A gentle reminder of how we do things: 🐱🐶🐦
- Do not troll the diary. If you hate pootie diaries, leave now. No harm, no foul.
- Please do share pics of your fur kids! If you have health/behavior issues with your pets, feel free to bring it to the community.
- Pooties are cats; Woozles are dogs. Birds... are birds! Peeps are people.
- Whatever happens in the outer blog STAYS in the outer blog. If you’re having “issues” with another Kossack, keep it “out there.” This is a place to relax and play; please treat it accordingly.
- There are some pics we never post: snakes, creepy crawlies, any and all photos that depict or encourage human cruelty toward animals. These are considered “out of bounds” and will not be tolerated. If we alert you to it, PLEASE REMOVE THE PIC FROM THE IMAGE LIBRARY. If you keep posting banned pics...well then...the Tigress will have to take matters in hand. Or, paw.
The Toosdai Critters have been wondering about the phrase “let sleeping dogs lie” and just what kind of lies the dogs might tell in their sleep.
(The tech industry is not the home of serenity.)
(Your call is not important to us.)
(Cats are lazy.)
(Porcupines are prickly.)
(Bob isn’t really an expert in flooring.)
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Crows in a lab were able to distinguish shapes that exhibited right angles, parallel lines, and symmetry, suggesting that, like humans, they have a special ability to perceive geometric regularity.
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— NPR (@npr.org) April 12, 2025 at 12:48 PM
(And yet the dogs say crows are bad at math.)
(Every day is like Christmas.)
(You can’t fall asleep in five counts.)
(Exercise is bad for you.)
-Canines can’t carry a tune.
(Chicken factoids are often wrong.)
(Okay, this one is true.)
All in all, there’s nothing wrong with letting sleeping dogs lie.