Keep Your Cheese Off the Teeter

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7 Responses to “Keep Your Cheese Off the Teeter”

  1. Patty Says:

    Thanks for the face washing pic! I had no idea that cheese was such a treat until I took the cat to the vet and they sprayed cheese whiz on the table top. The cat had a grand time licking it off!

    I personally love cheese, too.

  2. Patty Says:

    but not cheese whiz so much

  3. Doranna Says:

    Cheeeeeeese, Wallace!!

  4. Elizabeth Says:

    I love the look in Belle’s eye, and also the way Dart’s tail and his posture seem to express “But my face didn’t really NEED…oh, but…can’t you…hurry?”

  5. Doranna Says:

    It may not surprise you that the grooming turned into a short but explosive round of play. ;>

  6. SharonS Says:

    I would think the owner of the equipment would have a cow if someone did that!! My husband and I use to compete in agility (before kids, sigh) I miss it. Any way I had a Rottie (nicknamed slug, cause….she was a little slow through the course ) but my husband had a Siberian Husky. Oh,yeah. Fantastic running dog until he got to a table, then his nose was drawn to it like a magnet, never to leave it until you said let’s go. I think he was sniffing dog butts (freaking dominant male dog). thanks for the post, brought back lots of memories. One day (when kids are gone ) I will get my Standard Poodle (empty nest dream dog) and get back into the fun!
    (my Rottie ran flawlessly, but once we got to excellence she disqualified on time faults every time! one day she qualified by one second and the whole place cheered – they all knew us well -it was the only leg she got towards the excellence title . She eventually ended up tearing an ACL playing with that awful Si ;)

  7. Doranna Says:

    Sharon, I’ve seen some lovely Rotties running agility in these here parts. And Standards are so pretty when they run–they just float! You made me LOL with that table remark, though…

    Avoiding ACL problems is why Connery had the prolotherapy and is on such extensive rehab. :/ Vet says the injuries were just as likely initiated in play, and I figure it was the tennie ball, which will happen nevermore no matter how much the dogs adore it. I was always careful to toss grounders, but there was still a lot of swapping ends going on.