Archive for September, 2011

  • Doggies for the win! Pups and critters

    3

    I originally penned this story for Maria who’s just been through an operation  (just rest up, M!) and thought you might get a chuckle from it as well.

    We were overseas recently. And discovered, upon returning, that life at the tropics doesn’t stand still. Due to our diligent pre-trip spraying, we didn’t get the Invasion of the Ants that we so feared, but we did get a mini-infestation of cockroaches that has now sent the kids into a regular cleaning frenzy (can’t be all that bad then, can it?), a spider the size of your fist (and they bite too, as J can attest), as well as two other critters.

    The first was a juvenile spitting cobra. Yeah, you know those snakes you see on National Geographic, where the camera is up close and waving around, and this snake rears up and shoots venom and it smears on the camera lens? Yeah, one of them. We found it in the pantry. They are endemic to this region and can just as easily be found in urban areas as forested ones. (It doesn’t help that our house sits in a combination of the two.)

    The poor thing was just looking for a place to call home but we didn’t have a choice. At first we looked around for something to trap it in but we barely had two long sticks! How the hell could we manoeuvre it into a jar or something? Where’s that little noose on a long stick thing when you need it? In the end, we had to kill it and did so with regret. The juveniles are supposed to be more aggressive than the adult cobras, but this one was so desperate to just get away and only got angry when J pinned it against the wall with one end of the broomstick. You would have lost your temper before it did.

    Meanwhile, the dogs were going berserk on the other side of the baby gate to the kitchen. They couldn’t see what was going on but they knew that Something Bad was in the pantry and were rearing to have a go at it. They didn’t get the chance. J had brought in Squeak to help him out but all Squeak wanted to do was get out and go back to lazing on top of the scratch post. (This is not the first of Squeak’s iniquities.) J finally despatched the snake, we toasted it that night for the forbearing animal with unfortunate choices that it was and moved on.

    But then, a couple of days later, Sausage started sniffing around the library like a bloodhound, culminating in one solid hour barking at the shoe cabinet. I didn’t think it was another snake, but I did think it was either one of those large-arsed spiders again or a cockroach. The kids and I got ready. Various insect sprays. Check. Torch. Check. Broom. Check. Dustpan. Check. A long stick. Check.

    I took the torch and shone it around and between spaces. Didn’t see a thing. But Sausage was still barking like mad. The Wast brought Fluff and Squeak into the room to help out Sausage but they looked as if they didn’t know what was going on. No sniffs, no curiosity. Nothing. So I tried moving the cabinet a little, shifting one side, to give us more working room. Little Dinosaur and I saw a flash of grey-brown and a long tail before we all ran screaming from the room. (I’m not ashamed to admit that.)

    We regrouped in the living room. “Right,” I said, “it looks like we’ve got ourselves a rat.” Meanwhile, Sausage was still barking around the cabinet because she didn’t see the rat take off for one of the bookshelves. “Let’s go get some rat poison.”

    We piled into the car, drove to the nearest supermarket, purchased some poison and headed back. Meanwhile, from Sausage’s investigations, we gathered that the rat was penned up around a particular bookshelf. The kids hightailed it upstairs to their room but I had my working machines in the library, so I didn’t have a choice. I did put some shoes on though.

    When we went to pick up J from the bus-stop a couple of hours later, I thought we had a plan all figured out. We’d pack up the cats and dogs for the night, put out some poison, then collect it (and, hopefully, a dead rat) up the next morning before letting our pets out again.

    It wasn’t to be. While we were gone, Rat obviously decided to head for somewhere safer. She must have darted to another bookshelf but, unfortunately for her, Sausage saw her this time. Our dog pawed an entire bottom shelf of books out of the way and Rat must have panicked.

    Instead of heading back to the sanctuary of the shoe cabinet, she must have decided to chance it in the rest of the house. Under she went, below the library baby gate, and that would have stopped Sausage cold. However, what Rat wasn’t to know was that Cookie was on the other side of the gate.

    Now, while Sausage is fast, Cookie is faster. Our smaller mini bully loves to run, looks like she’s half-whippet and is able to catch arrogant birds in mid-air on take-off from our front garden. Rat didn’t stand a chance.

