It’s midnight. Do you know where your cows are? Check your local rave, they could be high-stepping to the Cow Cow Boogie. Bovines just wanna have fun. Research in the journal Nature Food reveals that dairy cows which chowed down on industrial hemp produced milk that contained the psychoactive compound THC as well as CBD and other cannabinoids, which led to significant behavior changes. The animals yawned, salivated, appeared unsteady on their feet, had red eyes and began to listen to old Firesign Theater albums.
As everybody knows, hemp and marijuana are of the same species, Cannabis sativa. Hemp, however, has a significantly lower level of THC, the compound typically associated with getting high as RFK Jr. on Gorilla-glue sniffing day. Both plants contain CBD, a nonpsychoactive compound that has become all the rage as a health supplement. Legally, the U.S. government defines hemp as containing 0.3% or less THC and no longer classifies it as a controlled substance, which means it can be grown, harvested, tested, processed, transported and sold.
The big question is, of course, how does anybody know which cows are potheads? After all, their milk will sooner or later be funneled into those cute little cardboard containers that grade-school kiddies get at recess. Nobody wants to see seven-year-olds reading the Kama Sutra or doing the Time Warp again. Obviously, suspect cows will have to be tested, which could easily lead to bovine abuse, arouse the attention of the ACLU (American Cows Liberty Union) and send goat stocks soaring. It’s an ill wind that bloweth no goatherd good.
Crime May Not Pay, But It Tastes Good.
Bears---grizzlies, black and brown ones---thrive in the western national parks of the United States. They were there before we were, of course, but they’re willing to share as long as we do, so don’t take offense if Papa Bear occasionally pokes a hole in the back window of your Kia Sorento and snatches a ham sandwich or a bottle of schnapps.
Like humans, some elitist bears prefer the ski mecca towns of Colorado like Aspen, where the menu is loaded with calorie-rich treats like maple syrup, honey and ice-cream and the garbage bin locks are unsophisticated. After all, you were through with it, right---you tossed the remnants in the trash---so what’s the big deal? Bears stay out of the living room and almost never pee in the pool so it seems reasonable to allow a little tailgating now and then, but Aspenites are outraged by a few scattered taco wrappers and a little poop in their driveways. The bears, as you might expect, are miffed at the criticism. “If humans want Winnie and Paddington,” says one, “they’re going to have to put up with the occasional bad, bad Leroy Brown Bear.”
Aspen’s challenges pale in comparison to those of West Bengal, the Indian state where herds of hungry elephants, isolated in small pockets of forest, wander into villages in search of food, cotton fiber and even haaria, the local home brew. Elephants, alas, love to drink alcohol but lack the enzyme required to break it down, so they might accidentally trample a couple of crops now and then before settling down to croon a few bars of The Whiffenpoof Song. But the Indians are forgiving people who are loath to jail or injure elephants because of their sacred status there. “Why would you shoot a god,” asks one local woman whose shop was raided by a tipsy pachyderm. A refreshing contrast to the treatment of errant bears in Aspen and elsewhere. Elephant sympathizer and author Mary Roach writes, “India may be a better place to be an animal than it is to be a human.” Ask any cobra.
Animal Land’s Most Wanted
1—Dale Bearhart Jr. Durango, Colorado lawmen are still looking for this nervy black bear who shifted resident Ron Cornelius’ SUV into gear, sending it rolling down the driveway and smashing into an ill-placed mailbox. Terrified, Dale screamed “Oh, shit!” before leaving a nice pile of it in the front seat. Who ya gonna call for cleanup, the Merry Maids aren’t coming? Bearhart Jr. also left a note which said the whole thing never would have happened it the car owner left his beer in the open and he didn’t have to dig around in the dark looking for it.
