Tags
beach finds, beach fossicking, British molluscs, Common cuttlefish, cuttlebones, marine fauna, mollusc, Sepia officinalis
I’m heading south to Weymouth again today so, by the time this post is published, I’ll hopefully be heading back from my first walk around Lodmoor. Maybe, as I headed to my guesthouse, I’ll have crunched my way along the pebbles at the top of the beach and found more of these Cuttlebones, the shells from inside the Common cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis), a type of cephalopod, the class of mollusc that includes the octopus and squid. (The photos here show both sides of the same cuttlebone.)

I first saw cuttlebones when I was a child. My nana, who lived just a couple of houses away from us, used to have a Budgerigar as a pet (she probably had several over the years but they were always called Johnny), and she used to buy cuttlebones to put in the cage. Budgies, and possibly other caged birds, gnaw on the bone to get the calcium and other minerals they need.

My parents-in-law have had several budgies over the years, all called Toby! They have all loved their “cuttlefish”.
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What is this thing with keeping the same name for each new version? I don’t get it. 🙂
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And weirder still, they don’t even look the same. The current Toby is blue, but the last one was green! 😂
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Now that really is weird. At least my Nana’s were all the same colour, and she taught them all to say ‘Hello Johnny’. I wondered if she was trying to fool us grandkids into thinking they were all the same.
You’ll have to ask your parents-in-law and report back. 🙂
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