Monday, June 20, 2011

Once upon a time it was quiet here

Monday, June 20, 2011

I’m pretty sure half dozen critters from the 1980s television series “Fables of the Green Forest” just moved into my neck of the woods.

Yes folks I’ve got “Chatterer Squirrel,” “Paddy Beaver,” “Grandpa Frog,” “Uncle Billy Mouse,” “Jimmy Skunk”, and “Bobby Raccoon” living here along with a handful of new recruits—“Chip Chipmunk,” “Morris Crow,” “Mervin Magpie,” and “Suzie Starling.”

Bestselling author and humorist, David Sedaris should come over and take notes. Undoubtedly he could find enough chaos in this caper-filled neighborhood to write his next book. Herein lie the goodies for a sequel to “Chipmunk Seeks Squirrel.”

When I was growing up, I wanted to be an animal vet and I practiced my budding career on the unfortunate birds that flew into our living room window.

There I was pumping those little wings and blowing puffs of air into the bird’s little lungs. What was I thinking?

At the very least, if I couldn’t be a vet I wanted to have a big farm where I could take in disadvantaged critters and give them a place to live out their days.

I should be careful what I wish for.

“Sammy Blue Jay,” the yappy one around here, is the biggest tattletale in the bunch. Never mind that I just saw him put the run on the chipmunk and steal all the dried bread crumbs out of the bird feeder.

The canine capers have but to put one paw out on the front step in the morning and the Blue Jay is announcing to anything within earshot, the dogs’ arrival on the outdoor scene.

And it was Mr. Blue Jay who caught me poking in a piece of chocolate as I crossed the yard from my car.

“Cheater, cheater!” was all I heard as the bird’s beak flapped and the chocolate touched my lips. The Blue Jay’s fondness for acorns may indeed be credited with spreading oak trees after the last glacial period, but he’s a snitch just the same.

Now, if I could just train the raucous fowl to publicize the arrival of “Jimmy Skunk” to the neighborhood I wouldn’t have to find out “Stinky” was here by alternative—i.e. catching a whiff of my dog after he’s already made it past me and into the house.

Alas, the chipmunk duo lives on borrowed time in my neck of the woods, given that two cats patrol the farmyard. I’m not sure why the cute little rodents have defected from the safety of the chipmunk herd that resides at the peanut farm next door, but I’m most pleased to have their company.

I am endlessly fascinated with the chipmunk comedy circus. Aptly named “Chip” and “Dale,” they get along fine as long as they aren't within 10 feet of each other during the nut haul. Otherwise it's an end over end fight for status—sort of like the scraps my brother and I had when we were young.

And the only way to tell one chipmunk gender from the other is by their investment management skills.

“Dale” cracks the peanut shells right on the spot and pouches the contents, sometimes stuffing in ten or more morsels of peanut. “Chip” just pokes three whole shells in his jowls and runs off.

Only a female chipmunk would take the time to break things down into an organized and manageable system.

And when I cry a river over the cost of peanuts, I must remember to weigh the price against when I lived in B.C., where chipmunks preferred canned oysters and M&M candies.

My nemesis is “Paddy Beaver.” I long for his life span to get shorter every time I see another tree missing along the bank across the creek.

His nocturnal nature is going to get him in trouble if my new night vision goggles arrive on time. There I’ll be, hiding behind the scrub maples at 2 a.m. with a golf club and a gunnysack full of rocks.

And then there’s the “SQUIRREL!!”—the only word my dog “Cash” understands. Utter the eight-letter declaration and like a bat straight out of the “Meatloaf” song, both canine capers are all over the situation.

But “Chatterer” Squirrel is no dummy and because of the wit involved, I believe we are dealing with a female. She is the best dog babysitter I’ve ever had.

“SQUIRREL!” and the dogs take their stations at the bottom of the tree for hours waiting for her to come down. Meanwhile she’s skipping around the evergreen canopy shopping for pinecones.

At least that’s how relatively simple life was around here until the other day when I opened the porch door and was met by Murphy’s Law, as five squirrels—seemingly flung from slingshots—seized the opportunity and made a mad dash for the safety of the basement, followed by two blaring dogs.

