Friday, February 19, 2010

Cogito ergo possum

This morning I awoke to scrabbling and hissing. A ponderous and clumsy creature was running circuits on the pergola and the roof. I staggered out in the grey dawn and sat down on the garden seat that gives a view of the chimney pot.

The smaller of the two possums was staring back at me. In his expression I detected insouciance. He tilted his head slightly, almost cockily, then ducked down into the chimney pot. This is the one with the one way door installed, down into which possums are unable to duck.

His head came back out again. His look was sardonic. Then he dived again, and gave me the tail. When a brush tailed possum gives you the tail, you know about it.

Then the tail disappeared. I went back into the house and tapped the tiles to the left of the fireplace. There was a prolonged, ironic snarl.

I'm calling possum busters on Monday. The deal was if the possum comes back, they come back.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Tooth and Justice

Stella called out. She needed tissues or towels. She had lost a tooth. It was bleeding a lot.
After the worst was over, she told me the tooth fairy was expected. She wrapped the tooth up with a paper towel and a fair bit of sticky tape, folded over into a ribbon, then wound the ribbon into a spiral, secured with more tape. The tooth fairy was going to have to work to get the tooth out of the wrapping.
I pointed out that the whole thing might be confusing. She should leave a note explaining that there was a tooth, and its whereabouts, on the dining table.
The next morning she told me the tooth fairy hadn't come. She looked at me accusingly. I said did you leave a note? She said no.
I said it's not too late. Write the note, leave it on the dining table, you never know, the tooth fairy might show up.
She wrote the note. I said good, that should do it. I'll just go and check that everything's all right over here.
I waited until the coast looked clear then walked into Stella's bedroom. As I made for the bed she jumped out from behind the door and said Boo!
This attracted Lizzie, who came in too.
I said, well, any sign of the tooth fairy? I walked over to the bed, and lifted the pillow, concealing what was under it from the line of sight of the girls. Then I slipped a two dollar coin under it and pocketed the elaborate tooth package.
Well, will you look at that, I said. While you were hiding behind doors the tooth fairy must have come.
Lizzie laughed. Stella came and took the two dollar coin, shooting me a dour look.
What does she want, state of the art special effects? Honour was satisfied. Everybody wins.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Non Possum

We called possum busters last week. An efficient and personable young man came and capped off all but one of the chimney pots with wire. To the last one he attached a little one way trap door. The possums would have no trouble getting out, but would not be able to get back in. That was the theory, as he explained it to me.

Yesterday the possums were still there. For some reason, perhaps because it was raining so much, they had decided to stay in one night. Much as I wanted to believe in the trap door, it occurred to me that there could be reasons the possums would not go out that particular pot, and so were trapped. And as Elizabeth pointed out, with two possums it's a whole new ball game. What if one stays home to let the other back in?

Stella and I built chair barricades to block off the kitchen. I opened the back folding doors wide. I closed off the doors to the rest of the house. Then I put on what I hoped were possum proof gloves and opened the iron flue gate on the living room fireplace. When it grated against the iron frame, the possum snarled, right next to my ear. It was behind the left tile facing of the fireplace.

A brush tailed possum snarl is like the sound a zombie makes when, despite wounds that would incapacitate a living human, it is preparing for the final charge that can be stopped only by a double tap to the head, ideally with soft nosed bullets. Sometimes the snarl is periodic, with a decrescendo and a falling cadence like a classic bandit laugh. You hear this when possum territory is in dispute, with another possum or a cat.

This snarl was happening more and more often. I had jammed various bits of cardboard in the fireplaces, and we no longer had incidents when a possum would fall out, with a sudden clashing of heavy wrought iron fittings, and charge around the bedroom screaming in the middle of the night. It could take ages to round it up, and direct it out the door.

But now one of them had taken to objecting when we had a conversation in the living room, or watched TV. You could see its point. It was on night shift and it needed its sleep. But what with the jets flying overhead, which basically forced you to shut down brain function for twenty seconds at a time, and the possum snarling whenever you opened your mouth, it was getting hard to keep your thoughts straight.

