Fairy Evidence Discovered!

Yes, Virginia, fairies do exist.

This is a controversial issue we’ve covered frequently in the past. You will note the comments of the doubters; never supplying a single shred of evidence to support their theory, they deal in third-hand rumours and blatant pig-headedness to support their outrageous hypothesis that fairies are imaginary. It’s a scandal that so-called “rationalists” could indulge in unsubstantiated rumour-mongering of this nature.

Do you think Shakespeare, who wrote about Julius Caesar and the dubious merits of Scottish hosts, would make shit up? Do ya, punk?

Now, from TackyRaccoons, comes clear photographic proof of the existence of these delightful sprites. Polaroids, as everyone knows, cannot be faked.

Fairy Evidence Photo

Not only do we now have real proof that they exist, but we are beginning to understand how they reproduce. In this comment I suggested an hypothesis of fairy generation, and not long after that pictoral evidence surfaced to support my theory that they were not gestated in banal fashion like so many mortals, but instead crawled out from between the petals on the undersides of mushrooms. And here is the picture that proves it.

Fairy Ring Evidence

Case? Closed!

Quiz: which horrible affliction are you?

Yay! Mother would be so proud! I’m so glad I wasn’t something banal like gingivitus or hammertoes. No, this and only this is worthy of the raincoaster brand, I think we can all agree!

I am Ebola. Hear Your Organs Squelch.
Which Horrible Affliction are you?
A Rum and Monkey disease.

Congratulations, you’re ebola!

You start, innocently enough, with a headache; a fever; chills. Nothing special. Might as well be the flu. But that is only the beginning.

You move on through the unpleasant symptoms list, inducing vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea. You start to shut down the kidney and liver, and start to cause bleeding both internally and externally, with little or no clotting. Finally, the patient crashes and bleeds out, in a veritable explosion of blood. Anyone who has contact with that blood, or any of the patient’s body fluids while s/he is infected, is also liable to get you. Now that’s what I’m talking about!

Via Archie

The Cheese Stands Alone

Mouse will thieve no more

Not because anybody moved it, and not even because everybody refused to go near it. But rather, because I forgot about the cheese because the cheese was in the cheese keeper of my refrigerator, which is a cheese keeper in the sense that the elephant graveyard is an elephant corral. And now the smell of that cheese could probably repel nuclear weapons.

So, you know about the Dairy Continuum? This is a process unique in organic chemistry, whereby dairy products never actually expire; they simply become more expensive dairy products. So:

milk > buttermilk > yogurt > sour cream > cottage cheese > cheese > more expensive cheese

and so on.

Quel frommage, eh? (that counts as bilingual in Canada)

So, cheese. I like cheese. I’d like to say I eat a lot of cheese, but I do not, for I am not only impecunious but chubby as well, and cheesification is antithecal to my budget as well as my butt. But. Sometime I bust loose and cheesify, because hey, I gotta LIVE, baby, LIVE, before I die.

This brings me to the hardware store.

Well, actually not yet. It didn’t bring me to the hardware store just quite yet. What actually brought me to the hardwear store was the mouse. Mice. Meeses. Festering swarm of vermin rodents, seething up from the ravine and devouring all in their path, presuming All was my favorite cereals, grains and packaged foods, damn them. And so it came to pass that I chose to do something about them.

I could tell you exactly why it came to pass, but it’s too gross for this time of the night. You can thank me in the comments. Don’t say I never did nuthin for ya.

Let’s just say it looked like a teabag from that angle and how was I to know?

Anywhateverywhoo. And so it came to pass that I passed by the hardware store and passed, in fact, the portal thereof and proceeded to purchase a box of warfarin, sometimes known as Coumadin when they want to sell you some marked up to use on yourself which they do quite frequently in fact, and I myself was on it for many months which just goes to show you I’m hard to kill (speaking of which, did I tell you about the time a poisonous spider bit me, and it died?) but prosaically known as rat poison.

Now, this is a delightful little old hardware store up on The Drive of the type that never subscribed to the ridiculously provincial idea that a hardware store should sell only wares of a hard nature. Nooo indeed, and they were Italian to boot. Which meant that the front window featured Cloverdale paints on special, with espresso makers also on sale, pickling supplies ditto, and looming over them all a collection of plastic birdbaths and wholesome green Coleman camping stoves, plus the largest roasting pan in the known universe, presumably specially imported from Sicily for disposing of enemies in bayleaf-scented style.

So, naturally, what was up beside the till, where any thinking hardware store would have trowels and putty knives and keychains?

Nutmeg graters.

Now, the nutmeg grater is a kitchen tool with which you may not be familiar. Indeed, it was one with which I was not familiar, being notoriously unfond of nutmeg except well mixed into the eggnog with sufficient rum to ensure it’s completely dissolved (three ounces per serving should do the trick). Although I am familiar with the traditional way nutmeg is harvested in the Spice Islands, having seen it with my own eyes: the nutmeg dove, which looks exactly like a dove the size of a wild turkey, flies up to the nutmeg tree, where it unhinges its snakelike unhingeable jaw and swallows the small apple-sized nutmeg fruit whole. Eventually the seed works its indigestible way through the digestive tract and you can see why the nutmeg dove has to be so big at both ends, can’t you or do I have to fill in the dots?

Well, do I?

So. Nutmeg. Not really on my top five fave spices list, for obvious reasons. Have you ever tried to wash powdered nutmeg? Because you know where it’s been. Well, now you do.

So there was the little nutmeg grater, a harmless-looking impliment. It looks, in fact, exactly like a regular old four-sided kitchen grater with which your prissy aunt shreds carrots prior to floating them in an alien-looking and eerily glowing aspic salad.

Only smaller. Much smaller.

How much smaller? Think two inches from top to bottom, including the handle. And why would anyone who neither grates nor consumes nutmeg be interested in such an item, you ask? It’s quite simple, really.

Grated cheese is less fattening and more flavorful than chunked or sliced cheese, because of the greater surface area to volume ratio. So anyone who’s watching her cheese consumption but still likes to get her frommage on every once in awhile would naturally be drawn to such an item, and most particularly at the low, low price of only $3.50.

So I nabbed one of the little buggers and set it on the counter proudly beside my other purchase.

Upon which the little old Italian man behind the counter bent double with instant laughter.

Somewhat huffily I inquired, after he’d held on to the till and rocked back and forth enough times to need a breather, why he was laughing, wherupon he picked up the nutmeg grater and made grating motions over the rat poison, saying, “Oh, you’re kind! You treat the mice real nice, grating the cheese on the…” at which point he lost it again, I put ten bucks on the counter, and walked out.

Amazonia Alph says Spring is Here! Spring 2008!

You’ve heard of Punxatawny Phil. And mayhap you’ve heard of Wiarton Willie. And you may even have heard that estimates of the accuracy of their spring-predication (or is it predictification or perhaps prognostificationism?) vary from 30-50%.

Or even 0%, some years.

Well, meet the world’s most accurate weather-predictificating critter, with bonus albinofication (it makes them more sensitive to the sun, see, and that’s just got to be a good thing for a weather-predictificator, right?). Yep, Amazonia Alph here predicts that Spring 2008 will be late in arriving.

Amazonia Alph the Albino Aturtle

Let no man say that Amazonia Alph speaks too soon.

Alph currently resides in a palatial villa outside of Rio with his teenage concubines and a large collection of exotic cars, having retired to enjoy his poker fortune, obtained not by winning but simply by taking so long to make up his mind that all the other players had already died.

the truth about great inventions

It’s not pretty, people. Remember what they say about laws and sausage?

Married To The Sea