The illustration shows a carafe. Its principal food is wild grapes hanging from overhead vines but it can survive for long periods on nothing more than a baguette and a clove of garlic eaten with a teaspoon of olive oil.
Holy heck, of all the hundreds of people using the internet, here's Mr Barnsley. Mr Barnsley is watching his neighbour breed one of these creatures. His neighbour calls it "Auckland Supercity". Folk are beginning to wonder if it will ever fly.
An online scrapbook of the strange and amusing snippets I unearth during my job at a local history library; and a home for my comic strip experiment The Wesleys.
The illustration shows a carafe. Its principal food is wild grapes hanging from overhead vines but it can survive for long periods on nothing more than a baguette and a clove of garlic eaten with a teaspoon of olive oil.
ReplyDeleteWhat a refined creature!
ReplyDeletePossibly a horse designed by a commitee.
ReplyDeleteHoly heck, of all the hundreds of people using the internet, here's Mr Barnsley. Mr Barnsley is watching his neighbour breed one of these creatures. His neighbour calls it "Auckland Supercity". Folk are beginning to wonder if it will ever fly.
ReplyDelete