. Glass eyes. Cats lose eyes all the time in those fights you hear in the middle of the night. You take them to the vet, and they pop one of those marbles in. Sometimes they don't have a match. That's when you see one of those cats with two different-colored eyes."<br /><br />Next in the hierarchy: clearies. Glass all the way through. Best were the clear clearies, just glass-colored.<br /><br />Then the very most valuable marbles: steelies. Now I know they were just ball bearings, and they're not so interesting.<br /><br />Eric had one of those Newton's Cradle toys. Five steel balls hanging from Vs of fishing line. It's a momentum transfer toy. You pull one ball back, let it go, and it knocks one off the other end. Makes the click-click marble pendulum noise I can hear right now, writing this. Pull two back, let them go, and two pop off the other side. And so on.<br /><br />It's a toy that's interesting for maybe ten minutes, then you're done with it. Forever. Sort of like those magnetic Wheel-O toys. And the spinning, fly-apart metal Christmas trees with the Santa in the middle.<br /><br />Anyway, one day Eric dropped the Newton's Cradle on the floor, and one of the metal balls popped out of its plastic retaining ring. It bounced and rolled across the floor. Eric chased it down.<br /><br />"Hey!" he said. "That's a <span style="font-style:italic;">steelie!</span>" He got a screwdriver and pried the other four steelies out of the Newton's Cradle. That was five more steelies than I ever had.<br /><br />But then one day, crawling around in the laurel bushes, I found a whole pile of them. Stacked up in a little pyramid like the ones cannonballs get piled up in. Gleaming steelies, all licked clean by possum tongues. Almost better than the time I found the waterlogged <span style="font-style:italic;">Playboy</span>. But at least I could take the steelies home.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-4265386212354813512009-09-17T14:31:00.000-07:002009-09-17T14:45:15.452-07:00The Museum of CuriositiesToday I'd like to welcome you to the Museum of Curiosities. It used to be a Cabinet of Curiosities, then a Closet of Curiosities, but the collection kept growing and growing.<br /><br />Here we have the original closet. It smells a bit musty inside, I know. Of old wool suits worn too long and never washed. You can't, you know. Not without shrinking them. Which is okay if you have midgets or children around the house.<br /><br />Here we have the costume collection. We specialize in fur coats.<br /><br />This one's my grandmother's. It's made of weasels. Not pelts. That would be cruel. The weasels themselves, each carefully trained to hold onto the weasel next to it with its paws. Bite the tail of the weasel in front, below. As you can see, they all hang head down. It's a nice, warm coat, but it does smell a bit weasely. And it tends to writhe.<br /><br />Here we have the Moebius Scarf, endless loop with only one side. You stick your head through it, and it comes out somewhere else. I think it's China. Hard to tell, because it's crowded, and all you see is people's feet. I'm not sure what they see. Maybe just your head sticking up out of the sidewalk. Best not to wear this one, lest you be mistaken for a soccer ball.<br /><br />What's that, Ma'am? Yes, the costumes do get worn. Once a year at our Grand Fundraising Ball. There's information about it on our Web site. But there's a years-long waiting list for the weasel coat.<br /><br />This is the most valuable item in the original Closet of Curiosities. A coat made entirely of hummingbird feathers. Originally belonged to the Aztec emperor Moctezuma. That's right, the one with the revenge.<br /><br />The coat uses only the third primary feather from the left wing of a single species of hummingbird. The artisans caught thousands of the little buggers. Yanked out the single feather. Even a tiny modification like that messed up their ability to fly, so they could only fly around in counterclockwise circles. This single coat made the species extinct.<br /><br />Notice how shimmery and blue it is. If you put your ear close—just there—you can hear it humming. They say the coat got its revenge on Moctezuma when Cortés and his Spaniards arrived. Things went badly for the Aztecs. Moctezuma—they don't tell you this in the history books—Moctezuma was trying to escape by hiding inside an empty planter. The Spaniards were just walking by, ready to move on in their search, when the hummingbird coat started humming. The note was just right, just matched the resonant frequency of the inside of the planter, so the whole thing sounded like a foghorn. Moctezuma was discovered and captured, and you know the rest.<br /><br />We'll move on now to the first room. This is our rotating exhibit hall. It does rotate. The crank is over there. But we also bring in a new exhibit every month.<br /><br />Please don't touch that, Sir. You're right, it is crooked. Nevertheless.<br /><br />That's really the secret of this exhibit. It's not an exhibit of paintings, it's an exhibit of the people looking at the paintings. The audience observes them from the other side of the two-way mirror along the wall, there.<br /><br />Each and every painting in the exhibit is hung just a little bit crookedly. And another secret—even if we let you straighten them, you wouldn't be able to. Not a single picture, not a single frame is made of right angles. They're all non-equilateral rhombuses.