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A vision of Hellhounds [message #9611] Wed, 07 January 2009 19:14 Go to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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A Vision of Hellhounds


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9613 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 19:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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And then I remembered: Daisy has a four month old puppy. She’s not herself. And her judgement is seriously frelled.
I was checking out another forum the other day and there was much squeeing over a litter of BC pups. The comments were things like "Oh! Puppy breath!" ......... So I would have to say you are probably on the right track with your diagnosis of Daisy's condition...


But you get used to how sweet and adorable they are
Yes. Smile

And there are sheep that will, drat them, and I’m sure there’s another sheep hiding in the bushes ready to jump out and arrest us if we misbehave. Aren’t there laws against entrapment?
Most likely there are laws. But since when have sheep followed them? Rebels that they are. I do find reverse psychology works reasonably well with sheep and alpacas... Wink hehe


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9615 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 20:17 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jmeadows  is currently offline jmeadows
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Quote:

Recent highlights include the sock watch. Mike ate a pair of socks.^


Poor socks!!!

Puppy's blog name is Mike? I don't remember that. Obviously it has been too long since the last pupdate and important details are starting to slip.

Quote:

But it gives me a slight atavistic frisson seeing them acting on the instinct


Oh, indeed. I get a similar shock with ferrets sometimes, and it's just with stuffed animals. I joke about it, but the first time I noticed all the stuffed animals with their throats torn out--that was kind of a shock. (Then I noticed they always rip out the eyes, too, buttons or beads or embroidered. It doesn't matter. Eyes and throat. Every single time.)

And I keep hearing about how domesticated ferrets (like mine, not like the actual working ferrets you have in other countries) wouldn't survive a week without humans. Sometimes I think my ferrets are goofy enough they wouldn't know what to do, and then I remember their stuffies.

:|


Smooshes!
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9617 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 20:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
southdowner  is currently offline southdowner
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Daisy was here before hellhounds had had their domesticating walk and they were a trifle . . . exuberant. Eventually I felt that joy in life and visitors had been sufficiently expressed, and I said so. Hellhounds subsided. Oh! said Daisy. You have trained them so well!
I what? I thought, looking around bemusedly.

Trained by gad! Subsiding on command when intoxicated by visitations! Your certificate's in the post Smile

It’s funny though, hellhounds’ sheer beauty messes with people’s heads.
It is a fact, not to be questioned, that the HHs are creatures of beauty and a joy to behold. I envy you, having been more accustomed to cries of "Eeuww! Look! It's not a dog, it's a pig!!!" Furious on behalf of my poor dog I would march on, pretending to ignore the taunts; meanwhile, said bullie would be grinning from ear to ear, trying to ingratiate self and gain more attention. You do know that bullies are dogs of very little brain? Bet the hellhounds would run rings round them (in oh so many ways!)

[Updated on: Thu, 08 January 2009 12:00]


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9618 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 21:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
skating librarian  is currently offline skating librarian
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You guys (Robin and others who own dogs) have made me curious.

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another? The hellhounds are stunningly beautiful, but they sound awfully high maintenance. People with sheep would choose herders, hunters often seem to go for hounds or retrievers, etc. As someone who has never chosen a dog from the universe of canines, I wonder whether it's aesthetics, or personality, or what that you're looking for?

I've just re-read Spindle's End and I've been thinking about the various breeds of dog characters it includes.

My first pair of cats were presented to me by a friend who showed up on my doorstep with two kittens and who told me that my new house needed some cats. That I knew their Mom (who was a fantastic mouser and as laid back a cat as I've ever met) helped convince me that we'd do well together.

The next was a "rescue" from a blended family which acquired members who were allergic. She sold herself on the basis of a great personality which was evident from the very beginning of our "trial period."

Then came the current pair, long term shelter residents who also have great personalities. One has health challenges which had made the shelter folks very careful about the sort of home they could go to, and I was happy to oblige.

So why Hellhounds, Bull Terriers, Great Danes, or Cocker Spaniels? How did you decide?
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9620 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 22:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
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I still get a rush out of holding my first copy of my new book: and I want still to have that rush, even in a few more decades when I’m the oldest living writer still cranking ‘em out. My guess is that you have to have that rush to be doing your job properly. I could be wrong.

