Terrierman's Daily Dose
Information on working terriers, dogs, natural history, hunting, and the environment, with occasional political commentary as I see fit. This web log is associated with the Terrierman.com web site.
Monday, May 11, 2026
Sunday, May 10, 2026
The Root of All Things
It’s Mother’s Day, so let me talk about one of the two people that made me.
My mother was a steady, sensible rock my entire life. She was a constant life-long learner, perpetually curious, always reading, brave, tough when she had to be, and nobody's fool.
She grew up as a single child in a small town in Kansas, went to Syria the day she got married, and traveled everywhere worth going to, from Petra to Zimbabwe, from Machu Pichu to Japan, from Paris to Mexico, from Mali to Peru, from Germany to Libya, from Turkey to Canada, from California to Lebanon, from Norway to Iran. She knew about the world because she had been in it, double-drenched in wonder.
Through it all she raised two kids who now have kids of their own, and as a teacher for over 40 years, she taught an army of school kids about insects and life cycles, patterns, and history, native cultures, and great story.
My mom could bait a hook, build you bookshelves, raise a brood of chickens, make a lemon meringue pie, and haggle her way through an Arab bazaar earning respect in every stall.
And was she a terrierwoman? Only for more than 80 years, first with Trouble, then Scoot, Stuff I, Stuff II, Pearl, and finally Darwin.
I am my mother's son, and damn proud of it.
On her 88th birthday, with her memory starting to slip like soup through a fork, I wrote her a letter, knowing that anything I said would slip away in a day or two, but knowing the paper could make it fresh every day.
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Dear Mom,
Happy Birthday!
It’s *not* hard to put into words how grateful I am for your lifelong love and nurturing. It’s a simple fact that without your calm and steady strength, I would have fallen off the planet long ago.
Most of what I truly treasure — the things that give me deep joy — are values and appreciations fostered by you at an early age.
You never thought a fascination with butterflies and beetles was the slightest bit strange. Indeed, you shared it with us and instilled it in us, showing us how to make nets from coat-hanger wire, broom handles, and old pillowcases, and ether jars with cotton balls and coffee filters. Fifty years later, and I still have my beetle collection, now supplemented by other collections of skulls and antlers, rocks and fossils. I am my mother’s child.
Did anyone else’s mother make butterfly and praying mantis cages out of window-wire netting curled into cylinders and anchored into cake pans filled with plaster of Paris at the bottom, with another cake tin at the top to serve as a lid? Mine did, and as a consequence, I have spent over 5 decades in hedgerows marveling at chrysalis and cocoon, carrion beetles and horn worms. There is a world of wonder to be found in a strip of abandoned field, if only you will look.
I grew up with hundreds of chicken eggs, carefully marked “X” and “O” on opposite sides with a pencil so they could be hand rotated several times a day over a 21-day hatching cycle by your consistent and punctual hand. A lightbulb provided heat and a water pan provided humidity, but the hard lessons about the vagaries and vicissitudes of life came from infertile eggs and from the poor unfortunates with imperfect yolk absorption who were quickly attacked and killed by their chirping and rapacious brethren. Mother Nature is not for sissies, and she always bats last.
I have spent many decades with terriers, a seed first planted by you when you brought back a $5 black and white runt acquired from the back of a pet store on Pennsylvania Avenue. Scoot traveled from DC to Morocco, and Kansas to Algeria to Arlington before eventually settling under a marble headstone in the backyard of 1712 19th Street. All the other terriers that have followed — Stuff (1 and 2), Pearl, Darwin, Barney, Trooper, Sailor, Gideon, Haddie, Misto, and Moxie — are the fruit of that slip of a dog that you planted in our hearts.
Above all, you showed us that if you pulled on any one thing, you would find it was connected to everything else. Travels in Europe and North Africa were a dizzying parade of dates and invasions, but the essential message was that everything had a past and few things were entirely self-made. The Romans had been everywhere, and the Moors had marched through Spain and even into Rome. History was about connections, same as the life cycles of plants and animals were connected to each other. It was a very big Life Lesson Plan.
Through it all was your good cheer and natural modesty. Captive to kids, and raised in an era when the full potential of extraordinary women were given few outlets, you became a constant life learner who taught generations of children — including your own — how to fit together the dizzying parts of an ever-changing world.
Truthfully, it’s been quite a life. The day after you got married you flew to Damascus, Syria and from there you saw and lived in Isfahan, Iran; Beirut, Lebanon; Salisbury, Rhodesia; Bamako, Mali; Tunis, Tunisia, Tangier, Morocco, and Algiers, Algeria. You visited (and dragged your ungrateful kids) to every major cathedral in Europe, motored up the Alps and through Norway and Sweden, took ferries from Spain to North Africa and from Libya to Sicily. You have been down the Amazon and up Machu Pichu, seen the Louvre in Paris and the first albino gorilla in Barcelona. You have been to Petra and Pompeii, the Calgary Stampede and the dripping forests of the Pacific Northwest. You studied Turkish rugs and taught yourself French, wore a jellaba to buy groceries from market women, and tried to make Christmas Trees for the kids in countries without Christmas Trees of any kind. Richard Halliburton was a piker compared to you!
