Man builds village for mice - including pub and book shop

By Lauren Beavis

A photographer who built an adorable mouse village with over 150k social media followers has added - a pub, a book shop and Hobbit homes.

Simon Dell, 50, began making the 'mini shire' when he spotted a wild mouse in his back garden.

Since then, he has attracted more mice to the luxury mouse town - which he has constructed from recycled wood, materials and repurposed trash.

Simon documents daily village activities across his social media channels (George the Mouse in a log pile house) with an impressive following of over 152k.

He said: "Without photography and the fun of making little things for little things, I could soon sink back in to deep depression.

"Photography gave me a reason to get up and out again and the mouse village gave me back my smile.

"I hope it gives others the same joy it gives me."

Back in 2018, Simon recalls sitting in his garden in South Yorkshire when he "could see cats sitting just feet away from this little mouse at the other side of a fence."

He said: "I piled some small logs around a box as a home for the mouse and covered it with moss and straw to give him a little shelter.

"I then put some wire fencing around the fence so there was no way the cats could get to the mouse.

"We decided to name him George."

The Log Pile Inn mouse pub in Simon Dell's mouse village. (Pix via SWNS)
Outside table and chairs in Simon Dell's mouse village. (Pix via SWNS)

After saving the mouse, Simon began to add more homes next door.

Within days, more mice had moved in, looking for creature comforts.

The wildlife photographer began adding more to the tiny houses, fashioning detailed dining tables, washing lines, motorbikes and even a weights set for the adorable rodents.

Now six years on, Simon says there are at least 20 mice - with possibly two family groups of mice around eight to 10 in each group.

Simon Dell with the mice houses he has created in his garden in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. (Pix via SWNS)

He explained: "Since 2018 when I started the concept of a mouse village a lot has changed and the village has grown - lots of new houses have come and gone.

"The only limit is my own imagination and skills at making the new buildings - as everything is made by hand from recycled bits of wood old logs or just about anything I can find in skips or the trash that could be given a new life.

The wildlife sanctuary and village now has a Pub 'the Log Pile Inn', as well as a book store, village hardware store, a large town house and new hobbit homes at ground level and above those.

A book shop in Simon Dell's mouse village. (Pix via SWNS)
A mouse wearing boots and a scarf in Simon Dell's mouse village. (Pix via SWNS)

He said: "They have two of my old boots converted in to mouse homes and lots of other types of homes scattered around the village.

"In fact they have just about everything you would find in a village or even a town!"

He has plans to add a train station, cafe and a theater or cinema.

Simon, who is based in Yorkshire, expresses how the mouse village has given him - and all of his followers - immense joy amidst personal struggles.

He said: "As I have always suffered with depression -insomnia and anxiety they are always there to support me in good or bad times and many find my photos and videos help make them smile daily and lift their moods.

"That has always been my goal to make others smile along with keeping my mind and body active."

You can follow the mouse village across Facebook, Youtube and Tiktok: https://www.facebook.com/Georgethemouseinalogpilehouse

https://www.youtube.com/@GeorgetheMouseinalogpilehouse/videos


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"I've bought a full wardrobe of clothes for my future kids - despite not being pregnant or dating"

By Hannah Van De Peer

A woman has bought a full wardrobe of baby clothes for her "future kids" - despite not being pregnant or having a partner.

Katie Wood, 32, started out thrifting for her niece, Isla, five, and nephew, Ian, 13 months.

But she decided to keep some of her finds for her future kids instead - so she can save money while planning ahead.

Even though she isn’t sure she definitely wants kids, and isn’t sure she’ll have them anytime soon, Katie says she’ll “never say never" and she’s building up an image of what their styles will look like.

She keeps a box in the attic of 20-plus items of baby clothing - as well as shoes - with silica pouches for preservation and washes them once-a-year.

Katie says she'd be very open to letting a future partner know about her stash - and friends and family love it.

Katie, a solicitor, from Chattanooga, Tennessee, US, said: “I might not have kids for eight more years - but it’s a great money-saving trick to keep some things back.

“I don’t know if I particularly want kids right now - I’m 32 and I don’t have a partner.

“But I love thrifting - and thrifting for any future kids has kind of become its own thing.”

Katie has loved finding bargains since she was a child - particularly when going to garage sales with her parents.

Growing up with 14 aunties, uncles and “a ton” of cousins, Katie’s wardrobe was filled with hand-me-downs.

But during her teenage year, she rejected the idea of buying clothes second-hand, and wanted to wear brand new, fast fashion items like her friends.

