Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: You’ll never look at Almond Roca the same way again

Frazz
Frazz may have crossed another line today, but it cracked me up. I spend a lot of time around people who do seem to think their dogs need little treats shaped and colored like T-bone steaks, and who put them on expensive diets because they are convinced their pooches are gluten-sensitive.

Mind you, Vaska's buddies do not fall into this category. In fact, the big issue this summer has been his best friend Bogey's predilection for finding — and consuming — vintage sashimi along the banks of the Connecticut River. Laughter is a gift, even horrified laughter and especially horrified laughter you are trying to suppress while helping Bogey's owner attempt (unsuccessfully) to cancel the banquet.

Bogey is a generous giver.

Dog behavior in comics has been much more realistically depicted since Mike Peters had Grimm drink out of the toilet and created a new meme for cartoonists to riff on. Butt-sniffing and leg-humping have also become fairly common in the comics, and, of course, for decades, 90 percent of fire hydrants seen in comic strips have been there to receive, not dispense.

And now, litter-box snacking has come out of the closet. So to speak.

When I had a cat, the litterbox was actually kept in the furnace room, with a baby-gate that kept the dogs out but was, of course, no obstacle for the cat.

The horrors of your dog enjoying a bit of Almond Roca from the cat box now and then is a city issue, however, dwarfed and I daresay even eclipsed by what is apt to happen out here in the country when someone decides to ride their horse down your favorite hiking trail.

Horseriders hereabouts do not carry plastic bags.

As for dogowners hereabouts, we scoop poop when it's on a groomed surface and ignore it if the dog has gone off into the brush. If the dog goes on a groomed surface within three feet of the brush, we use the Pelé method to correct his placement — sort of the opposite of what golfers are known to do, and with the same furtive glance to see if anyone is watching.

But I did see someone shin-deep in the White River, attempting to scoop what their dog had deposited there, which was pretty amusing considering how hard it is to scoop something out of water with a plastic bag to begin with, never mind chasing it downstream at the same time. And, no, it doesn't float. It drifts.

Poopsign Back in town, however, I am a very strict supporter of pooper-scooper laws, in part because I happen to agree that poop on the sidewalks and in the parks is unpleasant and in large part because those who don't scoop give the busybodies a bit of totally unneeded leverage over all of us who own dogs.

You can tell the communities where the blue-noses have achieved that leverage because they can't just post a sign saying, "Please clean up after your dog – it's the law!" but have to add a snotty little sermonette. 

It's like smoking indoors. People who are going to scoop will scoop, people who aren't going to scoop won't scoop. Make a law, write some tickets. But nagging only adds to the unpleasantness without making the slightest difference in the rate of compliance.

Especially when it is hypocritical.

In the case of this particular sign, there was an infestation of crows in the same park last fall. Huge flocks perched in the trees and the walkways were an eighth of an inch deep in bird feces. Now, you'd think that the city of Lebanon, having demonstrated its fastidious fear of dog poop, would go totally ET on the place, cordon off the area, tent the park, bring in the HazMat team …

… or maybe that they'd just ignore it and hope for rain.

Then this spring, somebody raised a ruckus about dogs in the cemetery. I'm not talking about people letting their dogs run in the cemetery, but people walking on the gravel path, dog on leash, going from one part of town to another.

Fortunately, it only provoked some hemming and hawing on the part of the city council and a story in the paper, because that's a pleasant, quiet shortcut to the grocery store that avoids about the only busy part of the entire town, and it's a nice little walk. And, of course, you have your plastic bag in your pocket — doesn't everybody?

I was glad nothing came of it, because, not only is it an enjoyable shortcut, but, if dogs were banned, I'd have never come across this stunningly unlikely combination of name and symbol. 

(Yes, I know the symbol in this case doesn't mean that. Why? Did you think it was really him under there?)

Stone

 

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Comments 16

  1. My friends who have two dogs and two cats say that if dogs snack from the cat box, you tend to get the contents back rather quickly and messily. That’s why the cat box is in the basement, the basement door remains shut, and the cat door at the bottom is too small to admit dogs.
    (Rain is just starting here in DC. Stay safe, everyone on the East Coast.)

