(no subject)
Mar. 16th, 2004 10:35 amWhen I was a kid I thought poodles were by definition small, as my world contained no non-miniature poodles. I saw a standard poodle for the first time at the age of 14, and my reaction was "wow, it's like a poodle but big".
There is a dog in the office today, to which my reaction was "wow, it's one of those dust-mop dogs, but big". (Ok, not entirely, as you usually can't see the legs on the dust-mop dogs. But otherwise...)
Ok, now I've met my first komondor. This one is very friendly. My father likes large dogs (has a golden retriever now, previously had an Irish setter); I wonder if he's heard of these. I wonder if my mother would ever forgive me if I told him. :-)
There is a dog in the office today, to which my reaction was "wow, it's one of those dust-mop dogs, but big". (Ok, not entirely, as you usually can't see the legs on the dust-mop dogs. But otherwise...)
Ok, now I've met my first komondor. This one is very friendly. My father likes large dogs (has a golden retriever now, previously had an Irish setter); I wonder if he's heard of these. I wonder if my mother would ever forgive me if I told him. :-)
(no subject)
Date: 2004-03-16 12:24 pm (UTC)Actually, it looks like it's lower-maintenance than normal for dogs of that size. Apparently you don't brush or comb them; the cords just take care of themselves. (Shedding is apparently minimal or absent, too.)
Glad the large rasta-dog was friendly, though.
I don't think my coworker would have brought him in if he weren't, but I'm glad too. :-) (He's also on a lead, so he doesn't have run of the building or anything like that. He seems to be spending a lot of his time sleeping amidst the test machines.)