I think you do. Whether it is always smiling when you pick up the phone, having a deep satisfaction at the end of the day or a thrill at opening the next file, or any other thing that indicates that you take pleasure in what you do and doing it well is exciting to you, despite the icky and awful bits that every job has. I think that rush is what tells you that you are doing the right thing in life and if that is missing, that you should go out and search for what you are doing.

And because I am a demanding reader Wink I felt that a post on the gorgeousness of Hellhounds, their putative training and savage underlying instincts should be accompanied by photos (maybe tomorrow?). We haven't had pictures in a while. Since Christmas, that is Smile Pretty please.


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9623 is a reply to message #9618 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 23:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Maren  is currently offline Maren
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skating librarian wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 21:41


Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another?


Lola's the first one I've had independent of my parents, and I think it was definitely a case of underdog syndrome for me. She was at a shelter and had several strikes against her: heartworm positive, a known fence-climber, a rather unfortunate picture....(She does have ears--see?) She'd been there a month and no one had expressed any interest in her. Heartworm is treatable; I live in an apartment, so don't need to worry about the fence issue for now; and the picture actually made her look somewhat similar to Duke, one of my canine "brothers", although she's turned out to look not at all like him now.

The shelter was asking for donations to cover her heartworm treatment. My mom had me convinced that they might be so short on funds that they would have to euthanize her if someone didn't pay for it (this was not true--they'd already done the first round of treatment by the time I called). I gave in, and Lola has turned out to be just about the sweetest, most well-behaved dog I've ever known.

So...I'd say in my family, we choose based on personality and life situation (of the dog). But we do seem to keep ending up with terriers, without knowing why we do that to ourselves. Wink Lola and Duke (who's also very sweet) are anomalies--Schroeder the Schnauzer mix and his purebred predecessor Minnie are/were both holy terrors in their own ways.

[Updated on: Wed, 07 January 2009 23:33]

Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9624 is a reply to message #9611 ] Wed, 07 January 2009 23:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
librarykat  is currently offline librarykat
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That new book rush happens even when your book is a niche market, utilitarian sort of thing published for other librarians. Oh yeah. I've written two of them. I can't begin to imagine the thrill of opening a brand-new novel that one has written. THAT must be an amazingly wonderful feeling.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9627 is a reply to message #9618 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 00:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
katinseattle  is currently offline katinseattle
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skating librarian wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 18:41

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another?


I grew up in farm country. Most of the dogs in the area were collies and/or German shepherd mixes. Nice dogs, smart, with a reputation for protectiveness. By the time my own daughter started agitating for a dog, we were living in the city with a small yard. Neither of those dogs would do. I researched smaller dogs, read up on them, went to a big dog show and looked around. I ended up with - surprise, surprise - a Sheltie. Looked like a miniature Lassie. He died years ago. I can no longer give an active dog enough exercise, but I still look wistfully after a Sheltie prancing down the sidewalk. A happy Sheltie doesn't walk, he dances.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9630 is a reply to message #9611 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 05:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lucy Coats  is currently offline Lucy Coats
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Quote:

And then I remembered: Daisy has a four month old puppy. She’s not herself. And her judgement is seriously frelled.



Ah. I sympathise with Daisy, since I have just taken a deep breath and said a big YES to one of these....
Kerridwen the Goddess Tekel (who will have another and more shoutable kennel name) was born five days ago. This is her uncle. See next post for the uncontrollable squirrel catcher she will grow up into. I can't wait for the mayhem to begin...

index.php?t=getfile&id=130&private=0

  • Attachment: Tekel.jpg
    (Size: 39.93KB, Downloaded 406 time(s))

[Updated on: Thu, 08 January 2009 05:37]


Lucy xx
"'Thou shalt not' might reach the head, but it takes 'Once upon a time' to reach the heart."
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Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9631 is a reply to message #9611 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 05:42 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lucy Coats  is currently offline Lucy Coats
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And this is the uncontrollable squirrel catcher who is Kerridwen the Tekel Goddess's aunt. Oh dear. (It's NOT a ferret, Jodi--do not panic....). Did I mention that I may be even more mad than previously thought, since AT THE SAME TIME I am also acquiring a small and wriggly black cocker spaniel puppy. What the dastardly dinmont will make of it all, I don't know. The labrador will just go into 'must clean their ears a lot' mode.
index.php?t=getfile&id=131&private=0


Lucy xx
"'Thou shalt not' might reach the head, but it takes 'Once upon a time' to reach the heart."
http://www.scribblecitycentral.blogspot.com
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9632 is a reply to message #9631 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 06:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Lucy Coats wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 10:42

Did I mention that I may be even more mad than previously thought, since AT THE SAME TIME I am also acquiring a small and wriggly black cocker spaniel puppy.


