Lawrence Marsh

May 28, 2021 8:17 AM
OOC: This post may, or may not, be based upon current adventures with my dog. BIC:

Lawrence was bone tired. He’d been up at odd hours the last five days as two of the Abraxan calves were sick. Not running nose and sleepy sick. Tummy trouble and making noise sick. This meant that Lawerence was posted up in the stable, sometimes having to first calm down a protective mother at two in the morning before helping the calves out of their stalls, cleaning the horses and the stalls, and putting them back in. Thankfully, he’d figured out the horses had found a new clover in their pens and had begun eating it. Once he’d gotten rid of all of the clover, started the two calves on a simple diet and given them medicine they seem to improve. So instead of waking up three times a night per calf, it was down to one. This all had given him an idea for one of his last lessons though.

Lawrence smiled wearily at his students as they came in. He already had the jackalopes out in their changes on desks so students could go find them and sit with them. Lawrence knew that the jackalopes would be brought back to the preserve over the summer, but he also knew students were probably bonded to a specific animal, because that’s how the human animal worked. It bonded with any other animal it was in close contact with. With that in mind, what Lawrence had done was a bit maleficent, but important for a lesson.

“Good day class, I hope you are all doing well,” he started. “Today we are going to have a hands on lesson that may be fairly dirty. You will find gloves on the tables in front of you, though not all of you may need to use them.”

He slowly stood up from the desk.

“I am here to inform you that each of your jackalopes have come down with symptoms of some kind of illness. For some of you it will be lethargy and a cough, for some it will be diarrhea and a few other symptoms, and for some it will be ear scratching and whining noises. Your goal today is not to correctly diagnose the issue, but to observe your animal, think through what different diagnosis could be and prescribe a remedy. For those who did not read ahead or read it last year, you will find that chapter 15 of your textbook goes over some of the symptoms for common animal ailments and some suggested remedies. Now, many of you might be worried for your jackalopes safety, I guarantee that each will get better, I will see to it myself.”

“You are all going to be great, but if you have any questions or worries, please raise your hand and ask questions.”


OOC: I’m using this list for possible diseases: https://www.vets-now.com/pet-care-advice/rabbit-ailments-illnesses/
Another list if you want more info:
https://www.purinamills.com/rabbit-food/education/detail/common-rabbit-diseases

If you really want to get into rabbit diseases you can find a whole long list here:
https://www.merckvetmanual.com/all-other-pets/rabbits/disorders-and-diseases-of-rabbits
Subthreads:
41 Lawrence Marsh Coming down with something (Beginner) 1462 1 5

Xavier Lundstrom

June 03, 2021 1:37 AM
Xavier made his way to COMC, trying not to feel resentful. It was one of the classes that used the least magic, and therefore one of his better ones. He tried not to think about what it said about his potential place in this world that he was better suited to scooping poop than any of the cool, fun things.

He took a seat next to his Jackelope, grateful for the name tags on the cages as he still wasn't totally sure he could pick his out reliably from a line up. He wasn't loving the Jackelope unit, which was basically 'be able to care for a rabbit.' It was only lifted out of the realms of a kindergarten assignment by the fact that the bunnies were kind of pointy, but it still felt like a very babyish project. He also wasn't sure his totally trusted him, though in fairness the feeling was mutual.

He noticed that the cage smelt worse than usual as he took a seat, even though he was pretty sure he had cleaned it on schedule, just as thoroughly as he was meant to. Okay, maybe he had cut a few corners, but he hadn't done a terrible job. Was he going to have to suffer the humiliation of failing rabbit care? But as Professor Marsh talked, it became clear. Well, the part about why the cage smelt so bad did. Some other things...

First off, 'you aren't going to diagnose them, but examine them, think of possible diagnoses and prescribe a remedy' was pretty confusing. How was that latter set of steps not diagnosing? How were you meant to prescribe a remedy without having made an accurate diagnosis? If there was one thing Xavier was highly familiar with, it was that prescribing things usually didn't really work out when you hadn't put your finger on what the actual problem was.

Secondly, there was the fact that all the animals had come down with things at once. That was deeply sus. If a few had come down with different things, or a lot had come down with the same thing, that would be one thing, but all of them simultaneously getting ill with different problems? The only logical explanation was that Professor Marsh had made them all sick on purpose. That was awful. Was it even legal? He was pretty sure that would be considered an act of animal cruelty in his world. Maybe it was like Quidditch, where no one seemed to think it mattered if you broke a bone. Once 'yeah but you can just magic it better' became your way of seeing the world, apaprently your boundaries for acceptable behaviour shifted dramatically. Professor Marsh had demonstrated being more than willing to make them work from flashcards in the past. Why was today any different?