Katie Wood who has started collecting clothes for her future potential children. (Pix via SWNS)
An item of clothing that Katie Wood has started collecting for her future potential children. (Pix via SWNS)

She said: “For a while in my teens, I hated garage sales and spent a lot on trendy clothes.

“All my clothes were brand new - and with fast fashion, nothing is made well anymore, so I’d have to keep buying more.”

After starting at Florida International Law School in 2010, at the age of 18, Katie turned back to pre-loved clothing so she could afford “better” quality items.

She’d rifle through clothing bins in charity shops to find the best, most durable items - often coming out with pairs of Levi’s jeans and tennis shoes.

“My biggest thrifting hack has to be rifling through the bins,” Katie said.

“There are some bits that are worth over $40 that I’ve got for $3 each.”

When her niece, Isla, was born in 2019, Katie began thrifting baby outfits for her niece - buying babygrows, hand-knitted cardigans and dresses for $3 to $4 each.

She doubled up once Ian was born, four years later.

Now, she’s started saving them for any potential future children, so she can save money on designer gear.

An item of clothing that Katie Wood has started collecting for her future potential children. (Pix via SWNS)
(Pix via SWNS)

She said: “Until my niece was born, I was set on not having kids.

“But I loved her so much, I could only imagine what it would be like to love a child of my own.

“I realised I had to keep an open mind - and I started holding the clothes back so my future kids could wear them.

“Never say never - and I can always gift them at baby showers if I don’t give them to my own kids, which is a bit of a sad thought.”

Katie has even started to flesh out future styles for her kids - and knows exactly what she doesn’t want them to wear.

“I hate slogan t-shirts with really big brands and labels,” she said.

“I don’t want them wearing Disney stuff - I won’t have my kids walking around with a big Minnie Mouse on their shirts.

“But I do want them to be dressed in durable clothing - like little versions of Levi’s jeans.”


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"I have memory loss - I make memos on everyone in my life so I don't forget them"

By Emma Dunn

A woman with memory loss makes memos on everyone in her life so she can remember details about them - and has been nicknamed Dory by her friends.

Megan Mackenzie, 27, suffered a traumatic brain injury after she fell off a stage in school and hit the back of her head.

The author had to relearn to talk without a stutter and over time realised she was struggling with short and long-term memory loss.

Now she keeps a memo for every friend or family member in her notes app on her phone - detailing things such as their favourite colour, birthday and places they like to go.

Megan, an actress and college educator, from New York City, US said: "When I was in school I got pushed off a stage and hit the bottom of a piano. I hit the back of my head.

"I had to relearn how to speak.

"Then I realised I didn't have a memory anymore. I can remember how things make me feel but the details are blurred.

"I spent the next few years navigating the new normal.

"Each person has a personalised notes app.

"A lot of my friends know and let me tell the same stories over a million times.

"A lot of my friends call me Dory [from Finding Nemo]. I always say 'just keep swimming'."

Megan Mackenzie, 27, suffered a traumatic brain injury at 17 which left her with memory loss. (Pix via SWNS)

Megan was 17 years old when the incident happened which caused her brain injury.

She said: "I couldn't articulate what had happened.

"I don't remember the next few months."

Her parents took her to hospital the following day - as initially no one realised the damage the fall had done.

She was told she had mild concussion but, after her symptoms continued, she was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury.

Over the years Megan has had various therapy to relearn to read and talk.

She said: "I loved reading. Now I read by speed reading.

"I can read an entire book in three hours.

"I get to redo the Harry Potter series as an adult with a fresh brain."

Megan Mackenzie when she was in high school. (Pix via SWNS)

Megan started making a habit of writing things down after she realised she was repeating stories to her friends.

She said: "That's how I started using my notes app to keep track of things.

"I love bullet points. I title the notes app for that person.

"I write down their birthday, places they go, names of dogs.

"It's random life bits that were important when I wrote them down.

"Everyone wants to see their notes but I never let them see it."

Her boyfriend, Andrew, 24, a masters student in computer engineering, is very supportive of Megan.

She said: "He is lovely and wonderful. He finds it charming when I tell him my stories for the 800th time.

"When I'm retelling stories I'll look at him like 'what happened next?' and he'll jump in."

Megan Mackenzie, 27, suffered a traumatic brain injury at 17 which left her with memory loss. (Pix via SWNS)

After Megan's brain injury she was told it wouldn't be "an option" to memorise lines.

Now she's worked out a way to do it - by using movement.

She said: "If I'm learning lines I will touch my head or something.

"Through movement I'm able to lock in these words."

Megan shares her story online - to help share the "quirks" of a brain injury.

She said: "It doesn't keep me from doing anything. I found a new normal."


