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Related: About this forumIt's human v tortoise in the Beddington household. And the tortoises are winning
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/may/20/human-v-tortoise-beddington-household-tortoises-winningOpinion
Its human v tortoise in the Beddington household. And the tortoises are winning
Emma Beddington
You wouldnt believe how fast these things can move until you try to lock them up. How long until the next jailbreak?
Mon 20 May 2024 06.00 EDT
We have entered the season marked in our household by the battle of wits between human and tortoise. All spring, my husband (dexterous, resourceful, engineer) pours his ingenuity into trying to keep the four tortoises (prehistoric, pea-brained, no opposable thumbs) in the garden, while the tortoises, out of the greenhouse and warmed to a point where they are unnervingly speedy, FYI, do their utmost to escape. It makes no sense here they have a spacious all-you-can-eat buffet; out there its cars, cats and chaos. But the reptile heart wants what it wants.
Were already had one jailbreak by our worst recidivist. Despite double wooden sleepers corralling her and in defiance of all physical laws, shes been apprehended previously trundling down the street, destination unknown; wedged, thwarted, under a gate, still fighting to free herself; and repeatedly in our neighbours garden, demolishing her summer-flowering annuals (sorry, J). Weve tried a GPS tracker; she rubbed it off in minutes.
This time it happened on my (negligent) watch and was discovered on my husbands return. He thinks she scaled a carelessly overlooked raspberry cane; I prefer to believe she has an outside accomplice and was helicoptered to freedom somehow. We searched for hours, then printed up flyers, fretting she was gone for good. Thankfully, a lady I handed one to had intel: she had been picked up on the run by a kindly neighbour in the street behind and taken to the local vet.
This resulted in a relieved but farcical hour of trying to prove she was ours: unable to locate her microchip number, I was left scrolling through my phone for a picture. I dont take many, it turns out: of the handful it identified searching for tortoise, one was a pigeon and one a screenshot of me on a Zoom call rude. I finally found a 2018 mugshot that showed her chipped shell clearly and we were allowed to reclaim her. She travelled home in the car footwell, every fibre of her being vibrating with only sorry I got caught energy. Shes in the garden now, plotting. Actually, she probably isnt.
Emma Beddington is a Guardian columnist
Its human v tortoise in the Beddington household. And the tortoises are winning
Emma Beddington
You wouldnt believe how fast these things can move until you try to lock them up. How long until the next jailbreak?
Mon 20 May 2024 06.00 EDT
We have entered the season marked in our household by the battle of wits between human and tortoise. All spring, my husband (dexterous, resourceful, engineer) pours his ingenuity into trying to keep the four tortoises (prehistoric, pea-brained, no opposable thumbs) in the garden, while the tortoises, out of the greenhouse and warmed to a point where they are unnervingly speedy, FYI, do their utmost to escape. It makes no sense here they have a spacious all-you-can-eat buffet; out there its cars, cats and chaos. But the reptile heart wants what it wants.
Were already had one jailbreak by our worst recidivist. Despite double wooden sleepers corralling her and in defiance of all physical laws, shes been apprehended previously trundling down the street, destination unknown; wedged, thwarted, under a gate, still fighting to free herself; and repeatedly in our neighbours garden, demolishing her summer-flowering annuals (sorry, J). Weve tried a GPS tracker; she rubbed it off in minutes.
This time it happened on my (negligent) watch and was discovered on my husbands return. He thinks she scaled a carelessly overlooked raspberry cane; I prefer to believe she has an outside accomplice and was helicoptered to freedom somehow. We searched for hours, then printed up flyers, fretting she was gone for good. Thankfully, a lady I handed one to had intel: she had been picked up on the run by a kindly neighbour in the street behind and taken to the local vet.
This resulted in a relieved but farcical hour of trying to prove she was ours: unable to locate her microchip number, I was left scrolling through my phone for a picture. I dont take many, it turns out: of the handful it identified searching for tortoise, one was a pigeon and one a screenshot of me on a Zoom call rude. I finally found a 2018 mugshot that showed her chipped shell clearly and we were allowed to reclaim her. She travelled home in the car footwell, every fibre of her being vibrating with only sorry I got caught energy. Shes in the garden now, plotting. Actually, she probably isnt.
Emma Beddington is a Guardian columnist
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It's human v tortoise in the Beddington household. And the tortoises are winning (Original Post)
sl8
May 2024
OP
Karadeniz
(23,359 posts)1. Who woulda thunk ?????
ShazzieB
(18,530 posts)2. That was one of the funniest things I've ever read!
I enjoyed it so much I started checking out out some of her other stuff at The Guardian, and I am now a fan! Thanks for sharing this.