Posted by Karen Wild on Monday, December 21st, 2009

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Last Christmas

A funny Basset hound story from John Buscall

A wonderfully funny Christmas story all the way from Sweden by author Jon Buscall and his wonderful Bassett Hounds.

Last Christmas Aggie, the resident pack leader at Kennel Björkwood in Sweden, found herself miraculously alone in the kitchen.

I’d plucked up courage and donned my thickest jumper to venture out into -10°C for a a walk in the woods with the other woofs. Aggie, suffering from some feigned minor ailment or other, had persuaded me to leave her behind in the comfort of her bed. Despite  often eliciting a glowing “She walks extremely well,” from judges in the show ring, Agsie is in fact the laziest basset hound in Sweden and will do anything to avoid a walk – much to my frequent frustration.

So off I went with the other woofs and headed for the forest. Meanwhile, Agsie was left alone in the house with Mr Teen, who tends to be more interested in computer games than minding woofs.

Amazingly she managed to silently prise open the woof-gate that during the rest of the year always keeps the woofs out of the kitchen.

No doubt as she padded around the kitchen hoovering up the floor she found a crumb or two of something tasty. But I can only imagine her pleasure when she spotted what was on the counter: a kilo of frozen beef wrapped in a plastic bag that my wife was planning to use for spaghetti bolognese.

What happened next is anyone’s guess. If you’ve never owned a basset you might think of them as rather vertically challenged. Yes, they are rather short legged. But it never ceases to amaze me how a basset can suddenly turn into a counter-surfer the moment they’re alone with a tasty morsel or two in sight.

When I returned from walking the woofs I dried the snow off them and got them settled then went to check on Agsie. At this point in the story I wasn’t aware that there had actually been any meat thawing in the kitchen.

“Has she been okay?” I asked Mr Teen.

“Mmm,” came a grunt from his den.

I didn’t notice it immediately. Aggie was fast asleep, her blanket wrapped around her, snoring sweetly away. To look at her there was no indication of what she had been up to.

Then I saw the plastic bag. Interwoven with her blanket.

“What’s this?” I bellowed, picking it up to have a look. Neither Aggie nor Mr Teen responded.

“Has Aggie been in the kitchen?”

“NO!” yelled Mr Teen, irritated that I’d deigned to interrupt Counter-Destroy-And-Strike-Everyone-or-Whatever-it-is he spends his life doing.

I prodded Agsie. “You all right, girl?”

She woke up, rolled on her back and gave me the cue to rub her belly. So I did. She seemed her usual self so I didn’t think more about it. Until my wife got back.

“Where’s the minced beef?” Margrét wanted to know. “I’ve got to get the dinner on. Eirikur and Eygló will be here in an hour.”

“Isn’t it in the fridge?” I ventured.

“No, I put it on the counter to thaw,” she said. “It’s was in a plastic bag.”

And that was when the penny dropped. Aggie had scoffed the lot…

Much to my wife’s dismay Aggie showed no averse signs to wolfing down a kilo of frozen minced beef and part of a freezer bag. In fact the next morning she was decidedly chipper and accompanied me on a 5 kilometre walk through the forest with the rest of the Björkwood pack. Nevertheless, she was not let anywhere near our Swedish Christmas dinner on December 24. She was banished to the dog room by my wife – just as she will be this year!

About the author: Jon Buscall is a Communications Strategist based in Sweden. He is owned by four  bassets.

If you enjoyed this post please help an ageing abandoned basset and donate to House of Puddles.

Yesterday’s winner of the awesome Zogoflex Huck picked at random from yesterday’s comments was janet Considine, Congratulations!

Competition

Do you have a funny Christmas story about your dog that you would like to share? Today we have a fantastic toy donated by Collarways – an amazing Tuffy’s Rumble Ring: Soft, tough, floats and it’s machine washable too

13 Responses to “Last Christmas”

  1. Funnily enough it’s -10 out there this morning with stacks of snow. We’ve just got back from a wander in the woods and Aggie and the rest of the woofs are snoring off their breakfast.

    Rest assured, there’s no minced meat in Aggie’s reach :=)

    Posted by Jon Buscall on the December 21st, 2009
  2. I got out of the habit of leaving things on the worktop maaaaaaany moons ago. George (rescue Bullmastiff) memorises where all food is and waits patiently until you are out of sight. Any defrosting meat is now hidden in the microwave and we don’t have an indoor bin, because he can empty one in 3 secs flat!

    The Bassetts sound like great characters :)

    Posted by @k9_kirsty on the December 21st, 2009
  3. What a lovely ,funny story.I am a mobile hairdresser and I used to go to a house that had a basset called Fred.Fred unfortunately wasn’t very friendly and didn’t like visitors so the mum used to put him in another room when I did her hair .One of these days when she was washing her hair I was getting all of my stuff ready ,I had recently purchased a unbreakable red comb and was very proud of this little gadget .Suddenly the door to the room opened and in ambles Fred ,I freeze and Fred pins me up against the wall.Too terrified to move or shout, Fred sniffs gets down,spots my brand new unbreakable comb and picks it up and chews it into a million little bits right in front of my eyes.Unbreakable my eye.I was that relieved it wasn’t my leg he was chewing I didn’t care about my comb.Needless to say I never bought another one (trades description eh?)