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Woman conned by fake Gary Barlow offered concert tickets by the real deal

By Josie Adnitt

A woman who was catfished by a scammer pretending to be Gary Barlow has been offered show tickets and a chance to meet the real deal.

Janet Smith, 62, genuinely believed she was talking to the Take That singer for about a week, after she added him as a friend on Facebook.

But after the catfish bombarded her with compliments and told her he had "split up" she grew suspicious - and convinced the scammer to reveal their true identity.

The cheat said he was actually a 24-year-old man from Nigeria and was sorry for lying to her - but told Janet he really did love her and asked for cash.

After speaking out to raise awareness of online scammers, the real Gary Barlow spotted her story - and shared it on Instagram.

He wrote: "Dear Janet - I'm so sorry to hear this - please come to any show you want and meet me", followed by three heart emojis.

Janet said: "Someone texted me to say he'd seen the story - I don't know how he saw it.

"[Gary] hasn't contacted me directly yet. I've had an amazing time, it's been lovely.

"I've blocked [the scammer] on everything but I feel really bad - I just feel so guilty.

"He owned up to me and said he was sorry about it.

"I hope I've got the message out."

Gary Barlow's offer to meet a fan who was catfished by someone pretending to be the pop star. (Pix via SWNS)

Janet believed she was speaking to the real "Back for Good" singer after adding what appeared to be his profile on Facebook on 26th March.

However, she soon became suspicious that all was not as it seemed - and realised the man she was speaking to couldn't be the real Gary Barlow.

She managed to unmask the scammer after telling him he could have her WhatsApp number in exchange for his true identity.

The man confessed his love for her and said he came from a poor family, asking her for cash "to get some food in Nigeria".

Janet said the whole experience had left her feeling "really guilty" and has shared her story to help others spot similar scammers in the future.

Janet said: "I didn't send him any money - I thought it was a cry for help."


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Meet the four-year-old 'wombat whisperer' befriending marsupials!

By Leo Black

Meet the four-year-old 'wombat whisperer' who's best friends with the marsupials - and even learned how to walk with them.

Ashlee Neill spends up to three hours per day playing with the wombats and has been around the animals since birth.

Dad Josh Neill, 41, and his partner Amber Moyes rehabilitate wombats which have been injured in the wild or became orphans after their mothers died.

The little girl is so good with the marsupials that she helps speed up their recovery and boosts their confidence.

Josh, an electrician from Hayfield, Victoria, Australia, said: "When they're young and dependent they need a lot of attention or they stress quite badly.

"They need to be following someone around or they'll stress because they're always looking for their mum.

"With Ashlee, they get comfortable, they learn to eat grass, they learn to be outside, they run around.

"If it weren't because of her they wouldn't rehab so quickly."

The family started rehabilitating wombats in 2013, long before Ashlee was born.

(Pix via SWNS)

They release the animals into the wild after they've recovered, which normally takes about six months.

At the moment, they are looking after four wombats.

Ashlee doesn't have many playmates because they live in a rural area, so she and the wombats have become almost like siblings.

Ashlee even learned to walk by leaning on a wombat, according to Josh.

The four-year-old is so close to the animals that she has mostly foregone toys - choosing to play with the wombats all day instead.

Ashlee Neill, with father Josh. (Pix via SWNS)

Josh said: "Some of those wombats are like her siblings. That's why people in the area call her 'the wombat whisperer.'

"They're her friends, they're like a little family.

"She doesn't have many toys so she goes outside, runs around with them and goes on little adventures.

"It's really cute, sometimes I'll come inside and she'll just be reading them stories."

Josh added: "I guess she's learned to read them.

"They wouldn't really be this comfortable with anyone else, you need to build that trust."

All this contact with the needy wombats has given Ashlee big dreams and she now wants to be a vet.

Josh said: "She wants to be a vet. A lot of the animals aren't in good condition, there's not a lot of people to look up to out here and the vets safe them."


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"I started losing my hair at 19 - now I've launched a wig company to help others"

By Amy Reast

A woman who began losing her hair aged 19 launched a wig company to give people their confidence back.

Kimberly Di Benedetto, 34, began noticing her hair thinning in her teens and was diagnosed with female pattern hair loss.

Her confidence plummeted and she tried everything to get her hair to grow back - including laser therapy, vitamins, scalp injections and creams.

When none worked she looked into hair pieces and toppers and says they changed her life.

After connecting with others experiencing hair loss, Kimberly launched Lusta Hair - a brand selling realistic, natural human hair wigs and hair pieces.

The business, based in Adelaide, South Australia, sees products - starting at £1k - flying off the shelves.

