At last the Shamisen player in our midst has gotten the sand out of his eyes 
and and shed light on this matter.
And who knew that Japanese mice eat wooden buckets? Will there then be a 
termite shortage?

Dan- two plastic buckets, one cat, no shamisen


On Nov 27, 2011, at 12:04 PM, David van Ooijen wrote:

>   It came up lately, so I checked the reference.
>   It should be
>   "When the wind blows,
>   the bucket maker get rich."
>   But cats do feature in this story from Meiji Japan.
>   Summary:
>   When the wind blows, sand gets in peoples' eyes. So, more people will
>   become blind. One of the traditional jobs for blind peole is playing
>   shamisen. Shamisen are covered with cats' skin, so cats will become
>   rare when the demand for shamisen increases. With less cats around,
>   mice will have a party and eat all the buckets (this is in a time when
>   buckets were made of wood). Hence bucket makers will see their wares
>   sell well.
> 
>   David - shamisen player who loves cats
> 




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