Monday, 20 May 2024

Holiday time!

So it's time to say goodbye to this year's glorious rhododendron blooms in Duthie Park.

I'm excited to tell you that, later today, I'm off to my holiday home. I'll be staying with my lovely relatives, the Craigmancie Foxies, while Gail heads to Slovenia, where she'll meet her American friend Marse and they'll spend a couple of weeks exploring that country together. 

The rhoddie flowers will likely have wilted by the time I'm back in the park. Rest assured friends, this WFT is not for wilting!

But while I am rampaging around the fields and farmyard with my extended fox terrier family, my blog will be 'on paws'.

Normal service will resume in early June.

Friday, 17 May 2024

Wednesday, 15 May 2024

A misunderstanding about the seesaw

So Gail tells me the time has come on my "agility journey" for me to master the seesaw.

Well I've seen the little humans in the park playground, so I know how it goes. Gail sits at one end and I sit at the other and we have fun bouncing up and down. 

Given that we don't have a photo, I asked Gail to sketch the scenario, and she duly obliged -  see image below. She says she would have done better, but couldn't find a rubber (that's an eraser to our American friends) and had the cheek to blame me for stealing the one she keeps on her desk.

The problem, as clearly illustrated in the otherwise mediocre drawing, is that I weigh 9 kg versus Gail's 57 kg, so I'll be needing some of my bigger agility pals to balance things out. 

I know, I'll recruit my training partners Harrison and Ripple. They won't mind me asking their weight, will they? 

What?

It seems I've "misunderstood" the whole point of the seesaw exercise.

Apparently I'm supposed to run all the way along the plank, while Gail shouts: "Seesaw! Seesaw!" And I'm not supposed jump off in a panic when it tips and makes a loud clattering noise.

Hmmm. I'll think about co-operating, on the usual condition that there'll be a treat at the end...

Sunday, 12 May 2024

An auroral escapade


So I was all safely tucked up in my kitchen crate on Friday night when I heard Gail coming down the stairs and slipping quietly (so she thought) out of the front door. 

Most unusual behaviour. My owner is definitely not a night owl and, to be frank, neither am I. There was a moment of high alert, then I rested my head back on my comfy cushion and, after briefly wondering what on earth she could be up to, I went back to sleep. 

In the morning Gail showed me these photos on her phone, and told me how she, along with seemingly half the population of Aberdeen, had been enjoying the natural light show at the mouth of the harbour around midnight.

Have you ever seen the Northern Lights? Or maybe heard this old favourite Aberdeen song? 

Friday, 10 May 2024

Roaming free (eventually) on Morven

The weather was set fair on Wednesday for a roam up and around Morven, our favourite Aberdeenshire Hill.

See how I am on a lead at the start of the walk. 

This unsatisfactory situation persisted while we ascended the first, rather steep, section of the hill.

Gail claimed I was restrained because of the sheep grazing on the lower slopes. But we passed a group of hikers who offered an alternative explanation. They had paused to 'admire the view' (i.e. catch their breath) and commented on how lucky Gail was to have a dog helping to pull her up the stiff gradient.

Do you think they were right?

What's certainly true is that when we reached the gentler slopes of the broad summit plateau I was at last allowed to roam free. So I raced on ahead, stopping only occasionally to remind Gail to hurry up and ensure we reached the small summit shelter ahead of the group we'd passed.

I'm pleased to say we made it! As usual on top of a hill in Scotland, even the least protection from the wind was welcome.

I was a good boy and did not chase the solitary mountain hare we saw near the highest point, or the brace of ptarmigan on stony ground a bit lower down. Gail failed to catch these on her camera, but she did take some photos of the wild, expansive landscapes which we both love.

Near the end of the walk, and entirely of my own volition, I took preemptive action to avoid the need for a bath in the kitchen sink.

Wild swimming (or at least wading) is so much more fun than a home shampoo, don't you think?

Happy Nature Friday friends! Once again we are delighted to take part in the LLB Gang's always wonderful blog hop.

Wednesday, 8 May 2024

Monday, 6 May 2024

Neighbourhood gossip

We're spending another few days at the Torridon cottage. Yippee!

The early morning walk here is a c.2 mile circuit through the scattered settlements of Wester Alligin and Inveralligin 

The route should take about forty minutes, but that depends on who is around and how much they want to talk. Yesterday we set off before eight am and didn't get back until after ten thirty.

I expect you want to hear the local gossip.

We're just walking out of the gate when Mary, from a nearby cottage, pops over to discuss concerns about sightings of the dreaded invader Rhododendron ponticum. A noisy cuckoo in the woods behind us seems keen to muscle in on the conversation.

Further up the road, Donnie the local crofter has much to say about the recent road resurfacing work, claiming the council has poured so much tarmac on our quarter of a mile stretch they could have filled every pothole between here and Inverness. Oh and, now that his lambs have arrived, he's hoping for some rain so the grass will grow. (Hoping for more rain is not a sentiment you'll often hear in this part of the world...)  

Behind neighbour Phil's gate, I spot a new resident, a chunky bulldog, but I'm not allowed to say hello to her. She belongs to Phil's son and, Phil says, she has "issues" (don't we all?)  Apparently this bulldog has lived in Australia and California and has been transported between continents at phenomenal expense. Because she's worth it. I guess. 

Friends Julia and Alan are out in their van and, Highland style, they stop the vehicle in the middle of the single track road for a wee blether. They have grandchildren staying just now, and are trying to think up ways of tiring them out. Gail says "just like living with Nobby then..."

At the other end of the village, while Arjan and Gail boringly discuss local school closures, I am frustrated at not being allowed off the lead to play with Arjan's Patterdale terrier, the appropriately named 'Nipper'. 

A new part-time resident, out for a run, slows down to walking pace and introduces herself. Turns out Caroline's a geologist, husband's a GP, she works in Aberdeen, and knows some of the hill runners in Gail's Thursday cycling group. They have the 'it's a small world isn't it?' conversation. Later I notice a handsome yellow lab on Caroline's doorstep. I hope I get to meet him properly soon. 

Finally, we see Irish terrier Duffy and his owner Bridget, out for a stroll. Duffy is a year older than me, but Bridget says she is still waiting for him to calm down. A discussion on terrier behaviour ensues, and Gail shows Bridget the video of me doing the weave poles (see Friday's post).

In truth, Gail has contrived an excuse to show that video just about everyone she's met this week. 

You might almost imagine she's proud of me.

Wednesday, 1 May 2024

Comparisons

Some readers might remember the old (19th Century) fox terrier oil painting on the wall of Gail's not-very-tidy study. 

I wonder if anyone else saw one of the photos from Monday's post and noticed a similarity in the composition? 

And on the theme of comparisons, Gail had the cheek to ask me if my foxie friends from Sunday really are the same breed as those stuck up types who strut their stuff around the show ring at Crufts...