Director’s DVD
Commentary: This is an “Easter Egg” post; just a little something apart
from my usual posting cycle, but I’m throwing out
there for anyone who may stumble upon it.
As you may have seen, I’ve written
before about our (Sweetpea’s) yellow lab. They say it’s a comfort to have
pets in the Time of COVID, but I’m not so sure. They certainly inject a note of
unpredictability into our lives. Like this morning.
First, I need to tell you a few things. As is typical for
a lab, this dog is a 90-lb eating machine on paws. He’s completely motivated by
food and food alone. It doesn’t even matter what it is. He will scarf down a
bowl of sawdust with as much gusto as a bowl of filet mignon.
These are the things he cares about, in order:
1) Food.
2) Tie
between Ballgames and Mommy, (who no doubt holds this position due to being the
prime supplier of the food and ballgames.)
3) Everything
else.
I know food is number one because one time when I got
home before Sweetpea, (back in the days when I still went to the office), I fed
the dog and as he was eating, she came home. He never budged. His tail started
wagging, so he knew she was home, but he never went to give her his customary
licking and wagging welcome until the bowl was empty.
“It wud be rood to leev dinnner tabel.”
But “Miss B” is a whole ‘nother category unto herself.
Miss B is a friend of Sweetpea’s, from around the corner, and the dog completely
adores her. He goes bananas any time she shows up at the door and barks until
she plays ball with him. Sometimes she goes with them on their morning walks.
That’s what happened this morning when Sweetpea came
busting back in the house to tell me what happened to the dog.
They were out walking and she noticed our neighbor’s car
window was rolled down and she wanted to knock on the door and tell them so
their car seats wouldn’t get soaked. So she asked Miss B to hold the dog’s
leash. The neighbors didn’t answer but when she came back to Miss B, she said
she was showing the dog that she didn’t have any treats in her pocket, just
pennies. (She usually carries treats for the various dogs along their route.) When
she held them out in her hand to show him, the dog came to investigate and
snarfed them up.
So Sweetpea got on the phone to her vet’s, who told her
to bring the dog to the pet emergency room, and off they went. She delivered
the dog but then had to wait in the car.
It wasn't until she got the dog into the ER that she realized she was wearing one of my old tee-shirts... This one:
"Oops."
Because she got him in right away, the first thing they
did was make the dog throw up. When he did, they saw that there were no pennies
contained therein. Next step was to do an X-ray. Again, no pennies were found. They
said a swallowed penny always shows up on X-ray, ergo he must not have actually
eaten the pennies. So that’s good news. Also, that’ll be $391.
As soon as she got home, Sweetpea went out to where it
all happened and came back with the three pennies, which she found right there in
the grass.
Good thing we’re both still gainfully employed or that
would have been be quite a pill to swallow. But it’s especially ass-chapping
that not only should Miss B have NOT held out the pennies like they were treats,
to a known eating machine, she assumed
the dog had swallowed the pennies. He probably licked them out of her hand, or
spit them out after getting a taste. He does the same thing with olives, the
only food substance he refrains from eating.
So, everyone’s OK but we’re out $391 for the dog to yak
at the vet’s office. They probably added $100 for the "fuck" shirt.
Can Congress pass a relief bill for that? They should at
least make it tax-deductible.
The moral of the story: Let the neighbors worry about their own car. .
“Wen dinnner, Mommy?”
6 comments:
I hope you at least kept the pennies, so you'd only be down $390.97.
And with the coin shortage, they may be even more valuable than that!
With the corn shortage that I still haven't figured out(lol), every little bit helps. I know that the beautiful dogs have been known to eat almost everything in site. Years and years and years ago, I had Lab who as a puppy didn't mind chewing on my favorite shoes or gnawing on the edge of the brand new pool. I tried to cover up those corners with felt, but my husband caught on when he returned from a overseas trip to Guam.(lol) OMG - that shirt truly has me laughing out loud!!!!! That would be the perfect gift for a friend, and I need to see if I can find one. Happy Sunday to you both. RO
We're lucky in that he usually confines his chewing to food or his toys. Or if he wants attention and steals something of ours and we still don't pay any attention, he'll tear it up and look at us like, "Hey, I warned you."
The dog is a magician. Where did the pennies go? They disappeared!
Usually, he only makes food disappear.
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