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Woofing dog.
Comments
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Ohhhhhh deaaaarrrrr:D I am chuckling a bit too I'm afraid.
My elderly dog has been favouring his shoulder this week (arthritis) but he's still somehow managing to jump up at the worktops and pinch the cats bowls:think:
When I point this out to him .... he just wiggles (whilst licking his lips and trying to hide the evidence).
Oldies are just fab ...I love how he now has "selective hearing" and can't hear a thing on a walk etc but can still somehow manage to hear a cupboard or biscuit tin opening at the other end of the house!
Give Mutt a big cuddle from me!:)Grocery Challenge £211/£455 (01/01-31/03)
2016 Sell: £125/£250
£1,000 Emergency Fund Challenge #78 £3.96 / £1,000Vet Fund: £410.93 / £1,000
Debt free & determined to stay that way!0 -
I have to be honest (woofing apart) I do quite like it when she's being a sod. It shows she's still got some life in her - I start to worry when she's too quiet.
Although her being described as rickety took me aback slightly - it was a vet she's not seen before, and it is true (she falls over now when she sneezes which is quite funny to watch) but seeing your old dog through a new pair of eyes is a bit disconcerting.All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.
Pedant alert - it's could have, not could of.0 -
I have to be honest (woofing apart) I do quite like it when she's being a sod. It shows she's still got some life in her - I start to worry when she's too quiet.
I know that feeling well.
Ben's a nightmare thief - everything!:) I always have to put the rubbish bag out at night / when I go out. Recently I've forgotten a couple of nights ... and it's still been there in the morning:(
However, DM came and took me down to the shops the other day (housebound after surgery) and I forgot to put the bag out.
I was almost relieved to walk into a house that had shredded bits all over the whole downstairs:oGrocery Challenge £211/£455 (01/01-31/03)
2016 Sell: £125/£250
£1,000 Emergency Fund Challenge #78 £3.96 / £1,000Vet Fund: £410.93 / £1,000
Debt free & determined to stay that way!0 -
I don't ever have these things with Harley. That boy is so very unassuming and respectful of everything in here that you'd think I'd trained him with electric shock treatment. (I haven't!)
The poor dog wont even woof to let us know he needs out, he just sits patiently beside the door until someone notices his crossed legs. :rotfl:
I could leave all manner of food out overnight and it would still be there in the morning. He'd be sat on the floor beside it in a puddle of drool mind, but he would not touch it.
We laugh at him sometimes because you just know he's dying to watch you eat something (probably in case a bit falls on the floor and he gets lucky) but he knows he's not allowed to sit in front of you and watch so he goes and lies down at a respectful distance and tries so very hard not to look. It's really qute comical how much effort he puts into trying not to look.
I just can't imagine him woofing because his bed is in a draught. I think we'd die of shock just because he'd had voiced an opinion. :rotfl:0 -
If my dogs were lying in a draught they'd get up and plonk themselves in my bed. Whether I was in it or not.
They don't do discomfort.0
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