Magpie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 10,615
There's been a lot of dog threads lately, and I've noticed a lot of people have beautiful, well-trained, perfectly behaved dogs.
I just want to say that my dog is not any of these things. She's 20 lbs of scruffy, fluffy spaniel/poodle mutt. She smells. She tries to jump on friendly people, so I keep her on a short leash. If she isn't pulling me down the street, then she's dragging behind me trying to scavenge food off the sidewalk. Big dogs terrify her. So do leaves blowing in the wind, and - for some reason - empty golf bags. She doesn't like the feeling of wet grass on her toes, and usually requires a kick in the butt to get her onto the lawn to do her business on rainy days. She'll spend hours chewing on her toe nails.
Sometimes I'll point out a beautiful, highly trained, pedigreed dog to her. "See, Maggie?" I'll say, "That's a REAL dog. What do you think of that?" She has yet to give me any sort of satisfactory answer.
She actually does have a few commands, though. "Sit" means "Make your butt touch the ground for a split second, then jump up, tail wagging." "Sit, sit, sit!" means "Repeat the sit command, over and over." "Stay!" means "Look quizzically at my owner for a moment, then jump up." "Speak!" means "Bark joyfully, and don't stop until someone shouts, "Shut up!"". And my personal favorite... "Off!" which means, "Try and devour whatever's in my mouth as fast as I can, before someone pries my jaws open and fishes it out."
On the plus side, however, Maggie is mild-mannered, quiet, and doesn't bark when the doorbell rings. She doesn't bark at pedestrians, or other dogs, either. She doesn't destroy our belongings. She comes running when she's called. She doesn't bite, and is good with babies, toddlers, cats, and rabbits - she has no prey drive, and won't even play fetch.
I imagine she'd starve to death pretty quickly, if we weren't around to feed her. Luckily, we love her.
What's your dog like?
I just want to say that my dog is not any of these things. She's 20 lbs of scruffy, fluffy spaniel/poodle mutt. She smells. She tries to jump on friendly people, so I keep her on a short leash. If she isn't pulling me down the street, then she's dragging behind me trying to scavenge food off the sidewalk. Big dogs terrify her. So do leaves blowing in the wind, and - for some reason - empty golf bags. She doesn't like the feeling of wet grass on her toes, and usually requires a kick in the butt to get her onto the lawn to do her business on rainy days. She'll spend hours chewing on her toe nails.
Sometimes I'll point out a beautiful, highly trained, pedigreed dog to her. "See, Maggie?" I'll say, "That's a REAL dog. What do you think of that?" She has yet to give me any sort of satisfactory answer.
She actually does have a few commands, though. "Sit" means "Make your butt touch the ground for a split second, then jump up, tail wagging." "Sit, sit, sit!" means "Repeat the sit command, over and over." "Stay!" means "Look quizzically at my owner for a moment, then jump up." "Speak!" means "Bark joyfully, and don't stop until someone shouts, "Shut up!"". And my personal favorite... "Off!" which means, "Try and devour whatever's in my mouth as fast as I can, before someone pries my jaws open and fishes it out."
On the plus side, however, Maggie is mild-mannered, quiet, and doesn't bark when the doorbell rings. She doesn't bark at pedestrians, or other dogs, either. She doesn't destroy our belongings. She comes running when she's called. She doesn't bite, and is good with babies, toddlers, cats, and rabbits - she has no prey drive, and won't even play fetch.
I imagine she'd starve to death pretty quickly, if we weren't around to feed her. Luckily, we love her.

What's your dog like?

I've been able to take her out in public and she is so well behaved. Sits by my side, ignores other dogs, and is very calm and submissive. I don't trust her off leash (oh I'd love a dog I could trust off leash!), but she's a GREAT dog.






And they don't care whose it is. And they take turns at that, too. And then they want to kiss us. 

