Pumpkin Mice
Tales (4)
The holiday – part one
Big Brown MouseIt was summer and the Pumpkin Mice were going on holiday to the seaside. The youngest mice had just finished their MATs (Mouse Assessment Tests), and Big Brown Mouse, and White Mouse with the exceedingly long and beautiful green tail, (startling green and quite the longest tail ever seen in Mousedom) felt that they deserved a treat after all their hard work.
The Mousekins were very excited, because they were going to stay with their cousins, the Fishermice. They knew they would be spending a lot of time in the water, swimming and sailing. They hoped they would learn how to water-ski and surfboard, too. Big Brown Mouse told them that if they were very good, they might be invited to go out in the fishing smack with their cousins and help to haul in the nets of silvery fish.
There was much noisy chatter as they journeyed to their holiday destination, with Little Grey, the smallest mouse, asking, ‘Are we nearly there?’ so often that Big Brown Mouse simply answered, ‘Yes’, each time.
White Mouse with the exceedingly long and beautiful green tail (startling green and quite the longest tail ever seen in Mousedom) handed round some snacks to occupy the Mousekins and when they had finished them, she suggested they sing some songs to pass the time. They started with ‘Hickory dickory dock’ which they sang as a round until they got muddled and had to stop because they were giggling so much. Then they sang ‘Three blind mice’, but Tiny Grey and Small Brown started wailing that they didn’t want to be blind or have their tails cut off.
Small BrownBefore they became completely hysterical, Big Brown Mouse sang out in his beautiful deep bass voice, ‘A mouse lived in a windmill in old Amsterdam’, and everyone stopped to listen. They liked the song so much that they begged him to sing it again and again, and very soon they all knew the words and could sing along with him.
After a few hours, they arrived in Cornwall and soon came to the signpost for Mousehole, for, of course, that is where all good mice go for their holidays, (though sometimes they might go to East Mouse, or Middle Mouse in Anglesey.)
They were tired and it was late, so, after a tasty supper of Mousetrap cheese, they tottered off to bed and, despite their excitement, they soon fell fast asleep, to dream of the wonders they might see. What would the morrow bring?
Love the mice!
ReplyDeleteLittle characters!
DeleteI love the story and love there is an actual place called Mousehole :)
ReplyDeleteI'd like to live somewhere like Mousehole if it weren't for the tourists.
DeleteAbsolutely delightful, I enjoyed this immensely! Thank you so much :) I remember there being a Mousehole near where I lived in Devonshire.
ReplyDeleteThank you :-)
DeleteI just looked it up. It is actually in Cornwall.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mousehole
Also meant to say your header photo is fabulous!
Thank you - it's a photograph of this year's bees.
DeleteI think my other comment may not have been published. I seemed to remember the name Mousehole in Devon but may have been a false memory.
ReplyDeleteIt's strange how comments sometimes seem to disappear without trace, to reappear later . . .
DeleteLove love the mice .... wish they lived at my house ... the knitted ones and NOT the real thing (!!)
ReplyDeleteOh, Julie, you have lovely creatures at your house, living and created by you :-)
DeleteDid you do all this work? An amazing talent.
ReplyDeleteI certainly did not create the mice, just the story.
DeleteA lovely tale/tail.
ReplyDeleteNice word play.
DeleteIndeed, what will the morrow bring. I'm sure we'll find out.
ReplyDeleteI bet you can't wait ;-)
DeleteGreat story with great mice and pumpkins!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lynn.
DeleteSo cute x
ReplyDeleteAlison in Wales x
Thank you, Alison ;-)
DeleteYour pumpkin mice tale (tail) totally cheered me up. I've actually been to Mousehole by the way :-) xxx
ReplyDeleteSomehow that doesn't surprise me:-)
DeleteOh, this was just brilliant and so enjoyable, thank you.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see 'what the morrow will bring'
All the best Jan
I hope it won't disappoint;-)
DeleteThat let me re-enjoy the little mouse with clogs on... lovely.
ReplyDeleteI hope it didn't give you ear worms . . .
DeleteChortle!
ReplyDelete:-)
DeleteHi Janice - great tale ... and my mother used to live in Mousehole ... when I got married some Australian friends came down from London and said only you could live in a place called Mowzal ... happy memories on some fronts - one not so much! Cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteWe have some strange pronounciations.
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