Sunday, 31 December 2023

Poem of a Dog

 



🐾 POEM OF A DOG
I'm the one who's always waiting for you.
Your car has a special sound that I have imprinted on my senses, I can recognize it in a thousand.
Your steps have a magic bell.
Your voice is music to my ears.
If I see your joy, it makes me happy!.
Your scent is the best.
Your presence moves my senses.
Your waking up wakes me up
I contemplate you sleeping and for me you are my God, I am happy watching your sleep.
Your look is a ray of light.
Your hands upon me, hold the lightness of peace and the sublime display of infinite love.
When you leave, I feel a huge void in my heart.
I keep waiting for you again and again.
I am the one who will wait for you all your life today, tomorrow and forever:
I am your dog.


Saturday, 30 December 2023

The Wolf


 Weird And Fantastic Things

 
The wolf never eats corpses, neither animals, nor people; it spends its whole life with a partner, it does not mate with its mother or sister; it is a monogamous animal, it does not deceive.
If a partner dies, the wolf remains alone; it knows its young ones well: it is the only animal that helps their parents after deep old age and brings them food.
When you kill a wolf, it looks you in the eye until its soul gives out; it's 25% smarter than the smarter dog, and it's the only animal that doesn't obey training, they say...
*sometimes the bad thing in the movie is not how they portray it


Not sure all of this is true however, interesting to believe.




Wednesday, 27 December 2023

Agatha Christie

 



Deeply hurt by the death of her mother, thirty-five-year-old Agatha Christie was still trying to overcome her grief when her husband of twelve years suddenly announced that he was in love with another woman and wanted a divorce. The twin shocks threw Agatha into a deep state of depression. Feeling that the best of life was behind her, she saw little reason to go on living. Only concern for her seven-year-old daughter saved her from suicide.
Born into an affluent English family in 1890, Agatha Miller was a precocious child who taught herself to read at age four and quickly developed what would be a lifelong devotion to books. At age 22 she met Archie Christie, a dashing young pilot. The couple fell in love and were married on Christmas Eve in 1914. They spent most of the next four years separated by World War I, settling afterwards in London. Their only child, Rosalind, was born in 1919. By the time her marriage to Archie fell apart, Agatha had published five well-received detective novels, but she could hardly have expected the success that awaited her.
In time Agatha began to recover from the pain of her failed marriage. She resumed writing and, to boost her spirits, took a trip on the Orient Express. Then, in 1930 a friend invited her to come along on a trip to an archeological dig in Iraq. There she met Max Mallowan, a prominent archeologist thirteen years her junior. They fell in love and were married later that year, a happy marriage that would last until Agatha’s death 46 years later.
At the end of 1926, Agatha Christie may have thought that her life was no longer worth living, but she was entirely wrong about that. In the years that followed she not only found the love of her life, but she also enjoyed her greatest success, becoming the best-loved author on earth, with over 70 best-selling novels as well as the longest-running play in history. Her husband Max was knighted in 1968 and three years later Agatha was made a Dame of the British Empire.
Agatha Mary Clarissa Miller Christie Mallowan died at age 85 on January 12, 1976, forty-six years ago today. With over two billion copies sold, she is the best-selling novelist in history.
The photo is of Agatha Christie in 1926.





Tuesday, 26 December 2023

Full moon

 



Tonight is The Full Cold Moon, it is called the Cold Moon because after tonight the temperature will start to drop rapidly. It is also known as The Oak Moon and Yule Moon. This is an especially special Full Moon because it is the final Full Moon of 2023. This will also be one of the biggest and brightest Moons of the year.
Tonight's Full Moon is in the sign of Cancer, it will be an intense highly charged Moon filled with strong emotions coming to the surface, don't hold them back let them out, this is a time of release, of letting go and being our own true authentic selves, let the world see the real you. Something has been building inside of us and now is the time when the energy of the cosmos demands that we let it out.
This is a particularly lucky Full Moon, so don't be afraid to go for the things you want, lady luck is shining on you right now so be ready for all that the universe is ready to gift you, open your hands and your heart and take your universal gifts. Don't be scared to dream big and ask for more. Be positive and open yourself up to allow the good to come in to your life. Be ambitious, go for what you want or put plans into place to get what you want in the future. You will have an inner strength now that will pull you through anything that comes up against you.
This is a time to look back on the year passed and reflect on all the lessons we have learned and the people who have come and gone in our lives. As we come to the end of this year we should use the energy of this Full Moon to energize ourselves for the coming new year. All the inner work you have focused on this year will now be the foundation for bringing more power, love and energy into your life in this creative, forward-moving period. On this Full Moon we can truly bring in change and transform ourselves to be who we want to be, we will feel braver and more confident than usual. Good fortune will be on your side. Let your thoughts and desires manifest into something real.
This Full Moon brings light to whatever was hidden in the darkness or buried within the subconscious such as emotional pain or our deepest desires, but once awareness happens you are able to make realistic changes. Our emotional levels move like strong turbulent waves in the ocean during high tide for some on this Full Moon in Cancer, we may feel at a cross roads in our lives and are unsure of which path to take, trust your instincts and let them guide you. Emotional reactions may be strong, energies may feel irritable or uptight, but don't worry this will pass.
We are amidst great times of transformation which are heralding major new beginnings. Change isn't always easy or comfortable and it’s constant, so we must strive to keep our balance during these changing tides. Embrace the changes coming and steer them in a positive direction.
Let the Cancer water element wash away any negativity, let the energy of this Full Moon wash over you and heal your spirit, use it to heal you both emotionally and physically. Let the moonlight bathe and sooth you, body and soul. Seek a balance of light and dark and see the truth in your life however much it may hurt, only then can we do something about it. Now is a time of reaping the rewards of all the hard work we have put in this year and try and relax a little and let the current take you to a new and exciting New Year.
Have a blessed Full Moon, may the Goddess watch over you.