<br /><br />So we sit in the observation room and watch all the people fidget and twitch. Like that guy there—he keeps half-reaching out, arms starting up from his sides, fingers twitching. He's had to stuff his hands in his pockets, and he's dancing around as if he needs to take a pee.<br /><br />Next week we're going to change this one out for an exhibit of Dutch Maters. They'll all be hung three feet off the floor, so you have to crouch down to look at them.<br /><br />Now, if you'll follow me, please…<br /><br />This is the Hall of Bears. Bears of all sorts, as you can see. No, Ma'am, they're not stuffed. We hire these bears to stand around in poses. They're quite good at it.<br /><br />Here, as you can see, is our grizzly bear, posing as a rug in front of the fireplace. He has practiced for years to perfect the ability of flattening himself out like that. Mind your feet, please. Sometimes he snaps.<br /><br />At five o'clock the bears help us clear visitors out of the museum. You don't want to be slow when we give the closing announcement.<br /><br />Now if you'll follow me…Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-30923052511897587402009-09-16T12:15:00.000-07:002009-09-16T12:21:33.143-07:00Swine flueThe swine flue is the most important part of your pig furnace. You have to have the damper open just the right amount to vent off the lighter pigs while retaining the larger ones in the pork tank.<br /><br />Let's take a look here at Diagram One. Note call-out A. The pig damper. It's hard to remember whether the damn thing is open or closed. Do you pull it forward to open it, or is that closed? You could stick your head in there and look, but by the time your remember to check, you've usually got a nice, crackling fire going, and looking would roast your head.<br /><br />You'll know soon enough. If the damper's closed, pretty soon a bunch of hydrogen-filled piglets comes pouring out of the front of the furnace, collecting up near the ceiling, running around upside-down, squealing. One little spark from their hooves on a light fixture, and kablam! It's raining bacon. That's not a bad thing, but it needs to happen in a controlled space. And the little piglets are cute. Nobody likes to see them get blown up.<br /><br />If you get the swine flue adjusted correctly, the stream of piglets flies up the chimney and out into the wind. The larger swine come out the vents at the bottom, the swine heatelator, and you have to let them out the door.<br /><br />If you'd burn something other than those acorns, you wouldn't have to worry about all those pigs. It's the combustion product. You combine acorns and oxygen in the presence of heat, and you get pigs, water, hydrogen, and extra heat. That's just the chemistry of it.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-30912763391878102782009-06-16T08:41:00.000-07:002009-06-16T08:50:33.738-07:00Reject-o-RamaSo I submitted the bit <a href="http://mooseknows.blogspot.com/2009/03/cautionary-tale-439.html">posted here earlier</a>, the one about the kid and the escalator, to an on-line journal with literary pretensions.<br /><br />Here's what they said:<br /><br />We don't want it. Okay, I expected that. They sent editors' comments. I thought I'd want that. Now I'm not so sure.<br /><br />"Too juvenile for this market," said one. That's the literary pretensions, I guess. Did they mean written for kids? I wouldn't read it to <span style="font-style:italic;">my</span> kids, if I had kids that is. Or are they saying something about me? Damn this youth-obsessed culture, anyway. It's made me what I am.<br /><br />"Some things are best left to the imagination," said another. I think they mean where the kid gets sliced into long pieces like linguini. That's all I said, you know. Didn't mention the gouts of blood and all the other things that would result if a person got sliced into linguini. Okay, never mind—we're talking about a kid who gets sucked into an escalator here. It couldn't really happen, could it?<br /><br />I obviously sent this to the wrong people. I should send it to that escalator magazine, <span style="font-style:italic;">Tread and Riser</span>, I think it's called. At least I know what they'd say.<br /><br />"You should be ashamed of yourself," they'd say. "People are scared enough of escalators as it is. Not only are we rejecting your story, but we're putting you down on our enemies list. You'd better watch your ass the next time you try to ride an escalator. Not that there's anything unsafe about escalators. We're just saying."<br /><br />They might have a point. Maybe the linguini part doesn't need to spelled out.<br /><br />Maybe he got squashed flat like a postage stamp. Some things are best left to the imagination.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-46109071058038931222009-04-28T00:24:00.000-07:002009-04-28T00:30:32.910-07:00Slugs in the houseSlugs are coming into the house at night. I don't know where they get in—the slug-hole, maybe. It's the hole in the downhill side of the baseboard, where the water's supposed to run out if the apartment fills up with water.<br /><br />I don't know <span style="font-style:italic;">why</span> they come into the house. Maybe they've got a simple slug robot program.