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HAMSTERS AROUND THE WORLD
 
 
        
 
 
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 JAPAN

By David Imber

(Reproduced by permission of author from 1hml)
 
I have written here [1 hml] many times about how crazy in love with hamsters Japan is, and that hasn't changed in intensity, but it has in style. This has both positive and negative aspects. The positive is that it's still commonplace to see references to hamsters everywhere you look -- hamster cookies and cakes, clothing patterns, etc. They also come up in conversation on TV and whatnot (example: I'm watching a tv show and in it a little girl is talking to her friend on the phone in the  background "did you see her new hamster? It's white and fluffy...so cute..."). The negative is that the nation seems to have OD'd somewhat on hamster-themed goods, and so in this most consumer-oriented of societies it's only a matter of time before hamsters give way to ferrets or whatever the "next big thing" might be. Already it appears that the hamster daily calendars we've been using in our home for years seem to have gone out of print. The animated hamster hero of afternoon TV, Hamutaro, is still going strong, but as I remarked to my wife, he's become a franchise, like Starbucks, and is just everywhere. One of the local fast food concerns, Lotteria, is presently doing a Hamutaro promotion, giving away Hamutaro lunchboxes and so forth. Hamutaro still has a daily calendar, by the way, but he's animated, so it's just not the same. He seems no more like a hamster than Garfield is a cat.
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SINGAPORE
By mei
 
Some people start with a pair not knowing how they multiply . My own humble observation regarding hammy-keeping here in Singapore?  Years ago, when I was a kid, Syrians were the rage . They could go up to a few tens for a regular animal .

You hardly see Syrians actively on sale now.  In fact, some pet shops specialize solely in Dwarfs because Syrians don't sell well. I was initially looking for a Syrian when I took up hammy-keeping again after years of leaving the hobby, BUT found only Dwarfs . Some shops had stock that looked miserable.

What made me settle for a dwarf was after I had to baby-sit my sister's hamster Fatt Chye (a WW Dwarf...pearl). My little girl had been eyeballing hamster equipment for ages, and I thought this would be a good chance for me to observe how she related to the animal.

Well one thing led to another, and soon we were proud owners of a WW Pearl. A pure white specimen with a light grey stipe down her back. It took us two months to tame her.

Some hammys go to about 50 bucks in our currency for a young specimen . A regular WW could cost as low as 12 dollars . Most shops sell Dwarfs now. Sometimes shops selling birds or dog food could have a sideline for hammys .
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