Libraries

 

Former study/library room of Russian chemist D.I. Mendeleev (1834-1907). He is best known for formulating the Periodic Law and creating a version of the Periodic Table of Elements. (D.I. Mendeleev Museum & Archives, St. Petersburg State University scfh.ru/en/papers/the-soul-s-despairing-cry/








Friday, 22 December 2023

Christmas lunch for mum


 Main course

Coq Au Vin James Martin - https://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/coqauvin_10455

Baby roast potatoes in olive oil

Baked Boson Beans Paul Hollywood - https://www.paulhollywood.com/winter-rolls-recipes/homemade-baked-beans-on-crusty-rolls

Garlic mushrooms with blue cheese - https://amycaseycooks.com/garlic-butter-mushrooms-with-blue-cheese/

Braised Red Cabbage - https://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/occasions/christmas/christmas-100-recipes-to-freeze/traditional-braised-red-cabbage-with-apples 

Honey Roast Parsnips - Delia Smith - https://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/collections/root-vegetables/parmesan-baked-parsnips?amp&fbclid=IwAR2R9cWVUi9BGLt8EQRV3s-WarMlQQZEG2gLCRLNk3-NuFqJSUo9k7bOe1Q


Pudding

Cheese and biscuits

Mince pies and Brandy butter - https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1042680859043577519/8770887651469748407   and    https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/1042680859043577519/863411190242554877

Apple Crumble and cream

Panna Cotta with raspberry couli and Almond biscuits - https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/vanilla-panna-cotta

Coffee with dark chocolate bark - https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/easy-chocolate-bark    I used dark chocolate with white chocolate chips, cherries, clementine zest, golden rasins but you could add your favourite toppings










Chocolate bark being cut into shards


Braised red cabbage in a bowl with spoon


Panna cotta on plates with strawberries and coulis with pot of coulis

Thursday, 21 December 2023

Solitude


 

BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX (1850 - 1919)
Laugh, and the world laughs with you;
Weep, and you weep alone;
For the sad old earth must borrow its mirth,
But has trouble enough of its own.
Sing, and the hills will answer;
Sigh, it is lost on the air;
The echoes bound to a joyful sound,
But shrink from voicing care.
Rejoice, and men will seek you;
Grieve, and they turn and go;
They want full measure of all your pleasure,
But they do not need your woe.
Be glad, and your friends are many;
Be sad, and you lose them all,—
There are none to decline your nectared wine,
But alone you must drink life’s gall.
Feast, and your halls are crowded;
Fast, and the world goes by.
Succeed and give, and it helps you live,
But no man can help you die.
There is room in the halls of pleasure
For a large and lordly train,
But one by one we must all file on
Through the narrow aisles of pain.

How Much Water Should Your Dog Drink?

 https://www.whole-dog-journal.com/health/how-much-water-should-your-dog-drink/?utm_content=bufferc1e04&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer&fbclid=IwAR3pq_dsz61RBzI3-tFfABczfjimuhpMFqKYA-NbrNvO-vqBlpPiK4z3yhk


Healthy dogs need to drink about an ounce per pound of their body weight daily – but many factors can affect their consumption.


