Sunday 1 July 2012

Trying to build a hamsterrific home

Since March I have had a new room mate: a female Roborovski hamster called Hilinä Viuhuliina (born Jan 9th 2012; arrived March 6th). Since I tend to get over-enthusiastic about anything new and I am nerdy enough to want to get as much information I can, I have read countless texts and blog posts about hamsters, their preferences and keeping them healthy. This has resulted in a project of improving her inhabitat to give a happy and interesting life for the 2-3 years she (hopefully) will be with me.

Hilinä the Robo's time with me started with only a coconut house, a hay nest, two cups for food (one for dry, one for fresh), a pool for sand bathing and a drinking bottle. In the beginning she was a restless little hamster who runned around the terrarium constantly and/or jumped in and out of the sand pool all the time...


So I decided I needed to do something to make her life more interesting. First of all I started putting seeds and/or oat grain into the hay nest. It is hilarious how her bum goes up and down when she tries to find them in the nest!



I also made her a swing and a tube by crocheting. The tube you can see in the sand pool video and the swing here:



However, she quickly ate holes in both and I took them out, as doubted it would be healthy for her to get the yarn into her digestive system (especially as it is dyed).

The next swing was made of pieces of a willow branch tied together with sewing thread. I also cut some toilet paper cartridges into a set of tubes to run around her house. The tubes have an opening towards the glass but as the glass is there she feels like she is inside a tunnel, and spends a lot of time in these, sometimes eating, other times resting.



The red-brown hut behind the swing is an ex-candle lantern. It had holes in a square shape on two sides; I used a hammer to make the holes connect on the other side. The lantern broke into two in the process, so I used salt dough to glue the pieces together, as it is 100 % edible.

In this video the placement of the swing is new and she falls when trying to get into it, but today she is quite quick and sure to jump from the hut to the swing. In this video she has a flying saucer wheel as the wooden one was being cleaned.



Also, in the current setting the running wheel is at the center as she spends so much time in it and the sand pool wasn't really being used in the old setting where it was on the other end of the terrarium.


She jumps from the wheel to the green pool filled with coarse sand (hamster toilet sand), might roll and or rest and then jumps back:


The coarse sand was put there to encourage her to use the 'real' sand pool for bathing. The green one can then be emptied every few days since she mostly poos in it (since it's right next to the wheel). The poo also falls between the coarse sand grains so it at least looks like less like rolling in poo... She does love spending time in the sand pool, too, and often digs there for a very long time in between bathing. Here are some close-ups of the current setting:

The hut complex.


A mixture of organic grains and seeds I made myself.
The cup is not always there, if I hide seeds/grains
in the terrarium I take it out.
Hilinä in the tunnel.
The 'candle-hut' has its lid turned upside down
and I put some Oxbow hamster food in it.
The swing usually has some treat in it
(a nut or a sunflower seed)

The sand pool is the most important thing
in this end of the terrarium.



This is an atypical picture -
typically the sand is piled up at the other end from digging.




Finally, here is a short 15 sec video of behavior I have been wondering about. Hilinä has been doing this to walls mostly, but also to ceramic cups/pools she has in her terrarium. I wonder if it's just the digging reflex getting out of hand, or if this is some kind of hamster way to mark her territory. Or something else?



P.S. Sorry for the poor quality of the videos! As she is a nocturnal animal, there usually isn't enough light to catch both light and movement with my cheap video camera. One day this will be a great excuse to buy a more expensive one. ;)

P.P.S. In case someone wonders, the bedding is a mixture of hay and wood shavings. There is a thicker layer of bedding under her hut to give her room for digging in the nest. The bedding under the wheel is a layer of wooden cat litter pellets and some shavings to discourage her from digging there and to keep the wheel on "solid" ground. When I clean, I put the hay and the pellets first and then pour shavings on top --> the hay keeps the tunnels/structures in place. She also has some shredded toilet paper available in the 'candle-hut' which she takes into her nest to make it more comfortable.

Saturday 28 April 2012

Hanging Gardens of Helsinki

One of the bad sides of living in the centre of a city is that I don't have my own garden. Gardens are just great: they are made for walking, dreaming, reading in a hammock, playing, and of course, for telling and keeping secrets.

