Stonemason
It's
quite natural for a young border to be inquisitive. To examine all things
and determine whether they have any value or not.
In my early months I often
strolled around my patch, looking under the shrubbery and seeking out
anything that I considered interesting.
One such item was the small
round pebbles and irregular shaped stones that lay on the earth, pushed
to the surface by worms (now there's another story).
Since there seemed little
point in standing in the cold and wet examining these items, I would
bring them into the house.
I found that by rolling
them around between my canine teeth they made a great rattling sound.
The boss, alarmed by this
teeth grinding exercise, would quickly offer me a small biscuit.
Since food is what us borders
dream about, I had to drop the small pebble in order to get the biscuit
in my mouth. This enabled the boss to snatch up the stone.
Now we're not a stupid breed,
and it was obvious that this sequence of events would always provide
me with a tasty morsel.
Not wishing to push my luck,
I would only repeat the exercise a couple of times in each session,
and then maybe next day I would go through the routine again.
If my timing was wrong,
and the boss wasn't about, I would leave the stone somewhere for later
recovery. However, many is the time that one of my human companions
has let out a cry of pain as they unexpectedly trod on one of my discarded
stones. In stocking feet I gather it can be painful.
Every time they retrieved
a pebble from me they would drop
it into a jar (don't ask me why), and below is a picture they took of
me with my 2 year haul.
If only we lived in the
Kimberley Mountains, these little stones could be worth a fortune.
I will continue with my
cunning plan to get a tasty morsel at will, and who knows, one day there
may be enough stones to build me an executive kennel.
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do you think of my site so far?

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