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Fairly recently, I purchased a box of cereal that is recognizable by its varying shapes and vaguely leprechaun-themed sweet pieces. The reasons why do not matter, only the fact that it was an "in-date" purchase. I will never again purchase a cereal made by your company. Here is why. For several years, I have been a dog owner. During that time, I have discovered that dogs can be exceedingly indiscriminate eaters. Indeed, although I caution you that I have not ever deliberately fed them any of the really questionable items on this list, mine have been known to ingest at varying points in their lives (in addition to "approved" dog foods and meat) all of the following substances/items- * squeaky toys * toy stuffing-fluff * beer/wine * paper * nuts, with the shell on * plastic wrap * ribbon * Styrofoam * aluminum foil * cardboard * Fruits, vegetables, garlic "paper", onion skins * dead birds, with feathers * various condiments * soda bottles * shoe soles and insoles * coffee/tea and accompanying filter bags * food coloring tablets * vitamin pills and aspirin * flour products made from any number/type/combination of grain * stale crackers/sour milk/moldy yogurt * rocks * Scat (they are especially fond of the feline variety) This is truly an incomplete list, although I have summarized as many items as possible into their larger categories. That being said, my dogs managed to get a hold of a box of this cereal-- that is supposedly comprised of a variety of real food products (whole grain guaranteed!) in addition to a whole host of added vitamins and minerals designed to make it a stand-in for naturally nutritious food-- tore it open, and DID NOT EAT IT. Seeing as they always believe that they are on the brink of starvation, despite visible evidence to the contrary, I can find no explanation for this irrational behavior on their parts, except that in the general scheme of dog-perceived nutritional value and taste, your cereal ranks somewhere far below cat shit and rocks. No love, Me
The un-Thanksgiving menu is set, and here it is... App.'s Roasted chestnuts Charred artichokes with lemon sauce Spiced shrimp with heirloom tomato cocktail sauce Sides Cranberry-cherry chutney Mixed salad with fennel, shaved beets, and pomegranate vinaigrette Braised rainbow chard with pancetta Smoky-sweet smashed potatoes Farm-to-Market bread (with butter and jam) Caramelized fall vegetables Gravy Main Roast bird (have not picked on yet) with herbs Pot roast Dessert Ginger pumpkin trifle (layers of gingerbread cake, pumpkin mousse, and whipped cream) Salted caramel pecan pie (with fresh Missouri pecans!-- this is a recipe of my own devising as I really don't care for corn syrup but love the concept of pecan pie, here's hoping it turns out well!) Mile-high apple pie Pictures later :) Now I am off to run a few errands, get a cup of coffee, pick up my new sofa and a few grocery odds and ends that I could not get at the farmer's market (yes, that's right, farmer's market on a Friday night in November-- and it was packed-- warm fuzzies for me!) Full of energy this morning, yay!
Thu, Aug. 13th, 2009, 08:56 pm frustrations!
So no furnitures, at least not the stuff I was hoping for. Long story. ::sigh:: Friends coming for dinner Sunday though, need to think of something yummy to cook. Probably something nice and summery. I may throw some meat on the grill, but we'll see. Maybe homemade ice cream/sorbet/gelato if i am feeling really motivated. Peach perhaps. Or pie. Parents still coming this weekend. I don't say this much because I really do enjoy my job most of the time, but I am so glad tomorrow is Friday. Also. Am no longer the long-haired hippy. It was time for a change.
Sun, Jun. 14th, 2009, 08:34 pm Mother 3FF3r!