I jerked back convulsively and managed to avoid smashing my head on the mantelpiece. Stella took cover behind the barricades. I tried making more noise, to drive the possum either up the chimney or out the flue. I went to the fireplace on the other side and made more noise there. Apart from the occasional snarl the possums made no sign. They were bunkered in.

Maybe, even under threat, they wouldn't leave until nightfall. They were probably right. If they left now and started blundering about blinded by the glare of full daylight, they'd be sitting ducks. Stella and I decided to leave it until after eight. When the last light faded, if the possums didn't make a move, we would.

After dinner we heard the faint scrabbling of possum toenails climbing inside the chimney. I went out and took a look. It was dark and rainy, and there was just a silhouette on top of the roof ridge, but it didn't look like the shape of the chimney pot with added trap door fitting. Then it moved slightly. Two possums were sitting on top of the trap door platform. It's not easy to read possum body language. They're all pink, wet look noses and enormous black eyes. But there was something defeated in the set of their ears.

I tried snapping a picture from tiptoe on top of the garden chair, but the flash wouldn't reach. So I climbed up on the air conditioner, then on the back fence, and up onto the kitchen roof. I took it very slowly. All the surfaces were slippery and apart from any health and safety issues, I didn't want to fall into the neighbours' side passage and have them run out and have to explain the whole thing while lying winded on my back.

I walked carefully, stepping from one row of corrugated iron roofing fasteners to another. The possums watched me approach without outward signs of agitation. I took a few pictures along the way, but it was plain I was going to have to be right at the edge of the sloping slate tiled section before I could get a good shot. Too far and I might topple over into the street below. Lose my footing and I might slide down over the guttering and crash through the pergola.



At last I was only a few metres away. I took a couple of shots just to be sure. Then I picked my way carefully across the fasteners and back down onto the fence. I think they'll be all right. Like rainbow lorikeets and sulphur crested cockatoos and huntsman spiders, brush tailed possums are one of the success stories of Sydney suburban wildlife.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Second Life Again

I just returned to Second Life after a few years away. I've always been fascinated by Virtual Reality and Online Communities. I had high hopes for Second Life.

After a couple of years the interface is the same impenetrable mess. The movement is clunky and difficult to control. The graphics are slow rendering and patchy.

There are endless shopping malls with bad fashion. There are bars with people dancing listlessly and no conversation. There are people exploiting other people for sex that isn't really sex, and people littering the landscape with eyesores, and people standing around with no clear idea. Reminds me of something.

I toyed briefly with exchanging my leopard skin knee pants and shocking pink sleeveless texture top for something a little more daring, but on the whole I prefer the simple trailer trash look to, say, a Morticia Adams outfit with diamante bat wings.

The incentive to invest time and effort in learning the intricacies of Second Life is minimal. Facebook, say goodbye to that hard won "Dullest Online Experience" crown.

Virtual 3D Worlds are plentiful, but the trick is to figure out which are of any interest:
http://arianeb.com/more3Dworlds.htm
RealXtend / Open Sim Project sounds interesting.
http://opensimulator.org
http://www.realxtend.org/

I checked out OSGrid. There's some activity there but the place is mostly empty. No critical mass as yet. They use the same system as Second Life, and the Hippo client and Second Life clients are supposedly compatible, so the problems with the avatar movement and graphics in general occur in both systems. The OSGrid is just free, and not so openly dedicated to selling imaginary products and real estate.

But the general feeling of wandering around the abandoned remains of a trade fair is the same.

I checked out IMVU. It's only somewhat 3D. It just chat rooms, that provide a graphical backdrop for text chat with avatars. Your avatar can pop from one seat to another or to the dance floor. The chat is at the expected level. Wassup? Nuthin. Can u spel? Noap!!! According to the site it's 3D Chat and Dress Up. This is a straightforward way of describing the experience Second Life offers.

I'm looking for the cyberpunk matrix William Gibson hipster cool smart online community virtual world. I have a feeling it's still waiting to happen.