<br /><br />Here's the simple slug robot program:<br /><br />Step one: go forward.<br /><br />Step two: if you can't go forward, back up two inches and turn to the right ten degrees. Go to step one.<br /><br />So slugs bump into things a lot, if you can say something moving that slowly bumps at all. It's sort of a slow-motion thing.<br /><br />A slug wreck is a terrible thing to watch. You can see it coming. Even the slug sees it coming. Says, very slug-slowly, "Oh, noooooooo!" The front end of the slug touches the wall. Back end keeps moving. Slow, slow, creeping. Front end of the slug stretches out like a puddle. Wider and wider over the course of five minutes. Ends up as a splatter on the wall. You watched it happen. It took five minutes, and you couldn't do anything about it. It's the same way God watches car wrecks.<br /><br />You might think it's no big deal that slugs are coming into the house. Annoying, but not exactly dangerous. You'd be wrong.<br /><br />Pat fell asleep one night with the window open. In the big orange wing chair. Beer half-finished in his hand, resting on the armrest. Woke up in the morning with his hair in his eyes. Reached up to brush it aside, and it felt as if his head had been covered in snot. Sticky, silvery on his fingers, flaking to powder.<br /><br />The smell of beer had brought it—a six-inch banana slug from the patio. It muscled its way through the screen. Crawled up the chair, slowly, slowly. Over the top of Pat's head. Did a little circle with its back-and-fill slug robot program. Slorched its way down his arm, up and over the edge of the beer glass. Guzzled beer till it was too fat to fit in the glass, then died, head down in that last little bit of beer you're supposed to leave for the fairies so they don't snatch away your children and leave changelings in their place.<br /><br />Pat tipped the glass over the sink, but the slug stuck. He tapped the rim down on the counter. Still nothing. Tried running a butter knife around the slug's body. It was working wonderfully, making a slurping sound, till he got to a place where the slug skin had dried against the side of the glass. He pushed too hard, broke the skin, and the slug popped. Splattered beer foam and slug guts straight up out of the glass. Straight up into Pat's face. It stung his eyes. And the analgesic property of the slug slime (try licking one if you don't believe me) froze his eyelids open for a week. He had to sleep open-eyed, and he dreamed about nothing but the second-hand on his bedside clock going around and around and around.<br /><br />So slugs coming into the house are nothing to laugh at.<br /><br />You can't seal it up. They tried. Ran a line of caulk all the way around the base of the building. Painted it with beer to attract the slugs, salt to dissolve them as they tried to cross over. The slugs used the dead bodies of their companions as bridges. Crawled over them as they hissed and bubbled with the salt. Drank all the beer on the way into the house, so it wasn't just slugs, but drunk slugs.<br /><br />I got up in the morning. Staggered barefoot toward the coffee machine.<br /><br />I stepped on something. Cold, wet. A little bit of resistance, then something burst. Colder and wetter. I looked down. There was a spray of slime across the kitchen floor, fanning out the way ketchup does when you stamp on one of those little ketchup packages.<br /><br />And on my foot, slug skin. Slug guts—whatever kind they've got. There was a short trip to the bathroom while I scraped off the bits, sat on the edge of the bathtub and washed the bottoms of both feet, just to make sure.<br /><br />Out in the living room there was a zigzag trail. A shining, meandering path you could only see if you stood where the light hit it at the right angle. The drunken slugs had stumble-slimed their way all over the floor.<br /><br />They were all heaped up in a corner, singing slug songs in high, peeping voices. Sentimental ballads. "I met my love on a lettuce leaf." "When the dew is on the slime." That kind of thing.<br /><br />I scooped them all up in the dustpan. Eighty-sixed the drunken slugs into the toilet. A meaner person would have poured salt in there from the blue can with the little girl and the umbrella on the label. I just pulled the handle. The slugs went around and around, down the porcelain vortex. There was a sound like "glup." No more slugs.<br /><br />Next time someone peed in there, the toilet wouldn't flush. Did that thing where the water in the bowl goes up and up, and you stand, looking helpless, thinking, Please don't rise over the rim! Please don't rise over the rim!<br /><br />I called the Roto-Rooter guy.<br /><br />"Is it slugs?" he asked.<br /><br />"Well, um…"<br /><br />"It's slugs, isn't it?"<br /><br />I looked at my toes. "Yes."<br /><br />"Don't suppose you salted 'em first," said the Roto-Rooter man.<br /><br />"Well, no. I thought it would be cruel."<br /><br />"Yeah," he said. "Not like flushing them down the crapper. Well, I've got to go out to the van for my slug bit."<br /><br />The slugs are still getting into the house at night. I put a bowl of beer out for them. Chuck them out the door in the morning. They weave off toward the next-door neighbor's tulips, humming to themselves. If you look at just the right angle, you can see meandering trails of silver on the sidewalk.