September 26, 2010 by gerard oosterman
Bowral is really rocking. Tulip Time. Bus loads from Sydney. All rather senior looking and retirement at its best. Lives still being lived without fanfare or trumpets, like us and them and senior discounts. They file out with names such as Brian and Shirly stuck on their shirts and blouses, hunt out tulips and eat sausage rolls. Some have Dim Sims with chili sauce getting soaked up in the paper tissue as they walk and chew from the corners of their mouths. The men are wearing stout corduroy with women in casual slacks and pastel coloured blouses or cardigans just in case a chill might roll down from the The Gib. It pays to be careful. The Gib is short for Mount Gibraltar which is a hill overlooking Bowral. Mind you, the real Mount Gibraltar could easily have people named Brians and Shirleys walking around as well. They now walk worldwide.
We, feeling quite smug must look like locals because a group of tourists asks us for a nice place to have some nice lunch. “Somewhere ‘nice’ they all say”. Do we also now look as if knowing ’nice’ is something we have finally arrived at?
”What a lovely dog you have”, Milo looks up, expecting a pat. He knows the score by now. It’s not like the farm anymore, but is has its compensations. We gave the group two choices and continued on with Milo on a leash which is clicked on a kind of brace that dogs now seem to wear. As we pass a throng of people and just in front of a kitchen shop, Milo to my horror squats down and does an impromptu shit while still walking. An amazingly large one for such a little dog. Actually, one large and two little ones, all in a row with people doing an impromptu tango around them. I heard someone say ‘ohh nooo’.
I hope this isn’t what I think he has just done flashed through my mind. Where is Helvi? Helvi briskly walked on. I had no plastic bag and not much dignity either.
We now entered the crux of this matter. With no plastic bag but with full posession of two hands; what would anyone have done? No way could I risk exposing any failure in good standing amongst the Bowral citizenry nor the good name of Milo, carefully nurtured by so many walks. Within a split second I stooped down and with one majestic scoop collected the lot with my nude hand, while Milo looked on rather quizzically, the look that the Jack Russell is so known for.
I caught up with Helvi and explained I had a handful of still warm shit. “Put it there,” she sternly pointed at a metal bin. I shook it off into the bin but also realizing that Helvi knew what had transpired. ‘Don’t put your arm on me’, and wash your hands at Woolies upstairs. It was a long walk zig zagging along a ramp up to Woolies. One man looked strangely at me while I washed my brown hand inside the Men’s.
Now, I know it wouldn’t have been very gallant to have a woman pick up shit, but sometimes I feel blokes are expected to do a little too much. At least she could have stayed with me and given me some encouragement. A kind of moral support or an urging on.
Milo is fine.

I have an idea. Lets invent a dog poo collector, like a colostomy bay that you stick on the dogs bum before you talk it for a walk. The dog can crap till the cows come home. Then when you get home you take it off and throw it in the bin.
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Yes, Vivienne. I now have a plastic bag permanently in my pocket. Usually when Milo is taken for a walk he does it discretely in someone’s garden or behind the bus stop. The event in front of the kitchen shop in the middle of so many people was perhaps a lapse in his toilet protocol.
Yesterday I needed to use a hanky and sneezed into the plastic bag.
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Gez, this is the funniest story I’ve read in ages however I won’t be able to look at your gravtar the same any more LOL
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I suspect that from now on both of you will have a plastic bag or two tucked into a pocket or handbag.
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Viv, I had them in the pocket of my jacket, but as it was a nice day I left it in the car…
As I was only ten steps ahead, Gez could have called me; I always have a stack of tissues in my handbag. The poo story might have been invented to cheer the blokes at the Pigs…?!
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Mrs M has attached little dog poo bag dispensers to both of Fergus’ leads, so we never get caught short. The only problem is that the teenage son always insists it is not ‘his turn’, as he did it ‘last time’, in spite of being many months ago!
