* This week was a bit of a stress; five days of work which meant the only time I was home was in the morning and then after 23:00...not fun. But the pay will be good (and I need it!)
* Speaking of pay, lovely Ebay ended up demanding almost half the sum I earned on my first sale, after a long list of various fees, half of which aren't mentioned. Cute people, like hell I'm using their services again without a proper reserve price, the assholes.
* The Deaths: Legend is on hiatose due to problems with the beta-ing, but mostly due to the nonexisting free time I have. I'll keep writing various bits of it but it'll take me a while to find a proper beta and once I found them, to trust them again to properly do the jobs they took upon them or last for long without kicking up drama to cover laziness (the first being the fault of the latest now ex-beta and the last being the fault of my first ex-beta). See, Allan, no battle axes ^_^
* This morning Scarlett was very nice, helping mom fold the laundry. Mind you, the term "help" is very flexible in the feline world. I'll let you be the judge:
"Here, mom, take this, oh my clawas are in it? So sorry *pulls hard*"
Slowely creeping atop the pile to block any more kidnapping of items:
N00, THEY BE STEALIN' MAH LONDRI!!
Perhaps rolling around and looking cute'll do the trick...
She's just an angel
"leave me alone already"
"I'm sleeeeeeepiiiiiiing!!"
Yeah, right.
* Store stuffs: Meet Nathan, as I think he aught to be named:
Nathan was one of our kept-for-snake-food rats in the store along with several other rats. Last week there were only him and two other rats left and since I already introduced myself to him I held him again and he snuggled up in my overall's chest pocket to doze off, pop out and scare/delight costumers and pee in the pocket. ANYWAYS, halfway through the shift a man comes and wants two rats for his snake. The bastard insisted I'd get him the rats even after he saw what I had in my pocket and had to be prized off by the other worker in the store, bless his soul. So Nathan's buddies were taken and my little one, having been in my pocket, was saved.
The name stems from my father's sensitive and tactful (note the sarcasm) comment about the story that I "made Sophie's choice"....now tell me, is that something to tell a gal like me?
Anyways, the day after that I convinced a nice young couple of obvious animal fanatism to take Nathan in as a pet and his life were completely saved ^_^
Another friend who kept me company this week is this little cocktail parakeet:
Luckily, he was considerate enough to not leave any birdly "presents" behind while he stayed where he did. Kind parakeet <3
* The hyena project: He doesn't know what to do with ice XXXD it's not in hus umwelt, the poor baby. he spent the whole hour pacing like he always does with short tiny breaks to check if anything tasty melted off the ice yet and to lick it listlessly for a few minutes. Here's the ice lolly full of goody yum yums for hyenas like fish, whole chicken, canalopes and dates:
Bears go nutty over these lollies but I guess bears live in places much more prone to ice and snow while the currently more desert-inhabiting striped hyena has a problem wrapping his mind around the concept of nibbling and kicking the ice into melting to release the goody yum yum. Oh well, it's a result and it's a great result too IMO, so I'm pleased.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Thursday, June 19, 2008
@_@
Five work days + university + zoo experiment + project + university obligations = no life
However, I had this to cheer me up:
Brand New Monty Python Papperbok by Graham Chapman
rating: 5 of 5 stars
Very silly.
View all my reviews.
However, I had this to cheer me up:
Brand New Monty Python Papperbok by Graham Chapman
My review
rating: 5 of 5 stars
Very silly.
View all my reviews.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Book report
* A friend from uni forwarded my cat survey to his friends and they've been sending me back what is now the bulk of the Israeli voice in my survey. Thank you, Zohar!!
* Finished The Book Thief and here's the review:
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
rating: 5 of 5 stars
When I started reading this book I thought there was too much kitsch in it but then I told myself I've been reading too much documentry history books that human emotions seem like kitsch to me. Also, Zusak's writing swept me like a tidal wave.
This book really has everything; exact history, two sides of a coin, the whole ugly truth, and a boog plot. Sometimes it's got kitsch history moments but this book wouldn't become so glorified and admired by so many people if it hadn't had some pointless kitsch.
It's a wonderful, captivating read and it's written brilliantly, despite its slight amount of kitsch. I suppose saying it's not a human being narrating the book but death makes it some kind of an excuse to kitsch. I guess.
Still, it's a lovely book as is highly recomended!
View all my reviews.
Am now reading Francis Wheen's Karl Marx
* Finished The Book Thief and here's the review:
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
My review
rating: 5 of 5 stars
When I started reading this book I thought there was too much kitsch in it but then I told myself I've been reading too much documentry history books that human emotions seem like kitsch to me. Also, Zusak's writing swept me like a tidal wave.
