“I let a kitten steal food right out of my mouth.” Mattie, our sweet, patient, wimpy dog, lets our new kitten steal food out of her mouth as she’s chewing it. Note the look of resignation on her face. Resistance is futile.
“I let a kitten steal food right out of my mouth.” Mattie, our sweet, patient, wimpy dog, lets our new kitten steal food out of her mouth as she’s chewing it. Note the look of resignation on her face. Resistance is futile.
She doesn’t go far, but she doesn’t come back for awhile either
I Ate the couch!
This little lady likes to eat things she shouldn’t…like my parents fairly new couch. This is one of the many recent objects she has destroyed.
Jackson is a terrier cross, approximately 8 years old. He adopted me from the Casper, WY Metro Animal Control. I love him to pieces, but he can most certainly be a pill at times, as evidenced by his sign. Jackson’s sign reads, “I pee on any & all packaging materials. My favorites are plastic grocery sacks & cardboard boxes.”
Pelusa is a three year old mutt rescued from a city bus terminal by a Peace Corps Paraguay Volunteer. She now lives at said volunteer’s house and receives love, attention and lots of food daily, but her street-dog habits have not left her.
After a rough night of food poisoning, the bucket-a-yuck was placed outside, which Pelusa decided was a delicious treat just for her. She was pretty upset when it was taken away from her, and clearly wanted more. Gross!
I turned the stove on while no one was home trying to eat leftover pizza and almost burned the house down 🙁
I was looking for my sock earlier, but couldn’t find it. Later, when I was taking Ranger to his dog training class, he regurgitated the sock onto the passenger seat of my car. How helpful.
I was in bed and my dog decided to wake me up by punching me in the face with her nails. I am on blood thinners, so now I have a black eye.
I ate a sock, threw it up, then ate it again. Several times.
Maude and Cybil.