Lucy - four dogs (two of whom will be puppies)!!! *faints*

*remembers Southdowner's 11 - faints all over again*

It's so good to keep online company with mad people - including those who have just two nice, quiet, intellectually-minded hellhounds Smile


[Updated on: Thu, 08 January 2009 06:05]


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9633 is a reply to message #9632 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 06:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lucy Coats  is currently offline Lucy Coats
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AJLR wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 11:05

Lucy Coats wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 10:42

Did I mention that I may be even more mad than previously thought, since AT THE SAME TIME I am also acquiring a small and wriggly black cocker spaniel puppy.


Lucy - four dogs (two of whom will be puppies)!!! *faints*

*remembers Southdowner's 11 - faints all over again*

It's so good to keep online company with mad people - including those who have just two nice, quiet, intellectually-minded hellhounds Smile





Mad. Yes. That was the word. Still, on the plus side, not as mad as Southdowner. Yet. Razz


Lucy xx
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Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9634 is a reply to message #9633 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 06:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Lucy Coats wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 06:09

Mad. Yes. That was the word. Still, on the plus side, not as mad as Southdowner. Yet. Razz


Oh, don't worry. There's plenty of time yet. *eg*


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9635 is a reply to message #9634 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 07:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lucy Coats  is currently offline Lucy Coats
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b_twin_1 wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 11:16

Lucy Coats wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 06:09

Mad. Yes. That was the word. Still, on the plus side, not as mad as Southdowner. Yet. Razz


Oh, don't worry. There's plenty of time yet. *eg*



*faints with relief and anticipation*


Lucy xx
"'Thou shalt not' might reach the head, but it takes 'Once upon a time' to reach the heart."
http://www.scribblecitycentral.blogspot.com
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9636 is a reply to message #9611 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 11:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Fake Frenchie
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I prefer this link(http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7500479.stm) of a tabby kitty who adopts a Panda.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9637 is a reply to message #9611 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 11:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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I’m sure my hellhounds are better looking than he is, whoever he is.

Oh, that's guaranteed. Smile As I live right on a popular walking/biking/dog path, I get to see a lot of dogs + owners on a daily basis, and I always feel compelled to tell folks how utterly beautiful their dogs are. I don't often see whippets (much less hellhounds!) but there's someone with a few rescued greyhounds who I see with some frequency; their streamlined frame never ceases to amaze me.

it’s a reminder that anyone who keeps a cat for its mousing abilities is entirely familiar with.


Even those of us who don't necessarily keep them for that purpose are confronted with it regularly. All of mine have been big on the fetch-the-toy-mousie game at various points in their lives, and the catch * flip * grab * toss * smack * bite sequence before bringing the toy back is so obviously a neck-breaking ritual; I find it endlessly fascinating to watch.


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9643 is a reply to message #9637 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 13:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mori-neko  is currently offline Mori-neko
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Black Bear wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 11:48



it’s a reminder that anyone who keeps a cat for its mousing abilities is entirely familiar with.


Even those of us who don't necessarily keep them for that purpose are confronted with it regularly. All of mine have been big on the fetch-the-toy-mousie game at various points in their lives, and the catch * flip * grab * toss * smack * bite sequence before bringing the toy back is so obviously a neck-breaking ritual; I find it endlessly fascinating to watch.



Our cats occasionally bring -actual- mice into the house and play with them. And leave them around in various states of semi-to-entirely dead for us to deal with.

As far as dogs go, I don't have any and didn't grow up with them (have never lived long-term with a dog). If I were to get one, though, I'd want one that was intelligent, mid-to-large sized (never been much for small dogs), and long-furred. I want to be able to bury my hands in fur ^^
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9645 is a reply to message #9618 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 13:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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skating librarian wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 21:41

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another? The hellhounds are stunningly beautiful, but they sound awfully high maintenance....

So why Hellhounds, Bull Terriers, Great Danes, or Cocker Spaniels? How did you decide?


