Tails from Westley Piddle: Henry ~ Part Three, , from Zozo and Jools at Usual Muttwits

Continuing the saga… click the links to read part one and part two

 

The secret ingredient to KFC Gitorrf! is explaining through a noshful of spicy chicken strips to his bestie is chicken!

Howd’ya mean? Tuffy, the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, is shaking both his head and his butt at the same time to escape from a KFC plastic bag. Half a cardboard box of chips between his chops, chips flying everywhere.

Thems chickens, see, continues GitOrrf! are not lyk thems chickens from Mackers or Greggs, or even thems chickens ’round back in the Star of India bins. Or ’round back of any other bins yu might care to name

Chicken is chicken, mate Tuffy pronounces plain and simple, Arrrrrgh-urrrrh suddenly choking on chips, chucking his guts out, and quickly snoutzing ’round the chucked-out sludge with extreme interest.

GitOrrf! finishes the strip and goes rooting ’round for another under the back wheel of the bin, using his toes to push away the snowlick.

Nah Tuffy, wot makes KFC chicken really KFC chicken is, hold on – finding the soggy remains of a chicken breast is that thems bins ’round back of KFC are easier to snoutz into!

Tuffy thinks this is nonsense corss. He wretches out the chips and snoutz ’round abouts for some real nosh to sink his teeth into.

A one-eyed scratch sits atop the bins watching proceedings malevolently.

Do yu know wot a chicken is, GitOrrf!?

No. Yuz?

No

And they happily continue noshing their way through KFC’s bins ’round back. The scratch keeps its one unblinking eyeball upon thems at all times.



Dissatisfied with his paltry dinner, which is actually his third dinner of the day, Tuffy turns on the scratch got a problem whiskers?

The scratch just watches.

Get down ‘ere and I’ll teach yuz all about problems

Don’t bother mate GitOrrf!’s muffled bark from inside a KFC economy family bucket scratch are daft buggers, they don’t even talk

Right abouts that. Got no intellectuals, not lyk wot we got

But GitOrrf! ain’t really listening, coz he’s doing some sniffy thinking. About Mackers chicken and Mackers burgers topped with cheese and crispy fries and upsize specials and

Chops!

Sniffy thinking about Mackers leads Gitorrf! to thinking abouts Henry. That’s coz Henry appreciates Mackers more than KFC. And, since Henry trotted off for his chop, he ain’t seen him ’round abouts for a number of squirtz. Too many squirtz to count.

Chops!

Thing about fourlegs, they think only in the heres and nows – all time punctuated by squirtz.

And, still thinking about Henry, he decides to go round and bang snoutz with him and check up on the chops status. Who knows, Henry might still have one or two left over. Probably totally not, but worth a quick trot ’round his manor.

Wot chops? Sez Tuffy

See yuz, Tuffy, me old bin mate GitOrrf! trots off in haste.


Taking all the usual precautions, Gitorrf! approaches the hedge slowly, calling Henry’s name to prevent any unnecessary submitting ag on a poor hapless fourlegs. Himself, lyk.

Hellooo, Henry?

He waits and hears a muffled Lemme out, Franks. Lemme out! Lemme out! followed by the heavy pounding of Henry trotting up the garden. The strangest site appears over the hedge looking down at him. Henry’s head in a white plastic feeding bowl, his square black face at the center.

SUBMIT!

GitOrrf! just stands there, lost for barks.

I said sub –

I know, I know mate….and I will, I mean, I submit, but –

Franks sez I gotta wear this collar

Uh-huh, but –

Franks sez it will stop me chewing at thems orange sniffy plum bobs down the other end

Uh-huh, but –

Franks sez for a few sleeps only, til the orange sniffy pain sto –

BUT WOT ABOUT THE CHOPS, HENRY?

Dunno. I woke up and there was none. Reckons Shadow noshed ’ems

So, no chops?

