Metamorphose

METAMORPHOSE

I have of late, but wherefore I know not, lost all my mirth and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame the earth seems to me a sterile promontory; this most excellent canopy the air, look you, this mighty o'rehanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire; why, it appeareth nothing to me but a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours. What a piece of work is a man, how noble in reason, how infinite in faculties, how like an angel in apprehension, how like a God! The beauty of the world, paragon of animals; and yet to me, what is this quintessence of dusk. Man delights not me, no, nor women neither, nor women neither.

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Where has all the white dog poo gone?
Many a conversation or debate has been discussed within my team at work. Now you might think to yourself how interesting a conversation between a bunch of recruitment consultants within an investment bank can be. Take my word for it, they can get quite weird and usually ends up with me trying to figure out the intellectual boundaries that are around these people.

  • The case of "Do spiders drink water?" from Sandra unfolded into into "Do spiders drink water from your mouth while sleeping?"
  • The case of "I hate certain words!" from Toby unfolded into a blatant disregard of combining everyone's words into "Like Tight Moist Panties" and making the entire office reel in disgust
  • The case of "Why does my swimming cap leave a mark on my forehead" from Cheryl turned into me calling her a "Fathead" all day long because I convinced her head was growing and she needed a new cap.
Today's topic was one that had me wondering. Most times I can make an educated guess on the answer and come to some realistic logic, sometimes with the aid of the almighty Google. But this time I was dumbfounded. Where has all the white dog poo gone?

It's strange that, I remember cranking up the lawn mower and aiming for a line of those ivory nuggets my dog's had left me. You would push the lawnmower a good few metres ahead of you just to see the cloud spring up to envelope all with the familiar sound of dried shit hitting blade (much like a pffft sound). I never did mind the white dog shit, picking it up was easier then what usually came out the rear of most beloved canines. I realise now why the hell did I have to go out into that damn lawn to pick it up in the first place, especially when the dog was marking it's own area most times away from any walking zone. But I suppose, the one chance you think you have overcome not stepping in shit, you decide to walk bare foot to get the clothing off the line. It's Murphy's Law.

So I was humbled to find no easy solution to this unexplained exodus. I Googled and Yahoo'd to find no expert opinion about said subject, only educated guesses. Good ones too, ones that you would take a person's word for if you asked them. But I was not swayed by hundred's of internet forum's littered with this unexplained phenomenon, this bizarre unanswered question, the demise of a cultural heritage conspiracy. Answers evolved from calcium overdosage to social trends, I kid you not. The evolution of a dogs social trend is a bizarre read.

It was not until I came across an article by Sarah Hartwell regarding Cat Food Uncovered in 2003. Yes my usual reading pleasure for the evening was drowned out by the rendering processes of pet food around the world, what really goes into that putrid dish you serve and which country has the better food label; http://www.messybeast.com/cat-food-industry.htm

But yet I only found part of this unexplained answer;

...The increase in vegetable protein (within pet food) is dramatically seen in dogs - the characteristic white dog turds of yesteryear are rarely found; they were caused by weathering of dog excrement rich in bone meal...

I dug deeper and found this from AlternativePetHealth.com - http://www.alternativepethealth.com/canine-diet.html

...Hey, there's even a "Raw Meaty Bones Lobby Group" in Australia, led by a veterinarian! They amusingly "advocate" "chalky white dog poo" (and cat poo) - the natural (and unstinky!) result of a natural canine or feline diet. And they advocate the importance of raw meat and bones as being the mainstay of the canine and feline diet....

So I had to track down Raw Meaty Bones Lobby Group. They were not just limited to Australia, they're worldwide now. Spreading the white poo gospel with pooper scooper in hand.

http://www.aussiermb.org.au/ - Australia
http://www.usrmb.net/ - United States
http://www.ukrmb.co.uk/ - United Kingdom

But this got me way off track and I was reading more about dog's health, the poop report website and about why I liked the smell of puppy dog breath so much. Still I was yet to find the elusive mad professor, veterinary report, or some lucky prick that got a government grant to research the honest truth. The answer to the question we all were looking for I suppose and that was - why were they white in the first place. Then by chance I came across this science forum. It was a mixture of both types of answers which I had found (oh and I found some bizarre ones too). http://www2b.abc.net.au/science/k2/stn/archives/archive53/newposts/450/topic450934.shtm

There are a couple of reasons why dog faeces might appear white. In the past, dog used home prepared foods which might have contained pieces of bone. Bone can cause all sorts of problems to dogs - from chipped teeth to scratched oesophagus. They can cause salmonella and constipation - forming a cement in the small intestine. Bone is also white so any chips in the faeces can make it look white. Today dog owners prefer to use a prepared food with a milk based calcium source so there are no bone flakes to make it appear white. The other reason for dog faeces turning white when left on the pavement is that mould starts to grow on it turning it white. The mould - a yeast takes about 3-4 days to grow and these days town and city councils tend to clean the streets more quickly than they used to, removing the faeces before the mould turns it white.

