Posted on 11/08/2007 7:09:03 PM PST by blam
It’s funny blam....my current leisure read is Phil Lesh’s narrative of the history of the Grateful Dead and I confess that my Sirius radio is still tuned to their channel...36 I think.
You know.....them and Pink Floyd, Kinks, Skynyrd, Doors and Zepplin are bands I still enjoy just as much today.
regards....
that must have been fun....I caught the southern tail end of all that
GREAT pic! Thanks!
Boy O Boy, what a ride.
... but I would suspect that dogs are not quite as good as cats ...
Couldnt help posting this great pic of yours.
Boy those chargers are expensive . . .
I just thought you might be interested. I checked with my friend who owns Angus and the mastiff you saw is Angus. I am so happy. I know that boy is going all the way.
Those kitties are absolute dolls. Are they related?
Good morning. I’ll forward your question to the one who’d know.
That’s interesting, because now that I am in my mid-fifties, I feel that I don’t see as well at night as I used to, but my husband doesn’t seem to have the same problem.
This getting older stuff really sucks.
Ask Michael Vick?
SO men have a rod...and women have...
Do we really need the final sentence in that caption?
Are there people stupid enough to believe that a dog could grow a tongue that in every respect resembles a candy cane?
Don’t know about how well they see at night...but my black lab sees SATAN every time somebody new comes to our house for the first 30 - 90 seconds....(chuckle)
The two on the right are both from a local breeder, they are great-uncle and grand-niece. Different sires because the one in the middle is a Blue Point and the one on the right is a Lilac. The one on the left is from a different local breeder and is not related to the other two.
Since they all hung out together, though, they all started looking and acting alike. Just like married folks!!
LOL. I was wavering back and forth between lilac and blue point. They are adorable. I have had 8 siamese myself; so you can tell I am a lover of the breed.
The big male, Finny (the one in the middle) was a "true Blue" -- if you have too much Seal or Chocolate in the background, the blue points acquire a brownish tint as does the body coat. He was solid Blue for 5 generations (with the exception of one Seal in the 5th - the infamous Thaibok Teriyaki), and his points were the correct slate blue with no brown notes, and his body color was a pure pale gray. He was one nice looking cat! The cat on the left, Trina, had a Chocolate mother and she always did have the brownish undertone in her points and a beige body. The little Lilac, who is still with us, has the prescribed glacial white body, lavender gray points, and mauve nose leather and paw pads. Hanging around with a bunch of dogs has made her a bit peculiar, though!
Siamese are definitely the best of the cats, although Burms and Tonks are nice too.
That is amazing. 5 generations and only one chocolate. I am impressed.
They all sound like wonderful babies. It’s definately hard to go to another breed once you have bitten by the Siamese bug. LOL
It's probably wise to keep those bloodlines separate -- just like keeping the Chocolate Labs out of your Yellow Lab bloodlines because of the risk of coming up with a "Dudley" (a Chocolate Lab with the dilute coat color gene that produces a Yellow Lab from a Black Lab. A "Dudley" is a Chocolate Lab with a yellow coat -- they have pink eye rims and a pink nose. Not a good thing for anybody, they're supposed to be more susceptible to sunburn and skin cancer, and disqualifying in the show ring).
Genetics be it kitties or doggies is fascinating. I have two white sable dogs and 1 silver sable dog. It’s amazing what you can come up with. They all have the same father who is a pure white. The girls mother is a white sable and the boy’s mother is a light gray sable. The father and mother of the girls produced an entire white sable litter which is the only one ever produced in this breed with a white father and white sable mother. They said it couldn’t be done. I think it was because the father had a lot of whites in his background and the mother had a lot of whites in her background. Probably a double recessive white gene there.
However, the father and the gray sable produced a litter of no whites and 4 silver sables.
Genetics is so cool; and you can predict what the pups might be; but then you get that occasional odd one that’s been hiding. LOL like the chocolate in your blue’s history.
So, it’s kind of a crap shoot.
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