yo tamsyn wad up
Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!
It's a line from "Monty Python and the Holy Grail"
The French (the French say ridiculous insults throughout the movie such as: "Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!" "I fart in your general direction" "Leave! or I shall taunt you a second time!") Also, the witch trails are mocked in their ridiculous nature. (It is argued that a witch can be determined by comparing her weight to a duck)
Yes, you should. Unless you want your cage to be smelt of death. I left my dead baby hamster for a a few hours to allow the mother and her other babies to feed on the dead baby --- this gives proteins, nutrients and energy to the Mama hamster and keeps her healthy and nourished so that she can feed her babies with enough milk. After that, I removed the dead baby hamster. If you can not tolerate the gruesomeness of it, I suggest you remove it before the guts spill. But, it's good to give the mother more nutrients. (: Hope this helps!
Don't touch the babies. The mother will sense a smell that has never smelt before. Therefore, she thinks her babies are sick or contaminated, so she will eat the babies. Also, don't disturb the mother too much or she will go crazy!
well my hamsters had babys and mine smelt aswell but i had to leave it like that until atleast the babys are 2 weeks old because if you dissturb them in any way they may not be able to bond with there mother or they could get rejected by there mothers due to ur scent you might just have to sprat frshener round the area but not in the cage or by it just to keep the smel at bay
A smelt is a fish, and roe is fish eggs, so smelt roe is smelt eggs.
I'm sorry to say that my hamster had an enlarged stomach and smelt lot, also he had diarrhoea, it turned out that he had a large tumor in his stomach. You could tell he wasn't eating just hiding food because he was so thin on top.
I smelt you. Then I smelt the air. they are not the same.
No, smelled is but not smelt
smelt verb = smell past = smelt past participle = smelt
Dennis Smelt was born in 1750.