2---Otto the Octopus. Long known to be a troublemaker in his German home-town aquarium for banging rocks on his glass enclosure and playing catch with hapless hermit crabs, Otto was nonetheless not an original suspect when the aquarium lights went out three nights in a row. The reason for the power outages stumped employees until they decided to stake the place out one night. A little after dark, the criminal cephalopod swung onto the edge of his tank and shot a jet of water directly at the spotlight above his tank, causing it to short-circuit. “Guy’s gotta get a little sleep, for crying out loud!” complained Otto.
3.---Chipo the Crocodile. The law doesn’t take kindly to breaking and entering in Zimbabwe, but that didn’t deter Chipo from looking for a cozy place to spend the night. Cricketeer Guy Whittall rose from his sleep one fine morning at the Humani Lodge and began to prepare breakfast when his housecleaner let out a scream that could be heard in Botswana. It was Chipo, of course, yawning good morning as he crept out from under Guy’s bed, ready to start his day. “The really disconcerting thing about the whole episode,” Whittall said, “was the fact I was sitting on the edge of the bed that morning a few inches from his teeth.” Chipo was summarily charged with B&E and released on his own recognizance.
4---The James Gang. In 1451, before even Bill was born, a gaggle of leeches were yukking it up at the Salamander Saloon on a pond near Lausanne, Switzerland. A local fussbudget, if there ever was one, the clergyman there thought there were far too many leeches in the place and took them to court. Now when it comes to ecclesiastical court cases against animals in Switzerland, it is not usually necessary for the offending critters to be present in court, but this time the Bishop was instructed to bring in the whole slimy crew so they could hear the notice they were being served. And no, we’re not making this stuff up.
The leeches were gathered in a pile before the magistrate and were told they had three days to leave the area. Unemotional over the news, the leeches simply slithered in place, either in fierce defiance of the court’s edict or maybe because they had no ears.
Set Your Armadillos Free!
We out here in the wilds of Pieland are perhaps more forgiving of nature’s creatures, even the ornery ones like raccoons, who will steal you blind in a minute if you look the wrong way. Being married to a veterinarian helps, as does Gilbert Shelton’s admonition to me at age 21 to “Set Your Chickens Free!” Also, when you arrive at the unruly depot of 84, you are not particularly interested in offing anything, including spiders, ants and even Jehovah’s Witnesses (if you’re a cockroach, don’t push your luck).
Now, out in the country we have moles and voles and gophers and armadillos, all of which like to dig nasty holes in the ground in search of food treats. Criticize if you like, but just remember they have no ice-cream man dinging through their little neighborhoods like some people do. Besides, these perps are not so easy to find and haul off to jail or be put in a box and exiled to a faraway neighborhood. And they might have dependent children, according to my bride, who knows about these things.
We advise our canine companions on these matters but they do not always get the message. One night, our female Rottweiler, China (since passed to that great boneyard in the sky) was out sampling the evening air, when she ran across an errant armadillo just digging away in the flower garden, an obvious crime of the first magnitude. She put the cuffs on and delivered him to the county lockup forthwith. Since it was dark when she knocked, I didn’t see little Armand the Armadillo stuck in her jaws and I let her in. Naturally, she dropped the criminal on the floor, the better to have his mug shot and prints taken.
Once unleashed, Armand did the Armadillo Dance, hugging the walls of the living room as he raced faster than you’d think round and round, an outraged China on his tail. I don’t mind admitting this was a situation I had no expertise in handling. First, I had to corral my deputy and put her in a holding cell, then somehow grab the slippery varmint. Displaying all the skills of Papillon, one of only two inmates who ever escaped from Devil’s Island, Armand circled the room like Little Black Sambo outrunning the tigers. I finally devised a sort of tunnel to the porch he’d have to travel through and suckered him into it. He was gone, to the everlasting chagrin of China, who held his escape against me for weeks. How are we going to erase crime in Metropolis she asked Siobhan, if Bill keeps setting the criminals free? Woof woof!
That’s all, folks….
bill.killeen094@gmail.com