Spring has got off to an unusually warm and sunny start this year, and the pups have been trying out all the sunbathing spots on the new deck.
It took us a few days to work out where best to place blankies and beds to make the Beagle sunworshipping as comfortable as possible, but until we started getting it right, Daisy was quite happy to improvise.
Yeah, Monkey is basically Daisy’s portable heated cushion.
I still need to put railings on the stairs up to the deck, but this keeps getting delayed as we work to convert the building site at the rear of the house back into a patio that we and the pups can chill out on. In the midst of all that, Susan’s very busy getting all our veg and flowers ready to go into the ground.
With all this work to do, there are times when we need to keep Daisy and Monkey occupied at the bottom of the garden, so we’ve fallen into the habit of giving them lots of treats, particularly longer-lasting ones such as chicken feet, goat ears and various other animal parts. Given that they’re Beagles, distracting them with food should be super easy, and in Daisy’s case it is, but Monkey often presents a problem, well.. two problems to be more accurate.
Firstly there’s his complete inability to catch things, a failing he acquired from his mentor The Bigglet. When a treat is thrown for him, he just lets it hit the floor, then while he’s trying to work out where it landed, Daisy speed-eats her treat and swoops in to claim his. This can be mitigated by not throwing the treat but instead putting it directly in his mouth. If it’s in his mouth he can’t possibly lose it, right? Wrong, because he’s Monkey.
If the treat in question is one he hasn’t encountered before, he can’t just eat it; he has to check it carefully to ensure that it’s not some new attempt at Monkeycide, and as he puts it on the ground to study it, Daisy nicks it. Conversely if the treat is one he knows well and loves, he’s so filled with the joy of getting it that he has to play with it before consumption. Wagging furiously, he throws it in the air and pounces on it, throws it again and pounces, then throws it one more time and.. Daisy nicks it.
When this happens he looks round at us with a pathetic, bewildered expression on his face that says “Mum, Dad, it’s happened again! Help!”. Instead of getting on with what we wanted to do, one of us now has to go back into the kitchen to get a replacement, by which time Daisy has finished snacking and is either getting under our feet or making us feel guilty for not getting her a second serving too. We called our boy Monkey, and a Monkey he is, but he’s also a Doofus.
Some more recent shots…
When Daisy’s losing at chases, she still cheats by hiding under our garden seat and ambushing The Monkster!
That first Spring grass-cut took a bit longer than expected.
‘Cos when the mower’s out, it’s the perfect time for wrestling and chases.
It turns out that Spring is the ideal time for gardening Beagles to prune bamboo.
And whatever was in this pot, well it ain’t there any more. But Daisy did it, Dad, honest!
Little Miss Innocent. Well, the “little” part is true at least.