So I came home from St. louis this weekend and found out that my lawnmower had been stolen. ::sigh:: I have been keeping it outside tucked away next to the house for almost a year. Fool me once.... won't happen again. We are now the proud owners (?) of an electric mower. It is small and cute and cuts through everything with no fuss or bother. It is nice. Messing with the cord is a pain in the @$$, but I figured out a very efficient way to handle it, so life is good. It is also light and compact enough that I can pick it up and carry it to the basement so I don't have to worry about hauling it in and out through the garage (I pay someone to mow the front because I hate to mow the hill and it needs to be mowed more frequently than the back). My life is so fascinating sometimes... Oh well. The garden is growing, but very, very slowly. ::sigh: : I really want some goodies! All I have had so far is lettuces, two raspberries, and one baby bean, but it looks like my cukes are making little baby cukes right now and the raspberries are starting to ripen en masse so that is good. I also have some green tomatoes and tiny peppers coming on, which is fab. More work on the kitchen this week as my planned activity for this afternoon/evening was to finish painting the trim and cabinets but ended up being a protracted trip to the hardware store to find a new mower. And then, since I had a new toy, I decided I may as well mow the back yard. Turk came over last week to help with the kitchen, but I am on my own this week so motivation will be harder to come by. Oh well. It is my goal to finish 6 projects this month. I have 2 nearly completed and one that will be underway on Tuesday once the kitchen painting is complete. I don't know if the 6 projects will happen, but I am hopeful. Still haven't had to turn on the A/C. That may change this week. Urgh. In general, work is OK and life is OK, so I guess that about sums everything up. One of my very bestest friends got engaged to his partner so I am totally stoked about that :) Squee :)
The story of a long weekend: So for Memorial Day weekend, we went for a long overdue visit to our family in the Galveston, TX area (my mom's sister, her husband, my cousins, step-second cousins, and step-cousins). I think everyone was really excited because the last time we saw them was before Hurricane Ike during Thanksgiving. Wednesday night and Thursday I was feeling terribly and had antibiotics that did not agree with me. Friday we flew down, and though I was still not feeling great, I had painkillers, ibuprofen, and comfy clothes to make the trip in, so it was OK. Friday afternoon was spent with beer and socialization on the patio by the pool. We also had a tour of the house and got to ooze green jealousy all over their new kitchen and the other rehab work that they did on their house. Additionally, we got to have the Best Oysters Ever, which I will be making at every available opportunity in the future: ( Oyster Recipe )Friday evening I sat on the edge of the hot tub for a while visiting, then went to bed still feeling a little peaked, but not suspecting anything amiss. Saturday morning I woke up with about 50 fire ant bites. Yay. They hurt now that I am no longer taking drugs, FYI. Saturday was spent on a boat that belongs to my cousin's boyfriend's buddy (her boyfriend makes his living partially dealing in re-furb boats and real-estate, and currently lives in a boat, which I now think I can get behind as a lifestyle choice). We were testing it out. We loaded up massive quantities of snack food and alcohol and drove out to the dock after breakfast. When we got there, a shark had been murdered. I am totally not against hunting or fishing, or even taking trophies for what you kill, but for heaven's sake show a little damn respect for the creatures whose lives you take! The fisherman caught this very large (600-700 pounds if I recall correctly from the discussion) hammerhead shark and were industriously removing the jaws. Then they loaded the animal back into the boat and took it out to dump it at sea. I know that this will feed many happy sea creatures, but really. They did not even offer to let anyone take the meat (although as they had not gutted the fish and it was nearly 90* out by 10:00 there probably would not have been many takers). ( Slightly bloody photo behind cut (not too bad) )Though the trip began on a downer, it rapidly turned into a lovely afternoon spent sightseeing around Galveston Island via boat. The weather turned lovely after a short rain, and remained cooler and slightly cloudy most of the afternoon. We stopped at a semi-cajun tie-up restaurant and had a late afternoon snack, then returned to the water and headed for a swimming hole. I caught a little (heavily filtered) sunshine, while everyone else swam in the lovely shallow water. Meanwhile the tide went out, and as we were on a fairly large boat, the propeller became lodged in the sandy bottom. When it was time to go, a game of "everyone get on the bow" ensued, and a friend of the captain's helped tow us around to get the props unstuck. It was fun :) After the boat ride, we had dinner at a totally decent Mexican restaurant, then Lizza, Brian, and I got an abbreviated tour of historic Galveston via car from my Aunt. We saw many unfortunately damaged (from Hurricane Ike) historic homes of great beauty and saw quite a bit of damage that still, nearly a year later, has not been repaired. Sunday was family/friend barbecue day. Wally made smoked brisket (so tender!), sausage, and more oysters, and we met additional members of Wally's family that no one except my mom had met before since she was the only one who got to go to Deb and Wally's wedding 10 years ago. Everyone was lovely, the food was fantastic, liquor flowed freely, and the pool was once again open although it rained and stormed on and off most of the day (fortunately, that kept things fairly cool). Sunday evening after the bulk of the guests left, we spent several hours sitting on the patio with B&B, beer, and wine b-sing and unwinding. Monday we had pancakes went to NASA , which was lots of fun despite the abbreviated nature of our visit (only a few hours), then came back to crab melt sandwiches and headed out to the airport ( More Recipes... )Then we all piled in the car and got on the highway to go back to the airport. About 10 minutes into the drive, a driver in the far left lane lost control of her car as she was swerving to avoid the idiot in front of her who slammed on his breaks. She swerved and spun across a lane and a half of bumper to bumper traffic and struck the rear driver's side door/wheel area mostly head-on (unfortunately where I was sitting in the car). Ouch. Everyone is fortunately OK (although not the cars-- so sad!!!!), and it looks like all the damage done to people was a beautiful bruise that I will totally be photographing when it finishes coloring up in another day. No loss of life, but unfortunate possible loss of property. ::sigh:: Luckily all flights were made (mine barely, as I made it to the gate just as boarding started), no one was really badly injured or killed and insurance is a good thing. So that is the (very long) story of the a *really* good weekend that began badly and ended badly (or well, depending on your glass), but was super fun anyway :)
Mon, May. 4th, 2009, 09:48 pm Photo update!
