Our daughter and her smallest offspring, while out walking near their house, quite often come across a rather fine long-haired cat, a cat who looks as though he should be an indoors cat, definitely not a cat on the razzle, roaming the streets. They know his name, Leo, and where he lives, quite some distance from where they usually come across him. As a rule they take him home. Sometimes there is someone to take him in. Sometimes they have to leave him in his garden. The children would like to kidnap him and take him home to live at their house.
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Our daughter has almost always had a pet of some kind since she left childhood behind. She blames this apparent obsession on having pets on me, because we never had a pet when she was small, apart that is from the goldfish that a friend’s parent bought her for her birthday one year. That parent took an autonomous decision that our daughter needed a pet, in the belief that all children need a pet. She could have consulted me beforehand! Our daughter wanted a dog - and has had several - so that her children would grow up with no fear of dogs, a fear she had as a child. Some of that fear I put down to her reading the Wolves of Willoughby Chase is a children's by Joan Aiken rather than her not having had a dog of her own as a child. Her aim to accustom her children to having dogs around was mostly successful, except that the last dog was rather aggressive, especially towards the vacuum cleaner which he regarded as an enemy, and was so bouncy that he scared the wits out of one of the children and in the end had to be rehoused.
She is currently pet-less but under constant pressure from the small people to get a cat! They are inspired in this by their acquaintance with Smokey and Buttons, their older cousin’s two cats.
It seems there are an estimayed 13 million dogs in the UK, many owned by Dinkwad couples. Dinkwad stands for “double income, no kids, with a dog”, in other words couples who have decided not to have children but get a dog and treat it as if it were the child they have decided not to have. The owner of such a child substitute, a golden retriever, said about herself and her husband and the dog: “We are deeply obsessed with him. He turned two last year and we had a little birthday party for him – we had party hats and got him a dog-safe cake and a little outfit: a little vest with a bow tie.” Well, okay, each to their own! Personally I think dogs don’t really need fancy outfits or bows in their hair, but that’s probably just me. (I feel the same, by the way, about doting parents who put fancy headbands on their practically hairless baby so that you can tell it is really a little girl, a very girly girl!)
Some might think having a dog is a good substitute from the financial point of view. After all, nursery fees for a small child can be extremely expensive! Similarly afterschool care! But vets’ fees are quite extortionate and if you take into account those fancy outfits and specialist dog food, it may be a false economy. Mostly though, I suppose that dogs don’t turn into stroppy teenagers who argue with their parents.
Dogs are even coming into political campaigns: “In a race that is expected to come down to a few thousand votes, every last one counts – including, for the candidates seeking to become the next mayor of Paris, those of the French capital’s disgruntled dog owners.
Both favourites in Sunday’s second-round vote, the leftwing frontrunner Emmanuel Grégoire and the former conservative culture minister, Rachida Dati, have promised an array of canine-friendly measures if they win – and for good reason.
In the last city council elections, in 2020, about 57,000 votes separated the winner, outgoing Socialist mayor Anne Hidalgo, from her closest rival, Dati. This year’s race is expected to be tighter still and Paris has more than 100,000 dogs.
“That’s, what, something like 170,000 votes,” said Loïc Amiot of Paris Condition Canine, an umbrella group of 10 dog-owners’ associations in the capital that has published a manifesto demanding better treatment for the city’s dogs.”
The world is full of mildly crazy people!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!


















