BosnMate
Gold Member
- Sep 10, 2010
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I like dogs. I especially like well trained dogs. Police K-9's, or drug dogs come to mind, and when I read or hear that a Navy SEAL sent in their "hair missal," my mind can conjure up all sorts of really great images, where the dog always wins. And circus dogs, any of you guys remember the trained animals at the circus? The lions weren't happy at all, the elephants didn't act if they cared what was going on, but the dogs were having a ball, loving every second of what they were doing. But my very favorite dogs are stock dogs, sheep dogs and cattle dogs. I love to watch sheep dogs work, but my personal experience is with cattle dogs, and I have some good stories. Everyone in their life is entitled to one good horse and one good dog in their lifetime, and I've had both. My dog was a Queensland blue heeler, and she replaced at least 6 cowboys in the brush. The dog and the horse are both gone along with my youth, but there are good memories, and in the end that's all we really have. Anyhow, I'm getting off target. I was watching the neighbors dog the other day. He has probably the friendliest lab in Oregon, a young dog, and anything that critter is asked to do is his favorite thing. He loves people, he loves to be with people, and most of all he loves to play with people. But on a more serious note, I'm watching out our widow in the morning, and first thing in the morning the neighbor lets Ruger out for his morning necessaries, and that dog sniffs every inch of their yard, and by the time he's done, I think he knows everything that has gone on in the yard the night before. If there was a coon or a skunk, perhaps a deer or a person, Ruger knows it. Now this brings up a question. Do dogs think? When they are sniffing are they seeing pictures of the animal they smell in their mind, or are they deducing much like humans, and if that's the case do they think in a language, like have words for coon or deer. Or perhaps when he's checking out the yard, is he only looking for food or sex, or is their more going on in the dog's mind. I had an uncle that used to say that teen age boys and dogs are a lot alike, if they can't eat it or breed it, then pee on it, but watching Ruger sniff out the yard, I'd like to think he's got more than that going on.