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-89142209243780302382009-04-13T20:31:00.000-07:002009-04-13T20:44:23.656-07:00CornucopriaCrap. Today I'm going to write about crap. 'Cause we're surrounded by it. Inundated. There's the Cornucopia of Crap, the Cornucopria, I guess it would be. Curved horn with a river of garbage pouring out of it, fish heads and eggshells, coffee grounds and banana strings, the ones you have to peel off the banana after the peel is gone.<br /><br />People come by with buckets, scoop up the bounty, and take it home to watch on their DVRs. That's where most of the crap goes, right? TV. There's a collection system by the Cornucopria, collects it all in a pipeline, funnels it to Fox headquarters and other places like that. Then it's piped directly into your house through a fiber-optic cable. You turn on the switch, and you've got a hundred channels of crap to choose from.<br /><br />You kids don't know how lucky you have it. When I was a kid we only had three channels of crap to choose from. There would have been more, but our house was up against the foothills, and the signals from Golden didn't get to us. Or some of them. That's where the towers are for the Denver stations. Tall things on Lookout Mountain above Golden, with red, winking eyes at the top. Golden's where the Coors brewery is, so there's all manner of different kinds of crap emanating from there.<br /><br />It all went off around midnight, too. They'd play the Star-Spangled Banner, show some jets flying around and some flags waving in the breeze, then there'd be a test pattern and a long beep—maybe 440 hertz? I don't know—for the rest of the night.<br /><br />The test pattern was all mysterious symbols. Stripes and radiating lines. Triangles with an all-seeing Masonic Eye of Providence in the middle. Just starting out. When you looked away it would blink, but could never catch it in the act. Thing is, it was really watching you.<br /><br />Here's how it worked. It all goes back to Golden, home of Coors beer, the Colorado School of Mines, and NORAD—that's the North American Air Defense Command. Under the mountain there, a bomb-proof complex mounted on giant springs from hundreds of old Chevies. From the towers on top of the mountain, Cheyenne Mountain, where there's a zoo full of mutant giraffes and things, baboons with a strict patriarchy and a resource base of booze and chicks—we'll get to that later—from the top of the mountain NORAD sent out that test-pattern signal with the All-Seeing Eye of Providence, watching, even when you turned off the TV. Ever notice how the picture shrank down to a little dot when you turned it off? The eye was still there. Then the dot got so small you couldn't see it, but <span style="font-style:italic;">still</span> it was there, watching your living room all night.<br /><br />Ever notice how the test pattern looked like a combination of a radiation symbol and a target? That was NORAD, too. A big message saying, "Hey, Ivan! Aim 'er right here. See if you can land one in the living room. We're ready for you."<br /><br />But we were talking about crap. It's years later here. They've mothballed NORAD due to a lack of Rooskies, along with satellites that beam the crap down your chimney from directly overhead. Keeps you occupied. You're watching ads with fashionable people buying, well, crap from crappy stores like Target. You're watching shows like <span style="font-style:italic;">America's Biggest Idiot</span>, where a houseful of contestants vie for the title of, as it says, America's Biggest Idiot.<br /><br />Here's the secret. I can't tell you where I found out. At the end of the show they reveal that America's Biggest Idiot is… you! Because you watched the thing for three whole months to find out.<br /><br />There are others. <span style="font-style:italic;">Who Wants to be a Baboon? </span>for instance. Where twelve hapless contestants are thrown in the middle of a troop of mutant baboons at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo. They vie for the post of Top Baboon, with all the booze and chicks that come with the position. Nice work if you can get it, but you have to wear a big, red, strap-on ass, or the other baboons don't give you any respect. It's not fair or unfair. It's just biology.<br /><br />At any rate, all of this stuff coming out of your TV keeps you distracted while the other guys pick your pocket and drive off with your car.<br /><br />You look at the TV and say, "You call those idiots? I could be a bigger idiot than that! How come I'm not on this show?"<br /><br />Then you can't find your wallet or your car keys. Meanwhile, they stop a red-assed Chacma baboon trying to buy Coors beer at the 7-11 with your credit card.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-83251419800244119542009-04-02T00:27:00.000-07:002009-04-02T01:57:39.117-07:00HummingbirdsI was sure there were no hummingbirds here. Eric said, yes, there are hummingbirds.<br /><br />I still thought no. We hung up a feeder, just to see. No hummingbirds. Never saw them. Kept looking at the feeder every once in a while. Still full. Still full.<br /><br />I went out to empty it about a month ago. Thought, That sugar water's going to grow mold. Grow toxic bacteria, and if a hummingbird happens to take a sip, he's going to fall right out of the air, stone dead on the bricks. Stuck point first into a crack, quivering like an arrow.