- cross-posted to:
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- whitepeopletwitter
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- whitepeopletwitter
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/10594088
In a heartbeat
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/10594088
In a heartbeat
That’s not evil. Lots of dogs were bred for thousands of years to hunt small animals. It’s like asking you not to like eating ice cream.
Were they also bred to play with them for hours and not let anyone near them until you trick them into letting them go?
And then there was the time she brought half a squirrel through the dog door. Just half a squirrel.
She’s learning to share. Good dog!
Or, if those happened in reverse order: She’s learning that you don’t want her to share the animals. Good dog!
She still doesn’t want to share. She just forgot she left it on the living room floor.
Oh, and there was another time she brought in half a rabbit.
To be fair, who hasn’t set down the half squirrel they were gnawing on and forgotten about it? Maybe the half squirrel and half rabbit were supposed to go together and make an even more fun animal to
maim and killplay with. Cute little Dogtor Frankenstein.Unfortunately, they were both the back end of the creature, so unless you want to attach the butt of a squirrel to the butt of a rabbit and hope it springs to life, I think that wouldn’t work.
Well that just sounds like a nickelodeon show waiting to happen!
I feel like you aren’t actually thinking about what it would be like for your dog to come inside with dead animals
Other than the fact that it’s happened many times, sure.
Than why are you acting like it’s the same thing as a stuffed animal?
deleted by creator
Understandable. I am familiar with the experience, it comes with the territory when inviting a dog (or cat, for that matter) to be part of your family from time to time.
I meant to comment that to flyingsquid, my bad