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Pingback: Dog Ethics in Bowral | Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle « Ethics Find
Big M, no one worries about ‘foolishness’ at Pig’s Arms, anyhow what’s a bit of foolishness amongst friends 🙂
Gez’ cute puppy looks a little embarassed though, wonder what ‘foolishness’ it’s been up to.
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Our Fergus often manages to pinch off a human size stool at the most inopportune moments. Mrs M tries to embarrass him by tying it to his collar, until they reach a bin. He’s never bothered!
Our foolishness on the weekend was after the most beautiful wedding. The bride and her brothers had been orphaned when she was 20, but they’d managed to maintain home and heart, whilst expanding their parent’s business. It was made all the more emotive by the absence of Mrs M’s beautiful niece, who passe away earlier this year, and her dad, who’s quite demented.
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‘home and hearth’!
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Big M, the heart too has to be ‘managed’, without heart there’s no home , no hearth…no one wants a heartless home …
There must be lots of homeless hearts though !
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These are lovely people with big hearts!
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Glad I wandered over to this corner at Pig’s and heard you say this about foolishness, H. Mary Poppins and Bert all rolled into one I often feel like exclaiming, it is so hard to hide foolishness around friends. It just is there starkers eh. 🙂
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Sandshoe, in my neck of the woods, my friends and I thrive in ‘foolishness’…
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H, and dalliancers all
I think to mention before the day is any older that on this weekend a very close friend -in the at least privacy of his address and suddenly no fuss- left me and our friends and has gone to that way away locality for good. I am intermittently very, very sad.
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We empathise, Sandshoe. It’s very sad, and we have some idea of how you feel.
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It is very kind at The Pig’s Arms.
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Big M, the good thing about blurting out something about Mrs M at the Pig’s Arms, as opposed to some other blog page, is that Emmjay and Hung One On are probably about somewhere and willing to collaborate on your epitah.
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I realised the foolishness of my comment right after I hit ‘post comment’!
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I wonder Voice is referring to the comment conjuring unmistakeable and repeated images of Mrs M-alas who I have not yet formally met, leastwise I think not herein-stooping to tie a bag of dog-do to Fergus’s collar, a neck tie of dog-do.
That’s certainly seeming a bit Mick Mouse letting get out how Fergie is paraded around town. Pheww. 😦
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Still,
With the cleaning up of footpaths many must now walk around with dogs and reaping deposited coils, pocketing them and disposing into bins. I suppose with Fergus’s own turd tied onto his collar we are all brought back to that old song ‘Lipstick on your collar’ by Connie Francis 1959.
Here it is.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vR6xFCQJS4
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Groovy!
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I make my wife sound like some sort of lunatic, walking the dog with complementary turd!
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I was, truly, joshin’, Big M. 😉
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There’s a bit of poetic or rather prosaic license used here by my very best friend….I won’t point out any specifics, I’ll let the boys have their fun 🙂
PS. I do not have eyes at the back of my head, not even funny smells make me turn around when I have just spotted the ideal addition to my summer wardrobe in my favorite fashion store.
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No time for pow-wow and a bow-wow just has to make its own arrangements when I spy a nice pair of denim overalls, H. Especially in the window at the Mission. I’m v. partial to ‘Stuart Membery’.
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Sandshoe, I used to love Stuart Membery, I think it was the eighties; I owned a brightly coloured pants+casual shirt/ jacket…I wore it on one of my trips to Finland, my sisters were jealous….
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It is hard to credit the label, H. I have seen nothing like it since, except a New Zealand one (can’t remember the name just now). I had a pair of Membery overalls that were like climbing in a tent, a handbag and a model’s favourite catwalk garment in one. I illustrate, that I carried when necessary half-a-doz. babies’ cloth nappies in one of the pockets on its front. Over it I frequently wore a recycled curtain fabric orange-pink dress jacket (longish). A one-off boutique garment, it had large self covered buttons and nicely balloony sleeves. Ooah! H! 🙂
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