Animal House

The other day I was having a nice conversation with our youngest cat, Bane, while we sat on the steps leading up to the upstairs bedroom. For some reason, this has become “our” spot – a quiet place reserved for us and us alone.

Scott Adamson’s humor column appears whenever he has a funny feeling. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @adamsons60

“Who is my pretty boy?” I asked as Bane purred loudly while rubbing his head against my hand. “You’re my pretty boy! You’re my big, beautiful boy and daddy loves you very much!”

Now for those of you who aren’t “animal people” such an exchange sounds insane, but it’s really pretty common for critter folk. It’s basically just a version of baby talk applied to animals.

Certainly, I don’t expect Bane to talk back.

And I realize I’m not his biological daddy. That would be disturbing and likely invite comparisons to The Island of Dr. Moreau films – both the bad one from 1977 with Burt Lancaster and the worse one with Marlon Brando that was released in 1996.

Anyway, the point is that Bane is part of my family, and this is how we communicate. But ours is a multiple animal household – two dogs and two cats. And just as humans engage with other humans in different ways, my dealings with our animals varies from one to another.

Charlie is our senior dog, and quite possibly the sweetest creature to ever sniff the earth. I’ve never heard him say a bad word about anyone. Come to think of it I’ve never heard him speak at all but if I did, he would speak well of others.

He likes to relax between 23 and a 23 and a half hours per day and enjoys sitting next to me with his chin resting on my knee. I’ll scratch him behind the ears and pat him on the butt occasionally, and our conversations are simple and brief.

“You’re a good boy, Charlie,” I’ll say. “Daddy loves you.”

And he’ll look and me and say nothing because – you know – he’s a dog. Yet, he is convinced I’m sincere and his gaze tells me he feels the same way.

Our oldest cat, Thor, is six, and we had him three years before we brought Bane home from the local shelter. He’s a sweet little guy and likes to crawl up on my lap and lay his head and left paw on my chest every morning while I’m still in bed. His is a head that demands to be kissed, so I kiss it while saying, “I love my little T-Bone.”

(T-Bone is his nickname … I don’t love actual T-bones because I’m a vegetarian).

Unfortunately, Thor is a nervous wreck and always has been. I can sneeze or burp and he’ll frantically leap from my lap and haul ass to the porch. Hours will go by before you see him again, and when you do he is more often than not cowering in a corner, biting his nails and occasionally smoking a cigarette.

The poor fellow shakes like Luther Heggs in The Ghost and Mr. Chicken when he’s nervous.

Then there’s Steve, the Chihuahua.

Most people think Chihuahuas are cute, what with their wiggly butts and bulbous eyes.

But you know who else was cute?

Damien from “The Omen.”

He was just a precious little child right up until his nanny hung herself at the behest of a hellhound – and it was discovered the tyke had the number of the beast on his head.

He wasn’t so cute then, was he?

Such is the case with Steve. Without warning he’ll show signs of demonic possession, complete with levitation, cursing and projectile vomiting. I don’t have it on video, but I’ve seen his head spin completely around on several occasions.

He launches unprovoked attacks on the other animals, lunges at my hand and bites my fingers every chance he gets, and our conversations mainly consist of me yelling, “Dammit, Steve!” “Stop it, Steve!” and “Dammit, Steve, stop it!”

But you know what?

I dearly love him, just as I dearly love Bane, Charlie and Thor. I’m still gonna rub his belly and kiss him on the noggin because I’m his daddy (though not in the biological sense, which I established earlier).

Oh sure, I’ll burn sage in the house from time to time and I’ve found an exorcist on Craigslist, but Steve’s an important part of the family.

Bottom line is I love all the furry ones the same even if I have to treat them all differently. That might seem odd to people who don’t live with animals, but I’m confident those of you who do understand this perfectly.

In parting, my only bit of advice is that if you ever decide to rescue a Chihuahua, you don’t need to bring a nanny into the picture.

It might end very, very badly.