    When we came home from the bus stop, we found a dead rat in the dining room with its throat crushed, but otherwise intact. I pieced the rest together from the evidence available. Lowest bookshelf in a mess with network switch unplugged. Squeak still in the middle of the library, having a nap. (Fluff had buggered off back upstairs, the lazy sod.) Baby gate moved out of position but still holding. (Sausage must have slammed into it, chasing Rat.) Said dead Rat. Cookie outside sunning herself by the koi pond.

    We were never so proud of our dogs than at that moment. They may not be what people think of when they think of working dogs but it looks like they’re our working dogs, perfect for our current environment. They got extra treats that night and the cats got a lecture on the responsibilities of being part of the household…but I don’t think it took.

    Have a good weekend and I’ll catch you next week.

  • The problem with multiple pen-names

    4

    That’s my issue of the week. As well as this name (KS Augustin, just to remind you!), I’m just about to start an urban fantasy series under another name of Cara d’Bastian.

    At first, the decision seemed very simple. Two different genres, two different pen-names. Augustin sometimes writes erotic stuff and mostly sf, d’Bastian keeps it fantasy and sweet.

    The problem, however, is how to cross-pollinate between the two. Now, I’m not sure I want d’Bastian readers to follow me back to Augustin (especially as the UF books can be read by my kids with my full blessing, whereas some of my Augustin books…ahem, not so much). On the other hand, being a greedy little writer, I’d like some of my Augustin readers to try my d’Bastian books.

    I have no answers here, I’m just thinking it through on this blog. Maybe I can put a link here somewhere to d’Bastian? Would that work? I’ll try to get that up next week while I continue thinking.

  • Can someone please explain banks to me?

    1

    I had the dubious pleasure of opening a new bank account recently and it made me wonder why we bother to stick with banks? I swear, if someone was to invent an alternative to banks, I’d be there like a shot.

    I’m not talking about investment banks, those Ponzi-scheming, blood-sucking, Crown-of-Thorns starfish devouring institutes of everything in their paths. Ahem. I’m talking about your normal, run-of-the-mill banks that, now that I think of it, are little better.
    Think about it. You’re giving the bank YOUR hard earned money. And the bank will be using YOUR money to make money that they supposedly survive on. Remember when banks were like that? But now….

    You want the flexibility of a daily working account? Well, you ain’t going to get a cent in interest from any money there. And if you underestimate your expenses one day and overdraw your account, the charges rack up at an alarming rate.

    You want something with some interest? After all, you should get something back from essentially giving your money to an alien concern that may or may not guarantee your cash deposit, right? Sure, you can have some interest, but the bank won’t make it easy for you. You can’t have a cheque book or ATM card associated with YOUR money. You have to pay for any over-the-counter transactions associated with YOUR money. You have to maintain a minimum balance of YOUR money.

    As the conditions of the accounts available were explained to me, you can probably guess that I was getting more and more unhappy. You can bet that if I had a more client-friendly place like a credit union available, I wouldn’t have given the bank a second glance, but I didn’t have a choice.

    I hate the way banks pour on the charges for each thing you want to do with your own money. I hate the way banks give exchange rates that are worse than you can get from a High Street money-changing booth. I hate the way banks expect to make many percentage points of profit between the paltry rate you wrangle out of them and the rate at which they loan out your money. And I hate the fee they charge every month to keep your money in their virtual building. It’s obviously not good enough to make money the regular banking way. Oh no, they have to rub salt into the paper cut by then taking away your money whether you’re using it (transaction charges) or not (account-keeping charges).

    Anyway, that’s my weekly rant. The account was set up, the service exactly as I was expecting (I was dressed casually), but I do not count myself as a happy customer. If anyone is thinking of setting up alternative banking options, please let the world know. It’ll be more popular than inventing a new mousetrap.

  • Of fish and exotic meats

    3

    As a lacksadaisical aquarist, I made a terrible mistake recently. I bought some new fish but didn’t quarantine them and ended up killing four out of five of my very big, very graceful angelfish when I introduced the newcomers to the tank. All that was left was one lone angelfish, the newcomers also having succumbed to stress and who knows what else, as well as passing their malaise to a small school of tetras. Sigh. Expensive lesson well learnt.

