
Couch Kitties: Seagull Curry?
http://www.theguardian.com/environm.....n-tikka-masala
Staff at the hospital used washing-up liquid to remove the bright orange from the seagull’s feathers. They returned him to its original white colour but have not been able to wash away the smell of curry.
Lucy Kells, veterinary nurse at the hospital, said: “He really surprised everyone here – we had never seen anything like it before. He had fallen into a waste vat of curry that was outside, it was chicken tikka masala. The thing that shocked us the most was the smell. He smelled amazing, he really smelled good."
Which, of course, got a certain couple of scamps thinking.
Zeph ©
sharra. Tali and the kittehs © me. H/T
walt46 and
eocostello for the inspiration.
http://couchkitties.comicgenesis.com/
Staff at the hospital used washing-up liquid to remove the bright orange from the seagull’s feathers. They returned him to its original white colour but have not been able to wash away the smell of curry.
Lucy Kells, veterinary nurse at the hospital, said: “He really surprised everyone here – we had never seen anything like it before. He had fallen into a waste vat of curry that was outside, it was chicken tikka masala. The thing that shocked us the most was the smell. He smelled amazing, he really smelled good."
Which, of course, got a certain couple of scamps thinking.
Zeph ©



http://couchkitties.comicgenesis.com/
Category Artwork (Digital) / Comics
Species Housecat
Size 1200 x 409px
File Size 291.8 kB
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lols i was thinking more https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-3e0EkvIEM actually !! ^v^
Geoducks are very picturesque (or picaresque) enough to make Carl Jung crave a geoduck chowder... but they are much more difficult to find and dig than more ordinary clams. I have heard that 'razor clams' were much preferred, but most everything my father cooked into chowder was just ordinary semi-round beach clams. But this was in the days before 'clam guns' were developed for scientific ease in clam digging.
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