Nah, no chops



Lying on her rug, Mayumi starts sniffing something really orange and interesting in the bin beneath the kitchen sink. Last evening’s shushi?

Right then, a plan of action is needed. Her recently trimmed toenails making it dog-damned easier to crawl soundlessly into the kitchen for a quick snoutz-snatch-noshing op.

Juma and Daisy are nows chilling on a green sniffy e-bong shared between thems, getting all muttwity to some scritchy scritching sounds from the little box in the corner. This is Mayumi’s chance to put her soundless toenails to good use. And enjoy some good noshing from the bin under the sink.


First, I gotta get out of the living room

“woooooph”” JumaSabah tokes up “huuuuuuh” tokes out. Passing the bong to DaisyZhang, his head falling back and eyeballing the ceiling.

“woooooph-huuuuuuh” DaisyZhang does the same, eyeballs swimming all over the place.

And…now!

Mayumi furtively zig-zags towards the door on folded legs, belly rubbing the carpet. One paw forwards, second paw forwards, pull. And repeat!

“woooooph-huuuuuuh”

“woooooph-huuuuuuh”

One paw forwards, second paw forwards, pull. And repeat! Slowly, slowly, she drags herself out the door and into the hallway, unseen, unheard.

“nonsense,nonsense,nonsense” JumaSabah is scritching more garbled nonsense than usual.

“nonsense,andmorenonsense” DaisyZhang scritches back with a silly giggle.

Mayumi knows they will eventually stop off scritching and start on thumpity thumpity thumping. Thanks to the green sniffy bong.

Right then she considers the kitchen door ajar, silently slipping through.



Next! standing before the sink the hardest part is yet to come.

She’s often eyeballed DaisyZhang pressing open the door beneath the sink with her handpaw. Wotz so hard about that!

Here goes standing on her back paws she throws her front paws at the door. Nothing happens.

I need a run at it and she runs at it, jumping up and pressing with her front paws on the right spot. The door springs open, releasing wonderful orange-sniffy colours from the kitchen bin.

“woooooph-huuuuuuh”

“woooooph-huuuuuuh”

Green-sniffy bong now mixing with orange-snifz of tuna fish from the bin under the sink.

Only want thems noshy legless bits from top of the bin, that’s all she jumps up again and pulls at the bin.

CRASH!

Ay-yaaa!

Bin topples out, a trashy wave spreads across the kitchen floor, Mayumi’s paws deep into it.

Tuna! and she’s on it in a flash, noshing down as fast as her little snoutz can ferret it out.

“who’sethere?” JumaSabah is hanging onto the kitchen doorframe, big eyeballs swimming all abouts.

Fast as she can, Mayumi is noshing up the tuna and anything else within biting range before being swept off her paws and carried out the backdoor.

“we’revegans,notanimals” JumaSabah kicks open the door and chucks Mayumi into the night “andstayout!”

I will, too she barks at the door. A Japanese Spitz in snowlick being as right comfy as flaplegs on the Thameslick.

She lazily noshes up the last flakes of tuna stuck between her paws.

Next thing is to find a way out of the garden and escape thems two sniffy muttweets, for-eever!

Snowlick floats down from the sky, evaporating fast on her black button snout.




At nighttime, when no one is throwing the bright hot ball into the sky and most hindlegs lyk to curl up asleep, most fourlegs – on the other paw – lyk to get out and kick off some action. Henry’s no different. Sitting in his favorite chair, waiting for Franks and Cheryl to sleep. Earflaps open and listening intently for thems to fall into chasing dreams with thems slow and regular heartbeats.

All quiet!

Surprisingly stealthy for a brute his size, he slips off his favorite chair and pads towards the kitchen. Passing Cheryl’s favorite chair of her own he considers jumping up onto it and squishing her cushions. He knows she don’t lyk him on her chair but, Henry owns this houseden and he considers it his dog-damned right to park his big butt on any bit of furniture he so pleases. Tonight there’s no time for parking big butts. He has more pressing concerns.

