Best The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir By Hal Borland

Download PDF The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir By Hal Borland

Download PDF The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir Read MOBI Sites No Sign Up - As we know, Read MOBI is a great way to spend leisure time. Almost every month, there are new Kindle being released and there are numerous brand new Kindle as well. If you do not want to spend money to go to a Library and Read all the new Kindle, you need to use the help of best free Read MOBI Sites no sign up 2020.

The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir-Hal Borland

Read The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir Link RTF online is a convenient and frugal way to read The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir Link you love right from the comfort of your own home. Yes, there sites where you can get RTF "for free" but the ones listed below are clean from viruses and completely legal to use.

The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir RTF By Click Button. The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir it’s easy to recommend a new book category such as Novel, journal, comic, magazin, ect. You see it and you just know that the designer is also an author and understands the challenges involved with having a good book. You can easy klick for detailing book and you can read it online, even you can download it



Ebook About
The national bestselling memoir of a friendship between a New England outdoorsman and the scrawny foxhound who came to his door one snowy day. In the midst of a blizzard, late one Christmas night in the 1950s, author Hal Borland heard a howl at the back door of his home on a hundred-acre farm in the Housatonic Valley of northwest Connecticut. Resistant at first, he called around trying to find an owner whose dog had gone missing—with no luck. Finally, with the encouragement of his wife and haunted by memories of his childhood collie, Borland brought some scraps of leftover steak outside. This was his introduction to Pat, a miserable, half-starved, but deeply trusting black-and-white foxhound mutt.   Pat would soon become a member of the family, accompanying Borland on hunts and terrorizing the local woodchuck population—and teaching him that sometimes our most immediate connection to the natural world is through the animals we live with. A longtime journalist and a winner of the John Burroughs Medal for distinguished nature writing, Borland tells the tale of the time he shared with Pat in this touching true story that “will appeal to many sportsmen and to all people who have ever been closely attached to a dog” (The New York Times Book Review).

Book The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir Review :



I understand that the author, Hal, is a hunter and likes to watch his dog catch and kill rabbits and woodchucks. We can disagree on that. But I would think most dog lovers would not understand some of the treatment of Pat, the dog.I literally winced when I read some of his "proud" stories. A few examples:Hal and his wife, Barbara, heard Pat and Mike, "the dog Pat came with," (which the author gave away) howling in pain while being a distance from the house . They didn't investigate, but decided to wait, "They'll come home." They did, but it was hours later. Pat had been in a fight most likely with a bobcat and had a ripped ear, bleeding from multiple cuts, and limping. Hal called a vet and they decided to bring him in only if it showed infection. How about to prevent infection? How about something to help him with his pain?Pat, being a dog, once stole a hamburger for which he was hit. When he began snooping around again the owner, in his own words, "gave him a trouncing." This type of "teaching" (hitting/trouncing) was repeated several times over a small infraction (such as attempting to get on a piece of furniture). Nothing wrong with not wanting your dog on furniture, but there are ways to train other than "giving him a good trouncing."Pat was locked in a woodshed at night -- even in below freezing weather. OK, I realize this story is older and dogs were treated differently, but I can't understand why he couldn't at least stayed in the mudroom of the house in the harsh Connecticut winters.Hal suggested that Barbara take treats with her to train Pat to walk beside her and not run off into the woods. Good idea. She chose chocolates. While tolerated in small amounts, chocolates are poisonous to dogs. Obviously, Hal and Barbara did not know this. I'm sure they would not have offered it if they had known. ("Trounce" him for an infraction? Yes. Ignore his howls when being attacked? Yes. Lock him in the woodshed on below freezing nights? Yes. But I'm sure they would not knowingly give him a poisonous substance.) Yet, surely they knew chocolate is loaded with sugar and caffeine. Doesn't that seem an odd choice for a dog? Especially an odd choice to give a highly stimulated dog to train him to walk passively beside you and not bolt after a squirrel? Counterproductive at best, setting him up for failure (and perhaps another "trouncing") at worst.Hal seemed proud of his stories. He and a friend laughed when their dogs went at each other. As they separated them, (as they were eager to go kill some raccoons), they agreed that soon they should just let the dogs "have it out."Were there some magical, heartwarming moments? Of course. But too many cringing episodes (I only listed a few) to make this an enjoyable story. If you are a dog lover, and don't like reading about ill treatment of animals, stay away from this book. Sad because the setting is so lovely and I do think Pat had many great adventures. I know my dogs would love to roam free in fields. But they surely would not love being attacked by bobcats, raccoons, woodchucks, and their owner! Freedom with limits would have been easy enough as Pat stayed near Hal on their walks in fields and woods. Only when he was let out alone or told, "Go get 'em," did he go in for the kill....often ending in his own injuries.
too much time on scenery, way too much time on hunting, too little time on dog's personality. Borland didn't strike me as a real animal lover. waste of time reading this book. kept thinking it would get better -- didn't happen.

Read Online The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
Download The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir PDF
The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir Mobi
Free Reading The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
Download Free Pdf The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
PDF Online The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
Mobi Online The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
Reading Online The Dog Who Came to Stay: A Memoir
Read Online Hal Borland
Download Hal Borland
Hal Borland PDF
Hal Borland Mobi
Free Reading Hal Borland
Download Free Pdf Hal Borland
PDF Online Hal Borland
Mobi Online Hal Borland
Reading Online Hal Borland

Best Cryptonomicon By Neal Stephenson

Read The UX Book: Agile UX Design for a Quality User Experience By Rex Hartson,Pardha Pyla

Download Mobi “I Have Nothing to Hide”: And 20 Other Myths About Surveillance and Privacy By Heidi Boghosian

Read Glimpse of Death: An addictive crime thriller with a shocking twist (Tess Winnett) By Leslie Wolfe

Read Red, White, and Black: Rescuing American History from Revisionists and Race Hustlers By Robert L. Woodson

Best Building Blockchain Apps By Michael Juntao Yuan

Download PDF Dragons of Spring Dawning (Dragonlance Chronicles Book 3) By Margaret Weis,Tracy Hickman

Best Ottolenghi Simple: A Cookbook By Yotam Ottolenghi

Read Online Possible Minds: Twenty-Five Ways of Looking at AI By John Brockman

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Read Online NEW MyLab Arts with Pearson eText Standalone Access Card for Art History Volume 1 5th Edition By Goodreads

Download PDF The Copenhagen Trilogy: Childhood; Youth; Dependency By Tove Ditlevsen

Read No Filter: The Inside Story of Instagram By Sarah Frier