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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Making a perfect snow pusher
RCM only
On Thu, 7 Feb 2008 11:03:56 -0500, with neither quill nor qualm, "Tom Gardner" quickly quoth: "Ignoramus29783" wrote in message m... I have not seen a snow pusher that would actually work well. They are too small and not too strongly made. Probably the Chinese have not seen much snow and do not know what is a good snow pusher. snip The perfect snow pusher is bolted on the front of my neighbor's truck! There ya go. Otherwise, tell Ig to go get one of these. They're a lot more fun. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=91037 He's one of those rich Rusky fellers who made millions on eBay and the Internet, so it won't hurt him to buy propane. g -- Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in getting up every time we do. -- Confucius |
#2
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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Making a perfect snow pusher
"Larry Jaques" wrote in message ... RCM only On Thu, 7 Feb 2008 11:03:56 -0500, with neither quill nor qualm, "Tom Gardner" quickly quoth: "Ignoramus29783" wrote in message om... I have not seen a snow pusher that would actually work well. They are too small and not too strongly made. Probably the Chinese have not seen much snow and do not know what is a good snow pusher. snip The perfect snow pusher is bolted on the front of my neighbor's truck! There ya go. Otherwise, tell Ig to go get one of these. They're a lot more fun. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=91037 He's one of those rich Rusky fellers who made millions on eBay and the Internet, so it won't hurt him to buy propane. g -- Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in getting up every time we do. -- Confucius With age comes at least SOME wisdom...I think. My snow solution is good snow tires on my 1-ton van. It'll go through ANYTHING! I convinced my sister that a Honda Element was "cute", OK it didn't mater to her that it was all-wheel drive. We don't need to remove snow except for a bit on the back patio so the dogs have somewhere to go. |
#3
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Fri, 8 Feb 2008 10:19:22 -0500, "Tom Gardner"
wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message .. . RCM only On Thu, 7 Feb 2008 11:03:56 -0500, with neither quill nor qualm, "Tom Gardner" quickly quoth: "Ignoramus29783" wrote in message news:EOidnbnyU4unhTbanZ2dnUVZ_rWtnZ2d@giganews. com... I have not seen a snow pusher that would actually work well. They are too small and not too strongly made. Probably the Chinese have not seen much snow and do not know what is a good snow pusher. snip The perfect snow pusher is bolted on the front of my neighbor's truck! There ya go. Otherwise, tell Ig to go get one of these. They're a lot more fun. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=91037 He's one of those rich Rusky fellers who made millions on eBay and the Internet, so it won't hurt him to buy propane. g -- Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in getting up every time we do. -- Confucius With age comes at least SOME wisdom...I think. My snow solution is good snow tires on my 1-ton van. It'll go through ANYTHING! I convinced my sister that a Honda Element was "cute", OK it didn't mater to her that it was all-wheel drive. We don't need to remove snow except for a bit on the back patio so the dogs have somewhere to go. SWMBO claims I have way too much fun blowing snow in our back yard but puppy only has short legs. Year ago last December, we got a heavy snow late in the day and overnight to the point there was a column of snow two feet high on the garbage can. When I pushed the aluminium storm door open next morning, puppy stepped off the threshold and did her business on the spot. It only takes a few minutes to clear the area for puppy plus a path to the compost bin and one to the shed after I finish the 16 x 70' driveway and a path for the postal person to get to the route drop box near my drive. Did anyone get the impression I enjoy winter? Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#4
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Making a perfect snow pusher
"Gerald Miller" wrote in message ... On Fri, 8 Feb 2008 10:19:22 -0500, "Tom Gardner" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message . .. RCM only On Thu, 7 Feb 2008 11:03:56 -0500, with neither quill nor qualm, "Tom Gardner" quickly quoth: "Ignoramus29783" wrote in message news:EOidnbnyU4unhTbanZ2dnUVZ_rWtnZ2d@giganews .com... I have not seen a snow pusher that would actually work well. They are too small and not too strongly made. Probably the Chinese have not seen much snow and do not know what is a good snow pusher. snip The perfect snow pusher is bolted on the front of my neighbor's truck! There ya go. Otherwise, tell Ig to go get one of these. They're a lot more fun. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=91037 He's one of those rich Rusky fellers who made millions on eBay and the Internet, so it won't hurt him to buy propane. g -- Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in getting up every time we do. -- Confucius With age comes at least SOME wisdom...I think. My snow solution is good snow tires on my 1-ton van. It'll go through ANYTHING! I convinced my sister that a Honda Element was "cute", OK it didn't mater to her that it was all-wheel drive. We don't need to remove snow except for a bit on the back patio so the dogs have somewhere to go. SWMBO claims I have way too much fun blowing snow in our back yard but puppy only has short legs. Year ago last December, we got a heavy snow late in the day and overnight to the point there was a column of snow two feet high on the garbage can. When I pushed the aluminium storm door open next morning, puppy stepped off the threshold and did her business on the spot. It only takes a few minutes to clear the area for puppy plus a path to the compost bin and one to the shed after I finish the 16 x 70' driveway and a path for the postal person to get to the route drop box near my drive. Did anyone get the impression I enjoy winter? Gerry :-)} London, Canada When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. |