Food for thought

I think it’s safe to say that Mary and I have fully adjusted to quarantine life.

Scott Adamson’s humor column appears whenever he has a funny feeling. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @adamsons60

While millions of our fellow Americans seem content to pretend COVID-19 is no big deal, we’re erring on the side of science, following recommendations from immunologists, and using common sense. This means we’ll stay home as much as we can – at least until our sentient ape overlords take control of the planet and give us the all-clear signal.

When we do have to go out, we wear masks and stay as far away from people as possible. But in order to steer clear of harm’s way we buy up a bunch of food during our trips and try to make it last. This has been a learning experience for me because I’m ashamed to admit I used to be pretty wasteful when it comes to grub.

Take loaves of bread, for example. As you know, they come with “end pieces” or “heels.” In the past, I considered end pieces the children of a lesser flour god and never thought about eating them. Not only do they look vastly different from the other pieces of bread, but they also get abused every time you open the package. Since they serve as the first line of defense before you get to the cool-looking slices, the heels get touched and nicked and quickly start to look like Leatherface from “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.”

When I would get down to the two end pieces, I’d thoughtlessly put them in the garbage can. (One time I allegedly threw them at our neighbor across the street, but my lawyer has advised me not to comment on that situation until we find out if the CCTV footage is admissible in court).

Well friends, those days are over. Now, the heels of bread are honored members of our diet, serving as wonderful vessels for spreads such as peanut butter.

Speaking of which …

We go through a nutload of peanut butter, and did so even before the pandemic. Give me a peanut butter and fig preserve sandwich (possibly served between end pieces) and I feel like I’m eating like Queen Elizabeth – providing Queen Elizabeth eats peanut butter and fig preserve sandwiches.

There was a time, however, when I would often toss the jar of PB away while it still had stuff inside. It was easier to simply open a new jar instead of scrounging for remnants.

I shouldn’t have done that.

Nowadays I scrape and scratch and dig for every last bite of butter – right down to going full Winnie the Pooh and sticking my nose and tongue in the jar.

(The next time I’m faced with that situation I’m going to put on a red shirt and take off my pants to get the full Pooh experience).

We’re also big into fruit bowls – not the container itself but bowls filled with actual, edible fruit. Mary will dice up cantaloupe and pineapple and mix the pieces in with blueberries and that makes for a nice snack, especially during the summer months. Thing is, after a couple of days the cantaloupe gets bored and turns translucent.

There’s nothing really wrong with it – it just loses some of its flavor and is a tad off-putting from a visual standpoint. In the pre-COVID era such chunks would be chunked, but now even the see-through pieces of cantaloupe get gobbled.

And finally, there’s the potato chip issue.

A staple of my diet since I was a child, I used to take great pleasure in opening a bag and carefully pulling out a large, unbroken crisp. None were ever completely round and often came in interesting shapes. I remember one back in 2014 that looked like former Soviet Union President Mikhail Gorbachev’s head, although I sometimes wonder why I’d remember the shape of Gorbachev’s head 23 years after he left office.

Anyway, I would eat all of the whole chips before finally consenting to nosh on the half chips, but once I got down to the quarter chips, I’d throw the bag away.

Not anymore.

I now devour every last piece of chip dust to the point that – when I’m done – there is nothing remaining in the bag but the bag itself.

One day – maybe five, 10 years down the road – the coronavirus crisis will hopefully pass, but I’m confident the lessons learned from quarantine will stick with me.

Going forward I’ll continue to respect bread heels, enjoy peanut butter to the last drop, and leave no chip behind.

Oh, and I’ll probably still stay away from most of you people. It’s nothing personal – I just don’t want to have to share what’s left of my peanut butter.

Birmingham’s CFL dreams

Anyone remember what you were doing on July 4, 1995?

Scott Adamson writes about alternative football leagues whenever he feels like it. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl and Instagram @adamsons60

For many of you it was probably just a run-of-the-mill holiday. It likely involved some combination of beer, baked beans and fireworks, because nothing screams “Fourth of July!” like alcohol, gas, and noisy pyrotechnics.