I have a greyhound and not Hellhounds, but greyhounds are in my experience anything but high maintenance (despite my current boy's being nearly blind). I chose the breed primarily because of the personality: they're sweet and affectionate but very low-key about it for the most part, they're very low-energy 95% of the time, and they're very smart (but independent enough to make training tricky -- the human has to work to figure out how to make it relevant!). But there are other plusses as well. Greyhounds are generally healthy dogs with very little of the genetic baggage you get with some breeds (no displasia, low incidence of allergies, virtually no heart problems, etc.). And they're beautiful!
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9656 is a reply to message #9618 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 18:12 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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skating librarian wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 21:41

You guys (Robin and others who own dogs) have made me curious.

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another? ... As someone who has never chosen a dog from the universe of canines, I wonder whether it's aesthetics, or personality, or what that you're looking for?

Different people have different reasons. I love all dogs, but have certain aesthetic preferences, certain personality preferences, and certain lifestyle compatibilities. Aesthetically, I like BIG. I never outgrew the childhood belief that bigger is better, whether it's dogs, horses, cars, buildings, men, whatever. So I'm drawn to the giant breeds. I also don't like to spend time grooming or cleaning up hair, so I look for short-coated wash 'n' wear breeds. And I don't lead an active lifestyle, so I don't want high energy breeds; I look for the couch potatoes who can get their exercise running laps and playing with each other in a large fenced-in yard. And I like to love and be loved, so I don't want aloof. And I want something pleasing to the eye, and much of that is subjective. So far, I've had Great Danes and Mastiffs. I'm hoping to adopt a retired Greyhound racer in the near future as well as adding another Mastiff after the Grey has settled in.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9657 is a reply to message #9611 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 18:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
judith  is currently offline judith
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Quote:

Mike ate a pair of socks.^ Yes. Apparently the first one was so tasty he had to go back for the second too. The vets said, if they don’t reappear in x amount of time . . . but they did. ^^

^ Whose idea was it that small children and puppies are a good plan? You can’t reliably train a seven year old not to leave her socks lying around. At least this means they’re really little socks.

^^Granddaughter, however, has been informed that she is to remain barefoot until Mike grows out of the sock-eating stage. He’d probably be happy to eat mittens instead though.

This can be cute, and it can also be dangerous. They can get away with it a number of times, and then the next time it can kill them. My Mastiff girl ate a bunch of my socks before I learned methods of keeping them from her. My husband wasn't quite so diligent, and my sweet Mastiff boy got a pair of his underwear -- and died from it last May. You never know which time will be the fatal one. That pair of underwear had been in his GI tract for a couple of weeks. He was asymptomatic until he suddenly became VERY symptomatic, and his intestines were so damaged that the vet doubted that surgery would have held them together for healing. He ended up dying on the table from cardiac arrest. So although many of these surgeries for foreign bodies go well, in many other cases they don't. I almost lost my first Dane in a similar surgery when she ate a bunch of her bedding; two strings holding two pieces of it together had almost sawed a hole through her small intestine, and the toxins released into her bloodstream almost killed her, but the same wonderful vet team pulled her through that time.

Anyone who has a dog with these propensities just can't treat it as a joke. Closed hampers, careful toy selection, periodic checking -- in short, constant vigilance is necessary.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9660 is a reply to message #9615 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 18:51 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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[Hellgoddess]
Mike. Short for Michelangelo because he's a Piece of Work. :)

And I can't bear squeaky toys. I don't want to have to LISTEN to them die. :(

Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9661 is a reply to message #9617 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 18:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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NOTHING is dumber than a dumb sighthound! I would put Chaos up against any bullie ANY DAY!!!!! Twice on Sundays! Fortunately he has other virtues!!!!!!

Bullies are DARLING! Bullies were on my short list except I saw the whippet lurcher ad in the paper!!! Every time we get bloody **assaulted** by some *&*^%$£""!!!! off lead monster I think WISTFULLY about a bullie who, I believe, take crap from no one?? Although I suppose this brings up other problems, but I keep feeling that the dog ON the lead that has the dog OFF the lead by the throat has a strong arguing point about who started it. . . .
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9663 is a reply to message #9618 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 18:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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[Hellgoddess]
You fall in love.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9664 is a reply to message #9632 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 19:00 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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And *I'm* delighted to be thrown into company that makes my hellhounds look calm and intellectual . . . :)
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9665 is a reply to message #9643 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 19:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Uh huh. Have fun with the cleaning during mud season, and the searching for ticks during tick season, and the combing in ALL seasons. I LOVE having short haired dogs. Also, they're happy to come INDOORS again in cold weather.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9672 is a reply to message #9618 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 20:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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skating librarian wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 02:41

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another?

