We got a hamster for the library. It was my idea. (See? My
raging desire to nurture something is even following me to work.) I had a
number of hamsters growing up. I think I counted one time, and I’ve had a total
of twelve hamsters from the time I was six until the time I went off to
college. Mooney, Rose, Squirt, Alice,
Creamy, Calico, Smokey, Sparkles, and Soybean are the hamsters I remember with
clarity. There was a string of three in the middle there that died within days
of bringing them home. I think one of them was called Mustard.
So, there was this library somewhat near here that adopted a
stray cat that they named Dewey. Dewey lived in the library and welcomed
patrons. He climbed around on the shelves and the library director cleaned his
litter box and made sure he had food to eat. Now there are books written about
him. National Library Week is coming next week, and those of us on the planning
committee for this Big Event in the library world decided that we would like to
have a pet in the library too. Not feeling quite ambitious enough to take on a
cat (and not wanting to deal with allergy problems that would certainly arise),
we decided a hamster was a good choice for a library pet.
Hammy and me at the library |
The rest of the committee was willing to go along with this
plan, but I’m pretty sure if I hadn’t propelled the idea forward, it wouldn’t
have happened. You see, I loved having
hamsters when I was little. I carried them around in a little plastic traveling
case all day as I went around the block visiting friends. The poor nocturnal
rodent—he just curled up right there in the middle of this little plastic case
rocking back and forth and slept as best he could. My friends and I built mazes
for the hamsters out of Duplos and toilet paper tubes. I even have a faint
memory of carrying one of my hamsters (probably Mooney or Rose—bless their
little hearts for being the pets of a six-year-old) around on a tennis racket
and bouncing him up and down. Gently.
My friend Allison and I once tried to introduce my hamster,
Mooney, to her hamster, Peaches. They immediately latched onto each other in
what looked like a furry trembling ball. We couldn’t even see their heads. At
first, I think I thought they were hugging (I was only six, after all.) But we
quickly realized they were not hugging
and we should probably separate them. One nasty hamster bite later, I learned never to introduce adult male hamsters
to each other and expect them to be friends.
Squirt was my only dwarf hamster. He was too squirmy for me,
though. He escaped from his cage one night, disappeared (probably down the heat
register) and was never seen again. Alice
was my only albino hamster. When I was little, I had a fixation on being albino. I still have pictures I drew of myself as
an albino human being. Alice
allowed me to experience the thrill of being albino vicariously.
Creamy is the hamster I remember with the most fondness.
Creamy was a long-haired hamster, so I could brush him with a Barbie brush. He
moved with me from Wisconsin to Iowa when I was nine and
I considered him my only friend for a while. He also escaped down the heat
register once, but thankfully during the summer. After he didn’t turn up for a
few days, my mom and I went down to the basement and opened up the side of the
furnace. There he was, a lovely shade of grey from all the dust, curled up in a
ball, sleeping right in the middle of the furnace.
Sparkles probably should have lived longer than she did. I
was fifteen when I got her, and I had three very rambunctious guy friends who
hung out at my house most weekends. They took a liking to Sparkles right away,
but not because he was furry and cuddly. They played catch with Sparkles.
Sparkles was the ball. At first they were content to toss him from about four
feet apart. After a while, they became so confident in their hamster acrobatics
that they would put her in the middle of a throw pillow, pull it taut suddenly
at an angle, and Sparkles would fly through the air toward the other boy with
another throw pillow. (Please try to refrain from sending me hate mail for my
animal abuse. I was an irresponsible sixteen-year-old, and I really am quite
horrified at my past self!)
Soybean was the last hamster I had before I went to college,
and he spent most of his life in his cage. I was too busy with school and
friends and extracurricular activities. I had no time for a hamster. I can remember many times when I suddenly
remembered I needed to feed Soybean or give him some water that I would think
to myself, I’m so glad God doesn’t care
for me the way I care for this hamster!
I wouldn’t say I was terribly neglectful, but I wasn’t a good pet owner at age
eighteen.
And now, I have the library hamster to take care of. He
doesn’t have a name yet. I’m going to let the kids vote between a couple of
names during National Library Week. He will either be called Humphrey,
Reepicheep, Freddy, or Midnight. Humphrey and Freddy are both hamster
characters from book series. Reepicheep is the adventurous mouse in the
Chronicles of Narnia, and Midnight is just a name I thought preschoolers might
prefer if the names I gave my hamsters at that age are any indication.
But I really do enjoy taking care of little Library Hammy. One
of the hardest things to do with a new hamster is tame it. You need to make it
feel comfortable with your hand reaching in the cage, comfortable with your
smell as a human (so it doesn’t try to nip curiously at any hand thrust into
the cage), and comfortable with being picked up. I’m finally to the picking-up
stage, which is by far the most fun. Hammy is comfortable enough now with me
that he will let me scoop him up in my hands and carry him around the library
(before it opens—I’m still not sure he’s ready for a stampede of children
clamoring to pet him).
Contrary to what it might seem from the stories above, I do
think I was a good hamster-owner, and I really did like having hamsters. I like
having one in the library.
But it is kind of fun to care for, all the same.
Reepicheep! Reepicheep! Does my vote count?
ReplyDelete(Not Despereaux? I'm surprised!)
I had a hamster when I was young, also! Named him "Hamlet" and called him Ham. He went down the heat register after 2 years, never to be seen again! I will try to find a picture of me with him. :-) mom
ReplyDelete