Friday, June 25, 2010

The Tale of Little Dragon.

Once upon a time, there was a little dragon who was very thick and wide.  She would crouch in the rocks by the big blue house and sit and listen.  Sometimes the noises perplexed her and she was compelled to see what made such strange noises.  She would scuttle and scurry, but if the people from the blue house came out, she would lie low and pretend to be looking elsewhere.  She didn't want the people to see her, to know she was watching.
Days would go by and she would inch closer to peer near windows, and then scurry off at the first sign of activity.  Curiosity was too much.  There were so many interesting sounds.  Children laughing, phones ringing, games whirring and beeping.  She felt compelled to see these people.  Yet she knew she shouldn't.
Today she made it to the arbor door, and as I stumbled upon her, she gave me an "oh-you-don't-see-me-I-am-not-going-anything-wrong" look.
I flicked her with the hose and she scurries away.
But like a good little bug eater, this little dragon, both thick and wide, will scurry back, drawn to the noises of my home.


Wednesday, June 23, 2010

I love fabric!

I love fabric.  The colors, the designs, the textures......
Here is what I ordered for the coming holiday season:

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

An ugly ugly thing.......

A person who destroys another's reputation may be referred to as a famacide, defamer, or slanderer.

 Slander is the spoken or transitory form of defamation of character, a legal term that refers to a falsehood presented as true which could harm the reputation of a person or entity. Slander also encompasses body gestures as in the case of sign language. If defamation of character is placed in a fixed form, as in the case of a sign, published paper, film or recording, it is considered libel. In short, slander is temporarily uttered or gesticulated, libel is published or otherwise fixed.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Eye Spy.......

I woke up today with Pink eye.  So annoying.  I hate how I constantly feel gunk build up and smudge up my vision.
So, I spend part of my morning wiping my eyes and putting in the burning acidic drops.  Caitlyn calls to me from her room, can I tell her what animal is down in the grass, outside her window.
My eyes blurred I looked down from her second floor window and said, "That is a baby bunny eating grass."
Caitlyn squeals with glee, announces she is going to catch it and runs downstairs.
Since we live out in the country, catching wild animals is considered a normal activity, nothing of concern.
I go downstairs and Caitlyn comes back in, flushed.
"That was so NOT a baby bunny"
"Well what was it?"
"I went to catch it and it turned and I saw it's long skinny rat tail.  It was a RAT!"

I think I need more eye drops.

And how was your day?

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

What is brown and white and smells all over?

Ugh.  Dogs.  What is with their choice of canine cologne?  Our darling dog, Holly, went out in the back yard.  This is a normal activity for her.  There is sun, there is shade, there is grass to eat and birds to chase and a much better choice of spiders than are in the house.  So, the kids and I made second breakfast (yes, I am raising Hobbits), and afterwards, I went to let the dogs back in.
In walks Cricket.  I wait.  No Holly.  I call.  No Holly.  I go into the back and there are only safe and happy spiders.  No Holly. 
I scan the pasture for where she would normally be and where our brother ducks were out in the tall weeds playing "Whack a Duck".  No Holly. 
I gather the kids, all hands on deck.  The children are well trained.  They put on shoes, grab leashes, my purse and the van keys.
We start cruising.  Where would a tired (I walked her a mile this morning), well fed (somewhat fluffy), neurotic dog go?
We go to the turkey farm in case she has a death wish.  No Holly.  We go down the street to where there are some dogs behind a fence that she never gets to play with.  No Holly.  We drive around the old wheat field, down the dirt road to the other house with a dog.  No Holly.  We drive up the highway and around to Mom's because she has a canine visible cosmic sign over her house that seems to beckon all dogs to come and live with her.  No Holly.  The one dog in the world that hasn't shown up on Mom's porch??
We drive back toward our house, past Joan's.  No Holly.
As we pull up our street I see a blur of brown and white, running, four on the floor, across the pasture it runs, flies through our front yard, jumps the fence and sits on our back porch.  Holly.
I am not sure if I want to hug her or hurt her.  Then I lean down, thinking, hug and the smell hits me.  I look closer.  Yellowish brown smears on her ear and neck.  One side of her body is smothered in.....ick.  Spooge. Vile offal.  The cast off of a large herbivore.  The remnant's of the south end of a north bound bovine.
Cow pie.  Buffalo chip.  Meadow muffins, land mines.  On my Holly dog.  She doesn't understand my confusion.  She doesn't understand my instant revulsion.  I choke back an instant gag reflex.
"YOU NEED A BATH!"
I couldn't have said a harsher thing to her.  Her eyes widened, her ears went from pricked to drooped.  She dropped to her tummy and wiggled her slathered self at me adoringly, given homage to the alpha female.  I wasn't buying it.
"Bath".  I only said it to drive home my disgust.
  It worked.  So, because I am heartless, I said it again.  At this point she looked ready to jump the fence again.  So we leashed her.  And filled Cricket's wading pool with water.  And got the "good" shampoo.  And hauled her smelly self into it.
Defeat.  She stood.  We scrubbed, we hosed, we rinsed, we lathered.  We squirted, we rubbed, we scraped, we gagged, we soaped some more.
In the end, Holly now smells like oatmeal and coconut.  Her coat is back to her normal color.  She is walking small.  But she is home and safe.

And I now smell like wet dog.

And how was your day?