How you have managed to do it all and raise two kids and still laugh with ease is a model for the rest of us. I cannot imagine what diaper duty in Lebanon and Rhodesia was like, or how you managed to get us through chicken pox in Tunis, or the airport pretty much anywhere. I don’t think we were bad kids, but we were surely embarrassing, and no doubt loud, expensive, and inconvenient. I was trouble and terror from the start — a Caesarian section in Rhodesia in 1959. I apologize now and forever, and I know that was not the last of it. I have adult kids of my own now, and know the job never ends, thank God.
There simply are not enough words to encompass all you have been to me. Above all, thank you for loving Carolyn and the kids and passing on all that is good to them as well. Your love and care has watered a lot of roots, not just my own.
XXX OOO
Patrick
Saturday, May 09, 2026
Overnight At the Vets Is Often a Scam
Impatients Going In
Friday, May 08, 2026
Happy 100th Birthday, Sir David Attenborough
Sir David Attenborough turns 100 today!
It turns out the famous nature documentary-maker gets hate mail from Christians.
Why am I not surprised?
From The Guardian:
“Sir David Attenborough has revealed that he receives hate mail from viewers for failing to credit God in his documentaries. In an interview with this week's Radio Times about his latest documentary, on Charles Darwin and natural selection, the broadcaster said: ‘They tell me to burn in hell and good riddance.’
“Telling the magazine that he was asked why he did not give ‘credit’ to God, Attenborough added: ‘They always mean beautiful things like hummingbirds. I always reply by saying that I think of a little child in east Africa with a worm burrowing through his eyeball. The worm cannot live in any other way, except by burrowing through eyeballs. I find that hard to reconcile with the notion of a divine and benevolent creator.’
“Attenborough went further in his opposition to creationism, saying it was ‘terrible’ when it was taught alongside evolution as an alternative perspective. ‘It's like saying that two and two equals four, but if you wish to believe it, it could also be five ... Evolution is not a theory; it is a fact, every bit as much as the historical fact that William the Conqueror landed in 1066.’”
Thursday, May 07, 2026
Baby Barred Owls In the Nest Box
A Ted Turner Appreciation.
HP Lovecraft on American Republicans
"As for the Republicans — how can one regard seriously a frightened, greedy, nostalgic huddle of tradesmen and lucky idlers who shut their eyes to history and science, steel their emotions against decent human sympathy, cling to sordid and provincial ideals exalting sheer acquisitiveness and condoning artificial hardship for the non-materially-shrewd, dwell smugly and sentimentally in a distorted dream-cosmos of outmoded phrases and principles and attitudes based on the bygone agricultural-handicraft world, and revel in (consciously or unconsciously) mendacious assumptions (such as the notion that real liberty is synonymous with the single detail of unrestricted economic license or that a rational planning of resource-distribution would contravene some vague and mystical 'American heritage'...) utterly contrary to fact and without the slightest foundation in human experience? Intellectually, the Republican idea deserves the tolerance and respect one gives to the dead." —HP Lovecraft in a letter to Donalad Wandrei, November 8, 1936
Wednesday, May 06, 2026
Legal Mass Murder, Every day
“There are many ways to kill. You can stab someone in the guts, take their bread away, not heal someone from disease, put someone in a bad living space, work someone to death, drive them to suicide, lead someone to war etc. Only a few of these are prohibited in our state.” - Bertolt Brecht
Masterpieces of Stick Craftsmanship
Tuesday, May 05, 2026
Eagle Hunter H-R Recruitment Ad
Monday, May 04, 2026
The Fox Did Not Kill a Cow!
I pulled this calf leg and joint out of the entrance to this fox den at this time eight or nine years ago. The mole was at the entrance to another hole nearby.
Sunday, May 03, 2026
A Wee Man Project is Waiting
Saturday, May 02, 2026
Austin Runs His First Marathon!
His time was 3:37, and he's signed up for two more marathons towards the end if the year.
Thursday, April 30, 2026
I Have Passed My “Sell By” Date

King Charles Gives a History Lesson
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
The First Tree Huggers
The first “tree huggers” were 294 men and 69 women belonging to the Bishnois branch of Hinduism, who, in 1730, died while trying to protect the trees in their village from being turned into the raw material for a palace. The villagers literally clung to the trees while being slaughtered by foresters in what is known today as the Khejarli massacre, but their actions worked, leading the Maharaja of Marwar to prohibit the cutting of trees in any Bishnoi village. Today those villages are a wooded oasis in the Thar Desert of western India
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
The Best Mussolini Is a Dead Mussolini
On April 28, 1945, Benito Mussolini and Clara Petacci (his mistress) were removed from a house and driven to the small village of Giulino di Mezzegra on the shores of Lake Como. They were ordered to stand in front of a stone wall at the entrance to Villa Belmonte where both were executed by machine gun fire.
On April 29, 1945, the bodies of Mussolini, Petacci, and three other executed fascists were loaded into a van and moved south to Milan. At 3:00 a.m., the corpses were dumped on the ground in the old Piazzale Loreto.
After being kicked and spat upon, the bodies were hung upside down from the roof of a service station and stoned from below by civilians.














































