The Posse Hideout

punkinduster

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Dec 25, 2010
2,699
14,890
Horse and Buggy Country, PA
Good morning everyone! :)
Noticed a little frost on the roof tops this morning. A nice clear/sunny day...

Drott,
I went to check my thermostat to see if I needed to change batteries. Ours doesn't use batteries! It runs off of the house power. Maybe that is why I don't ever remember changing the batteries! :lol:
 

Drottwiler

Old Timer
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Oct 20, 2010
20,392
82,550
Drott's Dog House
Cool morning but74 at the shack now. Still waiting on the furnace guy. Could have went to Home Depo and installed one by now. But since everything's under warranty let them fix it. :lol::lol: We have hot water so if we get cold we'll just turn on the electric fire place.
 

Drottwiler

Old Timer
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Oct 20, 2010
20,392
82,550
Drott's Dog House
Seen this and though I'd share. It's soo true.

2764.png

Living with a very old dog means feeling your heart speeding up every time you see them a little more still than usual and approaching with the fear that they have stopped breathing.
Living with a very old dog means being aware that some of the things you'll do together may be the last.
Living with a very old dog means thinking ′′ this is their last summer ", ′′ this is their last July ", ′′ This could be the last morning".
Living with a very old dog means they bark at any noise at any time, not because they know what they are barking at, its they feel they need to bark and let us know.
Living with a very old dog means, you have to lift them up into the truck, the bed, the couch, the stairs.
Living with a very old dog means putting off commitments because it's important to be close to them.
Living with an old dog means we trip over them because they are so sound asleep they don't hear us approaching them.
Living with an old dog means accidents in the house, its ok they don't mean to do it.
Living with a very old dog means feeling guilty because you know you could have done more, giving them more runs, more travel, more hugs, more caresses, more everything.
I would like to say that living with a very old dog also puts us in the face of our own death, fragility, vulnerability.
Living with a very old dog means we got to experience life with a very old dog, which is one of the best joys on earth!
 

Users who are viewing this thread