#5
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Fri, 8 Feb 2008 22:43:35 -0500, "Tom Gardner"
wrote: When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. I have found that if I run the blower along the curb line "upstream" of my driveway, it gives the plow room to dump most of the snow being carried before it gets to my nice open driveway. Living on a corner lot, and depending on the operator, they start the side street at my driveway and carry around the corner; then when they complete the loop and come past the front, they lift the wing just before my driveway and continue straight through, and out of the subdivision. Generally I get very little dumped in my driveway. Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#6
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Wed, 13 Feb 2008 03:18:08 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Gerald Miller wrote: On Tue, 12 Feb 2008 00:34:22 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Tom Gardner wrote: My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Old dogs are cute. What more can I say without insulting you? Are you related to the Late Rodney D.? ;-) BTW, here are a couple pictures of my favorite pampered pooch: http://home.earthlink.net/~mike.terrell/photos.html She belongs to my dad and step mom. The camera's flash turns her deep brown eyes bright green. Lacey is a firm adherent to the universal law that people should never tease animals.OTOH she has never accepted that the converse is also a law. Regularly, at bedtime (2AM) she decides that it is time to go out for a final "poopy dance" and barks loudly in the vicinity of a door. The drill is; I get out of bed, get slippers on and go down and get leash and collar from behind the kitchen door. This is her signal to crouch down and defy me to apply her collar, to the point that she retreats behind the dinning table, barking continuously. I retrieve my yard stick and tap it on the floor within five feet of her and she gallops to the back door and waits to be collared and let out to do her business, which we then have to go find while mother eats her poached eggs next morning Maggie is very well behaved, and only gets them up at night if she gets sick. She gets up from her bed in the living room and gives them a look as if to say, 'It's bed time, don't keep me up!" then goes to her bedroom, and into her cage. After one of them closes the door to her cage she lays down and dozes off for the entire night. She will spend the entire day by herself without making a mess, which is more than i can say about some of the people on this newsgroup. ;-) She loves to sit outside where she can watch my dad while he's busy in his workshop, too. Ive 3 dogs in the house when Im home, Opie my sidekick, and his mom and dad who live inside all the time. Plus the cats, number unknown. The dogs as a group let me know when its potty time, but never go out after midnight. They sleep on my bed, usually with Opie on his back, tucked into my armpit and his momma pushed up against my knees. His dad sleeps at the foot of the bed in HIS spot. They come and go throughout the night, sharing warm spots with 1-5 cats. Musical bed so to speak. First thing in the morning, they line up and make it clear its time to go out and poop. We take a walk around the back 40, they do their thing. Repeat about 4 times during the waking hours. When Im working outside, Momma likes to hang out in a safe spot, Opie still a pup, rambles around a bit, usualy in company with his 6 toed compadre, Mittens the cat. They investigate the same stuff they investigated yesterday, and the day before and enjoy each others company, with periodic checkins with dad for head scratching petting, then off they go again. I cant imagine not letting ones critters not sleep with them, unless they are so small that rolling over on one might be dangerous to them. Its a rite of passage in my house, that when a kitten is big enough to get up on the bed (pretty tall), its now big enough to sleep with the Family. and not get smooshed. Unfortunately, we had that happen once. Total bummer to find a smooshed kitten under a sleeping dog. Gunner "Pax Americana is a philosophy. Hardly an empire. Making sure other people play nice and dont kill each other (and us) off in job lots is hardly empire building, particularly when you give them self determination under "play nice" rules. Think of it as having your older brother knock the **** out of you for torturing the cat." Gunner |
#7
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gerald Miller wrote:
SWMBO claims I have way too much fun blowing snow in our back yard but puppy only has short legs. Year ago last December, we got a heavy snow late in the day and overnight to the point there was a column of snow two feet high on the garbage can. When I pushed the aluminium storm door open next morning, puppy stepped off the threshold and did her business on the spot. It only takes a few minutes to clear the area for puppy plus a path to the compost bin and one to the shed after I finish the 16 x 70' driveway and a path for the postal person to get to the route drop box near my drive. Did anyone get the impression I enjoy winter? Winter? Snow? -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#8