My parents came up this weekend to help with the kitchen (and boy did they ever help!) We made a huge amount of progress, and I am so pleased with how the kitchen is shaping up. We were all very tired and cranky by Sunday, but it is so worth the pain and frustration to have a friendlier, more open, and more useful kitchen! Pictures of the kitchen progress: ( Photos behind cut )
I don't do this often enough really.... So... let's see Going to Europe in the fall to visit switzerland, austria, possibly slovenia. italy, and possibly france. It is mainly going to be a camping/driving trip, but we will be there during several lovely events, including the prosciutto festival in Parma and the largest balloon festival in the world in ferrara. Stops will include lots of historical goodness, wineries, restaurants, and hopefully friendly neighborhood purveyors of all things importable wine, vinegar, olive oil, mushrooms, meat and cheese. I am open to requests for goodness (food related or otherwise). *However* if you are requesting food, please request things that can be carried in a car for a long time, or be prepared to give me the information I need to ship it to you (i.e. a credit card, cash, or fedex account number, etc) by the safest available method. The approximate route of our trip is as described above, and we will be in Italy most of the second week, if that helps. The vendor I buy mutton from for the dogs now has a creamery. I am currently doing research on new types of cheeses ::munch:: I have fresh cheese down pat, but now that spring (and thus my supply of raw milk) has come, I will be trying to branch out again. I have a cheese press and need stuff to make with it! Soft, unripened cheeses are lovely, but it is nice to have a little variety now and again. Garden 3.0 is underway. I decided last year that while I got lots of tomatoes, lettuce, and green peppers, I really would be more happy trying the heirloom vegetable thing again (because they are sooooo good!), so I have planted a collection of tasty edibles. Many of these should (keeping my fingers crossed) have a few lovely, ripe things on them in time for fourth of july: 1. heirloom italian and brazilian eggplants 2. Striped scallop squash 3. heirloom italian lettuce, arugula, swiss chard, and mixed salad bar lettuce 4. Sugar snap peas 5. True baby carrots (about the size of a thumb, no lathe required) 6. Heirloom italian beets 7. Significant variety of heirloom tomatoes (red/yellow, red/orange, purple/gold, white, yellow, red, peach, brown, green) 8. assorted herbs, and garlic as usual 9. Blue Jade corn (a true miniature blue sweet corn) 10. Assorted melons (fond blanc, noir des carmes, early hanover, golden midget watermelon) 11. Cucumbers (white, green) 12. Long Island Cheese squash (like a pumpkin sized butternut but richer) 13. Beans (dragon tongue, chinese red noodle, green snaps) 14. Fruit (raspberries, blackberries, cherries, grapes) It should be a very colorful garden this year :) Speaking of 4th of july, Grue and Kat are coming for a long weekend. So excited!!! On that note, I would like to invite anyone who is interested to a fire+meat party on the 4th. Bring something to grill (for those who are not familiar with fire+meat, you might bring, for example, a package of bratwurst, although meat is really not required), and I will provide a large fire, BBQ sauce, side dishes, dessert, and enormous quantities of alcohol. Additional details to follow. Fireworks may also make an appearance. Please let me know if you plan to come and with how many people (more friends = better), so I know how large of a keg to buy. I would also suggest that you bring a folding chair. Please do not plan to bring anyone to my house who has a strong dislike of dogs, cats, alcohol or fire. Please do bring anyone who might be interested in taking Ninja home as a party favor :-D General home improvement-ishness has been going on. Latest project is painting and cleaning up the kitchen in general. Pictures to follow in a couple weeks. I decided that since it will be a while until I can really do the kitchen up like I want, something had to be done. My mother came up with a semi-plan, and it has snowballed from there. Anyone who has not seen it in a while will be quite surprised after next weekend. Although still old, it will look completely different (I will start by saying, "YAY NO MORE PINK IN THE CABINETS!!!!"), and I am really glad for the change. Then I will be moving back to the back room to finish up work in there. Well, I am about tapped out I think. Work= good House = in progress Cheese = tasty Animals = good, but SHEDDING, AAAAAGH Anyone interested in a fun thing to do next weekend should consider "Marvels" at Belton High School.