<br /><br />They have tiny little livers, hummingbirds. That's why you're not supposed to use that red-dyed hummingbird food. It kills them, just like the bacteria in the feeder. So you think you're being nice to them, but instead they're piling up in a heap over there behind the bushes.<br /><br />Anyway, I went to empty the feeder, and it turns out it wasn't full of clear sugar water, it was full of clear air. The hummingbirds had guzzled it all in secret, when we weren't looking. So it's full again, and I see them all the time. Little fat things. They hover back a few inches, looking around for cats or something, then zip in to swallow about quart of sugar water in ten seconts, then zip back out again to check for cats.<br /><br />Any cats? Nope. Zip! Glug-glug-glug. Zip! How about now? Any cats?<br /><br />Any other hummingbirds? That's what they're really after. They fight like demons, zipping around, fierce. But tiny. You laugh, and it's all funny till one of them pokes you right in the eye. Hummingbirds are sharp. Fast. Dangerous. Poison-tipped, especially after they've been drinking out of a feeder full of toxic bacteria.<br /><br />You wonder what note they make with those wings. Is it like the fluorescent lights, 60 cycles of out-of-tune B-flat? Could you train them to hum in chords? The bass hummingbird would keep falling down because its wings weren't beating fast enough. Once again to be stuck beak-first into the ground, and you'd have to pull it out.<br /><br />You also wonder, Do they ever drink so much that they can't fly? Like those puffins up in Alaska that eat so much fish they can't take off. I saw them, with their little round bellies bouncing off the water. You figure most of them would get eaten by seals and orcas. A bonus, because they're already stuffed.<br /><br />So then I learned this—it's amazing the things you learn. Vampire bats get a jet-assisted takeoff by peeing. It's because they suck so much blood out of a cow that they can't take off. It's a lot for the bat, not so much for the cow. They only way they can lighten up enough to take off is to pee. You don't want to be standing in the takeoff path.<br /><br />Look at that—I start off with hummingbirds and end up with peeing vampire bats. That's the way of all this writing, right into the gutter, with all the bat pee and discarded hummingbird beaks.<br /><br />See, you can eat them roasted, the little hummingbirds, if you really want to. Hold them by their beaks like hors d'oeuvres on toothpicks. Not much meat on a hummingbird, though. Just a mouthful of little gleaming green feathers.<br /><br />Not like a puffin, but I imagine those are mostly beaks and oil. Seals eat them, but seals eat all kinds of things you wouldn't touch.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-9116896575371888302009-03-29T21:29:00.000-07:002009-03-29T21:32:15.571-07:00Signs from GodSigns from God.<br /><br />Here's one. "Do Not Enter." That's what it says. Big red circle with a white bar across it. "Do Not" above the bar, "Enter" below it.<br /><br />You'd really think God's sign would say, "Thou shalt not enter," but He keeps up with the times. Doesn't speak 17th-century English any more.<br /><br />Anyway. Signs from God. He hung the Do Not Enter sign in midair over Scott's head when Maggie went on her first date with him. Tried to save her a lot of grief, but signs from God are usually tough to see.<br /><br />Here's another one. It says, "Free." That's all. It got misinterpreted all the time.<br /><br />"Free," said the sign. <br /><br />Scholars argued. What did He mean? Obviously a sign from God. Written in that Old English blackletter He used back in the middle ages.<br /><br />"Free."<br /><br />Should we be free? Make others free? A sign maybe that you're free to meet God? God is free? Love is free?<br /><br />What really happened was that God had an old sofa that He didn't want any more. The cat had scratched it up. There was a stain from when a bottle of wine tipped over when nobody was paying attention. The cushions were getting kind of shiny from all the rear ends that had sat on it. Time to get rid of it. Time to get a new couch. Maybe a hide-a-bed for when guests wanted to stay over. The only problem was, they were so damn heavy. God knows why. Or, really, He doesn't. He thought of asking the manufacturer.<br /><br />Anyway. Time to get rid of it, but it was a perfectly good sofa. Someone should be able to use it. So he put it out by the curb. With a sign that said, "Free."<br /><br />A guy in a red pickup truck was driving by. Stopped. Backed up. Muscled the couch into the back and drove off. Left the sign. Sign from God. And now a couple of rabbis and a Jesuit are trying to figure it out.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-34735860423460257342009-03-25T20:02:00.000-07:002009-06-16T08:46:54.374-07:00Pirates and BreakfastExterior. Day. Fade-in. Okay.<br /><br />There's an ocean. Long, rolling waves. Waves are the long, wide backs of big animals swimming in a line. Big animals like manatees. Extra big. Bigger than the biggest whale. Bigger than any other animal. Backs are green, mottled with white, all barnacle-covered. They swim at you, and you roll across their backs. The ship rides like a roller coaster up one manatee, down the other side, up the next. Their big, bristly whiskers brush the sea floor, leaving parallel lines. Like the sand-floor of one of those Japanese gardens, raked into parallel lines.