Spring in the North . . .

is happening at it’s best. . . again. We woke up to snow on the ground this morning. Terribly depressing, but beautiful! The new leaves pale green gleams through the bright white of the snow. Holly (our 8 1/2 year old Rottie) is the happiest of our crew. She has snow to roll in again. Earlier this week I caught her standing in a puddle, staring down at the remains of her snow bank. Sigh, she says.

I’m so glad she enjoys life now. With the abusive start she had in life, she hasn’t found much joy, but over the last couple of years she has more than made up for it. We went through the terrible twos and the adolescent rebellion all in the last couple of years. We are probably the only dog owners who rejoice in a bit of rebellion! It is so good to see; for years there was no one home behind her eyes. We only saw a spark at rare intervals – usually when she had mud squishing between her toes!

Now she romps and runs, all full of herself. Poor Tank, he would say over-bearing . . . who would have thought our Holly-bear would become an over-bearing Rottie female.

It’s happening!

Snow is melting and temperatures have been consistently +10C everyday . . . and this is happening to me!

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Fit & Furry ©2003 Cute & Cuddly Cross-Stitch by Gillian Souter
(stitched for Denise Grenfell, Stitching Diva’s Colour RR)

Not the furry and definitely not the fit, but me, in my annual spring manic activity, bouncing up and down and waiting for the green.

How do I know spring is coming?

  1. I have a little dachshund who wants out, wants in, wants out, wants in, wants out. wants in . . . repeating all day . . .
  2. The lane is free of snow. There is one patch of ground in front of the house free of snow. Of course, this muddy strip is the only area around the house not covered with grass; the grassy areas being well protected by snow.
  3. There are robins every where, mostly in that said small patch of mud.
  4. When the delightful squishy mud is not covered by robins, it is the delectable play ground of 2 rotties and one long-haired miniature dachsie
  5. The floors are covered with rottie and dachsie muddy foot prints (we will learn by the time things dry up to wipe all six pairs of feet upon entry).
  6. We wake in the morning with a bed filled with sand and sawdust . . . and a warm smarmy, long haired miniature Dachshund so happy to be with us.
  7. It snows nearly every day

So enjoy your green grass, your daffodils and tulips and think of us, way up here sitting in the middle of the muskeg.