Cats and Birds and Stuff

Kilvey Hill: When Sociopathic Kids Met Baby Frogs

Frogs sitting on some weeds in a pond

For context, this was in the early 1960s, and Kilvey Hill was the wild backdrop to my childhood in Swansea. 

It loomed behind our street like a sleeping giant, not far in reality, but to a small child’s legs it felt like a hike into the wilderness. I didn’t go up there often; it always seemed just slightly out of bounds. To get there we also had to walk past the “Cem” (cemetery), a place full of ghosts and vampires. Still, when I did, it was usually with a mixture of excitement and unease, the kind of feeling that something unexpected might happen. It usually did.

The Quarry and the Devil’s Table

The main attraction was the old quarry carved into the side of the hill. It was rough, wild, and scattered with half-believable landmarks.

There was the Devil’s Table, a stone ledge halfway up the quarry face, reachable by a narrow path. It had a reputation for something ominous, though what exactly we never quite knew. The name alone was enough. I remember finally reaching it after weeks of daring myself, and being sorely disappointed to find… just grass. No pentagrams, no satanic relics, not even a burnt crisp packet. Still, we said it was eerie, because admitting it was boring would’ve shattered the fragile magic of our entire lives.

Nearby was the Devil’s Cave, which felt much more promising. It was man-made, probably from quarrying days, but to us it was a portal to who-knows-where. I don’t think I ever made it more than twenty feet in. It was dark, wet, and full of vague, slithery noises. We weren’t equipped with torches, only bravado—and bravado tends to give out quite quickly in pitch black.

The Pond

Below all that was the pond—a magical, filthy little pool full of frogspawn, tadpoles, and the odd discarded condom bobbing about like lost balloons. (We used to call them “dunkers,” though to this day I’ve no idea why.)

We’d catch tadpoles in jam jars and take them home, not because we had any plans for them, just because it felt like the thing to do. They usually died after a few days, probably from stress, poor water quality, or sheer boredom.

The Frog Incident

Now, what follows is awful. Truly. If you’re an RSPCA member, or in any way decent and normal, you may want to skip ahead.

One summer afternoon, a boy named Christopher, surname possibly Pike, and I found ourselves at the pond during a veritable baby frog explosion. The whole area was hopping. At some point, Chris mentioned the French ate frogs. Of course, we had no idea what that actually involved. We weren’t thinking frogs’ legs sautéed in garlic; we were thinking:what do frogs taste like?

So, we lit a small fire.

And we threw a few baby frogs on it.

I know. It’s appalling. I wince writing it now. But in my defence, we were six or seven. I like to think most of them got away, those that didn’t, we certainly didn’t eat. They looked too horrifying, even to godless, sociopathic seven-year-olds. David, my brother, began showing similar signs of Psychopathy around the same age. But his victims were much smaller.

It wasn’t cruelty so much as a mix of curiosity and stupidity. Still, it remains one of those grim little memories that sticks. I don’t think we ever did anything like it again…

Well—there was that kitten.