"Is it just me, or is this kind of messed up?" he whispered to a classmate. "Like, the only explanation I can think of is that he made them sick on purpose for class," he clarified, in case his classmate hadn't thought of that.
13 Xavier Lundstrom How unusual... 1529 0 5

Hansel Hexenmeister

June 03, 2021 10:57 AM
Hansel liked Care of Magical Creatures, as an idea, but he had discovered his interest was kind of biased and some animals just looked like food to him. The jackalopes were one of those, which made the year long assignment less engaging that it might have been if they were bonding with, say, a snake. Or at least a carnivore. Preferably one that didn't eat primarily snakes, but he was fine with feeding animals mice and stuff. And rabbits were only a bigger version of a mouse, and a jackelope was only a more verbal version of a rabbit. Cori was too little to eat one, but a lot of the snakes at home would happily chow down on Schlangenfutter. (Hansel had really hoped Professor Marsh didn't know German when he named his Jackelope.)

Being a parselmouth, Hansel was less than impressed by the jackelope's ability to 'talk' to him, though it was weird and kind of cool to hear his name being said by an animal without it sounding like hissing.

He suspected he was a bit in the minority in his opinion that snakes were better than jackelopes, though, so he didn't bring it up ever. Even Heinrich and Hilda didn't really like spending time with the snakes at home.

Now, halfway through the year, Hansel dropped into the seat beside Schlangenfutter and frowned slightly at the critter, who had just whined pitifully at him instead of greeting him by name like he usually did. "Hey, Laufweg, you don't look so hot." Poor Jackelope was probably very confused about what his name was, because as Hansel grew more accustomed the small mammal, he'd started calling him Run Away more often than Snake Food. A pet name, if you would. "You dehydrated?" he asked, and checked the water bottle, but that seemed to be working and it still had water in it.

Professor Marsh brought the class to order though, before Hans could try force feeding the animal some water. And they were sick. They were all sick.

He'd definitely have to change the water first before giving some to Schlangenfutter. Maybe the furry little guy was smarter than Hans had given him credit for, and that was why he hadn't been drinking from his bottle. For this many animals to be sick at the same time, there was either something wrong with the water supply or the food supply.

They were told to go care for their sick animals, and Hansel's neighbor whispered to him. For a moment, Hansel just blinked at the other boy, the horrible idea he had suggested making a terrible sort of sense. There were different sets of symptoms. "Oh. I thought it was the same illness, just different symptoms showing." But if it was different, if every one of the jackalopes was sick with one of three different diseases . . . it wasn't just a simple matter of the food or water getting accidentally contaminated.

Professor Marsh had guaranteed their recovery. He had guaranteed it. How could he do that unless he already knew the problem, already had the cure, but he just hadn't given it out yet?

"That is messed up," he whispered back. Whether intentional or accidental, the most likely mode of transmission was still the same. "My pa runs a snake ranch. Usually it's bad water or bad food that will make this many animals sick all at once, and that's probably the easiest way to get it done on purpose, too. Whatever else is wrong, we should start by changing those."
1 Hansel Hexenmeister This is a disturbing turn of events 1524 0 5

Xavier Lundstrom

June 06, 2021 12:01 AM
He had ended up sitting next to Hansel. That hadn’t been on purpose, it had just been how the jackelopes had been positioned. Though he wasn’t sure he liked the idea of Fate nudging him around any more than he did bossy sixth year prefects… Still, he couldn’t say he was exactly sorry for the turn of events. He did want to try and get to know people, and Hansel seemed like a good start. He was in the friendly house.

He possibly should have checked who he was sitting next to, and modified his English accordingly, though Hansel seemed to follow along better than he might have predicted. His English certainly seemed better than his sister’s. Perhaps he’d lived here, with their uncle, for longer. Xavier had not pried into that at the feast, sensing that it really couldn’t be anything good or any of his business. Though Hansel clearly had memories of being back on their father’s snake ranch. That was… not a thing Xavier had ever thought of existing.

“Snake ranch?” he checked. “Like, breeding them for pets?” That was the only use of snakes he’d ever come across. He guessed those snakes had to come from somewhere, though he’d never really thought about it before.

Hansel seemed to have a suggestion of where to start too. It didn’t seem to involve much evaluation of the symptoms, so Xavier wasn’t sure it was totally in line with the lesson plan. However, given the symptoms that had been induced in his jackelope and his suspicions that it had been somehow done on purpose, he wasn’t sure that ‘being in line with the lesson plan’ was his biggest priority.

“Sounds good. Want me to go rinse out and refill the water bottles?” he offered, figuring they may as well share the tasks.
13 Xavier Lundstrom You can say that again 1529 0 5