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Ella Fitzgerald and Amelia Bedelia by Callista Buchen

Rather, Ella and Millie live for eating. I prefer to think that they live for our love and affection, but in their world, as in the worlds of so many of us, food simply is love. When we come home, instead of running at our feet or licking our faces like puppies, the pigs start squeaking and chirping at the sound of the refrigerator door. These squeaks quickly turn to sirens and wails until we say hello with baby carrots or a leaf or two of kale. Ella prefers to eat food while we hold it. She’d rather savor and nibble at a carrot you hold for her, while Millie viciously grabs her food, her slice of cucumber, her sprig of parsley, her very own carrot, and dashes into her igloo house to eat as quickly and privately as possible. She flies so fast, on her plump little belly and little legs, she goes blurry and moves
with insect-like precision. Buchen3

Guinea pigs have an amazing behavior when they’re happy or excited. Guinea pig people call this “pop-corning” (I love that even this term comes from the world of food). They involuntarily jump when they’re pleased, bursting into the air with a kind of mini-seizure, all from joy. Guinea pigs tend to grow out of pop-corning when they get older, as their body weight gets harder to lift and their joints get sore. But for Ella and Millie, who are four (in guinea pig land, that’s middle-aged or so), the peel of a green apple, among other treats, can still bring on the happy-seizures.

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