Taken with the PlayBook.
It’s the first wintry day of the season. About 1cm of snow fell overnight, lending an appropriate cast to the scene, which was, is, assisted by the moderate northwest breeze.

No, we have not been buried under a wall of snow. This is a three year old photo from the Goderich area, a part of the world which can be buried under a wall of snow.

These dogs have graced the lives of one or another or both us. I look often at this collage, usually with a smile on my face and in my heart. Clockwise from top right:
Just a saying about the impact they had on us.
Rex, a very sweet boy. Faye adopted him sight unseen. Despite his blindness, HW positive diagnosis and treatment, and other concerns, he was always a sweet, loving, courageous boy whose sense of direction and location was as sure as that of many sighted animals. His job was to be loving and to show the way.
Moonpie ran into my yard and heart as a tiny puppy. Enthusiasm was her watchword and how she lived her life. She was a delightful Labx who never would swim but loved chasing a ball and whose life came to a shockingly abrupt, all too early end.
Kingsley Leigh was my friend Marian’s dog, and she taught me the love of and for dogs. Kingsley was an extraordinary dog, smart, sensitive, mischevious. I had not had any dogs in my life before her, and now I cannot imagine ever living life without a dog.
Ah, Corndog. He strayed from his previous home into my life and though he went back to that home he never left and eventually came back for good. Corndog never met a human or a dog he disliked.
BoJo was hard done by. He’d been abandoned outside a shelter which took him in anyway, had pretty much run out of time there, had very bad hips which must have hurt terribly. None of these things were his fault. Faye saw to it that we gave him two comfortable years that he would not have otherwise had. I did not give him the credit he deserved. My loss.
Bruno guarded Faye throughout his life, which regrettably ended before I met him. He was loyal, a marvellous companion by all accounts I have read and heard and I wish I could have met him.
Avis was the second dog in my adult life. She could be hard-headed, even morose, and sometimes difficult to control. It didn’t help that I was ignorant, lacking in knowledge and self-awareness. Dussie was nearly fearless and full of character, once at eleven years of age launching herself at a GSD/wolf mix.
I am doubtful there is a Rainbow Bridge, that concept, that philosophy seems awfully egocentric to me. Who would Corndog choose? Why should he choose me, a bit player in the totality of his approximately nine years of life? He had a pretty good life at his previous home so why would he come running up to me? And, he loved all people. I would be not at all offended if he continued loving whatever human was scritching his ears when I entered.
I don’t often shed tears that they are gone. Instead I prefer to be grateful, and to try to remember and apply the lessons they taught while they were in my life.
What a terrible draw for the US men’s football team – Germany (ranked #2), Portugal (#5 and Ronaldo) and Ghana,who have sent the States home from the past two Cups. What’s more, the Stars and Stripes travel something like 9,000 miles. But wait! There’s more! They play Portugal in Manaus at 3:00PM. This is like playing in Houston TX in July at 3:00 PM – 33 degrees and 90 percent humidity.
This could be ugly.
If you want to make peace with your enemy, you have to work with your enemy. Then he becomes your partner. -Nelson Mandela, activist, South African president, Nobel Peace Prize (1918-2013)
A great, great man is gone. He leaves a legacy and an example of forgiveness and of tolerance that all of us – black, white, brown, red, Republican, Democrat, Tory, Liberal, man,woman – that each of us should strive to emulate
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We had some minor excitement this morning. When the mantel clock chimed 5:00 we stirred and Faye said ‘We have no hydro.’ It turned out that not only we had no hydro, nor did the whole street, now did the entire town.
There was an ‘equipment problem’ according to Hydro One. No matter and no big deal. Faye retrieved the coffee perk from the shed so we enjoyed our coffee and heated our oatmeal.

Today I humg up some Christmas lights outside and inside. I still have many lights to go, not sure all of them will get put up. The chili pepper and Santa boot lights will go up to work along with some desktop decorations. We also did photo shoots with the dogs inside and outside. A review of the PlayBook photos confirmed that surprisingly Kendal was by the most photogenic during the outdoors shoot. More photos to come.