Do not cut self with knife. Go to Europe Do not cut self with anything else Get some house projects done Drop off all the clothes that I pulled for donation Learn something new
Tue, Nov. 4th, 2008, 10:48 pm History
Awesomeness
Now i just wish everyone in my neighborhood would put away the fireworks and guns and let me sleep...
It is totally not that i disagree with their excitement...
Yes, friends, the Stinky Meat. Does anyone see where this is going yet? Five points.... This is a little old, but I keep meaning to post it. For anyone who has not encountered the neighbors that moved in about 7 months ago, they are quite odd. They have screaming matches periodically and are constantly doing odd things. The man also frequently approaches me (and David when he is here) for cash. Usually he is reeking of booze when he does. So anyway... on with the Tale: My parents came to help work on house projects over Labor Day weekend (see previous post). While they were here, we noticed an unusually large number of flies in the house. We could not find the source of the flies, but did notice a very bad smell in the back yard. For a little more than a week, every time I walked out the door to put the dogs out, I was nearly overcome by the stench of rotting meat. The dogs were not interested, and I could not locate the source of the smell although I looked diligently every day. One day, after a little more than a week of the smell, upon returning home from work, eager for relaxation and rest, I noticed that the stench of rotted meat had dissipated to a tolerable odor. I was pleased, and thought that perhaps the endless rains had washed away the offending matter, or that the neighbors had perhaps taken their trash to the curb and thereby removed it. The next morning when I went, bleary-eyed and stumbling to turn out the dogs, I opened the door and was assaulted by yet another, less offensive, but still stinky, odor. I turned out the dogs for their morning constitutional and was concerned that the ground seemed to be swimming. I considered going to check my blood sugar to be sure that everything was alright, but the humid balm of the air caused my eyes to lose their dryness and allowed them to focus. The swimming ground was actually teeming with maggots. Yes, maggots. Thousands of them crawling on every surface, and thousands more attempting to flee the rapidly expanding puddles caused by the rain. Still no sign of the meat, but I took pictures lest anyone doubt that my backyard was, in fact, crawling with those denizens of decay. Even the dogs were traumatized (though some of their trauma may have been due to the rain), as maggots freely jumped about. I was not entirely convinced that my yard did not have a dead body buried in it somewhere because I just could not fathom what would generate that many larvae, though it may have been the neighbor's yard for all I know, because many were crawling back and forth under the fence After a significant email exchange with my mother, I was persuaded to check the fence line to see if a small creature had died and become entangled in the vines where I could not easily see it. When I returned home from work that day, I walked the fence. To my horror, I discovered a pile of bones and goo about 10 feet away from the fence on the neighbors side. What were the bones and goo from, you may ask? Chickens. Whole chickens. Maybe three or four large ones. That had been left. In the grocery sacks. To rot. I don't really like my neighbors anymore.....
Porch before:  Porch After:  Porch Before:  Porch After:  Porch After:   A huge big thanks to my parents, David, and Turk for all the help putting this project together this weekend. It is obviously not completely finished, and more pictures will follow when it is, but this makes such a HUGE difference in the way the outside of the house looks!
Sun, Aug. 24th, 2008, 08:40 am Go see Hamlet 2
It drags a bit, but the ending is sooooooo worth it.
