
BlueWidow
Visionary
- Oct 6, 2019
- 2,179
I know that many people on here have pets and like to talk about them and post photos.
I thought I would write a thread discussing some of my experiences with various pets I've had over the years, and try to explain why in my adult years I've never had a pet.
The first two stories both happened before I was born or when I was very very young, so they aren't about my own personal pets, but the pets of other people in my family. They're just funny stories that I've had floating around in my head and thought I would share them with you.
Story #1- The Hog & The Dog
Before I was born, and up until I turned 1, my family lived on a farm out in the middle of nowhere. The nearest neighbor in any direction was a mile or more down the road.
It was a working farm with pigs, chickens, a cow or two, goats, and a huge garden with vegetables and fruits. Along with the farm animals, they were also domestic animals like dogs and cats. Most of the animals, including the dogs and cats, were not really there as pets. They were all considered working animals. The cats were there to keep mice away and the dogs were mostly my dad's hunting dogs. There may have been a few that were pets, but for the most part, all the animals on the farm were there because they produced something that my family needed to survive, or they performed a service that my family needed to survive. I believe most of the produce was grown for my family's personal consumption, as well as the eggs some of the chickens produced and so on. Occasionally though, my mother would take any spare produce or eggs or other food that she got and sell it at a local produce stand.
Anyway, one day one of the pigs was giving birth and my dad was getting ready to kill the runt. It was common practice to knock the runt in the head with a hammer and kill it so that the mother wouldn't waste its resources taking care of it. However, my mom stopped my dad from killing it, and she wrapped it in a blanket and took it in the house. It's similar to the beginning of Charlotte's Web. My mom bottle-fed the pig and she laid him near the dog for warmth. The dog seemed to tolerate the pig, so my mom left him there.
As time went on, the pig got bigger and my mom tried to re-introduce him to the pig pen so he could be with the other pigs. This pig had other ideas however, and had decided that he was a dog. He stuck to the dog like Velcro. By the way, neither of these animals had names. They were just called "the hog" and "the dog". I don't know if that was on purpose because my dad didn't want anyone getting attached to them, or what the reason was. Anyway, the hog refused to eat slops with the other pigs. He refused to stay in the pen with the other pigs, and he didn't act like the other pigs. He slept with the dog, he ate with the dog, and he went wherever the dog went, and did whatever the dog did. He thought he was a dog.
However, as the pig grew, he got harder and harder to control and took up more and more space. I believe he eventually got to be over 100 pounds and his weight was starting to become a problem.
One day everyone had gone into town.
Before my family left, the hog had fallen asleep outside next to the dog, but the dog had woke up and gone back inside the house while the hog was still asleep. So, when my family left, the dog was inside the house, but the hog was outside the house. The hog seemed to consider the dog something of a security blanket and if he wasn't near the dog, he would completely lose it. As I said, he followed the dog everywhere and was attached to him like Velcro. I'm not sure that the dog exactly liked the pig very much, but he tolerated him. I think however, he probably wanted time to himself every once in a while, but the pig wouldn't give him any time to himself. If the pig was awake, he was wherever the dog was. So anyway, the pig woke up and realized that the dog was gone. He frantically searched around the yard for the dog. The way that they know this is because he left a trail of destruction in his wake as he frantically searched for the dog. Eventually, not finding the dog outside, the pig decided he was going in the house to find the dog. He attempted to get in through a window and left behind some damage when he couldn't get through it. He then circled the house several times trying to find a way in. He eventually charged the front door, and basically used his body as a battering ram and smashed right through the door. My family came home and the screen door was hanging off the hinge, and the front door had clearly been forced open. At first, my family thought we had been robbed or something. It looked like a tornado had hit inside the house, as the pig had gone all around searching for the dog, leaving all sorts of destruction everywhere he went.
Eventually, they found the pig sleeping peacefully next to the dog. Once he found the dog, he laid down next to him and went to sleep and was perfectly calm once again.
This sounds like a story that I made up and I believe I've even seen similar things on TV. But I have pictures of the hog and the dog together. That's how I know the story is true, even though it happened before I was born.
After this episode, my dad decided that we had to get rid of the hog because he was causing too much damage and havoc, so he agreed to sell him to some people that lived in another town. In the end, they decided to buy the hog and the dog together and they promised that they would put them somewhere where they would have plenty of room to roam around and not cause any damage, and that they would be allowed to live to an old age. I'm hoping that's what happened.