Gotta get this thing off me he paws at the large plastic collar ’round his neck can’t get at any of me essentials


Important Henry can get at his essentials, coz a day without plumb-licking is a day sadly wasted. Time don’t mean a thing to him, o’ corss, but the joy of grooming essentials is a pleasure missed when not attended to on a regular basis. Dog-damn it! Almost as bad as going without a squirt.

In the kitchen is just the thing to help him get back to some well-needed plum bob grooming action.

Henry snoutz open the door.

Just a touch as it swings open and nudges the fridge.

Clunk!

Head up, earflaps pushing forward, holding breath and straining to snifz any movement from the companions upstairs. Not a sausage.

He makes his way towards the backdoor and the scratchflap.

The scratchflap is the one part of the houseden that Henry wants nothing to do with, usually. Don’t even want to snifz it. That’s because, beforenows, the scratch that made regular use of it was Henry’s biggest pain in the butt. But the scratch, called Tosca – though why any hindlegs would bother calling a scratch anything other than scratch – is now no more. The scratch’s disappearance woz absolutely nothing to do with Henry.

First, the scratch was never fed: his food bowl always empty shortly after Franks filled it. Second, the scratch suffered the frights: constantly clinging and hissing from the curtains. Third and fatally: the scratch suffered odd compound fractures to its little body due to unknown compressive force. Scratch was gone for good after that.

Weren’t me

Anyways, quietly approaching the scratchflap, Henry is ready to put his cunning plan into action. The scratchflap is a touch bigger than his head but it’s a whole lot smaller than the dog-damn collar wotz ’round it. Kitchen table is in the way, sort of, but he’ll compensate for that. Lining up earflaps with scratchflap the other side of the kitchen, Henry charges.

CRASHHHH!

“wha’sgoingondownthere!” Franks footpaws are thumping down the stairs “Henry?Henry?”

Franks switches on the light. Kitchen table has collapsed, one leg missing, breakfast items – set up so nicely by Cheryl before retiring to bed – are all over. Sitting with his big ass on the tablecloth is Henry, one back leg cocked up in the air, happily applying some well-awaited licking action to his essentials, plastic collar in pieces all about him. He looks up from re-acquainted plum bobs.

Wot?

*

Same time tomorrow for Part Four of Henry’s story…

Meanwhile, you can follow Zozo, Jools and the Muttwits crew at their blog, Usual Muttwits or find them on Instagram: @usualmuttwits and Facebook: Usual Muttwits

 

Posted in Dogs | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments

Silver ~ Di #writephoto

This is The Pool of Tears,
Silver tears dropped by moonlight,
Tinged with bronze as a new day dawns.
The rippled sand caresses as it soothes,
Absorbing the pain of her sorrow.

Continue reading at pensitivity101

Posted in photo prompt, Photography, Poetry | Tagged , , | 7 Comments

A Thousand Miles of History XXXIV: A Lake of Legends…

Next morning we were once again up and away early, though this time our first stop was only a mile or two down the road and still on Bodmin Moor, a place where there must be as many legends as there are people who visit the place. We had come to pay our respects to a lake and to those who, so the stories tell us, reside within its depths.

Dozmary Pool is a small and isolated lake left behind by a glacier. Around it the remains of flint-working have been found, suggesting it was a gathering place for early Man and there are many prehistoric remains in the area. The waters of Dozmary feed nearby Colliford Lake and it is one of the sources of the River Fowey. There are no trees and no shelter, and although the ordinary world measures its depth at around ten feet, it is said to be bottomless. Perhaps it is, for the waters of Dozmary mirror only the vastness of the sky and the light that shimmers and sparkles in its wind-born ripples. You can imagine that at night, here where there are few traces of modern man, the still surface would reflect the stars and would indeed appear to hold infinity within its heart.

