Puzzled
Well, of course.

Delicate as a bull in a china shop. Which, as evidenced by Mythbusters, is actually very careful indeed. Not a single piece fell.

Got D suckered in, and we enjoyed doing more. It's all US national parks, and with the lines, and different art styles and discernible palates. And I've been to quite a few, and know of just about all of them.

We have one on order from the same people, of Boston.
Delicate as a bull in a china shop. Which, as evidenced by Mythbusters, is actually very careful indeed. Not a single piece fell.
Got D suckered in, and we enjoyed doing more. It's all US national parks, and with the lines, and different art styles and discernible palates. And I've been to quite a few, and know of just about all of them.
We have one on order from the same people, of Boston.




4 comments:
Our cat has actually been caught picking up a piece now and then where we had to admonish him for it.
Who knows what he does when we are out of the house.
I like Phil's thoughts about what goes on in your absence. A friend has photographic evidence that her dog opened the fridge, had a bit of a rummage and then closed it again....which is sort of insulting. Nothing at all worth stealing?
Liked the bull in china shop video, but it wasn't really a china shop, was it? It was a bull pen with some china stuff in it, in the open air with ordinary earth underfoot, no claustrophobia, no shop lights... OK, I'm being pedantic, it was still impressive, as is Moby not knocking down any pieces. I remember our old Ginger when we were kids watching my brother and a friend playing a board game and then reaching out a paw and delicately moving one of the pieces on a few squares.
I love doing puzzles. Sitting with a giant puzzle, some music and some tea is a great winter weekend for me.
Our cats are far less graceful when it comes to puzzles. Generally we're missing a few pieces once they've rolled around and "helped" us :)
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