7 Reasons

Tag: Kit

  • 7 Reasons That a Cricket Bat is Preferable to a Baseball bat

    7 Reasons That a Cricket Bat is Preferable to a Baseball bat

    Hmm.  What’s the best bat to keep around the house, you’re probably wondering.  Well, I have both, and it’s definitely the cricket bat.  Here are seven reasons why.

    A picture of a cricket bat and a baseball bat with a plain, white background

    1.  Perception.  When you stroll down your nice, quiet unremarkable street with a cricket bat tucked under your arm, you fit in.  To passers-by and onlookers you are that nice chap (or chapess)  from number 29 on his way to participate in a genteel and respectable game which involves a break for tea, and a lunch which perhaps involves a home-made cake or two on a picturesque village green somewhere.

    2.  Perception.  When you stroll down your nice, quiet unremarkable street twirling a baseball bat you do not fit in.  In fact, you are a harbinger of evil, bristling with menace and exuding undiluted violence.  Suddenly, in a scene reminiscent of a cheap western, everything will become silent.  Young women shield young children behind their voluminous skirts; old women scuttle away in terror; middle-aged women…er…er…(I’ve never even seen a middle-aged women in a cheap western, why is that?); men (of all ages) suddenly become incapable of eye contact, because there’s a madman with a baseball bat on the rampage.  Never mind that in your other hand you’re carrying a mitt and a baseball because the people have seen the bat and the panic-stricken-nitwits have been rendered incapable of rational thought.  They will blindly assume that you’re off to break someone’s kneecaps or smash a car’s door-mirrors.  And that won’t help you get an invite to your next-door neighbour’s birthday party.  It may, however, stop trick-or-treaters visiting.*

    3.  Certainty.  Cricket bats, like some of the more successful and big-headed practitioners of the game itself, are doughty, resolute and they stay where you left them.  If you put a baseball bat on the dining-room floor, however, it does not.  The baseball bat is an inherently flighty creature and, like a hollow-headed flibbertigibbet, it will just disappear from where you left it, merrily rolling away without a care in the world.  Eventually, of course, it will turn up, usually while you’re stumbling around in the dark or when your wife is entering the room carrying a glass of orange juice, a plate containing two cheese and real-ale-pickle sandwiches and an apple. Or something.

    4.  Arms-length.  Ever had to pick something up that you really didn’t want to pick up?  Something that you wanted to keep at further-than-arms-length?  Something with many legs, perhaps, or with steam emanating from it.  A cricket bat is ideal for such an eventuality owing to its flat blade.  A baseball bat is not.  In fact, there’s no way that you’ll be able to carry your friend’s pet “hamster” that you’re looking after or that god-awful smelling bowl of onion soup on a baseball bat.

    5.  Flour.  I have never returned home to find my cricket bat covered in flour.  I have, however, returned home to discover my baseball bat covered in flour on several occasions.  And, as I’ve tucked into the pie that my wife has prepared for me, I’ve often thought, funny that.  I didn’t leave it anywhere near the flour cupboard.**

    6.  Air-guitar.  Try miming along to the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion or Led Zeppelin using a baseball bat and you’ll look like a pillock.  Do it using a cricket bat and you’ll look like an eminently sensible and respectable chap (or chapess), suitable for a post in the foreign office, perhaps, or as a school governor.  No matter how bad the music or the miming, if you use a cricket bat you’ll always maintain a thin veneer of respectability.  Until you fall off the table.

    7.  Visitors.  When you entertain foreign guests from non-cricketing nations in your house, a baseball bat is just a bat for baseball.  A cricket bat, however, is a strange thing of wonder which they will enquire about.  And fairly soon you’ll find yourself explaining – at length – to your blankly-incomprehending friends the finer points of the game of cricket.  And they’ll love you for that.  Really.  And, after several hours talking about cricket, you may even find that they close their eyes in concentration as you explain the finer points of leg-spin.

    *Topical top tip.

    **The flour cupboard is not exclusively for flour.  It contains other things such as; homemade blackberry vodka, homemade limoncello, half a packet of raisins, three packets of linguine, a jar of treacle that may or may not pre-date the Crimean war and a sake jug.

  • 7 Reasons That Squirrels Shouldn’t Eat KitKats

    7 Reasons That Squirrels Shouldn’t Eat KitKats

    Yesterday, A picture of a squirrel eating a KitKat was printed in the York Press.  It struck us that squirrels eating KitKats was a bad thing.  Here are seven reasons why.

    A Grey Squirrel Eating a KitKat finger in the city of York

    1.  Health. As humorists, we don’t know much about the internal workings of squirrels (or about the economy of Papua New Guinea for that matter, though that is less relevant here), but we’re fairly certain that chocolate is bad for squirrels.  In fact, it could be deadly for them.

    Dead KitKat Eating Squirrels In The Museum Gardens, York.  Loads of them

    2.  Corpses. And parks littered with the corpses of dead KitKat-eating squirrels aren’t fun places.  In fact, they’re probably hazardous to park-goers; just try chasing a frisbee when there are many dead squirrels underfoot.  Or get a dog, they chase frisbees for you.  And probably eat squirrel corpses.  But they poo everywhere – and chase writers – and no one wants that.  Also, the park of dead squirrels would probably…

    A dead KitKat eating squirrel and an upset child3.  Upset The Girl. And no one wants to upset the girl.

    A fat squirrel eating a KitKat4.  Squirrel Obesity. Although grey squirrels are American, and we should expect them to be on the portly side, they will only be made fatter by the consumption of chocolate confections.  And the spectre of obese squirrels lumbering around the nations’ parks is not a desirable one.  In fact…

    a child is upset by a tree that has been broken by a fat squirrel

    5.  It Could Be Injurious To Flora. And this would upset the girl.  And no one wants to upset the girl (she’s not called Flora, by the way).

    A Giant Squirrel Eating A Submarine near some broken ice6.  The Unknown. We just don’t know what effect eating KitKats could have on squirrels.  Partly because this is a new phenomena and there is insufficient data available to construct a meaningful hypothesis, and partly because we would rather do almost anything than conduct a scientific study.  Or maths.  Or whatever the hell it is.  Anyway, our cursory investigations have led us to conclude that eating KitKats could cause the grey squirrel to mutate into a giant submarine-eating creature that would constitute a hazard to shipping.*

    A Giant Squirrel Eating A Submarine While An Upset Girl Looks On At The North Pole7.  And This Would Upset The Girl. And no one wants to upset the girl.

    *Our study mostly consisted of thinking hmm, what could we photoshop into the hands of the squirrel?

    **7 Reasons (.org) would like to make it clear that we do not believe that Nestle are a large, evil corporation that are attempting to achieve world domination by causing squirrels to mutate into giant submarine-eating creatures that dwell at the North Pole.***

    ***Do not read that with a sarcastic tone, it totally undermines the important disclaimer.

    ****Picture “borrowed” from York Press.  But if you check the original article, you can see that we’ve put it back exactly where we found it.