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— The food won't get wet when it rains.
— Sophia will be less tempted to gulp down Fitzroy's food (in the wink of a dog's eye) when she just happens to be strolling around in the vicinity of his kennel. In other words, Sophia seems to realize that the interior of the kennel is definitely out of bounds for her, since it's Fitzroy's territory.
— In this position, with his head in the semi-darkness, Fitzroy is less likely to get distracted in the middle of his meal. In the outside world, he jumps constantly from one preoccupation to another. And, if he runs out of plausible preoccupations, he resorts to racing around furiously, like a greyhound, in a big figure-of-eight trail.
In any case, Fitzroy eats heartily, as expected: warmed-up pasta of a morning, and croquettes later on in the day.
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Recently, during our frequent walks up the road beyond the house, the dogs inevitably discover a large male ring-necked pheasant that beds down overnight in the weeds of Gamone. The bird only darts off when the dogs are right alongside him, and he flies rapidly in a straight line to the opposite side of the creek, making a weird clicking noise like a motor. Of an evening, the dogs start barking as soon as they pick up the scent of the pheasant who has returned to roost in his usual corner of the weeds. I'm starting to look upon this bird, reared to be shot by hunters, as a new member of our Gamone family. But I wouldn't bet on his lengthy survival.
I'm looking forward to Fitzroy's introduction to the snow by his mentor, Sophia.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your obvious delight in your environment.
Me too, I'm eagerly awaiting Fitzroy's initial contacts with this mysterious element, which always sends Sophia into a state of euphoria. Every morning, when I wake up, I draw aside the curtain to see whether the night has brought us a blanket of soft whiteness. For the moment, there has been no snow whatsoever at Choranche, or even on the upper slopes of the great Cournouze, but I can observe patches of snow on the distant cliffs that close the valley to the east, in the direction of the Vercors plateau and Italy.
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