But that particular Independence Day was different for me – and special. It marked the beginning of what I thought would be Birmingham’s first long-term relationship with professional football.

The Birmingham Barracudas opened their inaugural Canadian Football League regular season on the road against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers that night, and I was thrilled. I had to work – I was in my ninth year as sports editor of The Daily Home newspaper in Talladega, Alabama – but the game didn’t kick off until 8:30 p.m. local time.

We’d go to press before the clash ended, so I’d be able to listen to the first half of the radio broadcast in the office and follow the rest of it at home. And I hadn’t been this excited about a tackle football contest in a long, long time.

See, Birmingham natives like me have been jilted plenty of times when it comes to the pro game.

The Birmingham Americans of the World Football League lasted just one season in 1974.

Their WFL replacement – the Vulcans – made it through 12 games in 1975 before expiring along with the rest of the league.

The United States Football League and Birmingham Stallions played from 1983-85, and the World League of American Football’s Birmingham Fire had a two-year run in 1991-92.

The Cudas, I firmly believed, would be nothing like those franchises. All the other teams that had called the Magic City home were in start-up organizations, but the CFL had legs, baby.

Its roots were long and deep and the modern league was officially established in 1958. Aside from the National Football League, there was no other pro gridiron circuit in North America with that kind of staying power. It had great tradition, unique rules and I thought it was a perfect match.

“Fans have supported the teams that were here before,” Birmingham coach Jack Pardee, who coached the WFL Florida Blazers and USFL Houston Gamblers, said during a preseason news conference. “The leagues have been the failures, not the teams, and that’s why I’m here. At my age (58) and experience, I didn’t care about pioneering again.”

So this July 4 would be a day to celebrate not just America’s birthday, but the day Canada gifted Birmingham a new and long life in professional football.

Details of the game don’t matter – but I’ll provide some anyway.

Birmingham won, 38-10, racking up 31 first half points including pick sixes courtesy of Andre Strode and Junior Thurman.

Jimmy Klingler was filling in for starting quarterback Matt Dunigan, who was sidelined with a finger injury, and connected on a 95-yard touchdown pass in the blowout.

It was the first of 18 regular season games but I knew there’d be countless more to come because – for the first time – Birmingham was in an established league.

But as I found out before the calendar flipped to 1996 (and after Birmingham finished 10-9 with a first round playoff loss to the San Antonio Texans), it’s called the Canadian Football League for a reason.

Except for the Baltimore Stallions, most American fans were rather cool to the idea of CFL football being played in their backyards. Still, when I heard people suggest there were financial issues and it might not cut it in the Lower 48, I simply put my fingers in my ears and shouted, “La, la, la.”

I didn’t want to hear it, even though it was true (and even though as a sports writer I should’ve taken off my maple leaf colored glasses).

While the CFL brain trust thought expansion to the United States would be a boon it ultimately proved to be a bust, and threatened to drag the league down with it if the chord wasn’t cut.

Baltimore (1994-95), the Shreveport Pirates (1994-95) and the Sacramento Gold Miners (1993-94) were the only American-based CFL teams to last more than a year.

The Barracudas, Texans (relocated from Sacramento), and Memphis Mad Dogs were one and done in 1995, and the Las Vegas Posse played a lone season in 1994.

When the league kicked off the 1996 campaign it was back to nine teams – all based in Canada.

Was I naïve to think the Barracudas would survive and thrive a quarter century ago?

Yes.

Would I be naïve to think Birmingham will ever keep professional football on a long-term basis?

Yes.

Since the failed CFL experiment, Birmingham has been home to the XFL Bolts and Alliance of American Football Iron. The Freedom Football League – should it ever get off the ground – is supposed to have a team in Birmingham nicknamed the Kings.

But really, the end of the Cudas marked the end of my confidence that the Magic City will ever find a forever home in a professional football league.

Fool me once, shame on you.

Fool me seven times, shame on me.