Friday, March 5, 2010

Slo-mo Dogs

Here's the perfect end to a terrible, mixed up, crazy week—dog paws and sloppy tongues in filmed in arty slo-mo with fan effects! Thank you, Colleen, Finder of Muzzy and Also Funny Dog-Related You Tube Bits! -z

Friday, February 26, 2010

Spring After (Snow)Fall



Yesterday, Muzzy and I walked down along the creek bed at Dog Park, in search of even the smallest hint of spring. We hunted in vain. (Although poison ivy must still be lurking. I came home with evidence of contact with it on my hand.) Then, this morning, we found four signs in our own yard. Above, redbud bud.


Plum tree.


Peach tree.

Coneflower.

The rare Muzzy flower, most precious of all.

Enjoy. -z

Monday, February 22, 2010

The Literary Dog (Collar)

At Dog Art Today, I saw this image of a collar once worn by a dog belonging to the nineteenth-century novelist Charles Dickens (1812-1870). Blogger Moira McLaughlin reports that, at a recent auction, the collar went for nearly $12,000. Wow! It is made of leather and brass and is apparently free of all the disgusting organic matter I find encrusted in my own dogs' collars. Apparently, Dickens was fond of dogs and had many, but most of their names do not survive. (Read Moira's entry for an excerpt of a contemporary report of Dickens' return from a trip to America and the greeting offered by his dogs, including a St. Bernard named Linda.) Dickens was the master of memorable character names with good "mouth feel," including, Ebenezer Scrooge, Misses Mowcher and Havisham, Magwitch, Pumblechook, Mr. Guppy, Lady Dedlock, Edmund Sparkler, Pip, and the Artful Dodger. So we can only conclude that his dogs had more inventive names than Rex, Fido, or Rover, and—er—Linda.

Enjoy. -z