But Kimberly says she's driven by raising awareness for women's hair loss and seeing the look on people's faces when they first see their new locks.

The business owner said: "By the time I noticed my hair loss it was 50 per cent gone.

"When you're 19 you're supposed to be starting your life, not worrying about hair loss."

Kimberly launched Lusta six years ago - originally for hair toppers.

Kimberly Di Benedetto, 34, holds up a hair topper. (Pix via SWNS)
Kimberly Di Benedetto with and without hair topper on her hair.

This expanded into wigs when colleague, Holly Faller, 33, joined the team, because she has alopecia.

Their hair pieces and wigs, hand-made with human hair, can be worn to swim and do sports, so that the wearers don't feel conscious.

Kimberly said: "When I began losing hair, I remember hyper-fixating.

"If I was invited somewhere I'd have to style it in a certain way, and I felt uncomfortable staying over at friends houses and going on dates.

"Once I found a solution I could finally stop stressing about my hair and it became fun.

"With the hair toppers, I went out with my friends more, felt more confident at work and I became myself again."

Holly, an employee at Lusta, has had alopecia since she was born. (Pix via SWNS)

Most of their clients receive their hair products in the post - but some pop in to visit the team to have their hair applied in person.

Most recently they have launched 'Wigs For Kids' - an initiative giving free wigs to children experiencing hair loss due to alopecia or cancer treatments.

Having experienced hair loss, Kimberly does her job to allow others to feel the relief she felt when she found a solution that could bring back her self-confidence.

She added: "When I discovered hair toppers and learnt how to use them, I felt like myself again.

"It's not easy to start a business but I know how good it feels to find hair that makes you feel good."


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Dozens of huskies escape pet café - causing chaos in shopping centre

By Samuel Wightwick

Dozens of huskies escaped from a pet café - and ran riot in a shopping centre.

The video, filmed in Shenzhen, Guangdong, China shows the dogs bounding around the mall after getting loose from a pet cafe on March 12.

Shouts can be heard coming from bemused and confused shoppers as the dogs race around them.

According to reports, some customers had accidentally opened the gated door to the cafe which allowed the dogs to escape.

With the help of several shoppers, all the Huskies were retrieved safely.


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Music-loving dog sings along when owner plays piano

By Samuel Wightwick

A music-loving dog can't help but "sing" along when its owner plays the piano.

Videos show Ashton Biggs, 21, and her 10-year-old pooch named Goose performing together to hits like Bohemian Rhapsody or Hallelujah.

As Ashton plays the tunes on her piano, Goose, a Treeing Walker Coonhound, sits and howls along.

Ashton says that Goose hadn't even heard a piano properly until during the pandemic in 2020, but since then their duets have become a regular occurrence.

Ashton, a full time student from Nacogdoches, Texas, USA, said: "One day I had started playing the piano for fun when he happened to be in the house and he approached the piano and started howling with his beautiful bay.

"From then on, it became a routine! Every time I played, he had to sing."

Ashton has tried a variety of different songs on the piano for Goose.

Drops of Jupiter by Bruno Mars, Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen and House of the Rising Sun by The Animals are just a few of Goose's favourites.

But nothing beats his reaction to his all time favourite song- Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen.

Remarkably, Goose has always been able to show Ashton which songs he preferred by his body language.

She said: "As I learned more songs, he started to show favouritism to some songs over others.

"When I play anything on the piano he will sing, but when I play a song he loves his tail wags more enthusiastically.

"He'll tilt his head back, close his eyes and his bays are much longer and more drawn out.

"He tends to match the pitch more accurately too."

Ashton's dog Goose. (Pix via SWNS)

When Goose first started joining in with Ashton when she played the piano, she couldn't believe it.

Goose has always hated loud noises - whether it be fireworks, gun shots or clapping hands.

But when it came to the piano, it was a different story.

Ashton said: "At first I thought it was a fluke, like a one-and-done scenario but it kept happening.

"Eventually, we would wake up and he would run to the piano and start barking and screaming for me to play.

"Once I play, and he gets to sing for a little bit, he would go outside and carry on with the rest of his day!

"Other times it wasn’t possible for me to play enough."

Ashton playing piano with her dog Goose singing along. (Pix via SWNS)

Being a music major in college has also meant that Ashton has been able to experiment with other instruments.

Goose isn't a fan of the trumpet or any other brass instruments, but does sing along to the guitar every now and then.

She said: "I’m assuming he doesn't like these instruments because they are very bright and loud and produce frequencies that hurts his ears.

"He likes the guitar, but he isn't as enthusiastic about it as the piano.

"Goose is much more of a string-based instruments dog than a wind instruments dog."


