Mud Season

 http://www.gocomics.com/theothercoast/2016/02/13

gocomics.com/theothercoast
Click on picture for higher resolution.

Mud season for the pups in the comic is clearly in winter, so I looked up their cartoonist, Adrian Raeside. Sure enough, he lives in Whistler, British Columbia, and the rainy season there is November through February. That’s different than here or for Sammy and Montana.

When it’s warm and muddy Montana loves to play in the mud and track it into the house, and onto the walls. But as she pointed out in a recent post, in winter she loves lying next to the heating vent to get warm:

Montana-and-Heating-Vents

Do you have a mud season? If so, when is it, and do you have any furry friends to bring it into the house?


 

This entry was posted in Life As a Shared Adventure. Bookmark the permalink.

8 Responses to Mud Season

  1. Linda P. says:

    Here in Central Texas, we have drought and flash floods and not much in between these last few years.

    • Jean says:

      My heart goes out to you. We have droughts and flash floods here, too, but we really lucked out with some rain last Spring and Summer. We’re hoping for some more this year, but who knows?

  2. tammy j says:

    isn’t she darling!
    you could forgive that face anything.
    and i don’t see a speck of mud! i bet kaitlin has that all figured out.
    and… even so…
    what’s a little mud among friends? 🙂
    LOLOL!

    • Jean says:

      There’s no mud now because it’s been too cold. Trust me, she does bring mud inside when the weather is right. 🙂 Sammy doesn’t like to get his feet wet, so he tries to walk on the pavement instead of in the mud.

  3. Cathy in NZ says:

    I haven’t thought of a “mud season” although when I owned a car there would be cat paw prints at different times of the year…why do animals have to stroll through garden/soil instead of staying on the concrete paths!

  4. Rummuser says:

    Mud season here is the monsoon and our Chutki too loves to play in the mud and bring the whole lot sticking to her into the house. It is a job to get her cleaned up.

Comments are closed.