Jan Treneagle, an evil man who made a Faustian pact with the devil in exchange for wealth and power in life, is a central character in Cornish folklore. At his death, he was doomed to wander until the end of time, performing impossible tasks. One of those tasks was to empty the bottomless Dozmary Pool using only a holed limpet shell. He escaped from this thankless task and headed instead for Roche Rock. The devil caught up with him there and Treneagle was set to weaving ropes from the sands of Gwenor Cove.

The weaving of ropes has an echo in the legends of the lake too. The Victorian writer and folklorist, Sabine Baring-Gould, wrote of the witch’s ladder, woven of black wool, with white and brown thread and designed to curse an enemy. Aches, pains, boils and ills would be woven into the ladder which was adorned every two inches with the feathers of a cockerel. This would be thrown into Dozmary Pool and the spell-caster would watch the bubbles rise from the bottom of the lake, believing that as they did so, so would their curse be set free to do its abominable work.

One tale says that the name of the lake comes from ‘Dozy Mary’ and refers to the murder of a young woman at the spot. Other and more recent tales tell of the Beast of Bodmin, a strange cat-like animal that terrorised the livestock on the moor as recently as 1978, while an older story tells an even darker tale…

Back o’er the moor, the frozen moor,

Flies the cursed soul to Dozmary Pool.

With gleaming fangs and eyes aflame,

The pack, the pack, the hellish pack

Race by his side, yap, yap, yap –

Race by the side of the soul in pain.

~ The Ballad of the Haunted Moor (full text available online here)

But not all the tales of Bodmin Moor and Dozmary Pool are so dark. The most widely known legend to speak of this lake seldom names it, so that many would not realise that it was from these waters that the legendary King Arthur was given his sword, Excalibur. The legend, as told by Malory, says that when Arthur lay dying after the battle of Camlann, mortally wounded by Mordred, he instructed Bedivere, one of his true knights, to take the Sword of Britain and cast it into the lake whence it came.

Continue reading at France & Vincent

Posted in albion, Ancestors, Ancient sites, archaeology, Avalon, Books, france and vincent, Merlin, Photography, road trip, travel | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Launch Day!

A new book for writers from Esther Chilton…

Esther Chilton's avatarEsther Chilton

It’s here at last – the launch day for Publication Guaranteed (Well, Almost!). Thank you to those of you who pre-ordered the book. I hope you find it useful.

The idea behind the book is to help you become a published writer. I know many of my students have struggled to become published or have had a piece published only to be faced with rejections when they’ve tried again. I know how they feel – I’ve been in that exact position. My book shares the lessons I’ve learned along the way, together with plenty of examples, tips, writing exercises and resources. If you take it step-by-step, you can become a published writer and on a regular basis.

Publication Guaranteed (Well, Almost!) is currently only available as an ebook. A paperback will follow shortly.

To buy the ebook, here are the relevant links for you:

Amazon UK

Amazon US

View original post

Posted in Photography | 4 Comments

Abode ~ Anisha #writephoto

Her mind was spinning,
so fast, like a broken
directionless compass.

She came from a land of hills
from a place so high

Continue reading at Crazy Nerds

Posted in photo prompt, Photography, Poetry | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Black Shade…

*

‘Montgomery’s Men’‘The law of unintended consequences’

The two phrases now ran in Sergeant Patrick’s mind like an insane tape loop…

As they ran, quicker and quicker, going nowhere, getting nowhere, a dark form grew in the corner of Patrick’s room.

Sergeant Patrick did not at first notice it for his lips were now following the lead of his mind, incessantly tripping over the two impossible phrases which merged with a third…

‘We let ‘em go!’… ‘Montgomery’s Men’‘The law of unintended consequences’

Perhaps it was a form of prayer?

‘Montgomery’s Men’‘The law of unintended consequences’‘We let ‘em go!’

Or an invocation?

Eventually, inevitably, Patrick’s mind finally snapped as would the tape of an overused recording and the hum of sound now issuing from his lips became a blurted question, “How come Montgomery has Men?”