<br /><br />A pirate comes across the deck carrying a tray. Breakfast. Covered dish with bacon smells coming out from underneath. Silverware rolled up in a crisp white napkin. Bowl of cantaloupe slices, and a tulip in a little bud vase.<br /><br />The captain's had a hard night, deserves breakfast in bed. Up all night lashed to the tiller in case a storm was coming. Heard it on the pirate radio weather forecast. Usually the pirate radio just plays this weird industrial music that the kids who run the pirate radio station record in their basement. The FCC's onto them, but they move the station every four hours or so, so the FCC boys can't get a fix on it.<br /><br />The music today—the captain has it turned down low—music today is some kind of big steam engine with what sounds like a stick running back and fourth across a picket fence. Rhythmic. The weather report last night was wrong. No storm. Just long tendrils of glowing stuff, purple like the raver-kids' necklaces, drifting by the hull and eddying off the back.<br /><br />The captain had an argument with the quartermaster. Quartermaster said, "In the northern hemisphere, the phosphorescent eddies swirl clockwise. In the southern hemisphere they go counterclockwise."<br /><br />"Is that so?" said the captain. "Then why are they swirling in both directions off the stern, there?"<br /><br />The quartermaster said they must be sailing exactly along the equator, hence the eddies on either side went in opposite directions. The Coriolanus effect, he said it was.<br /><br />The captain thought the Coriolanus effect was something to do with Shakespeare. The swirling effect had another name. And besides, if they were sailing along the equator, what was the North Star doing <span style="font-style:italic;">there</span>, directly in line with the bowsprit?<br /><br />"That's not the North Star," said the quartermaster.<br /><br />"It bloody well <span style="font-style:italic;">is</span> the North Star," said the captain. "I think I'd know the North Star when I see it, and who's the captain here, anyway?"<br /><br />The quartermaster shook his head and muttered something about heathens.<br /><br />The captain said of <span style="font-style:italic;">course</span> he was a bloody heathen. He was a pirate, wasn't he? Violated all ten commandments right after breakfast as a warm-up for the day. And the coveting your neighbor's wife one was a damn challenge, let me tell you, since there were no women on board that he knew of.<br /><br />"Are there?" he paused to ask, and the quartermaster shrugged.<br /><br />There were no women on board, so he had to covet Gabardine Jack's wife back there in Kingston, and if you got a look at her last time we were there you'd know that coveting her was a damn sight more work than coveting Gabardine Jack's cattle. He half suspected she had <span style="font-style:italic;">been</span> one of the cattle until Jack brought her in the house.<br /><br />The quartermaster sauntered off toward the bow, whistling, and the captain went to bed with a migraine.<br /><br />So here we are this morning with the pirate carrying the breakfast tray across the deck, peg leg knocking every other step with the slapping bare foot—knock-slap-knock-slap-knock-slap.<br /><br />The peg leg gets stuck in a knothole, and the pirate stumbles forward, barely catching himself on the rail. The tray and breakfast sail out into the air, each piece of bacon and half a grapefruit turning slowly in the air, half of them clockwise and the other half counterclockwise. All drop in with fifteen tiny splashes, and the nearest giant manatee rolls over and swallows the whole thing. Astern, you can see it spitting out the tray, the plates, and one tulip in a bud vase.<br /><br /><br />Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-9370231296305324452009-03-25T01:50:00.000-07:002009-03-25T01:56:28.019-07:00Mail Order IIMy dad used to get a catalog from Miles Kimball. Quarter-page size full of miscellaneous things, a grown-up version of the last page in a comic book, the one with the x-ray specs. I think my dad got it because he'd had something for sale in there once.<br /><br />Here's a real item from the Miles Kimball catalog. It was called the "Vibrating Tingle Bullet," your own personal massager. Relaxing, it said, for those hard-to-reach places, like the back of your neck. There was a line-drawing of a smiling woman holding the Vibrating Tingle Bullet up next to her face. You could buy the regular 8-inch model, or the deluxe 10-inch model. For those <span style="font-style:italic;">really</span> hard-to-reach places.<br /><br />I saw the same thing once, honest to God and no fooling, on a display table at Montgomery Ward's. Different name, but it was a whole table full of Vibrating Tingle Bullets in boxes. I don't know whether the Ward's people were in on the joke, or so completely clueless that they ordered them as personal massagers. They only had one size, though.