It’s been raining here most of the day, and the landscape has gone back to looking like bleak autumn instead of the deep of winter. There isn’t a speck of snow or ice left, and I’m grateful for that. It sure makes walking Jack less fraught with danger and not nearly so physically demanding. Jack has mixed feelings about the weather. Today, for the very first time, Jack didn’t want to go for a walk. We stepped out on the porch, Jack raised his head and looked slowly to the right, then to the left, and then he turned around and asked to go back into the house. Sheesh! 2 days ago he was swimming in the frigid water of the river, and today he lets a little rain put him off. He’s a water dog for Pete’s sake. It’s even in his name. Officially, Jack is Wasserhund’s King Jackson Brown, and Wassserhund means ‘water dog’ in German. So my water dog didn’t want to go out in the rain.
I fixed that, though. I put Jack in the house and set out across the street to check the mailbox. I could see him watching me through the window as I made my way down our sidewalk, and then he started to howl, a loud, pitiful howl like the coyotes that we hear down east. I had no idea that he could even do that! I think he thought I was going on our walk without him. By the time I got back a minute or two later, Jack was eager to go out despite the rain, so we stepped out on the porch again, and this time Jack didn’t stop to take measure. He just went down the stairs with his tail wagging: Sehr gut, meine wasserhund.
kestrel says
LOL. This reminds me of a good way to catch llamas in a small corral: Close the gate to the corral where you want them to go. They become so consumed with curiosity about why the gate is closed, they will all be quite anxious to go in there when you sneak over and open the gate a little. Goats go for this too…
The color in that leaf is astonishing.
Lofty says
The Fear of Missing Out is greater than the Annoyance of Getting Damp.