CycleDog: (n) 1. An all-weather bicyclist, often regarded as one very sick puppy with a bad attitude. 2. A ankle-biting poodle with a Mohawk. (l)Canis familiaris cyclus
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Monday, September 21, 2009
Ask Dr. Wally - Handlebar tape
Dear Dr. Wally,
My beloved cat, Fluffy, died recently from complications resulting from a life of dissipation, gluttony, and lack of exercise. She was quite large. I'm thinking of memorializing her by applying her hide to my handlebars as a kind of furry bar tape. Despite tireless searches on the interweb, I haven't found any method of performing this. Can you help? Oh, she's in the refrigerator until I hear from you.
Remorseful in Ramona
You're just messing with me, aren't you? Everyone knows you can't apply a cat's hide to your handlebars. The fur offers no padding whatsoever and once it gets wet, it stays matted down. Use sheepskin instead. Wool is a springy, shock absorbing material that cleans up easily with a bit of Woolite. I'd save the cat hide for doing static electricity demonstrations for the neighbor's kids, the obnoxious ones with their iPods, cellphones, laptops, and ground thumping stereo systems. Microcircuits don't like static discharges, but you didn't hear that from me!
Next month: Avoiding blood sucking monkeys from West Mifflin, Pennsylvania
Nice! Hey, my daughter has a pet snake that's lookin' a little sickly...
ReplyDeleteDr. Wally is right, cat hide is useless for bar tape.
ReplyDeleteIt is really good for making winter helmet liners though...
I hate washing all my cat hide covered things. All that hair in my mouth...
ReplyDelete[acalangl]
The newsletter editor wouldn't run this one. One of the board members is an ardent cat lover and she'd be offended. I thought it was funny, but then again, I only manage to rate above the household pets on special occasions.
ReplyDeleteHow well does the hide of Sea Kittens work?
ReplyDelete