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Yes, the leg one, lol! Thanks for getting me onto him, really mesmerizing to watch.

I've seen pictures of heather from my friend in England. That would be so tasty. No heather in Canada, unless you count women named "Heather". Good honey, nothing like it. Fresh from a beekeeper, raw, it has medicinal properties (not just the eating kind but also topical and well, I'll stop there).

It is really mesmerising. I think the music really adds to it. The way he just pounces and boom, in you go!

Heather does have a lovely taste, well the honey does. Honey is an amazing thing. I have been a big fan ever since I was a sickly young man, lol!

LOL, yes, the music definitely adds. He's deadly with a mouse. I found his swallowing process fascinating, the way his eyes go flat. I wonder now about how the digestion of fur and bones works. I'll have to read up on that.

You, a sickly young man? You look so stout and ready to do battle in your images (thinks of swords). That honey must have done the trick. I bet you've had it in the chunks of honeycomb too.

The eyes flattening is really something. I have found myself wondering about how much they poo out. Their stomachs must be quite something.

Hehe, perhaps not that sickly. I do remember getting glandular fever, I think it's called mono in the States. One of my college teachers suggested raw honey and I was hooked ever since!

I kept replaying the eyes flattening scenes. I had to and then freeze it to see how flat they went in an instant. I bet the poo is a whole other thing. Note to self, read up on that too. I'm thinking their stomach must be like a garburator.

Yes, mono, that was a thing here also. Very interesting that raw honey helped with that. First time I've heard that one. I see why you got hooked. There's something special about bees and honey.