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Mum with no heating for three months forced to use kettle to make daughter's baths

By Lauren Chaloner

A pregnant mum says she fears for her daughter and unborn baby after being left without heating and hot water for THREE MONTHS.

Chloe Welsh is forced to boil pans of water on the stove and in the kettle to make baths for her two-year-old daughter Harlow.

The 25-year-old says the boiler in her two-bedroom flat in Redditch, Worcs., broke in January and has yet to be fixed.

Chloe, who is 12 weeks pregnant, uses a small fan heater to keep one room warm but says Harlow still suffers constant coughs and colds.

She says she has repeatedly told Sanctuary Housing, which manages the flat, about the issue but nothing has been done.

Chloe Welsh and her two-year-old daughter Harlow, who have been left with no heating or hot water.

Chloe, who works at a garden centre, said: "This has been going since January 15 which is almost three months now and it is just getting out of hand.

“If I want to give Harlow a bath I either have to spend ages boiling up water on the cooker and kettle or drive an hour to my mum’s house.

"It isn't just about the hot water not working, but it's the petrol money, the time off work waiting for repairs and the electricity costs on the heater and kettle.

“I am under so much stress both emotionally and financially and nothing is being done.

"It is not acceptable and my daughter has had colds and been ill as it is freezing in the flat especially in the morning.

"I bought us both thick hoodies to wear at night but it's so cold we wear them all the time inside the flat."

Chloe, who moved into the property in 2021, says she feels as if she is being ignored by the housing provider.

Chloe Welsh's boiler that broke in January and has yet to be fixed. (Pix via SWNS)
Chloe Welsh says she is forced to boil water on the stove and in the kettle to make baths for her two-year-old daughter Harlow. (Pix via SWNS)

She said: "I'm just exhausted and drained. It's a joke. I just have no words for them even though I've argued this is an emergency repair.

“They haven't even offered to put us up in a hotel.

"I've asked them to reimburse my costs as bills soon mount up and they've said we are all in a crisis.

"Three months is long enough and I just want my flat fixed. It's really stressful and I don't know what else to do."

Sanctuary Housing manages 125,000 properties making it one of the largest housing associations in the UK.

A spokesperson said: "We are committed to completing the required repairs as soon as possible and are sorry that it has taken longer than it should have done to resolve this issue.

"We have offered the family the option of a temporary move until the repairs are completed and having also provided portable heaters for them to use, we have reassured them we will cover the cost of any extra energy used."

The housing provider said it has also issued an apology directly to Chloe.


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Schoolboy, 15, making £2k-a-month selling Fortnite-themed art

By Kate Pounds

Meet the schoolboy already making more than his parents - raking in £2k-a-month selling Fortnite-themed art.

Savvy Shakir Hussain, 15, already has his own design agency based around the popular video game.

He creates artwork and customers pay into a PayPal account set up in dad Amjad's name.

His proud parents have praised his entrepreneurial spirit - and say he's always had a passion for cash.

Shakir Hussain, 15, in his house in Birmingham, March 26 2024. (Pix via SWNS)
Shakir Hussain, 15, in his house in Birmingham, March 26 2024. (Pix via SWNS)

Shakir, from Birmingham, fits in the graphic work around his schooling and has not spent much of the money.

He said: “It’s amazing that I’m making so much money.

"I love playing Fortnite and it’s awesome that this hobby has given me a business as well as lots of fun.

"I love seeing the money come in and piling up in my savings.”

Charity worker Amjad, 38, said: "We're incredibly proud of him.

"He's always had a passion for making money and been good at it. He's helped me with charity fundraising since he was very young.

"I certainly wasn't earning that at his age and I still don't - he's earned more in a day than I do in a week."

Shakir, who lives with Amjad, mum Rifat Bibi, a nursery worker, and his younger sister, created Fortnite-themed graphics on an old computer and started selling on freeance platform Fiverr when he was 14.

He made a couple of pounds a piece.

The youngster then set up his own agency, Akito Media, when he was given his first iPhone for his 15th birthday, in November.

The cash started rolling in when he began taking commissions and paying other artists to create the Fortnite pieces for him, via a platform called Discord.

Shakir made over £2,000 in January and February, and has nearly made £2,000 this month (22/3).

The lad has no immediate plans for his money and puts it all into his savings account.

Amjad said: "I get a message every time he's payed.

"He used to get a message here and there, earning a couple of pounds, then after we got him the iPhone it went crazy.

"Suddenly I was getting messages all the time, and the figures went up.

"The biggest single sale so far is £280.

"He just has the mindset for making money but he's not bothered about spending it: I'm proud of him for earning it and for saving up."


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