Step one: find an animal with warm undercoat and skin it.Step 2: find a hyperactive animal that creates body heat when standing still.Step 3: Take the body heat source and burrow into straw until hunger sets in; emerge for feeding then return to the straw.
As soon as the temperatures drop, my dogs are just like Kenny. I can’t get them in the house. No, they are NOT huskys.Lab and Germ Shep mix. Go figure.
While growing up in northern Minnesota, every January (or thereabouts) was at least a week where the temperature (NOT including windchill) never got ABOVE minus 20 f.
Observer fo Irony about 10 years ago
Step one: find an animal with warm undercoat and skin it.Step 2: find a hyperactive animal that creates body heat when standing still.Step 3: Take the body heat source and burrow into straw until hunger sets in; emerge for feeding then return to the straw.
johovey about 10 years ago
As soon as the temperatures drop, my dogs are just like Kenny. I can’t get them in the house. No, they are NOT huskys.Lab and Germ Shep mix. Go figure.
T_Lexi about 10 years ago
Hang on Iggy, hang on… I’m knitting you a snowmobile suit as fast as I can!
gorbasche2 about 10 years ago
While growing up in northern Minnesota, every January (or thereabouts) was at least a week where the temperature (NOT including windchill) never got ABOVE minus 20 f.
libbydog about 10 years ago
early snow in Minnesota this year – didn’t even get yard work done. I hate snow – my 5 year old could stay outside all day.
Elvanion about 10 years ago
This is why when people ask “Isn’t that dog overweight”, you can always reply “No, he just Husky.”
Old27F20 about 10 years ago
Yeah dog, try telling that to the folks in Buffalo, NY!! They’re up to their ting-tangs in SNOW.