Interestingly, eating cute critters (and their offspring) is the topic of the current post on http://mountaindweller.com/. (It's lambing season in the low Alps.)
Excellent! We will need surplus populations to colonize future conquests! And in the meantime, you can make a fortune off the Chinese. Heh, heh, heh, our plan to overrun them is working out perfectly!
It could. According to the BBC, in China, hamster prices are soaring and demand is unabated - since it's the year of the rat. Apparently the Chinese find the hamster more appealing than its larger, long-tailed cousin. And who would disagree? And I'm certain hamsters and sheep play well together.
left us speechless, didn't he?
ReplyDeleteDG
You found Sid....you can keep him.
ReplyDeleteI just don't think I could eat a penguin egg . . .
ReplyDeleteInterestingly, eating cute critters (and their offspring) is the topic of the current post on http://mountaindweller.com/. (It's lambing season in the low Alps.)
ReplyDeleteI don't think we can have lambs in the city limits . . . and I'm not sure how we would incorporate an Alps feature into the yard . . .
ReplyDeleteGoats???
ReplyDeleteI'm going to start a working hamster ranch.
ReplyDeleteExcellent! We will need surplus populations to colonize future conquests! And in the meantime, you can make a fortune off the Chinese. Heh, heh, heh, our plan to overrun them is working out perfectly!
ReplyDeleteCrap... I've had this window open so long I forgot what I was going to say.
ReplyDeleteA hamster ranch... interesting. Do you think direct marketing would work for that too?
ReplyDeleteIt could. According to the BBC, in China, hamster prices are soaring and demand is unabated - since it's the year of the rat. Apparently the Chinese find the hamster more appealing than its larger, long-tailed cousin. And who would disagree? And I'm certain hamsters and sheep play well together.
ReplyDelete