<br /><br />Here are some things that would be for sale in <span style="font-style:italic;">my</span> catalog:<br /><br />A holy relic necklace. It's a chip of porcelain in a filigreed box, gold or silver, glass front. On a chain so you can wear it around your neck. This is a piece of the True Toilet. The one Elvis died on after eating one of those football-sized peanut butter and bacon sandwiches. At great expense the True Toilet was smuggled out of Graceland by descendants of the Knights of Malta. There was a forklift accident while they were loading it onto the truck, and the holy relic tipped over, dropped four feet to the sidewalk, and smashed into tiny shards.<br /><br />It's lucky for you, though, because that means we can bring you your very own personal piece at a very reasonable price. It's said that just touching a piece of the True Toilet will cure the tone-deaf, chill the uncool, and put a swivel in the hips of the most hopeless brown-shoed square.<br /><br />Later there was a big scandal. First, because there were enough pieces of the True Toilet sold that the porcelain could have filled a hotel with full-sized bathtubs. And second, because the experts knew that Elvis didn't die on the actual toilet, but in a big easy chair that he kept in the bathroom.<br /><br />"But what about the miracles?" people asked.<br /><br />"Placebo effect," said the scientists and theologians. "Of course it's all ruined now, since the secret is out."<br /><br />In the next edition of the catalog you can buy a small square of Naugahyde, a piece of the True Easy Chair Elvis died on. It's a little lucky patch you can carry in your wallet or sew onto the elbow of a sweater.<br /><br />Here's another item from the catalog:<br /><br />An accordion possessed by the devil. There was a young kid in a lumber camp in Minnesota who challenged the devil to an accordion contest, just like in the song. The devil made a crucial mistake in the da capo in "Lady of Spain," took all the repeats when the rules clearly state that repeats are not to be taken on the D.C.<br /><br />The devil was disqualified, and the kid got the accordion. But the devil had the last laugh and left it possessed. Now when you play the buttons on the left hand side, you get nothing but diminished chords and tritones, the Interval of the Devil. Whatever melody you try to play in the right hand comes out as "Tubular Bells," "Danse Macabre," and sometimes "A Night on Bald Mountain."<br /><br />The kid gave it up and devoted the rest of his life to timber-cutting. The accordion sat in the Accordion Museum in Baraboo, Wisconsin, but the night watchman swore that it played tunes all by itself in the middle of the night. Earworms, repetitive things that get stuck in your head—"It's a Small, Small World," "Happy Together," or "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald." The hall always smelled like sulfur in the morning. After a couple of unexplained fires, the museum de-accessioned the possessed accordion into the dumpster, and now we're offering it to the discriminating collector at a very reasonable price.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-79835158099087499982009-03-22T20:32:00.000-07:002009-03-22T22:28:57.279-07:00Cold War Artifacts #143The Soviet Weather Machine is up near the Arctic Circle. Underground.<br /><br />The Soviet Weather Machine is gray. Leftover paint from battleships. Appropriated by the Commissar of Gray Paint, manufactured by the Progress Gray Paint Factory, where women in gray overalls and gray kerchiefs squeezed elephants and thunderheads in big presses to extract the gray pigment. A byproduct of the Progress factory was white elephants and big, puffy, white cumulus clouds.<br /><br />The theory behind the Soviet Weather Machine was developed by Aleksandr Timofyeyev Sarkhov. Sort of like Lysenko, who was responsible for Soviet genetic theory, which, as it happens, was false. But at least the weather theory didn't hurt anyone.<br /><br />Sarkhov, Lexi to his friends, developed a theory with three main principles, known as Sarkhov's Three Laws of Weather.<br /><br />The first: Weather wants to change.<br /><br />The second: Weather at rest tends to stay at rest, and weather in motion tends to stay in motion, unless acted on by an outside force, such as a big, gray weather machine constructed on the Siberian tundra.<br /><br />Sarkhov's Third Law of Weather: If you don't like the weather, shut up and quit bitching about it, unless you want to get sent up to work on the big, gray weather machine.<br /><br />Work on the machine began in the early 1940s, under Stalin's plan to create avalanches in the Austrian Alps, thereby blocking supply lines to the Nazis' eastern front.<br /><br />The Commissar of Meteorology went to watch the first test. The machine was the size of a small refrigerator, the kind you could keep a keg of beer or the weekend supply of vodka in. There was a slot in the upper half, a knob with a pointer that could be turned to a number of selections designated with numbers, and an opening near the bottom.<br /><br />"All right, Comrade Researcher, show us what you've got," said the commissar.<br /><br />"Well, Comrade Commissar, the operation is quite simple. One sets the dial, thus." He turned the knob to a setting in the middle. "Then, to activate the machine, one places a ten-kopek coin in the slot." He shrugged apologetically. "Later we hope to add change-making functions, but at the moment exact change is necessary."