Robin wrote

You fall in love.

I grew up with a terrier, and I promised myself a dog immediately I left university.
During those dog-less years I was sadly struck down by madness; while sitting on the top deck of a bus lumbering to the top of one of Sheffield's 7 hills, as Robin so succinctly says, I fell in love.

In love with a pirate of a dog, with the unsteady gait of a sailor newly landed, patch askew over one eye, mouth gaping in a foolish but joyful toothy grin. And so I sought one for myself.
A bullie owner? A masochist with a sense of humour. But worth every moment. Bullies love more wholeheartedly than any human has a right to deserve, they amuse and console with their comedic souls and they have hearts and characters so large that I am at a loss as how to imagine life without (at least) one.
I love my shaggy grey mixtures of dogs, my shepherds (bright, brave and utterly faithful) and adored my standard poodles who were clever, charming, immensely loyal, and sparkled with fun.
No other breed however makes me want to run across parks and roads to crouch down and hug them in the way almost every bullie I've ever seen affects me.
Short haired, willing to walk for hours or be total couch potatoes, medium sized, bribable, trainable - great family dogs; stubborn, disobedient, horribly frustrating and delinquent, needing firm consistent (nonaggressive) handling - not a novice owner's dog by any stretch of the imagination.

Rational choice? No. Love? Definitely Very Happy


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9680 is a reply to message #9672 ] Thu, 08 January 2009 21:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
katinseattle  is currently offline katinseattle
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southdowner wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 17:21


Robin wrote

You fall in love.

Rational choice? No. Love? Definitely Very Happy


Yup, that's what it is.

After seeing those pictures of the Dandy Dinmont, it's a good thing there's not one here to adopt. I'm definitely infatuated.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9685 is a reply to message #9672 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 00:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 20:21

Rational choice? No. Love? Definitely Very Happy


Absolutely. And of course when you are in love that much you make it a rational choice.... LOL (Case in point: I love Shelties .... they are a sheepdog.... so therefore it is a legit breed for me to have.... see? Wink )
Currently I am applying this theory to the consideration of a whippet. (I have a rabbit problem... my terrier and the BC can't catch them... ergo I need a whippet.... hehe)
But I am complicating my life further by trying to decide whether or not to have Belle bred. Decisions, decisions....

I'm not trying to catch up to Southdowner. Honest.


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9690 is a reply to message #9617 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 01:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 19:44

I envy you, having been more accustomed to cries of "Eeuww! Look! It's not a dog, it's a pig!!!" Furious on behalf of my poor dog I would march on, pretending to ignore the taunts; meanwhile, said bullie would be grinning from ear to ear, trying to ingratiate self and gain more attention.


One of the show vendors last weekend is a bookseller. Prominently displayed on his table was one called Pigs Can Fly! Training the Difficult Dog (or some such subtitle). I regret to say that the cover picture was of a white Bull Terrier in full extension going over a bar jump.

Now if they'd really wanted a dog that looks like a pig, they should have found a picture of a Shar-Pei. Very Happy



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9691 is a reply to message #9618 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 02:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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skating librarian wrote on Wed, 07 January 2009 20:41

Why have you chosen one sort of dog over another?


Our first dog was a Lab/Shepherd mix, and she was a wonderful girl. My husband had always wanted a Great Dane, so when we bought our first house we got a Dane puppy. And we fell in love with Danes and, except for a brief period, have had one or more ever since. I can come up with a lot of objective reasons why Danes are great dogs for the right owners, but the falling in love is the thing.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9693 is a reply to message #9611 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 02:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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Whose idea was it that small children and puppies are a good plan? You can’t reliably train a seven year old not to leave her socks lying around.

Socks maybe not, but seven-year-olds will get the message if/when things that they value turn into dog toys. Anything on the floor is, by definition, a puppy toy.

It’s funny though, hellhounds’ sheer beauty messes with people’s heads.

But how nice that people appreciate that they're beautiful. They ARE beautiful, even swathed in coats!



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9702 is a reply to message #9672 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 11:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Fri, 09 January 2009 01:21

I was sadly struck down by madness; while sitting on the top deck of a bus lumbering to the top of one of Sheffield's 7 hills, as Robin so succinctly says, I fell in love.


