Forum Discussion
- Code2HighExplorerShe was running with her midget crew and she hit it with her shoulder/ribs, when she jumped up and turned sideways because she was playing. It was a very hard collision and she limped away. The tree groaned a little but seems otherwise unharmed.
For the third time in less than two months.... no, wait, there was that thing with the saucer with cat food on it that someone broke where I wasn't sure who broke it or if they ingested any, so that's four... I thought of which direction to go for the vet ER. I'm telling the universe "enough!" with the animal adventures.
Fortunately a little arnica and a night's rest and she was fine.
It has been two years and she's grown and filled out. I hadn't realized until I looked at that pic, how her face changed as she grew. She's such a funny kid.
We're getting two fosters for a month in a day or so, so that will be interesting. - Code2HighExplorer
magnusfide wrote:
Handsome gal. One of our dogs had trouble running into the side light on the front door. He never learned it was "not open". Otherwise he was a very intelligent dog. Eyesight maybe?
Dogs definitely don't see the way we do so that could be a factor. This was more just a thing of acting silly and not paying attention to where she was going. But she does miscalculate when she jumps up to give kisses and has about knocked me and a couple of other people out. I was talking to a people chiro last week who has had that experience with other pits and thinks they lack depth perception. - CA_POPPYExplorer
Code2High wrote:
I was talking to a people chiro last week who has had that experience with other pits and thinks they lack depth perception.
That seems possible, because of the eye spacing. But then again, who ever saw a pit that couldn't catch a bone in mid-air? :W - Code2HighExplorerGood point!
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