Saturday, July 6, 2019

IT’S OFF TO THE MOON FOR THE GUINEA PIG GUINEA PIG

Durwood ‘Doc’ Pigeon, whose HydroVac 2000 vehicle desiccator is being trialled as we go to press, is hardly a man to rest on his laurels.

Work on his next – and easily most ambitious – project is already nearing completion.

“I’m going to send my pet guinea pig to the moon,” the jubilant inventor told the Observer yesterday.

“To the best of my knowledge, nobody’s ever attempted it before, so Lawrence will be a guinea pig in every sense of the word.

“The idea came to me after I successfully fired a Burmese cat across the Channel last year. It made a reasonably soft landing on a greenhouse roof and now lives with a family in Deauville.

“They write to me sometimes, but they tend to sound a bit resentful,” he added.

In preparation for the trip, Lawrence will be placed inside a Ziploc bag stuffed with vitamin-enriched hay. This will serve as both food and bedding during the voyage. Once he’s safely inside, the bag will be pumped full of oxygen and sealed.

With the bag secured, half a dozen cardboard tubes, each packed with a mix of gunpowder and barbecue briquettes, will be fitted into place around Lawrence’s body, using a large industrial elastic band.

“All six fuses will be lit simultaneously then, as they start fizzing, I’ll propel Lawrence into the air with the same catapult I used for the cat.

“As the force from the catapult is boosted by the ignition of the fuel, the whole thing should go critical and achieve escape velocity,” said Doc.

Once out in space, zero gravity conditions will cause the elastic band to slacken, allowing Lawrence to jettison the tubes by wriggling inside the bag. From then on, the 240,000-mile journey should take around two weeks.

“Lawrence has undergone rigorous mental and physical training to prepare for this,” said Doc, glancing affectionately at the impressively muscular rodent.

“Landing, in particular, will require him to exercise absolute discipline and split-second timing.”

By the time Lawrence begins his lunar descent, both oxygen and hay will be all but depleted, leaving little in reserve to absorb the impact. It is therefore crucial that he quickly creates a cushion of air around himself, to avoid a potentially fatal crash landing.

As the spacecraft enters the moon’s atmosphere, a small onboard cassette machine will click into play. The recorded instruction ‘Breathe! Breathe!’ will repeat at three-second intervals, prompting the cavy cosmonaut to massively increase his respiratory rate. His accelerated exhalations should fully inflate the bag and allow him to make a soft landing.

“I trained him inside a beach ball, connected to the hose of an old cylinder vacuum cleaner I’d found in the loft,” explained Doc. “As I shouted the command to breathe, I’d turn on the cleaner and suck the oxygen out of the ball.

“When I was satisfied that he was exhaling at maximum rate, I would throw the ball down onto a mattress, to simulate the bump of landing in the Sea of Tranquility.

“We’ve done everything we can and he’s 100% flight-ready. The only thing now is to wait until the beginning of the next lunar cycle, so the moon will be full when he arrives.

“That way, he should have the maximum surface area to aim for.”

When asked by the Observer how Lawrence would be getting back to Earth, Doc stopped speaking for a moment and looked pensive.

“Do you know, I hadn’t thought of that,” he admitted.

“But Lawrence is a resourceful little chap – he's bound to come up with something.”

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