Beagle dog drinking
Dogs should have access to fresh, cool water at all times. That said, we don’t recommend supplying dogs with a self-filling water bowl, as there is no way for you to keep an eye on their consumption – an important aspect of your dog’s general health monitoring. © Alex_Ugalek, Getty Images

How much water should a dog drink in a day? The simplest, most accurate answer to this question is, “However much he needs to maintain normal hydration.” The many variables affecting a dog’s daily water intake make it impossible to just pick a number. These variables include:

  • The moisture content of his food. The moisture in fresh, canned, or semi-moist food meets some of the dog’s daily water requirements. Dogs fed these diets will drink less water.
  • Puppies younger than 16 weeks old don’t have the ability fully concentrate their urine yet, so they drink more to make up for what they lose in dilute urine.
  • Activity level. Exercising dogs pant for temperature regulation, which causes them to lose water through evaporation. Then they must drink more water to make up the deficit.
  • Environmental temperature and humidity. The hotter and drier the environment, the more the dog pants and the more moisture he loses.
  • Health status. Dogs with vomiting and diarrhea lose a lot of water, which can cause serious dehydration, fast. And dogs with metabolic disorders may urinate excessively. In each case, affected dogs need to drink more to keep up with the extraordinary losses.

Normal Daily Water Consumption

Although the above variables complicate things, here’s a guideline to a dog’s normal water consumption. Internal medicine specialists generally agree that normal water consumption for healthy adult dogs, resting in a temperature-controlled environment, is 50 to 80 milliliters of water per kilogram of the dog’s body weight per day (mls/kg/day). To convert this to ordinary household measures, there are 30 mls in an ounce, 8 ounces in a cup, and .45 kg in a pound of body weight.

If you look closely at the table, you will see that normal water consumption is about an ounce of water per pound per day. So easy to remember!

If your healthy adult dog seems to drink far less than this, never fear. As long as plenty of fresh water is available, a healthy dog will drink what he needs. There are highly effective mechanisms in the body that trigger thirst when water stores are depleted.

Having said that, be aware that dogs who are not feeling well can dehydrate in a hurry. If you notice the water bowl is not emptying at its usual rate, pay close attention to your dog’s attitude, appetite, and behavior. Dogs with fevers typically don’t feel well enough to drink what they need. Dehydration on top of fever can cause a snowball effect. Don’t hesitate to see your veterinarian if your dog seems to be feeling a bit under the weather.

Drinking Too Much?

We humans tend to be obsessed with a lack of hydration, but with dogs, it’s more important to recognize when they are drinking way more than normal amounts. This is called polydipsia, and it’s usually accompanied by polyuria (excessive urination).

There are many diseases associated with polydipsia/polyuria in dogs; the most common are kidney disease, diabetes, and Cushing’s syndrome. If your dog consistently drinks more than the amounts in the table, see your veterinarian as soon as possible.

Finally, be aware that dogs can suffer a variety of life-threatening conditions if they drink too much water in a relatively short time:

The behavioral issue of compulsive water drinking can impair the kidneys’ ability to concentrate urine, creating an unhealthy vicious cycle.

Dogs who swim or play for hours in water or who get obsessed with biting at lawn sprinklers can inadvertently ingest so much water that they suffer from low blood sodium levels (hyponatremia). This can cause brain swelling, and the dog may begin to stagger or become uncoordinated and exhibit lethargy, nausea, and excessive salivation. Left untreated, cerebral edema can be fatal.

And finally, large breed deep-chested dogs who are allowed to guzzle large quantities of water all at once may end up with gastric dilatation or “bloat.”

As you can see it’s important to be aware of how much water your dog is or isn’t drinking. It’s an important aspect of your dog’s general health monitoring.


Dr. Eileen Fatcheric is a 1988 graduate of Cornell University’s College of Veterinary Medicine. She owned and managed her own small-animal veterinary hospital for 17 years and currently sees patients part time at VCA Fairmount Animal Hospital in Syracuse, New York.




Dog’s

Body Weight

Normal Water Consumption

(oz/day)

Normal Water Consumption

(cups/day)

10 lb 7.6 – 12.1 oz0.95 – 1.5 cups
20 lb15.2 – 24.2 oz1.9 – 3 cups
30 lb22.7 – 36.0 oz2.8 – 4.5 cups
40 lb30.3 – 48.5 oz3.8 – 6.1 cups
50 lb37.9 – 60.6 oz4.7 – 7.6 cups
60 lb45.5 – 72.7 oz5.7 – 9 cups
70 lb53.0 – 84.8 oz6.6 – 10.6 cups
80 lb60.6 – 97.0 oz7.6 – 12.1 cups
90 lb 68.2 – 109.1 oz8.5 – 13.6 cups
100 lb 75.8 – 121.2 oz9.5 – 15.2 cups