One of the practical sides of having a garden is having fresh herbs available for some yummy home cooking. Until I have enough money for a lovely house with a huge garden, I will have to do with this little fellow and its friends:

In time I plan to make a whole set of hanging baskets and put them all in my kitchen window (as this apartment doesn't have any windowsills). My own little hanging garden!

Monday 13 February 2012

Reindeer pizza & crocheted beanies

This weekend I got into making crocheted beanies. A few years back making them was a really big hit and a lot of boys and girls (yes, boys, too!) who were into snowboarding made them, so they could have the kind of hats they wanted. The beanies I made are a bit more complicated than a simple striped crochet which you tend to see on snowboarding beanies (see eg. this Burton beanie or this one by Dana) but they still have the basic stripe motif in them, just a bit changed. They're also made of cotton wool which makes them good to wear when it is not so cold or under a helmet, as they give out moisture and cool the head. Maybe now that I got into this I will make some of wool, too, which will be warmer.

Here are the first two, going out as presents to members of my family:


size 60 cm, baggy fit
size 55 cm, slim fit



***

I also made some reindeer pizza this weekend! Noticed the other day when doing shopping that my grocery store sells frozen, thin-sliced reindeer meat. I've tried taking my food shopping towards a more nature and animal-friendly direction, trying to find not only organic fruit and vegetables but also organic beef and chicken. This is at times difficult, so I was happy about this, as the reindeer wonder freely in Lapland for most part of the year.

Yes, I know, giving up meat would be the best option but I find it SO hard to do... Eating only veggies, even soy/beans/other vegetarian foods high in protein just keep me hungry. :( But going there. Baby steps. :)

So, a fresh mozzarella - pepper - reindeer pizza going into the oven:




And coming out:




Within 15 minutes of taking this picture, the pizza was no more.


Tuesday 31 January 2012

Random Paths

Last five months have been so stressful both in good and bad ways that I haven't been able to keep my promise to update this blog every two weeks. I wouldn't go as far as calling my life at the moment  (dis)stress-free, but it is going there, and I am content with my efforts to Slow Down & bring back the Big Calm.





I was walking the other day in Lauttasaari and took some photos. Winter has arrived in Finland, but unlike most Januaries, the sea hasn't frozen yet. Instead there is a combination of snow and a pale blue wintery light. I wish I was a better photographer, but for now, this will have to do:


Grey-blue and a hint of pink. 





















Growing towards the light, I suppose.


In the midst of whiteness.





















During a winter like this one, snow can stick to trees and rocks in funny ways. This tree has had snow blowing on it from two sides, while two others have been left untouched or been cleaned up by the wind. This tree, by the way, is a dead tree still standing, called kelo in Finnish. Apparently in English it is just a 'dead tree.' 

Luminen kelo / a snowy dead tree.

Searching for the term I discovered that "dead tree edition" is a pejorative term for a paper publication that has been already published online. As a printed book lover I must protest. I find books to be much more alive than any pdf or web page. A book one can put in a shelf is not just an information container, it is a friend with thoughts. Yes, printing books means cutting down trees, but once a book has been printed it can be read for centuries without any extra cost to the environment. Bits are much more untrustworthy. They disappear the minute there is a power failure.

When you look at a recently keloed tree closely, you can see the bark peeling off. 


The Harry Potter stone.


Sometimes snow can reveal something that might have gone unnoticed. I wonder if Voldy and his supporters had anything to do with this:





Trees in the water.









Life is not always fair. Actually, I find it to be mostly unfair. These trees might feel the same... Or then they're just into winter swimming, something worth trying if you've never done it. Remember to take a sauna first! 

***


I've made very few items lately. The one below was inspired by, well, me receiving the materials and instructions to it as a Christmas present. From my dad! (Well, mum helped). 

The bag is made by crocheting a weft (or a fill, kude in Finnish), something which can be made from old cotton clothes by cutting them into slices to make rugs. Menita shop sells packages which contain two rolls of weft, a big wooden crochet hook and the instructions to this bag. 

The buttons are from my late grandma's collections and were added to make the bag more interesting. If you look closely, the seemingly randomly placed buttons are actually connected to each other with orange yarn... A very random path, but it looks good, at least to my eye.