Yesterday Dog went on her annual trip to the grooming parlour. She gets a grade 7 chop in early summer to help her cope with the heat. (Naturally, this signals the end of summer). One minute she is stretched out on the patio, snoring, looking like a holidaymaker in the Costa Del Sol who has bagged a sunbed and won't give it up. The next she heads panting into the border, where not content with a shady patch, she tries to excavate a dog-shaped hole to cool off in. It is possibly no coincidence that two of our neighbours are trying to move house, since the oft-repeated scream of 'Get off the bloody plants, Dog!' is not conducive to an afternoon's nap in the garden.
Anyway, I assumed that her appointment would take most of the day and planned my day accordingly. However, the memory of last year's session obviously still shone too glaringly bright for the grooming lady, as she told me that dog would be ready by lunchtime. Dog smirked, because she obviously has rather fonder memories of the prolonged barking battle with the dryer - a battle that Dog continued for two hours after the dryer had been abandoned and she had been locked in a kennel awaiting collection. When I collected her, the staff looked wan and traumatised, and little bubbles containing the words "Never again" and "Once a year is a visit too soon" floated around their heads.
So I abandoned my morning's plans and went to a nearby garden centre. It has a rather good cafė - so good that sitting in it is like watching a procession to Lourdes. A stream of elderly, disabled, and obese people came in for the big breakfast. And it was big: 2 sausages, 2 eggs, 2 bacon, 2 hash browns, 2 slices toast and marmalade, tomatoes, beans and mushrooms for £5.80. How people who clearly live sedentary lifestyles can tuck that away is nothing short of a miracle.
I only intended to get a coffee - it was only 10am. But Greed grabbed me by the ears, marched me to the food counter, and forced my lips to say 'a bacon and egg roll, please'. I've never tried one before. I can't think why not. It was delicious. But next time, I will remember not to bite carelessly into an egg yolk. Not content with covering my chin and T shirt with a yellow stain, it inexplicably managed to glue my plate to the table top. So that when I balanced my cup on the plate to take it to the tray collection area, the subsequent yank to remove the plate sent the remnants of black coffee onto the egg yolk stains.
Add to this tableau some compost from the plants I bought. So when I collected Dog I looked like a Jackson Pollock-obsessed toddler. Dog was sulky when we were reunited. This might have been because the parlour wouldn't let her meet the dryer. Or it might have been due to the fact that instead of looking like a border collie, she now looks like a Pharoah Hound with a tail wig (or a rat according to my husband). Or it might simply have been a deep-felt grievance that I, rather than she, would have benefited the most from a grooming whilst she would have had no problem tackling a big breakfast.