This book really has everything; exact history, two sides of a coin, the whole ugly truth, and a boog plot. Sometimes it's got kitsch history moments but this book wouldn't become so glorified and admired by so many people if it hadn't had some pointless kitsch.
It's a wonderful, captivating read and it's written brilliantly, despite its slight amount of kitsch. I suppose saying it's not a human being narrating the book but death makes it some kind of an excuse to kitsch. I guess.
Still, it's a lovely book as is highly recomended!
View all my reviews.
Am now reading Francis Wheen's Karl Marx
Friday, June 13, 2008
Happiness is....
1. A cocktail parakeet on my shoulder, playing with my earring and putting its tiny face into my curls' loops.
2. Fluffing up a bunny and having a child-costumer come up to me asking if they can hold it and to quickly and sternly answer "No".
3. Doing the same to an annoying screeching teenager girl, who has been running around the store aimlessly babbeling nonsense and responding to animals' natural behavior like only stupid teenaged girls can react when they think being disgusted and amused by whatever looks odd to them is the right and feminine thing to do, and is now standing by the bunny pen with a large sign on it saying 'Do Not Touch the Animals' asking if she can pet the bunny.
4. Fondling a rat who, after a long while of sniffing around my hands and shirt, curls up in my palms and goes to sleep.
Did I tell you I love my job yet?
The hyena project relaxed a bit and now the toy stage is in full force. The bones experiment is done and next week'll be time for the ice lolly test. I enjoyed making the ice lolly (take a small plastic tub, fill it with cut up chicken, sardines, canalopes and dates, fill it with water and put it in the freezer) but I did not enjoy putting it in the freezer. I found a dead sheep there, waiting for consuming; not a pretty sight on the end of a long bunker-like refrigerator, opening a giant bunker-like door and once the clouds of frost dissappear to see the sheep's legs sticking out in odd directions @_@
Anyways! Here are some kitty pictures:
Muh?
You again? What do you want?
The biggest toy bone (the one he did not yet consume, BTW) was also a key interest to the fluffers when I let them sniff it around. Scarlett was the most intersted:
She was trying to get under it for some strange reason...
Sam joined in
But gave up when Scarlett started showing too much interest. He's a gentleman like that; he'll give her whatever she's interested in even if he's playing with it. The only thing he'll take from her is the food bowl come gushy food time...
Hopefull much, ne?
She tried biting it from every direction
She even managed to drag it for a few centimeters...
Today I was in the zoology garden doing the last round of the bones test and here are pictures!!
This is the predator's compound's yard. Mostly the wolves are in it but the hyena gets to go there once in a while
This is the hyena in one part of his cage. The other part is of equal size on the other side of the wall.
Shiran, who came up with me onto the roof of the wolves & heyna side of the compound, looking glum. I had to take someone up there with me due to security orders...
More of the hyena
Standing in his water pool, he likes sitting there, scratching himself or drinking the water while cooling on them.
Bones round I. Note the big yellowish bone is the same one Scarlett tried having a go at. Note the changes a hyena can do...
And that's it for today, I'll bring pictures of the ice lolly round as well ^_^
2. Fluffing up a bunny and having a child-costumer come up to me asking if they can hold it and to quickly and sternly answer "No".
3. Doing the same to an annoying screeching teenager girl, who has been running around the store aimlessly babbeling nonsense and responding to animals' natural behavior like only stupid teenaged girls can react when they think being disgusted and amused by whatever looks odd to them is the right and feminine thing to do, and is now standing by the bunny pen with a large sign on it saying 'Do Not Touch the Animals' asking if she can pet the bunny.
4. Fondling a rat who, after a long while of sniffing around my hands and shirt, curls up in my palms and goes to sleep.
Did I tell you I love my job yet?
The hyena project relaxed a bit and now the toy stage is in full force. The bones experiment is done and next week'll be time for the ice lolly test. I enjoyed making the ice lolly (take a small plastic tub, fill it with cut up chicken, sardines, canalopes and dates, fill it with water and put it in the freezer) but I did not enjoy putting it in the freezer. I found a dead sheep there, waiting for consuming; not a pretty sight on the end of a long bunker-like refrigerator, opening a giant bunker-like door and once the clouds of frost dissappear to see the sheep's legs sticking out in odd directions @_@
Anyways! Here are some kitty pictures:
Muh?
You again? What do you want?
The biggest toy bone (the one he did not yet consume, BTW) was also a key interest to the fluffers when I let them sniff it around. Scarlett was the most intersted:
She was trying to get under it for some strange reason...
Sam joined in
But gave up when Scarlett started showing too much interest. He's a gentleman like that; he'll give her whatever she's interested in even if he's playing with it. The only thing he'll take from her is the food bowl come gushy food time...
