All these sweet, precious fur babies are so adorable! I love Fred petting Coco, too cute!
And the goat! I need to borrow for my back yard! It never gets mowed in time, plenty of food there! Haha. And the kids! Just !!!
The kitten with his claws all stuck out is tooooo adorable. The adorable kitty standing up and saying hi, and Buster's face, oh that face! I have to stop gushing now or I'll have pages. I want to comment on every single one. I might come back and catch up and do it though before it's all over. Just fair warning.
All of them stole my heart, I want to come visit everybody now.
I have below my beloved Solomon. We adopted him from a rescue facility who rescues dogs from euthanasia lists. Our sweet baby was scheduled to be put to sleep! I can't imagine it. I will talk way too much about him. He is American Staffordshire, I think. No hearing issues, perfect health. Often whites have hearing issues.
Also we have Henry- he is our black long hair kitty that Rowan, my daughter, rescued from the mall parking lot when he was no bigger than the palm of her hand. He was only a tiny ball of black *POOF* then. Now, he is a huge ball of black *POOF*.
The other picture has four of the babies scrunched in it. I titled this picture 'What product photography in my house Really looks Like". Lilly is the tiny little dark calico, Frodo is the grey cat, and I still have to come back and post a shot of our polydactyl, Liberty. She's our mean little six-toed kitty. She keeps everybody else in line.
I've also included Sheldon the box turtle, because we still kind of feel like he is 'ours'. He got lawn mower damage and the Boyfriend was extremely upset about it, so he doggedly called around until he found a wildlife shelter that would take the turtle in and try to care for it. He had a chunk clipped off his shell an inch and a half or so around, and really deep. He hung in there the few days we kept him, and we drove the turtle to Louisville . He is still so far okay and should make it as long as he is in captivity. His story is *supposed* to air on National Geographic this fall in order to educate people on what to do when they find injured wildlife. Solomon was also with us and we hope his appearance will also help send a message throughout the animal shelter community that euthanasia rescues really can come a long way--from death's table to national TV.