I could just see the news headline “Five squirrels fend off dogs only to get their tails tangled together and require surgical intervention to get them apart.”

Like I said before, I need a holiday.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Alert! Administer chocolate immediately

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

It was the stupidest bet I’ve ever made—just plain stupid.

May 31st a crew of us from work had nothing better to do during the noon hour than invent a contest that would have each of us give up something for 30 days.

I plumped up my feathers and said, “I’ll give up eating chocolate.”

I’m not even sure what the winner gets. All I know is that besides the five bucks I forked out to be in the stupid contest, I’ve already had to cough up two penalty payments.

And the farm rooster hadn’t even crowed yet when I mindlessly shoved two homemade chocolate brownies in my face and washed them down with “Caldwell Coffee” before I realized I’d cheated.

And it was 7 a.m. on June 1st—Day One.

I’m about to close the door on Day Eight and my willpower has already had to be duct-taped to the wall three times to keep it together.

It would appear that I have an infatuation with chocolate or perhaps I’m in denial and I’m addicted.

I’ve come to the sobering conclusion that the next 22 days are going to be the bane of my existence.

And I may be going crazy but I think “Willie Wonka’s Chocolate Factory” has stepped off the big screen and into my shadow as part of an elaborate Universal plot to sabotage the single greatest challenge of my entire life.

By comparison, I quit drinking alcohol three and half years ago. I drank a lot before that—more than anyone who knows me might have realized—but choosing to quit was by far easier for me than laying a wager that I could give up chocolate for a month.

“That was the stupidest bet I’ve ever made—just plain stupid,” is my new mantra as I jump up and down in tantrum fits, kicking and screaming against the insanity of it all.

So as one can imagine, chocolate is on my mind a lot these days. And how many sleeps is there until I can sink my teeth into the solid chocolate bunny from Easter that I found still untouched in the kitchen cupboard when I was spring cleaning this weekend?

Again, I reiterate the Universal conspiracy theory.

The last time I found “surprise chocolate” was when I was smart enough not to be in the middle of a 30-day famine. I was cleaning my closet out and found a box of “Pot of Gold” chocolates I’d forgotten to give as a gift. It was all over in under 15 minutes. The little morsels never knew what hit them.

Hence everywhere I turn during this month-long fiasco, there it is. Choco-awareness is unrelenting.

If it’s not in the candy bars dancing at me on the shelf at the grocery till, it’s the wafter covering on the bottom of nutrition bars, in cookies and muffins, flavored in coffee, and in the ice cream.

Can’t have that, can’t have that.

I swear at this moment, I can hear the bag of milk chocolate chips calling my name from the pantry.

I can feel my age spots returning and my crow’s feet elongating with each passing day I am separated from my sublime chocolate experience.

I’ve always believed that those of us who eat chocolate will live longer than those who don’t. I knew it long before the scientific studies claimed it so.

My plan always has been to become a super centenarian using chocolate as my life preserver.

I want to follow in the footsteps of Jeanne Calment who was born in 1875. She lived to be 122 years old and ate two pounds of chocolate of week until the age of 119.

Regular consumption of chocolate has been thought to have circulatory benefits, aid in muscle recovery, be a cough preventer, anti-cancer agent, brain stimulator, and a migraine prophylactic.

I’ve abstained for eight days and my cognitive abilities have waivered, I have a cough, my feet are cold, I have a headache, and a backache.

I’m a wreck!

However, I am not among the 50 percent of women who supposedly prefer chocolate to sex—or at least not lately—though I do agree with the following wise words of a fellow connoisseur.

“I am a serious chocoholic. For the serious chocoholic, chocolate is better than sex. If you believe that, you REALLY need to meet that special someone who can change your mind. If you HAVE met that special someone and still believe that, I REALLY NEED to know where you get your chocolate!!!”

I also would now agree with the sage who figured out that if you eat a chocolate bar before each meal it takes the edge off your appetite and you’ll eat less.

In the past eight days I’m sure I’ve gained five pounds.

All I know for sure is that I’d rather pull stewed raisins out of a baby’s nostril and deal with poopy diapers than go without chocolate for the next 22 days.

And no, my children, this is not a shout out to you about my babysitting services.

Unless of course you arrive bearing lots of chocolate—for Day 31.