OCT 26 2022
down cometh the fencing..
all of a sudden they have stopped putting in the new and are back taking down the old..and i am about 3 loads behind them....so this may be short
i have also resorted to tip/dumping/dragging the 16 foot rails... which from a 14 ' trailer could break some... but i am happy the last load i tipped and dragged and it all came out without any breaking..
today will. make our collection an out of control pile...the paking pit will need sorting help ?? matt????
i am hoping to "encourage" ipswich to put in dog parks with some of this pile.
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i have a muzzle or not to muzzle debate going on in my head.... we have never muzzled...and do not at the moment see any need.... however one of our veterans took his service dog to a nervous vet who had been bitten once by a dane... and was terrified of the service dog... so he insisted on putting a muzzle on this perfectly behaved dog... which immeciately turned him into a 150 pound flying object , knocking over people and furnature. til they got it off him.. natrurally the vet thought the dog was nuts... and wrote me a nasty letter.... that could happen again ... if our dogs have not been introduced to a muzzle...
they are big..... to fear them....you have only to take a look at the depth of the cavern which is their mouth-- which is lined with white pointy things.
we have had blood produced twice by a dog just being friendly and mouthing someone's arm and the person pulled back thus engaging the pointy things........ mouthing is highly discouraged. and malarkey at the moment is the worst--- and the friendliest--- with the fact that his mouth is not what you might call "dry mouth". the combination means that someday... if he is not in my direct control someone might want to muzzle him. so... shoud i practice????? amd iof you see me playing with muzzles...PLEASE. THAT IS WHY !!!!!
so that is my mental state as i drive loads of fencing around massachusetts