Two eyes of flame flickered open in the dark corner of Sergeant Patrick’s room.

Continue reading at France & Vincent

Posted in albion, Books, Don and Wen, france and vincent | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Winged waves ~ Jane Dougherty #writephoto

And we’re off on another WIP. This isn’t an excerpt, just playing around with ideas. For Sue Vincent’s Thursday Photo prompt.

 

All that is left of the great wave is a silver pool and the rippling fishbones of the sea bed. She wades into the silver, sending echoes or ripples rushing across the clouded surface, but no head rises from the shallows, no mouth breaks into a broad smile, no hand reaches out to draw her home. The wave has passed, gone, ebbed, drawing him and hope back down to the deeps. She listens for echoes of his voice, calling, but even though it was not her name he called, that bitter pleasure is denied her.

Continue reading at Jane Dougherty Writes

Posted in photo prompt, Photography | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Right to be Wrong

The headline annoyed me. I barely needed to read the story. In a few words, it not only managed to criticise, but to ridicule the speaker… who had voiced a personal opinion… thus passing judgement for the reader, without allowing them to think for themselves. I could not help wondering exactly how far this kind of covert manipulation and underground censorship of thought might go.

In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus published a book expounding his theory that the sun was at the centre of the universe and the earth moved around it. He was not, by any means, the first to come up with the idea…  Aristarchus of Samos, in the third century BC, had deduced that the earth moved around the sun and not, as had been thought before, the other way around. Copernicus’ theory met with some opposition, but as he died soon after his paper was published, the arguments were comparatively low-key.

File:Nikolaus Kopernikus.jpg

The “Torun portrait” of Nicolaus Copernicus (anonymous, c. 1580)

Galileo Galilei was not so lucky. Having made his own observations and deductions, he championed heliocentrism at an epoch when most still believed the earth to be the centre of Creation. In 1615, the man now hailed as the “father of modern science” was hauled before the Inquisition, probably the highest authority in the Western world at that time. His theory was dismissed as “foolish and absurd”. In other words, he was inventing and promulgating a scenario that went against the ‘facts’ approved by authority. Galileo himself was forced to take back his theories before being placed under house arrest until his death in 1642.

Galileo Galilei, portrait by Domenico Tintoretto

Giordano Bruno had fared even worse at the hands of the Inquisition, but then, his ideas were even more outlandish. He had dared to suggest that not only was the sun the centre of our solar system, but that stars were also suns, at the centre of their own systems… and that some of the planets around them might even be inhabited!

The Catholic Church, which has, throughout her history, often been central in supporting scientific inquiry, was also the most powerful body in Europe at that time. For views that went against those of accepted authority, Bruno was tried by the Inquisition and sentenced to death. On 17 February 1600, his tongue was tied, so that he could speak no “wicked words”, he was stripped naked and hung upside down before being burned at the stake. With the clarity of hindsight and modern science, we can see how completely wrong the censorship of original thought and new ideas can be.

Art has been banned from exhibitions. Voices are silenced. From the hundreds of thousands of books burned under the Nazi regime that were seen as ‘subversive’, to the banning of books in schools and libraries that still goes on today, censorship of both media and ideas has been part of our history since time immemorial. That does not make it right.

These days, the power rests in the hands of governments, both regional and national, in the hands of corporations whose financial impact on economies may influence governments, and more recently, in the hands of those who regulate social media.

Many countries simply do not allow residents access to some of the giant social media platforms. Others demand that certain aspects and subjects are taboo and anyone breaching these restrictions may find their contributions removed or their accounts blocked. I recall having one of my accounts suspended for posting ‘obscene content’… which was a painting by one of the Old Masters that happened to show a bare-breasted goddess.

File:Rubens - Judgement of Paris.jpg

Obscene? The Judgement of Paris by Reubens. The National Gallery.