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Sat, 09 Feb 2008 19:59:12 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Gerald Miller wrote: SWMBO claims I have way too much fun blowing snow in our back yard but puppy only has short legs. Year ago last December, we got a heavy snow late in the day and overnight to the point there was a column of snow two feet high on the garbage can. When I pushed the aluminium storm door open next morning, puppy stepped off the threshold and did her business on the spot. It only takes a few minutes to clear the area for puppy plus a path to the compost bin and one to the shed after I finish the 16 x 70' driveway and a path for the postal person to get to the route drop box near my drive. Did anyone get the impression I enjoy winter? Winter? Snow? Better than dodging tornados on the south side of Kissimmee like I was doing IIRCC ten years ago about now. Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#9
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Wed, 13 Feb 2008 08:53:25 -0800, cavalamb himself
wrote: Gunner Asch wrote: Ive 3 dogs in the house when Im home, Opie my sidekick, and his mom and dad who live inside all the time. Plus the cats, number unknown. The dogs as a group let me know when its potty time, but never go out after midnight. They sleep on my bed, usually with Opie on his back, tucked into my armpit and his momma pushed up against my knees. His dad sleeps at the foot of the bed in HIS spot. They come and go throughout the night, sharing warm spots with 1-5 cats. Musical bed so to speak. First thing in the morning, they line up and make it clear its time to go out and poop. We take a walk around the back 40, they do their thing. Repeat about 4 times during the waking hours. When Im working outside, Momma likes to hang out in a safe spot, Opie still a pup, rambles around a bit, usualy in company with his 6 toed compadre, Mittens the cat. They investigate the same stuff they investigated yesterday, and the day before and enjoy each others company, with periodic checkins with dad for head scratching petting, then off they go again. I cant imagine not letting ones critters not sleep with them, unless they are so small that rolling over on one might be dangerous to them. Its a rite of passage in my house, that when a kitten is big enough to get up on the bed (pretty tall), its now big enough to sleep with the Family. and not get smooshed. Unfortunately, we had that happen once. Total bummer to find a smooshed kitten under a sleeping dog. Gunner That's a lot more information that I need with coffee... Have you seen the lathe accident pictures? Chuckle One of the big problems with viewing someone who has been dismembered in a dramatic fashion, is not only the visuals..but the smells. All those body fluids now evaporating into the open air. The copper smell of arterial blood, bile and stomache fluids, the sharp smell of lympth fluids trickling out of broken nodes and shattered joints. The poignent odor of urine and fresh **** as the bladder and bowels void after death. For years after..a random scent will flash you back to the visuals. Bon Appitiet. Gunner "Pax Americana is a philosophy. Hardly an empire. Making sure other people play nice and dont kill each other (and us) off in job lots is hardly empire building, particularly when you give them self determination under "play nice" rules. Think of it as having your older brother knock the **** out of you for torturing the cat." Gunner |
#10
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Wed, 13 Feb 2008 14:29:12 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Gunner Asch wrote: Ive 3 dogs in the house when Im home, Opie my sidekick, and his mom and dad who live inside all the time. Plus the cats, number unknown. The dogs as a group let me know when its potty time, but never go out after midnight. They sleep on my bed, usually with Opie on his back, tucked into my armpit and his momma pushed up against my knees. His dad sleeps at the foot of the bed in HIS spot. They come and go throughout the night, sharing warm spots with 1-5 cats. Musical bed so to speak. First thing in the morning, they line up and make it clear its time to go out and poop. We take a walk around the back 40, they do their thing. Repeat about 4 times during the waking hours. When Im working outside, Momma likes to hang out in a safe spot, Opie still a pup, rambles around a bit, usualy in company with his 6 toed compadre, Mittens the cat. They investigate the same stuff they investigated yesterday, and the day before and enjoy each others company, with periodic checkins with dad for head scratching petting, then off they go again. They just want to make sure everything is where it belongs, it's in their job description. I cant imagine not letting ones critters not sleep with them, unless they are so small that rolling over on one might be dangerous to them. Its a rite of passage in my house, that when a kitten is big enough to get up on the bed (pretty tall), its now big enough to sleep with the Family. and not get smooshed. Unfortunately, we had that happen once. Total bummer to find a smooshed kitten under a sleeping dog. Maggie is tiny, and snores like an old chain saw. Sometimes she's so loud they can't hear their TV at full volume. My dad bought wireless headphones to hear the TV. ;-) On reflection..I did have a dog that was banned from the bed. One of the rescued strays that showed up years ago. We named him Fart. Dog could bring tears to the eyes of a maggot. Gunner "Pax Americana is a philosophy. Hardly an empire. Making sure other people play nice and dont kill each other (and us) off in job lots is hardly empire building, particularly when you give them self determination under "play nice" rules. Think of it as having your older brother knock the **** out of you for torturing the cat." Gunner |