  2. It’s hard to explain to dogs that there is a rule “What goes down has to stay down.” In Bogey’s defense, he is apparently able to digest vintage sashimi, not only keeping it down but not having to go out at 3 a.m. either. I’ve never had a dog who couldn’t digest Almond Roca, but we were feeding plain Cat Chow and using a very basic clay litter — maybe the more exotic stuff isn’t so easy on the tummy.
    “I never buy Fancy Feast. It makes my dog throw up.”
    “You’re supposed to feed it to your cat.”
    “Oh, I do.”

  3. I grew up with a dog named Bogey–a German shepherd who had gotten a disease in puppyhood that left him half hairless. There was an area of mildly hilly country between our house and the beach that always made him throw up. He also never got used to the idea of sea water–he’d keep tasting it to see if maybe this time it wasn’t salty. Not the brightest dog I’ve known, but a good one.

  4. If the dog doesn’t throw up the litter box snack, the now-thoroughly-damp-litter will set like cement in the dog’s insides, leading to a VERY high vet bill.

  5. Very curious about the date on the Churchill tombstone. Pre- or Post-war?

  6. We’ve had lots of alimentary canal issues here in Ft. Harrington, but, thankfully, never that one. Which is really kind of surprising, given the total number of cats and dogs here.

  7. My dogs were never interested in anything but the Almond Roca, so the amount of clay consumed wasn’t enough to create an issue. I’d say if you have a dog going after the actual clay — perhaps the clumped clay — it could signal a dietary issue. Or that you need to scoop more often. Or that your dog is pregnant and grew up in the rural south.

  8. And Fran, my memory is that the stone is a family stone erected before the war, though people have been buried in the plot since then. But we’re right in Irene’s path and it’s already raining as I write this, so confirmation will have to wait.

  9. I don’t like what I’ve heard and seen out of Vermont and New Hampshire over the past few hours. Fervent best wishes from out here in California, Mike.

  10. The New Hampshire side of the river did mostly okay — I was down at the grandkids and had to post late because they lost power, but up here in town it was fine and there was no real damage up and away from the rivers. But there is a major shopping district near the river and it’s in pretty bad shape. Worse than that — the dog park is underwater deep enough that we may have lost the fence but won’t know until we can see it.
    Ah well. I’m sure Eric Cantor will find some cuts somewhere so he can help us out.

  11. Count on it. At least the cuts part.
    Good to hear that you and yours are okay, but what I’m seeing today from various places near you is still troubling, and I’m keeping my fingers crossed for what’s going to happen downstream in Massachusetts today as all of that water flushes through the Connecticut system. I remember a pretty bad flood there in spring ’69, and hope those towns don’t have to go through it yet again.

  12. A friend of ours called it “Kitty Roca”! It was definitely descriptive since our Lab girlie loves to indulge in it. She leeps it down and her breath smells like the kitty litter–too perfumy for words, unfortunately. I’ve finally found a place she mostly can’t get to it and the cats can. And I’m with you on those who will scoop will, etc. There’s already enough onus put on smokers, also. If you want to kill yourself that way it’s your business as long as you aren’t actively smoking around anyone.

  13. To answer the question about the Churchill stone: The original tenant thereunder lived from 1851 to 1912, well before swastikas had any connection with the failed artist from Austria. His wife lived from 1851 to April of 1945, but not only was the stone already there and she 94 years old, but there’s no-one else buried in the plot, so I suspect the rest of the family had moved on and she may even have returned to be there.

  14. i was bored and googled ‘almond roca dog’ found this blog which cracked me up. I thought my dad & i were the only ones that came up with calling kitty litter content ‘almond roca’ Anyway my dog passed away about 4 months ago but she would drive us crazy and always getting into the cat box even though it had a lid on, she was unstoppable. I don’t understand what goes through their brain, its so gross! Now my sisters dog comes over and sometimes cleans it out. Love the comic strip by the way!

  15. Another thing no i will never think of or eat almond roca the same way again! 😉

  16. I think it’s good of your sister’s dog to fill in for her late cousin. Someone must attend to these things!!!

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