I thought I would write a thread discussing some of my experiences with various pets I've had over the years, and try to explain why in my adult years I've never had a pet.
The first two stories both happened before I was born or when I was very very young, so they aren't about my own personal pets, but the pets of other people in my family. They're just funny stories that I've had floating around in my head and thought I would share them with you.
Story #1- The Hog & The Dog
Before I was born, and up until I turned 1, my family lived on a farm out in the middle of nowhere. The nearest neighbor in any direction was a mile or more down the road.
It was a working farm with pigs, chickens, a cow or two, goats, and a huge garden with vegetables and fruits. Along with the farm animals, they were also domestic animals like dogs and cats. Most of the animals, including the dogs and cats, were not really there as pets. They were all considered working animals. The cats were there to keep mice away and the dogs were mostly my dad's hunting dogs. There may have been a few that were pets, but for the most part, all the animals on the farm were there because they produced something that my family needed to survive, or they performed a service that my family needed to survive. I believe most of the produce was grown for my family's personal consumption, as well as the eggs some of the chickens produced and so on. Occasionally though, my mother would take any spare produce or eggs or other food that she got and sell it at a local produce stand.
Anyway, one day one of the pigs was giving birth and my dad was getting ready to kill the runt. It was common practice to knock the runt in the head with a hammer and kill it so that the mother wouldn't waste its resources taking care of it. However, my mom stopped my dad from killing it, and she wrapped it in a blanket and took it in the house. It's similar to the beginning of Charlotte's Web. My mom bottle-fed the pig and she laid him near the dog for warmth. The dog seemed to tolerate the pig, so my mom left him there.
As time went on, the pig got bigger and my mom tried to re-introduce him to the pig pen so he could be with the other pigs. This pig had other ideas however, and had decided that he was a dog. He stuck to the dog like Velcro. By the way, neither of these animals had names. They were just called "the hog" and "the dog". I don't know if that was on purpose because my dad didn't want anyone getting attached to them, or what the reason was. Anyway, the hog refused to eat slops with the other pigs. He refused to stay in the pen with the other pigs, and he didn't act like the other pigs. He slept with the dog, he ate with the dog, and he went wherever the dog went, and did whatever the dog did. He thought he was a dog.
However, as the pig grew, he got harder and harder to control and took up more and more space. I believe he eventually got to be over 100 pounds and his weight was starting to become a problem.
One day everyone had gone into town.
Before my family left, the hog had fallen asleep outside next to the dog, but the dog had woke up and gone back inside the house while the hog was still asleep. So, when my family left, the dog was inside the house, but the hog was outside the house. The hog seemed to consider the dog something of a security blanket and if he wasn't near the dog, he would completely lose it. As I said, he followed the dog everywhere and was attached to him like Velcro. I'm not sure that the dog exactly liked the pig very much, but he tolerated him. I think however, he probably wanted time to himself every once in a while, but the pig wouldn't give him any time to himself. If the pig was awake, he was wherever the dog was. So anyway, the pig woke up and realized that the dog was gone. He frantically searched around the yard for the dog. The way that they know this is because he left a trail of destruction in his wake as he frantically searched for the dog. Eventually, not finding the dog outside, the pig decided he was going in the house to find the dog. He attempted to get in through a window and left behind some damage when he couldn't get through it. He then circled the house several times trying to find a way in. He eventually charged the front door, and basically used his body as a battering ram and smashed right through the door. My family came home and the screen door was hanging off the hinge, and the front door had clearly been forced open. At first, my family thought we had been robbed or something. It looked like a tornado had hit inside the house, as the pig had gone all around searching for the dog, leaving all sorts of destruction everywhere he went.
Eventually, they found the pig sleeping peacefully next to the dog. Once he found the dog, he laid down next to him and went to sleep and was perfectly calm once again.
This sounds like a story that I made up and I believe I've even seen similar things on TV. But I have pictures of the hog and the dog together. That's how I know the story is true, even though it happened before I was born.
After this episode, my dad decided that we had to get rid of the hog because he was causing too much damage and havoc, so he agreed to sell him to some people that lived in another town. In the end, they decided to buy the hog and the dog together and they promised that they would put them somewhere where they would have plenty of room to roam around and not cause any damage, and that they would be allowed to live to an old age. I'm hoping that's what happened.