<br /><br />The researcher accepted a coin from his assistant and put it in the slot. It rattled down inside the machine. There was a humming noise, then the machine began rocking violently from side to side. The commissar jumped up, but the scientist held out his hand. "No cause for alarm," he said. "This is the normal function of the machine."<br /><br />After about 30 seconds a buzzer sounded. The machine stopped, then a slushy white ball dropped into the opening. The assistant removed it with a pair of tongs and held it out for the commissar to examine.<br /><br />"That's it?" he asked.<br /><br />"We're still in the early stages of development."<br /><br />"Development of what?"<br /><br />"Hailstones, Comrade Commissar. We're well on our way to pea-sized hail, and we hope to have hail the size of golf balls by the end of the month."<br /><br />"Golf balls?" said the Commissar. "Golf is decadent, bourgeois, capitalist. There will be no hail the size of golf balls."<br /><br />"Very good, Comrade Commissar. We will proceed directly to grapefruits, melons, and soccer balls."<br /><br />"Well, it all seems promising. Only…"<br /><br />"Yes, Comrade Commissar?"<br /><br />"Well. It's weather. One supposes that the hailstones, whatever their size, must eventually find their way into the air."<br /><br />"Yes, Comrade Commissar. We have a crack artillery team working on that aspect of the project."<br /><br />"Well, then. This is good progress."<br /><br />"If I may suggest, Comrade Commissar..."<br /><br />"Yes?"<br /><br />"The prototype hailstone that my assistant is holding..."<br /><br />"Seems a bit large and mushy."<br /><br />"We're working on the compression. But as it is, if the prototype hailstone is placed in a cup, or, say, a paper cone, and one adds flavored syrup or vodka to it, it becomes a delicious confection."Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2634071470950079610.post-4916281586820411692009-03-20T21:35:00.000-07:002009-03-20T23:19:24.526-07:00Mail OrderI got this e-mail. "Do you want a really big penis?" it said. I thought, Why not? Sent away to the address. Paid them the 50 bucks. It arrived by UPS about a week later. The box was waiting on the doorstep.<br /><br />By the time I got down through all the Styrofoam peanuts and the layers of bubble wrap, the thing turned out not to be very big at all. In fact, I'm not really sure it <span style="font-style:italic;">was</span> a penis. Maybe I'd been ripped off. Sort of like ordering that stuff out of the comic books.<br /><br />Like x-ray specs, which I knew didn't work. The picture showed a pervy-looking man staring at a woman in a skirt. A dotted line went from his eyes over to the woman. That means, in comic-icon-speak, "I'm looking here." They used it a lot in the comic "Nancy," the one with her little boyfriend, Sluggo. She had to use dotted lines to show where she was looking because her eyes were just two big, black dots.<br /><br />The x-ray specs idea was stupid anyway, because if you were looking at a woman in a skirt, why would you want to look at her bones? Can you even tell girl bones from boy bones just by looking at them? I'm no forensic anthropologist.<br /><br />But there were some things that were worth ordering.<br /><br />Like the ventriloquism kit. Throw your voice! The laundry hamper says, "Hey! Let me out of here!" And you mom doesn't know <span style="font-style:italic;">what'</span>s going on.<br /><br />But the ventriloquism kit arrived in an envelope, which wasn't encouraging. An envelope from Honor House Products in Lynbrook, New York.<br /><br />Inside the envelope was a booklet, the size of those religious comic tracts from Jack Chick. And a pill-sized metal tube with an accordion reed inside. You were supposed to stick the tube under your tongue, where it made buzzy sounds when you talked through it. I learned later that it's called a swozzle.<br /><br />The booklet told you all the secrets of ventriloquism. I'd tell you some of them, but that would violate the ventriloquist's code. Anyway, it didn't work. Not any better than the x-ray specs.<br /><br />There was other stuff—the secret book safe made of plastic. The hot pepper gum. The whoopee cushion. The soap that turns your hands black. <br /><br />The auto fooler—stick it up the exhaust pipe, and it makes whistling noises and shoots off sparks. Jimmy Walsley got one of those. Stuck it in his dad's car, but he put it in the wrong way around, and the car went up in a big fireball. Lucky for him, Jimmy's dad had gone back in the house for the key to the motel room where he was supposed to meet Amy Beatty's mom at lunch time.<br /><br />The flames peeled the paint off the garage door and made everything smell like the inside of a fireplace.<br /><br />They suspected Amy Beatty's dad, out for revenge, but they couldn't prove anything. The cops thought the clues pointed to a gang working out of Lynbrook, New York, and they didn't have the resources to pursue it.<br /><br />So after that Amy's mom and dad had a reconciliation, and the state victims' compensation fund bought Jimmy's dad a new Chevy Impala. Jimmy slipped the auto fooler package down between the holes in the storm drain and didn't read comics for a long time after that.Moosenosehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05301951909859895722noreply@blogger.com0