Yep. Could have gotten trapped in the basement and lost too much heat to get out however it came in. Your mum might've saved the snek.
A good deed for the day, and not a bad idea. Sneks eat vermin, after all.
Squirrels, however. They will eat all sorts of things. They are quite vicious little bastards, all together. Fascinating creatures, but have no doubt that where you shrunk to some ten inches high, they would not hesitate to bite your head off. They, too, have to eat, but they are unusually ruthless.
Dang tree-rats. IDK, usually they're pretty cute, frolicking around eating nuts and things, but I remember times they weren't. For some reason they would screech almost constantly during certain seasons in Raleigh. Eventually started filtering it out as background noise, like ugly birdsong.
They also swarmed our pecan tree, naturally... Except they did it too early, chewing off the sprouts which would someday
become pecans. Clearly the poor things were population-limited by hunger. So while it was a little uncomfortable to my sensibilities, it was actually pretty merciful when we started shooting and eating them. They didn't taste great but I felt better from using the meat. Dad got pretty great with that BB gun, and pumped it to a point where they only suffered for seconds.
So, we should consider that it might not have been bad to live as an uneducated peasant and die of horrible disease because nobody knew about germs or viruses yet?
No, and this is exactly the arrogance of today that is being exhibited - that everyone back then were uneducated peasants wallowing in offal unaware of infection or viruses, when in reality empirical medicine was being practiced by the Greeks and Chinese to such a meticulous extent that we still use their disease categorization systems and ethical standards 2,500 years later.
The Greeks were laudable for trying to classify things, and they were aware of the importance of hygiene. That's pretty cool, and most of that knowledge was preserved and used in medieval society, if only at the highest echelons. Most people had folk remedies and probably a basic understanding that unwashed wounds were bad...
Those poor peasants probably didn't understand about the four humors which needed to be kept in proper balance by bleeding or potions. They knew to clean wounds, but didn't ascribe it to a goddess. They really didn't have a good system of diagnosis and classification, which sucks for choosing or sharing remedies, but they were just as clueless as the Greeks about germ theory.
(Apparently, making poultices with feces
was a thing, but it was a notably un-scientific movement that promoted it... A movement championed by
Hippocrates)
On a different but I feel related noted, just look at how well they (or the Romans) classified animals. It's both impressive and awful. See the elephant:
http://bestiary.ca/beasts/beast77.htmIt's amazing how much they got right, mostly thanks to the Roman's unprecedented travel network. But there's so much that they got hilariously wrong.
But maybe elephants are an unfair example. Thing is, they got amusingly simple things wrong about very common animals as well:
http://bestiary.ca/beasts/beastalphashort.htm"The weasel conceives at the mouth and gives birth through the ear"
"Geese can smell the odor of man better than any other animal can"
"The cubs are born unformed, and must be licked into shape by the mother" (bears)
And don't get me started on *horses*, which you'd think they'd understand pretty well
http://bestiary.ca/beasts/beast212.htmI know you're not saying they're perfect or anything, I mostly shared all this because my friends and I find it interesting and often entertaining. It is impressive that they *tried*, in such a time. But they actually understood very little, they simply kept better records of their trial-and-error than the average witch or midwife. Which was a huge advantage, even though a lot of that knowledge was harmfully wrong.