If this is true out in the wild, the frequency of canid pup poisoning must be very high! But then, wild pups have parents to teach them, unlike domestic ones. (I recently watched a very large adult dog teaching someone else’s teenage pup how to fight while their owners were unmindfully conversing — the adult was doing a very careful, thorough job of it. Clearly different breeds so parenthood was very unlikely.)
My friend has had her homework eat and buy her pet bunny many times. It isn’t even an excuse. She literally brings in paper scraps that her bunny chewed up.
At least it’s more original then “a dog ate it.” Ozy is way too smart to eat his own homework.
Isn’t Ozy a fox?
A fox is a type of canid, which is close enough genetically.
He is a northwestern gray zen fox.
Do dogs actually do that? Mine never did.
Some dogs will eat anything they can reach, and the younger the dog, the more likely this is to be true.
If this is true out in the wild, the frequency of canid pup poisoning must be very high! But then, wild pups have parents to teach them, unlike domestic ones. (I recently watched a very large adult dog teaching someone else’s teenage pup how to fight while their owners were unmindfully conversing — the adult was doing a very careful, thorough job of it. Clearly different breeds so parenthood was very unlikely.)
My friend has had her homework eat and buy her pet bunny many times. It isn’t even an excuse. She literally brings in paper scraps that her bunny chewed up.
1000th strip