Recipe:
1 lb very meaty soup bones 1 lb carrots handful of baby beets 3 medium onions handful of fresh herb sprigs (i used thyme and tarragon) 3 tbsp olive oil
Peel and chop up carrots, onions, and beets. Combine with bones in a roasting pan, then drizzle with oil and sprinkle generously with salt. Roast until bones are nicely browned and veggies are slightly soft and carmelized
Scrape everything out of the roasting pan into a large soup pot. Add water to cover and 1 cup of wine (your choice, and optional). Add herbs. Bring to a slow simmer and allow to cook and reduce until meat is falling apart tender and stock has rich flavor. Strain into a new pot, and save the carrots (put them in the new pot).
To the new pot, add:
1 large very ripe tomato, chopped 1 half-pound summer squash, peeled and chopped 1 pound new potatoes, coarsely chopped 2 large green onions, chopped (white and green parts) 1/2 pound of green beans, snapped into bite sized pieces Any other soup-like veggies you found at the farmers market 2 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed Salt and pepper to taste
If there is not enough stock to veggie ratio, add a little water or wine to top it off. Bring to a gentle simmer. In the meantime, shred some of the meat from the soup bones. Add it back into the pot. Add in
1 small handful elbow macaroni (optional)-- if you plan to have leftovers, i suggest cooking this al dente ahead of time oiling it slightly and bagging it separately until ready to serve.
Allow macaroni to cook, then serve with bread and maybe salad.
Enjoy! Sat, Aug. 16th, 2008, 11:41 am TEH YUMMIES!
I went farmer's marketing today. This is the first time in almost a month, since as many of you know a lot of my time this last month and a half has been taken up with getting David ready to move to Columbus, IN to start his new job (le sigh). Anyway, I grabbed a gorgeous haul of produce for less than I could have gotten it even at the cheapest grocery store in town.  Included in this pile are all of the following: First apples of the season Nectarines Blackberries Eggplant Chinese long beans (purple and green) Baby Yukon Gold potatoes Farm eggs Summer Squash Green onions Skirt steak (grass fed beef) Whole hog sausage (pastured hogs) Sweet oniones Hard neck garlic Edamame Purple-podded pole beans Meaty soup bones (also from grass fed cows) Farm to Market bread What is not on here because it didn't fit in the picture (and didn't come from the farmer's market) Local milk Tofu (made in Lawrence, KS) Free range chicken (truly) So my menu for the next two weeks(all items supplemented with things from my garden/pantry): Beef and vegetable stew (homemade from scratch) Tofu and green bean stir fry Baba ghanouj with bread Roasted chicken Chicken noodle soup (from scratch) eggs in a hole with sausage and sliced tomatoes Fajitas Miso soup and edamame Gazpacho Deeeelicious! Going to go plant my short season fall harvest stuff now-- yay for having fresh lettuce, spinach, radishes, and peas again!
Sun, Jun. 29th, 2008, 04:30 pm Pictures!
YAY GARDEN!
New pictures of the garden are up.
Life is kinda boring lately, but will possibly get a little more lively soon.
We have been in st.l for the last several weekends for opera and this is the first one we get to ourselves in a while. On the bright side, we got to see Grue and Kat (yay!), whom we do not see nearly enough. Silly scattering of people.
The new job has been going very well, and I am reminded daily when I get to leave at 4:30 and see people who really seem to love what they do, that I made the right decision.
The garden is on that fine line between producing a few things here and there and giving us so much produce we are going to have to give some away in order to not waste any. The following items will more than likely be up for grabs fairly soon:
dill pickles bread and butter pickles pickled green tomatoes fresh tomatoes, zucchini, and cucumbers if you live near kansas city and can pick them up fresh brussel sprouts butternut squash lemon-mint herbal tea
I might even be persuaded to stick a few things here and there in the mail.
Saw Shakespeare in the Park (Othello) recently, which was quite good. The costumes were gorgeous and the acting (especially by Othello and Iago) was fantastic.
We took a picnic with Turk and a couple we have met previously and would really like to see more of-- we had pan-fried chicken, Tall Dan's Pasta Salad, roasted green beans and onions, homemade bread, and lemon-buttermilk cake with lemon mousse and blackberry filling. And beer. Lots of beer.
We got some nice Roman shades at bed bath and beyond yesterday and hung them in the upstairs bedroom. Yay lowered utility bills.
Projects for this week include cleaning, finishing the guest bedroom ceiling, and smoking meat (mmmm smoked meat!). David's brother and mom are hopefully coming over on Saturday and I am hoping to get the house in really good shape since Eric has never seen the place before.