Misrepresentation and the massaging of facts are underhand methods of censorship. Give people only the part of the truth you want them to see… and present it convincingly as the whole truth, and the likelihood is that the vast majority will accept it. Because it is, after all, true…

Another means of censoring unwanted ideas is to simply cover them in ridicule. Once an idea is labelled as ‘lunatic fringe’, ‘pseudo-science’ or ‘conspiracy theory’, few are prepared to stand up and express their belief for fear of being themselves discredited. Now, there are a lot of strange ideas out there… as strange, perhaps, as Bruno’s speculation that there might be inhabited planets, or that stars could be other suns… or the dreadful idea that the earth is not the centre of Creation! Some of the ideas now wandering around the internet seem downright odd, some I personally find laughable… others I will consider. Maybe research the background myself… think it through …and make up my own mind. To me, that is the beauty of the web of information that is at our fingertips… we can, if we choose, access theological, philosophical and scientific debates, compare historical documents, learned papers and mainstream information. We do not have to accept anything that we are told. Nor should we.

File:Relief Bruno Campo dei Fiori n1.jpg

The trial of Giordano Bruno by the Roman Inquisition. Bronze relief by Ettore Ferrari

Recently, there has been a move to apply more censorship to social media. I would uphold the idea of blocking content that incites hatred or violence, or encourages any kind of abusive or destructive behaviour. I can understand the reasoning behind closing the doors to the more dangerous misinformation, especially where health, for instance, is concerned.  But I cannot agree with the censorship of content that simply expresses a personal opinion… no matter how weird and wonderful it might seem. That is the thin end of a wedge that could do untold damage to our freedom and ability to think for ourselves.

Almost all leaps in human understanding have begun with ideas that might have been seen as subversive in their time, challenging accepted beliefs and such facts as were available. It is only from those individuals who are willing to stand up and suggest a new way of thinking that our collective understanding of our world will grow.

We have the ability to accept or dismiss, to swallow an idea whole or use our own common sense and discernment to think things through and reach our own conclusions. We have an incredible amount of information now available to us… and we should have the right to think for ourselves.

‘Facts’ only represent the current state of our knowledge. They change as we learn. Many ideas that would, today, be firmly thrust into the realm of the lunatic fringe… like Bruno’s theories… may well turn out to be nearer the truth than we could have imagined. Then those same ideas attain respectability and we call them ‘history’.

Posted in Life | Tagged , , , , , | 31 Comments

Lost in Thought ~ Aseem Rastogi #writephoto

He was cranky hearing the prolix speeches and

decided that he needed to spend some time at the

beach where he saw a ball of fire in the sky.

Reblogged from Aseem Rastogi at Transition of Thoughts

Posted in photo prompt, Photography | Leave a comment

Unseen #midnighthaiku

Unseen, unnoticed

Beauty grows in the shadows

Perfect potential

There are flowers, both wild and cultivated, in abundance. There has been plenty of rain and an abundance of sun. The purple loosestrife, always covered in bees of all varieties, is in bloom. There are barely any bees to be seen… apart from the odd bumblebee and the two tiny bees that attached themselves to my sleeve today.

With the virus restrictions, I haven’t been able to get around as much as usual, but the hedgerows and garden have always been the place to watch butterflies…there is no need to go far.  If the roses, pinks and wildflowers do not call them, the butterflies will always cover the buddleia bushes and they are in full blook. I have spent a lot of time with camera poised, but apart from a cloud of cabbage whites, not one butterfly have I seen. I find that bizarre and rather worrying.

A 2015 survey of British butterflies suggested there had already been “76% of the UK’s resident and regular migrant butterfly species declined in either abundance or occurrence (or both) over the past four decades”. You would have thought that perhaps the reduced vehicle pollution  and clearer air would have meant a good year for bees and butterflies, but at least on what I have seen so far, that does not seem to be the case.

I just hope the neat rows of eggs in the Acer belong to a butterfly.

 

Posted in Photography, Poetry | Tagged , , , , | 17 Comments