It's funny the things you remember from years passed disappear. There are many things we all take for granted, but yet were a part of our lives no matter how bizarre. We all remember the days of yesteryear with blissful amusement but society considers our future as a bleak landscape. Hopefully somewhere out on the horizon it has still got room for our canine's toiletry diets though.

LS at 1/31/2007 09:53:00 PM

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Don't eat the yellow snow
Looking out my window yesterday morning gave me strength to fight a little longer in London. Two weeks prior I was sitting on my stairs with my face in my hands trying to think of the most quickest way to escape England. I was literally depressed. Sunken and defeated, by being single in bars and growing envious of my friends around me in relationships, by drinking unknown quantities of alcohol to dull the boredom of seeing another bar, by sickness throughout the end of 2006 which had me becoming addicted to vitamin supplements, by starch and bland fruit and vegetables that are sold here, by knowing that my travel experiences had been somewhat non-existent in 2006, by the weird weather and why the hell had it not go cold and wondering if the world was nigh.

Strength and a smile when I saw the two inches of solid snow. Because it was only after finishing my religious monthly viewing of Withnail & I the night previously that I was standing at my window, complete buff naked except for the large overcoat I had on whilst smoking one of Lucky Strike's finest (yes Withnail & I does impress it's cult status on me), that I thought it was a little brisk outside. Looking to the heavens I thought maybe I could stand here and see the first snowflake fall. If it was not for the numbness of my extremities I could have.

Awaking in the morning in a rush of the usual "Shit Shit Shit, work work work." attitude that many of my housemates and girlfriends have lived with throughout the years, it was only until a quick look out the window after finishing the windsor knot in my tie that I realised London was going to be beautiful today. With a click of the heels and a race down the steps to pick up some snow and fling it at a passing bus was the only excitement I relished, that and the soft trudge of snow underfoot as it compressed into ice. The sound of ten thousand people wearing corduroy trousers all day long.

Alas today the snow has long gone, it's been forecasted for more, but I'm still happy that my extremities felt the first day of snow in 2007. My endless summer has truly ended.
Happy Australia Day for everyone back home too, I'll be celebrating in The Larrick at Putney Bridge this Friday after work with my smoking kangaroo!

LS at 1/25/2007 10:50:00 PM

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Bebo
Hello,

With increasing amounts of people blogging and filling up the billions of terrabytes with useless information. I decided another semi-blog needed to be maintained.

Due to this blogger being mostly text based angst and constant thought.

The new place holds recent pictures from my phone during a majority of the time - drinking excessive amounts of lager.

Enjoy

http://ZeeFoo.bebo.com

LS at 1/23/2007 02:58:00 AM

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

I know you don't love me - Roachford
I'm packing up my bags now
Coz I can't take it anymore
Yes, I'm picking up my suitcase
And Im heading out the door

I know you don't love me
I know you don't love me

Don't look for me at school
Don't you look for me at friends
Next time that you'll hear from me
I'll be working for the man

Do you understand now

Father dont love
Brother don't love me
I know don't love me
Yeh you don't love me
(ahhh) x2

When you try to find me
Ill be nowhere to be found
If you really want me
You're going to have to hunt me down

No, you don't love me
No, you don't love me
It's true you don't love me
I feel you don't love me

[instrumental and chorus repeated]


It's amazing when you throw your music on random and it plays a song that brings back a lot of memories. I bought Roachford - Permanent Shade of Blue when I was in Year 11-12 ( 93-94). At the time Lay your love on me was hitting top of the charts, a catchy tune although quite pop and corny.

I bought the album to impress a girl I liked at the time who was raving on about it, yet I never impressed my secret romantic ideal of love to her because she was seeing someone else at the time (a good mate). Yet I kept the album, and it stayed and piled dust on it. Sure I listened to it a couple times. But, 93-94 was my Pearl Jam / Nirvana years and was nothing better to listening to back-covers and polishing off a bottle of beam while listening to Kurt Cobain strain his unique vocal chords towards the rear section of his famous and intimate unplugged album.