    Posted by janet Considine on the December 21st, 2009
  4. Alfie our Lakeland Patterdale terrier cross has in the past been found with all 4 paws on the kitchen table!! He has demolished whole baguettes in the past, needless to say we don’t leave anything on the table anymore and he hasn’t quite worked out how to get onto the worktops!!

    Posted by Ailsa Cordner on the December 21st, 2009
  5. Selkie once wolfed down 8 sausages and a whole fruitcake at a barbecue while boarding with friends who are both vets (vets for god’s sake!). Helped herself to the BBQ trolley when no one was paying attention. She makes absolutely no noise when in stealth mode…I should know she often appears behind me with no warning and gives me heart failure when I turn around!

    Posted by @Widgetty on the December 21st, 2009
  6. Last Christmas I was wrapping Christmas presents when my dog Harry decided he needed some attention. I ignored him at first but he carried on jumping up on me. I was trying to wrap his present – but I couldn’t find the sticky tape anywhere in my pile of paper, presents and bows etc.

    I told him “Go and play with your toy, I`m busy right now.” He walked away and I thought he was getting his toy. After a few minutes, he returned with the sticky tape in his mouth!

    Later on, Harry pulled his newly wrapped present off the worktop when I wasn’t looking – and ate the whole thing, wrapping paper and all!

    Posted by Julie Kenny on the December 21st, 2009
  7. So, we had just settled into a routine with our new springer puppy. It was summer, he was six months old, and the bright mornings and the small bladder meant I was up early to give him his walks.
    Trying to be organised I had made cinnamon bread dough the night before and had rapidly rolled the buns that morning and left them to rise while the dog and I chased the local wildlife.
    Calling my partner to cook the rolls before I returned home I was *really* looking forward to these.
    Rolls hot out of oven and covered in a very hot sugar syrup, I went to the bathroom to wash my hands.

    Returned twenty seconds later to find EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THE BUNS GONE, and smug doggles sitting in his basket as if butter wouldn’t melt in his mouth.

    They were 200 degrees Celsius, hot out of oven and he ate them without even a twinge.
    (I think I would have felt so much better if he had got indigestion).

    Important lessons learned 1) Food is never too hot for dogs 2) Even a small puppy can reach the counter if the rewards are great enough and 3) Never, ever believe that 20 seconds isn’t enough for a spaniel to eat that breakfast you have been craving for 3 hours.

    Posted by Squid Vert on the December 21st, 2009
  8. That’s hysterical !! Bet she thought you’d left it specially for her !!

    Posted by Lynda and the Minkies on the December 21st, 2009
  9. nice story, this has happened often in the past with all of my dogs stealing something at some point. What a nightmare a few years back my pointer stole 8 frozen sausages, they were eaten in minutes.

    Posted by sherie buck on the December 21st, 2009
  10. What a great story about Aggie’s foraging activities… it really made me laugh and reminds me so much of my hounds’ and cat’s food grabbing tendencies :D

    Greyhounds are notorious counter surfers as we’ve learnt over the years!

    Mina has surreptitiously managed to snaffle a whole pack of frankfurters – carefully removing them from their packaging, which was left undisturbed on the counter. She also has a liking for homemade shortbread, as I discovered, when called out of the kitchen to answer a phone call. I came back in to see she’d scoffed most of them whilst they were cooling. (Thankfully there were enough left for my guests who were due that evening)

    Not long after Stevie came to live with us, we had chilli con carne for dinner… Hubby decanted the left-overs to some freezer bags & left them to cool… Well, you can guess the rest ;) I was upstairs & happened to look over the landing & saw what looked like entrials on the cream carpet (now dubbed the sacrifical carpet) – yep Chilli con Carne plus a good part of a freezer bag had been eaten by Stevie.

    Finally, my cat – Tazzie – must have Greek roots. I once got some baklava out to defrost (in the days before dogs), left it on the kitchen counter & then went upstairs. I came downstairs & kicked something on the floor – it was the top bit of a piece of baklava (the filo pastry bit) – Tazzie had eaten the bottom bit of nuts & honey.

    Needless to say we have now been educated by our animals & have very spick & span kitchen counters.

    Posted by Susan McKeon on the December 21st, 2009
  11. I have only ever taken one thing, a dog treat from the coffee table when I had been living in my new home 2 days! Oh boy, was Mum mad, so much so, that I have never stolen another thing in my life ….

    …sausages? OH, you know about them?

    http://img.geocaching.com/track/log/b31378be-2554-4a73-b2a0-969c31a44b41.jpg

    http://img.geocaching.com/track/log/9080b9e7-bb92-4c2d-9276-446339265524.jpg

    Well, I was instrumental in their recovery, someone else stole them *no names, no pack drill* it was someone else! I am INNOCENT! Do you hear me? INNOCENT!

    Posted by Caesar aka @goldencaesar on the December 21st, 2009
  12. Thanks so much for sharing YOUR stories. I’m glad to hear that Aggie isn’t alone in her mischief.

    Bassets are really wonderful dogs. Very resourceful. Tia, the youngest woof in the household, can even open the security windows in our house!

    As for Aggie, well she’s just adorable. And constantly hungry!

    Posted by Jon Buscall on the December 21st, 2009
  13. Great story Jon, so typical of a basset..I remeber when I had two frozen pizza’s and some garlic bread thawing on the work top placed well back I might add. Dylan somehow managed to get hold of one of the pizza’s and the garlic bred he shared his booty with his sister Flo wrapping and all?? Thankfully there were no adverse effects.

    Posted by Donna on the December 23rd, 2009

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