Capture: Dogs Love Cameras Too
357 Responses
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Islander, in reply to
Sad- but-
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Yes, my love. It's been a sad week all round. One of our old pupils was the child who drowned near Mangere Bridge in the weekend along with his Dad.
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Sophie G, in reply to
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Oh Sophie. That's beautiful. Thank you. xxx
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Sophie G, in reply to
You'll have to imagine the soft 'old lady' old rose scent : )
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An occlusion of subject matters:
tonight, I have 3 home-grown-in-Oamaru purple-black urenika (a Maori spud) steaming;
and several slices of venison backsteak *ready to go in the scanpan,
and in another iron pan, a large sliced brown onion and 4 large cloves of garlic with a bit of butter, soon to be fried.
You use the water from the urenika added to the meatjuice & the onion&garlic buttery juices, and you add a tiny bit of flour. Stir carefully, and you have the best gravy in the world…
uncle Bill’s dogs used to fight over it (no garlic then but everything else.)
We kids used to , too-
busher lamb & wild pork? Haunches & backsteaks?
(Not to mention all that Moeraki kaimoana!)
Helped my mother bring up 6 very healthy kids…
and my uncle Bill to have bloody good pigdogs (all mongrels. Disobedient ones were summarily shot. Bill could never do that with his cats…)*Courtesy of my lovely neighbour, Andris Apse.
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Islander, in reply to
Aue aue aue!
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Islander, in reply to
Please ignore the foodie post - it is insensitive now-
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
It's not, you know. It's lovely xxx
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
You’ll have to imagine the soft ‘old lady’ old rose scent : )
I did. I love flowers. That one is beautiful. Do you know the species? I now want to grow it in my new garden. :) Whoops, high-jacking Jackie's flower... so I'll gift one too.Here Jackie. To add to Sophie's. We could make a bouquet :) Chin up , have a glass of wine and I salute you.
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Thanks sweetheart xx
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Hebe, in reply to
No, not really when you know dogs. The night Meg, the supreme labrador glutton, died (see a few pages back in my posts today for the tale), her silly but enthusiastic assistant dog was given his dog roll. Usually he would gobble it. That night he stood and looked at the food for 10 minutes. Then picked it up and trotted down to her grave under the trees and buried it on top: for Mum, she would never miss dinner. So so sad.
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Oh so sweet!
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Hebe, in reply to
Poor you, poor dog. something very pure and unmixed about grief for a dog. Because they are so loyal.
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Steve Barnes, in reply to
One dog stroller as promised (sans hound in this case as it was still in store – but these are not that uncommon)
I know people who put their children in such things and we know how that ended up...
OMG!!! think of the puppies,
Don't let the puppy see that!
Don't allow rover to hear the "F" word...
Canine and Abel bodied people are becoming one. -
Well the gravy et al was as it should be – but I missed a dog **to share it with-
with very few exceptions*, they are straightforward direct & honest creatures, with love/loyalty as prime motivators-
*uncle Bill had -for a year and a bit- a kelpie-blue-heeler cross. We were warned as kids to never go into the dog yard if Tam was loose – if he was in his kennel, chained, OK. He was an excellent attacking pig-dog – but he just couldnt be trusted.
The day he bit a chunk out of the calf of my uncle’s longterm friend & pig-hunting mate was the day he died.**Or a sibling. Or a friend- however, all youse fellas? Enjoy the rich tastes & aromas
of venison gravy! -
Sophie G, in reply to
Do you know the species?
Souvenir de la Malmaison, from 1843, should be available if you hunt around : )
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Excellent. will hunt. thanks
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
I do have to tell you that Ellie is one of the least scary dogs I have ever seen.
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