Tonight is pad thai night, so it is about time to go prep some tofu and veggies for that. Talk to you all again soonish!
Wow! So much news since the last time I wrote. Too much to go into a lot of detail, but there are so many congratulations I have to pass out, that I will start off with that(in no particular order): 1. Dave and Kat-- it was so great to see you guys and celebrate with you! 2. Eric-- Law school is hard. I'm glad you made it (and knew you would) 3. Turk-- teaching is hard. I'm excited you are staying in KC for a while because you got a contract. ___________________- So.... we are in Tuscon right now (see item #2 above). We decided to make it a mini vacation and tacked on some extra days besides those needed just for graduation. Have been traipsing about since we got here. It is so nice. I am updating my Flickr site as I fill my camera's tiny memory card, so if you visit the link below, you can see a bit of what we have been up to. More pictures will be available tomorrow when I pull all the graduation pictures off the camera. Fun stuff. It has been unusually cool and rainy here, right up until today, so many things are still blooming and beautiful. SQUEE. http://flickr.com/photos/40629692@N00/More laterish?Perhaps.....
Sun, Sep. 23rd, 2007, 08:28 am And away we go!
So... Last night was tower of beer night at Paddy O'Quigley's-- 4 people, 3-110 oz towers, 6 long island iced teas and we are good to go :) Unfortunately the hotwings I had for dinner didn't survive my tower, but who really wants pickled chicken anyway. The worst part is that I wasn't really *really* drunk until we got dropped off by the art museum so we could walk it off. Getting my blood moving didn't turn out to be as good of an idea as it sounded like when I first vocalized the desire to "walk it off" because it was more like "walking it on." Halfway up the hill I was talking like a fool. Anyway, for anyone who hasn't tried it, tower of beer is highly recommended. It is like a tiny keg on your table, and very much an entertainment draw. I say this because we had a couple of drunk people stop by the table at varying times during the night, one of whom danced around the bar like a crazy man and decided Turk was his new best friend. Today, I am getting on a plane and going to california to help lizza move. YAY california. BOO lizza moving to california before me :( Oh well, I will just have to get my shit together and get out there soon :) She is moving to Santa Barbara, which as Jim says is "paradise." We are hitting IKEA and the LaBrea tar pits today and then moving lizza in tomorrow (I hope) and spending the rest of the time playing around santa barbara. Yay beach. I think it is time for me to stop wasting time and finish my packing, so off I go. I hope everyone has a nice couple of days :)
So after my recent bout with flesh eating bacteria (I won! YAY!), I am a little loathe to go outside behind the garden area. But progress was made, and poison ivy was slaughtered. Yippee!
(yes, you read the flesh eating bacteria part correctly-- I had a wicked case of poison ivy that got infected and caused me to have massive doses of antibiotics and steroids-- pictures are available for anyone who wants to see what that nasty shit looks like).
Pictures are avaible of the progress made on the back yard here:
Also, on Monday night, we rescued a dog. I let the dogs out to do their business and they immediately ran to the back fence and started going nuts and throwing themselves at it. Thinking of the recent opossum mishap that resulted in Shadow going under the fence into the neighbors yard and a dead Urban Assault Possum, I immediately ran to pull them off the fence. What I found was not a possum, but a dog. A very cute dog that was incredibly filthy and distraught, dehydrated, and hungry looking. He seemed friendly, so David hopped over the fence (braving the poison ivy he is not allergic to, my hero). Dog immediately ran away, so we spent the better part of half an hour coaxing him back to the fence and then coaxing him to allow David to pick him up.
We introduced him to the girls (Shadow and Kharma) since he seemed friendly. Shadow decided that he is her new special friend, and Kharma seems to be relieved to not have that title temporarily. Into the bath he went, and we removed about a pound of matted hair, gum, window screen, and twigs/leaves from his hair.
We are now trying to locate his owners, who unfortunately did not microchip him (note to self: do this, seriously), and apparently don't know he's gone because there are no lost dog signs up anywhere in the neighborhood.
His name for the time being is Ninja. Anyone who might want a dog, give me a shout in case I can't locate his family. I really can't keep a third dog, and I want him to go to a good home, as he is incredibly, incredibly sweet and good natured (very smart, also). I will bring him to you if someone wants him. He needs to be fixed, and needs shots (almost certainly), but I would be willing to help out with that.
Friends, meet Ninja:
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