#11
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Tom Gardner wrote:
When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. Your pups must be union dogs. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#12
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gerald Miller wrote:
On Sat, 09 Feb 2008 19:59:12 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Winter? Snow? Better than dodging tornados on the south side of Kissimmee like I was doing IIRCC ten years ago about now. What did you expect, in a place called Kissimmee? (Kiss Mimi) ;-) -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#13
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Making a perfect snow pusher
"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... Tom Gardner wrote: When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. Your pups must be union dogs. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! |
#14
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 13:47:26 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Tom Gardner wrote: When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. Your pups must be union dogs. Dunno about that, but if puppy gets left home beyond her bladder capacity, she much prefers the mat inside the door over any surface that might produce "splatter". Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#15
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 15:05:36 -0500, "Tom Gardner"
wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... Tom Gardner wrote: When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. Your pups must be union dogs. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Puppy (Lacey, as in Cagney and ......., Bichon type person) turned 8 on Thursday. Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#16
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 13:49:29 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Gerald Miller wrote: On Sat, 09 Feb 2008 19:59:12 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Winter? Snow? Better than dodging tornados on the south side of Kissimmee like I was doing IIRCC ten years ago about now. What did you expect, in a place called Kissimmee? (Kiss Mimi) ;-) Yeahbut it was convenient to several sources of interesting stuff, and SiL lived there. Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#17
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Making a perfect snow pusher
"Gerald Miller" wrote in message ... On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 15:05:36 -0500, "Tom Gardner" wrote: "Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message ... Tom Gardner wrote: When I DO fire up the snowblower for the big drifts the street plow leaves at the foot of the driveway, I'm sore for a couple of days from man-handling the damn machine! If I blow in the back yard for the dogs, I do a couple hundred square feet 'cuz the pups like to poop and pee on the grass if they can. Your pups must be union dogs. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Puppy (Lacey, as in Cagney and ......., Bichon type person) turned 8 on Thursday. Gerry :-)} London, Canada Great dogs! Do you groom or farm her out? |
#18
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 23:01:02 -0500, "Tom Gardner"
wrote: "Gerald Miller" wrote in message Puppy (Lacey, as in Cagney and ......., Bichon type person) turned 8 on Thursday. Gerry :-)} London, Canada Great dogs! Do you groom or farm her out? Strictly "do it myself" I want her to look like a dog even if she is really a long tailed, flop eared, funny bunny - loves carrots or any other crunchy raw vegetables and apples; doesn't know what meat is! Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#19
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Tom Gardner wrote:
My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Old dogs are cute. What more can I say without insulting you? Are you related to the Late Rodney D.? ;-) BTW, here are a couple pictures of my favorite pampered pooch: http://home.earthlink.net/~mike.terrell/photos.html She belongs to my dad and step mom. The camera's flash turns her deep brown eyes bright green. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#20
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gerald Miller wrote:
Yeahbut it was convenient to several sources of interesting stuff, and SiL lived there. I lived about two hours north at that time. My first job in Florida was about half way in between, at Ch 55 TV. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#21
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Making a perfect snow pusher
On Tue, 12 Feb 2008 00:34:22 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Tom Gardner wrote: My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Old dogs are cute. What more can I say without insulting you? Are you related to the Late Rodney D.? ;-) BTW, here are a couple pictures of my favorite pampered pooch: http://home.earthlink.net/~mike.terrell/photos.html She belongs to my dad and step mom. The camera's flash turns her deep brown eyes bright green. Lacey is a firm adherent to the universal law that people should never tease animals.OTOH she has never accepted that the converse is also a law. Regularly, at bedtime (2AM) she decides that it is time to go out for a final "poopy dance" and barks loudly in the vicinity of a door. The drill is; I get out of bed, get slippers on and go down and get leash and collar from behind the kitchen door. This is her signal to crouch down and defy me to apply her collar, to the point that she retreats behind the dinning table, barking continuously. I retrieve my yard stick and tap it on the floor within five feet of her and she gallops to the back door and waits to be collared and let out to do her business, which we then have to go find while mother eats her poached eggs next morning Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