This sounds to me like something out of 'Brief Encounter'! Did you have a final meeting in Sheffield Bus Station's cafe? Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9704 is a reply to message #9615 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 13:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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jmeadows wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 01:17

I joke about it, but the first time I noticed all the stuffed animals with their throats torn out--that was kind of a shock. (Then I noticed they always rip out the eyes, too, buttons or beads or embroidered. It doesn't matter. Eyes and throat. Every single time.)


Well, at least the ferrets aren't going out and terrorising your neighbourhood in the search for stuffies: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7776450.stm ! Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9707 is a reply to message #9672 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 15:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Thu, 08 January 2009 20:21

In love with a pirate of a dog, with the unsteady gait of a sailor newly landed, patch askew over one eye, mouth gaping in a foolish but joyful toothy grin. And so I sought one for myself.
A bullie owner? A masochist with a sense of humour. But worth every moment. Bullies love more wholeheartedly than any human has a right to deserve, they amuse and console with their comedic souls and they have hearts and characters so large that I am at a loss as how to imagine life without (at least) one.

I love my shaggy grey mixtures of dogs, my shepherds (bright, brave and utterly faithful) and adored my standard poodles who were clever, charming, immensely loyal, and sparkled with fun.
No other breed however makes me want to run across parks and roads to crouch down and hug them in the way almost every bullie I've ever seen affects me.

Short haired, willing to walk for hours or be total couch potatoes, medium sized, bribable, trainable - great family dogs; stubborn, disobedient, horribly frustrating and delinquent, needing firm consistent (nonaggressive) handling - not a novice owner's dog by any stretch of the imagination.

You know, this belongs in a book dedicated to the breed. I have to admit I've never even considered this breed, and yet reading it made me want to run out and get one! Smile
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9708 is a reply to message #9704 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 15:51 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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That was a great clip. I'm rather partial to cats.
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9711 is a reply to message #9704 ] Fri, 09 January 2009 17:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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AJLR wrote on Fri, 09 January 2009 13:21


Well, at least the ferrets aren't going out and terrorising your neighbourhood in the search for stuffies: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7776450.stm ! Smile



As far as I know, anyway!


Smooshes!
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9751 is a reply to message #9690 ] Sat, 10 January 2009 20:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Diane in MN wrote on Fri, 09 January 2009 01:53

...
Prominently displayed on his table was one called Pigs Can Fly! Training the Difficult Dog (or some such subtitle)...


Um, it's When Pigs Fly: Training Success with Impossible Dogs, and it's actually quite a good clicker-training book!
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9755 is a reply to message #9751 ] Sun, 11 January 2009 01:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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shalea wrote on Sat, 10 January 2009 19:58

Diane in MN wrote on Fri, 09 January 2009 01:53

...
Prominently displayed on his table was one called Pigs Can Fly! Training the Difficult Dog (or some such subtitle)...


Um, it's When Pigs Fly: Training Success with Impossible Dogs, and it's actually quite a good clicker-training book!



Those folks at Dogwise (the vendor) have their new books largely sealed up in plastic wrap, probably to keep them from being grimed and slimed by exhibitors and their dogs. So I could only be struck by the title and picture on this one--even though it was a white Bullie, I thought of Hazel right away! I'm glad you know the correct title, thanks.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: A vision of Hellhounds [message #9765 is a reply to message #9755 ] Sun, 11 January 2009 17:31 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
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Diane in MN wrote on Sun, 11 January 2009 06:40

shalea wrote on Sat, 10 January 2009 19:58

Diane in MN wrote on Fri, 09 January 2009 01:53

...
Prominently displayed on his table was one called Pigs Can Fly! Training the Difficult Dog (or some such subtitle)...


Um, it's When Pigs Fly: Training Success with Impossible Dogs, and it's actually quite a good clicker-training book!



Those folks at Dogwise (the vendor) have their new books largely sealed up in plastic wrap, probably to keep them from being grimed and slimed by exhibitors and their dogs. So I could only be struck by the title and picture on this one--even though it was a white Bullie, I thought of Hazel right away! I'm glad you know the correct title, thanks.

Yeti says training is exhausting - just reading about it made her fall asleep...
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3005/2902603295_6b85016f71.jpg

... and you can just see the "pigs" book disappearing underneath her Smile


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
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