Hopefull much, ne?
She tried biting it from every direction
She even managed to drag it for a few centimeters...
Today I was in the zoology garden doing the last round of the bones test and here are pictures!!
This is the predator's compound's yard. Mostly the wolves are in it but the hyena gets to go there once in a while
This is the hyena in one part of his cage. The other part is of equal size on the other side of the wall.
Shiran, who came up with me onto the roof of the wolves & heyna side of the compound, looking glum. I had to take someone up there with me due to security orders...
More of the hyena
Standing in his water pool, he likes sitting there, scratching himself or drinking the water while cooling on them.
Bones round I. Note the big yellowish bone is the same one Scarlett tried having a go at. Note the changes a hyena can do...
And that's it for today, I'll bring pictures of the ice lolly round as well ^_^
Labels:
hyena project,
picture post,
Sam,
scarlett,
The university gang,
university,
work
Monday, June 9, 2008
Yup yup
* The cat handling survey's on the roll!! If you wish to participate (which means you have a cat who's willing to be picked up or you frequently meet a cat who does so - like in a family's/friend's house) please email: CatSurvey@windowslive.com with a headline "bloggish" Thank you!
* The hyena thing is semi-solved, that is, if the hyena won't destroy all the bones we brought him too fast....
* Finished reading A Historical Achievement and its Evolution (BTW, they didn't mis-use the term 'evolution 8D) and here's the newly-made Goodreads review-form thingie:
A Historical Achievement and its Evolution by Abigale Paz-Yeshaiyahu
rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a gathering of many articles dealing with the kibbutz and moshav movements, the political and general history of the two.
A promising book, it managed to be a vewry good and educating book covering history well until it reached topics beyond that of WW2 and beyond. Until then it was extensive, well written, easy to read history and a bit of philosophy. Everything beyond the second world war and the foundation of Israel (including the big Stalin-good-or-bad crisis in the kibbutz movement!) was neglected. The articles became vague and overly sociologistic-politic-centered. Besides one purely economic article about the crumbling of the lesser-successful kibbuts during the 80s, and an article about Ben Gurion's efforts to create education settlements for the new arrivals as Israel was founded, there was nothing historical about anything happening in Israel beyond 1939.
Big, big, GIANT cock-up and a huge mistake in a book which claims to cover the kibbutz and moshav movements from 1900 to 1990.
View all my reviews.
Am now reading: The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
* I started putting some old anime-fandom-era treasures up to sale on Ebay and so far the one product I put on is getting quarrled over by two people, good good ^_^
* The hyena thing is semi-solved, that is, if the hyena won't destroy all the bones we brought him too fast....
* Finished reading A Historical Achievement and its Evolution (BTW, they didn't mis-use the term 'evolution 8D) and here's the newly-made Goodreads review-form thingie:
A Historical Achievement and its Evolution by Abigale Paz-Yeshaiyahu
My review
rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a gathering of many articles dealing with the kibbutz and moshav movements, the political and general history of the two.
A promising book, it managed to be a vewry good and educating book covering history well until it reached topics beyond that of WW2 and beyond. Until then it was extensive, well written, easy to read history and a bit of philosophy. Everything beyond the second world war and the foundation of Israel (including the big Stalin-good-or-bad crisis in the kibbutz movement!) was neglected. The articles became vague and overly sociologistic-politic-centered. Besides one purely economic article about the crumbling of the lesser-successful kibbuts during the 80s, and an article about Ben Gurion's efforts to create education settlements for the new arrivals as Israel was founded, there was nothing historical about anything happening in Israel beyond 1939.
Big, big, GIANT cock-up and a huge mistake in a book which claims to cover the kibbutz and moshav movements from 1900 to 1990.
View all my reviews.
Am now reading: The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
* I started putting some old anime-fandom-era treasures up to sale on Ebay and so far the one product I put on is getting quarrled over by two people, good good ^_^
Friday, June 6, 2008
*waves smoke away*
I got a job! I'm now a proud (and happy) worker in a PET SHOP in a neighboring city's mall. Yeah, Couldn't have thought of a better part-time job for me than that, huh? I'M SO HAPPY!! A hissing cockroach walked on me and a tarantula walked on me and a leopard gecko bit me and a budgy walked on me and an ara parrot missed pooping on me and rats smelled me and a siberean hamster yelled at me and *can go on forever* fun fun!!
On a different note; the hyena experiment is under a bit of problems. Here's a short video you can sort of make out my mood from:
Goodnight and happy D-Day anniversary.
On a different note; the hyena experiment is under a bit of problems. Here's a short video you can sort of make out my mood from:
Goodnight and happy D-Day anniversary.
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