#22
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gerald Miller wrote:
On Tue, 12 Feb 2008 00:34:22 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Tom Gardner wrote: My miniature schnauzers are 14 and 15 years old, old for doggies! But, they do get a bit of extra consideration for their age...unlike ME!!! Old dogs are cute. What more can I say without insulting you? Are you related to the Late Rodney D.? ;-) BTW, here are a couple pictures of my favorite pampered pooch: http://home.earthlink.net/~mike.terrell/photos.html She belongs to my dad and step mom. The camera's flash turns her deep brown eyes bright green. Lacey is a firm adherent to the universal law that people should never tease animals.OTOH she has never accepted that the converse is also a law. Regularly, at bedtime (2AM) she decides that it is time to go out for a final "poopy dance" and barks loudly in the vicinity of a door. The drill is; I get out of bed, get slippers on and go down and get leash and collar from behind the kitchen door. This is her signal to crouch down and defy me to apply her collar, to the point that she retreats behind the dinning table, barking continuously. I retrieve my yard stick and tap it on the floor within five feet of her and she gallops to the back door and waits to be collared and let out to do her business, which we then have to go find while mother eats her poached eggs next morning Maggie is very well behaved, and only gets them up at night if she gets sick. She gets up from her bed in the living room and gives them a look as if to say, 'It's bed time, don't keep me up!" then goes to her bedroom, and into her cage. After one of them closes the door to her cage she lays down and dozes off for the entire night. She will spend the entire day by herself without making a mess, which is more than i can say about some of the people on this newsgroup. ;-) She loves to sit outside where she can watch my dad while he's busy in his workshop, too. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#23
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gunner Asch wrote:
Ive 3 dogs in the house when Im home, Opie my sidekick, and his mom and dad who live inside all the time. Plus the cats, number unknown. The dogs as a group let me know when its potty time, but never go out after midnight. They sleep on my bed, usually with Opie on his back, tucked into my armpit and his momma pushed up against my knees. His dad sleeps at the foot of the bed in HIS spot. They come and go throughout the night, sharing warm spots with 1-5 cats. Musical bed so to speak. First thing in the morning, they line up and make it clear its time to go out and poop. We take a walk around the back 40, they do their thing. Repeat about 4 times during the waking hours. When Im working outside, Momma likes to hang out in a safe spot, Opie still a pup, rambles around a bit, usualy in company with his 6 toed compadre, Mittens the cat. They investigate the same stuff they investigated yesterday, and the day before and enjoy each others company, with periodic checkins with dad for head scratching petting, then off they go again. I cant imagine not letting ones critters not sleep with them, unless they are so small that rolling over on one might be dangerous to them. Its a rite of passage in my house, that when a kitten is big enough to get up on the bed (pretty tall), its now big enough to sleep with the Family. and not get smooshed. Unfortunately, we had that happen once. Total bummer to find a smooshed kitten under a sleeping dog. Gunner That's a lot more information that I need with coffee... |
#24
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Making a perfect snow pusher
Gunner Asch wrote:
Ive 3 dogs in the house when Im home, Opie my sidekick, and his mom and dad who live inside all the time. Plus the cats, number unknown. The dogs as a group let me know when its potty time, but never go out after midnight. They sleep on my bed, usually with Opie on his back, tucked into my armpit and his momma pushed up against my knees. His dad sleeps at the foot of the bed in HIS spot. They come and go throughout the night, sharing warm spots with 1-5 cats. Musical bed so to speak. First thing in the morning, they line up and make it clear its time to go out and poop. We take a walk around the back 40, they do their thing. Repeat about 4 times during the waking hours. When Im working outside, Momma likes to hang out in a safe spot, Opie still a pup, rambles around a bit, usualy in company with his 6 toed compadre, Mittens the cat. They investigate the same stuff they investigated yesterday, and the day before and enjoy each others company, with periodic checkins with dad for head scratching petting, then off they go again. They just want to make sure everything is where it belongs, it's in their job description. I cant imagine not letting ones critters not sleep with them, unless they are so small that rolling over on one might be dangerous to them. Its a rite of passage in my house, that when a kitten is big enough to get up on the bed (pretty tall), its now big enough to sleep with the Family. and not get smooshed. Unfortunately, we had that happen once. Total bummer to find a smooshed kitten under a sleeping dog. Maggie is tiny, and snores like an old chain saw. Sometimes she's so loud they can't hear their TV at full volume. My dad bought wireless headphones to hear the TV. ;-) -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
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