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 over 9 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 over 9 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 over 9 years ago
Hang on Iggy, hang on… I’m knitting you a snowmobile suit as fast as I can!
gorbasche2 over 9 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 over 9 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 over 9 years ago
This is why when people ask “Isn’t that dog overweight”, you can always reply “No, he just Husky.”
Old27F20 over 9 years ago
Yeah dog, try telling that to the folks in Buffalo, NY!! They’re up to their ting-tangs in SNOW.