Roachford popped back up my life in 99 when a long lived destroying relationship collapsed, thus beginning my reign of terrible relationships since.

This song crept into a stable repeat mode, played over and over again. Like a desperate man clinging to the hope that some ideal of his life would be sorted out with these lyrics. The song itself is heartbreaking to listen to. Obviously it meant something to Andrew Roachford when he wrote them, because when it's sung, it's actually got meaning to it. Listening to someone else's heart-break sometimes makes you forget about your own.

People have these tunes which remind them of things past. I smiled when it came on tonight. It's good to remember when things get forgotten.

LS at 1/10/2007 10:01:00 AM

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Who's Zat ?
I grew up thinking I was Dennis Lillee on the cricket pitch. I use to think that the tennis ball needed a good rub against my crutch every time I went into bowl, never knowing why they actually rubbed their crutch with it. I found it more entertaining knowing that my older brother who had been knocking the living shit out, of my over of 40 balls, all over the damn pitch (the width of our street and the surrounding greener pastures) that he'll be soon be out with a yorker. Alas our rules were pretty simple.

  • No hooking the ball (luckily we were both right hand batsmen)
  • The caravan or cars parked nearby were 'silly' fielders thus if you hit it either on the full you were caught out
  • A nick behind stumps was an automatic out
  • The pitch itself was about one and half times longer than a normal pitch thus giving running out plenty of opportunity
  • Fielders were given the rights to place themselves and knew that a catch would put them at the crease (a white chalk outlying of old Gyprock)
  • Overs were classified on a mercy and give up - something along the lines 'Here James have a go."
  • All you need is three (a good number since there were 4 men in the family, a couple friends up the street and random walk-in's)

The team usually relied on good weather, a tennis ball which was well used, stumps (a very large green plastic 'Otto' bin about twice the size as regular stumps), an old bat which always had fresh red cricket ball cherries on it, and a decent amount of courage to last a couple hours of play.

Adam thought himself to be a little bit of a Don Bradman, obviously brought up on the family hysteria that our Pop (grandfather) was also a good batsman. I remember stories, usually highly exaggerated, about him being an anchor batsman (a batsman who would not go for the runs or glory but to make bowlers become demoralised because he would just step out and place the ball in the dirt at his feet) and actually being quite good at it. Alas the never-ending books about cricket cluttering into library, which I don't think he ever bothered reading too much (was too interested in the ABC radio, crosswords or a game of patience).

You would know you had a good bowling session. Your arm hurt, the runs were cheap and there was some very near 'outs' which had us all jumping on the spot, legs spread apart, crouched, hands in air, screaming -- 'Howzat!" at nobody in particular - quite possibly was our dog Ladie (Lad-EE) who would sit bewildered at this bizarre sport. I always knew if I placed the ball at Adam's feet he would step back thus giving a good angle to hit that enormous target of a wicket. However he would train himself to walk into the bowl when he caught me doing it, so I knew that I could probably bowl it every 1 in 10. James's way of bowling was interesting as if you decided to hit him all over the place, he would eventually start pegging the ball at you, bodyline style - amusing to see but if he didn't get a bat soon enough we would lose one of the three team members, thus stumps would have be dragged back up the driveway (not fun if the bin was very full).

I remember trying my hand at spinning once on Adam and I got him out on one such occasion with a very awe inspiring magic delivery. However I never could remember to imitate the bowl ever again, as my wrist would hurt like a bitch every time I did. So I resorted back to my Dennis impersonation, a stare back down the wicket, a scratch of the groin with the ball, a spit into the dirt, a bull's charge windup, and a run up which was at least 100 metres long and would have me panting so hard that I sometimes stumbled on the approach to bowl (way too much sugar when I was a kid). You need to get yourself out to a friendly cricket game once in a while and watch these sorts of things.

Given the retirement of an Australian legend come tomorrow at the SCG in which looks to be an Australian whitewash of the Ashes (let me remind you of my whimsical little jibe only a year ago about us losing them) it makes me realise how many of those kids with their own sets of rules will be imitating the greatest spinner of this modern era and not Dennis. I never liked Shane Warne off pitch via the media influence, but on pitch I could see the amount of pain the man has caused England over the years and it's very entertaining to watch, especially baring witness to 'That Ball' (and the if you'd like to refresh yourself - click me) on one fine day. So I can imagine those kids coming up with their own flippers, lazy balls and googoolee's to out-do their own brothers.

I realise that I'm always going to be a Dennis, because I know that the fat kids were the better spinners.







              LS at 1/04/2007 09:45:00 PM

              Diary of the Gods - Jetblack