There's a Rat in my Hotel Room, What'm I Gonna Do ???
Re: There's a Rat in my Hotel Room, What'm I Gonna Do ???
We had i Belgium a rat called Magawa, military decorated and won a special price in the UK, she cleaned up landmines in . . . Kampuchea !! More then 100 of them !!
She passed away in january, RIP . . .
She had khmer girl-friend as you can see in the video, curious she had to pay also 30 dollar of turist-visa, or would she enter with work-visa ??
https://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20220112_92388939
She passed away in january, RIP . . .
She had khmer girl-friend as you can see in the video, curious she had to pay also 30 dollar of turist-visa, or would she enter with work-visa ??
https://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20220112_92388939
Re: There's a Rat in my Hotel Room, What'm I Gonna Do ???
Yes, i read about her, she was famous.Bongmab69 wrote: ↑Sat Jul 30, 2022 4:42 pm We had i Belgium a rat called Magawa, military decorated and won a special price in the UK, she cleaned up landmines in . . . Kampuchea !! More then 100 of them !!
She passed away in january, RIP . . .
She had khmer girl-friend as you can see in the video, curious she had to pay also 30 dollar of turist-visa, or would she enter with work-visa ??
https://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20220112_92388939
She was a giant african rat, not like my pets who where norwegians. Pissed all over my mattress. At first i had no idea they do that, marking the territory.
And they smell great, like a mix of rosmarin & lavender.
Re: There's a Rat in my Hotel Room, What'm I Gonna Do ???
You just give me the idea of my books headline,, " Me and the Rat ".
-
- Expatriate
- Posts: 1759
- Joined: Sun Jan 17, 2016 7:11 am
- Reputation: 357
- Location: Australia
Re: There's a Rat in my Hotel Room, What'm I Gonna Do ???
Plenty of rats in tropical Australia. My little cat is a great ratter. She has caught 24 in the last year. Most ended up under my bed. I found a small tail and a pair of feet on the bedroom floor one morning. Odd because there are no mice here. The next night I rescued a mouse in the bedroom and put him in a shoe box, expecting him to die.
The next morning he was fine but he was not a mouse. Well, not a European mouse. He was a native water mouse, a Yirraku. Quite a rare species, his mate had been eaten the night before. That evening my Khmer kid and I took him down to the creek about 500 metres away and released him on the bank amongst the mangroves. Always aware that there might be a big crocodile living there. He ran down the bank and jumped into the water and swam away. It was great to save some native wildlife.
The next morning he was fine but he was not a mouse. Well, not a European mouse. He was a native water mouse, a Yirraku. Quite a rare species, his mate had been eaten the night before. That evening my Khmer kid and I took him down to the creek about 500 metres away and released him on the bank amongst the mangroves. Always aware that there might be a big crocodile living there. He ran down the bank and jumped into the water and swam away. It was great to save some native wildlife.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 5 Replies
- 3322 Views
-
Last post by phuketrichard
-
- 21 Replies
- 9849 Views
-
Last post by pissontheroof
-
- 24 Replies
- 5174 Views
-
Last post by Freightdog
-
- 1 Replies
- 1084 Views
-
Last post by Doc67
-
- 0 Replies
- 1077 Views
-
Last post by exoterre
-
- 1 Replies
- 488 Views
-
Last post by Doc67
-
- 4 Replies
- 3884 Views
-
Last post by SternAAlbifrons
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot], Bongmab69, boringperson, crackheadyo, Majestic-12 [Bot], xandreu and 729 guests