That’s impressive! That took a little work for both man and dog.
10
Poor little Belle was sooo good. She could hardly wait!
12
@Jethro:
Now try that with cats…
Different animal! I wouldn’t try it with a herd of Cape buffalo, either.
And does your dog leave you nice presents of eviscerated lizards by your slippers to show you how much he loves you? I thought not!
10
No, but the cat would, and it would be either a mouse or a small bird.
4
Uncle Al – Actually my dog left me a dead rat under my dining room table once. She was so proud of herself. Beware of doggie doors.
7
Child’s play. With flushing dogs trained to sit on the flush there is a lot more temptation to break. They all want feathers in their mouths, but the ones who’s’ name is called are the one that make the retrieve or retrieves.
1
Immediately thought of the frequent “poop scooping” that crew requires.
Now that is some doggie discipline!
Now try that with cats…
^ Cats don’t speak English.
They speak Catlish.
https://x.com/Cat5SMASHICANE/status/1948846666917749159
Try not to laugh!
That’s impressive! That took a little work for both man and dog.
Poor little Belle was sooo good. She could hardly wait!
@Jethro:
Different animal! I wouldn’t try it with a herd of Cape buffalo, either.
And does your dog leave you nice presents of eviscerated lizards by your slippers to show you how much he loves you? I thought not!
No, but the cat would, and it would be either a mouse or a small bird.
Uncle Al – Actually my dog left me a dead rat under my dining room table once. She was so proud of herself. Beware of doggie doors.
Child’s play. With flushing dogs trained to sit on the flush there is a lot more temptation to break. They all want feathers in their mouths, but the ones who’s’ name is called are the one that make the retrieve or retrieves.
Immediately thought of the frequent “poop scooping” that crew requires.
Fun video