    This gave me a problem. I have an automatic fish feeder and, with only one fish left, the feeder was dumping way too much food in the tank. I needed more fish, I told J. But not from Teh Evil Aquarium Supplies. I’d have to scout farther afield. I decided to go to Gelang Patah.

    Gelang Patah is a small town of around 20,000 inhabitants, essentially forgotten by time. I can say this because, four years ago when we first clapped eyes on it, we noticed that the curbs were crumbling, the buildings were unpainted, and trash littered every centimetre of open ground. We couldn’t figure it out because GP is very close to the Singaporean border and all the glitz and glamour thereof. If you wanted a contrast of countries, you couldn’t do better than, say, Jurong and Gelang Patah.

    GP has improved since then. With the influx of Singaporeans looking for cheaper housing on the other side of the border, it didn’t have a choice, but progress is slow and there are still some things that are startling.

    Anyway, getting back to the story, I bundled the kids in the car and we went exploring to GP. And we found it hard to find a spot to park (most of the main car-park being occupied by empty stalls waiting for sunset and buka puasa (end of the day’s fasting for Ramadan) to start selling food) so we parked behind a busy row of shops (in front of a much less busy row of shops). After purchasing some beautiful gourami, I decided to stop at a shop that advertised frozen meat in blocks. The sign itself was stark and so was the shop. The floor was unfinished bare concrete and half a dozen chest freezers lined one badly painted wall. One young Malay woman was present, loading one kilogram sausages of chicken mince into one of the chest freezers. There was no air-conditioning, only two fans swirling in the increasingly humid heat of mid-morning.

    The whole place, with a couple of shelves holding some groceries with faded labels, reminded me of nothing more than a big ole fish bait shop in Queensland, Australia. If you’ve ever been driving north of Brisbane, up Bundaberg way and beyond, you’ll know what I mean.

    The young woman seemed content to parcel chicken mince into a freezer and I was about to leave when a tacked-up sign in plastic against one of the walls caught my eye.

    Burger Arnab – RM8.00

    “Burger arnab?” I repeated in disbelief. “That’s rabbit.”

    The young Malay woman turned to me. “Yes,” she replied. “We have rabbit.”

    “May I see it?” I asked.

    She smiled and opened one of those old freezers. And there, stalwart reader, I found more than just rabbit burgers. I also found ostrich burgers and local deer meat (rusa) burgers.

    Ostrich! Local venison! Rabbit! All Johor produce (made up in Kulai) and distributed — not to one of the snazzy supermarkets that have sprung up like weeds, but — to a basic, hidden away shop in a small town that barely looks as if it can support any kind of exotic business whatsoever.

    Of course I had to buy one pack of each and we tried the ostrich and venison burgers for breakfast the next morning. They were nicely seasoned and delicious. I’ll be going back and hunting through the freezers of that shop with a little more diligence next time. And the family can enjoy ostrich and deer burgers for breakfast every now and then. (I’m waiting until J’s at work one day before trying the rabbit. He has some aversion to eating past domestic pets, I think.)

    Just goes to show you never know what you’ll come across unless you try exploring a little.

  • At the coal-face with the children

    0

    As you know, stalwart reader, I’m homeschooling the kids. Part of their curriculum includes the use of technology and the concept of blogging. For their very first blog, I asked the kids to write a short post on anything that took their fancy. This is Little Dinosaur’s 9yo effort. After she came up with a title, being about herself (yes, she’s a vain little thing), she goes on to say:

    I wake up in the morning to eat my breakfast.

    If there is noting to do on my computer then I go up stairs to watch TV[.]

    I watch Animal planet, Mhtbusters [sic] and and TVIQ so that[']s what I watch.

    Okay, we’re working on her punctuation and a bit of her spelling. Ahem. You’ll notice she doesn’t say anything about school though! In any case, here is her 11yo brother’s comment to her post:

    The whole family knows what you are doing. It’s not like we don[']t pay attention.

    They have wonderful arguments and all J and I can do is try to stifle our laughter as we listen to them. Ah, kids. I know I keep threatening to sell them but I think I’ll hang onto them for a little while longer. Hope your weekend is an entertaining and I’ll catch you next week.