Just to cheer myself up after another Duna attack on Bonnie – this time in the street when I was on my own – and even more so as people melted away when they realised I could do with some help – just to give myself a laugh, I have added the little wolf on the right hand side.
I’ll take it away after 24 hours so try it out now! It will follow your mouse around the picture and if you click on the Moon……………well, try it and see.
dogs
Two Dogs


lived all their lives in Cornwall

until they moved to Catalunya
when they were 15
and 9
they swam in the Mediterranean
slept in the sunshine
scoured the rocks for discarded sandwiches
with a new companion who shared this interest
One overcame her fear of strangers
and fell in love all over again
And the other found her legs could walk further and further
taking her to places – she’d never been before
If I keep a green bough in my heart then the singing bird will come

One of the walks near here with grass and trees is at Mil Pins.
You have to drive there but it’s only 5 minutes away.

It’s like a park on the edge of the countryside.
Pep remembers camping there with his family when he was young

There are now lots of houses on one side and it’s easy to park right by the entrance

That may sound like a boring fact but believe me in Granollers it is a miracle

The dogs met some new friends.
I love the shape of the black one – the women sitting at the fountain said it was a podenco ibicenco which is a breed from Ibiza. But I can’t see any that are black. I had to stop reading because of the many sites describing how many are found in animal shelters after bad treatment. This one at least was happy and playful and had a wonderful open space to exercise her grace and agility and intelligence.
All was peaceful barring a few growls and snaps
Creepy Crawlies

I am feeling like a total idiot after reading this article on processionary caterpillars.
At the weekend I walked up to the Mirador with my friend, accompanied by Duna and Bonnie.
We were fascinated to see the long lines of caterpillars walking across the path nose to tail and we stopped for some time filming and taking photographs. The dogs were milling around as usual.
It is only now that I realise these are the dreaded pine tree caterpillars which can cause terrible reactions in humans and sometimes shock and death in dogs. They also damage the pine trees and move on when they have eaten their fill and it is time to look for a place to burrow underground and complete the next part of their life cycle. If you or your dog come into contact with the fine hairs which cover their bodies they can cause reactions varying from mild irritation to anyphalactic shock. These hairs fall off their bodies as they process so may be spread around the ground for the dogs to walk across.
Well, I suppose it is a good signal that you can be so close to danger without even knowing about it and sometimes nothing bad happens. As a compulsive worrier I will take heart from this
But I think it will put me off going up to the Miranda until the caterpillar season is over.
Let’s see if this video works – Bonnie is whining because she is bored – not stung!
On the edge

So, just me and the little wolf.
We walked up past the hospital and over the top of the hill to the industrial estate beyond where suddenly Granollers ends and the countryside begins. We were aiming for the Miranda, the little arched folly that overlooks the town.
I love the edges of towns – the place where the urban landscape stops and the country begins. Sometimes it isn’t easy to spot and you find yourself out in nature without having passed consciously over the border. I used to look for it when I lived in London every time I drove out of the city. But it didn’t matter what direction I took, I never saw the edge of London.
Granollers is different and the edges are as clear as if they were city walls. The tarmac stops, a rough lane leads past olive groves. A stream trickles down through piles of rubbish and after you jump across, you are in a newly ploughed field
We found this table and chairs beside a fire pit – would be a good place to come in the evening and watch the light change.
The almond blossom is in full bloom and smells of honey.
Here is the tree that grows by the railway station – glorious in its beauty in spite of the mulching of plastic cups and tin cans that surround it.
Today we walked through fields then followed a track that went under the main road, the busy artery that circles the town I think. Above the thunder of lorries and cars, never stopping. We passed beneath as if in another time and place, enfolded in the silence of the country lane and the peace of walking in nature with a beautiful dog companion. Up to the Miranda d’en Puntes.