Showing posts with label Valentine's Day Neck Collars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valentine's Day Neck Collars. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Lamb Love Loaf-A Valentine's Day Treat



"To get the full value of joy you must have someone to divide it with."
Mark Twain


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Oh, Valentine's Day.  Is there a more complicated holiday out there?  For every happily united couple there is a person cursing the sea of roses, cards, and heart shaped balloons.  So is Valentine's Day a holiday really invented by the card companies in an effort to unload heart shaped merchandise?  We at Urban Hounds decided to investigate and it turns out the stories describing the origins of Valentine's Day are nearly as confusing as love itself.  Here is what we found out:


Part One: Saint Valentine





The Catholic church has several legends about saints named Valentine.  One of most poplar ones says that Valentine was a priest in ancient Rome, a sort of third century  Gavin Newsom.  When the emperor outlawed marriage for young men, feeling it would make them better soldiers if they had no wives or children, Valentine continued to perform marriages and was martyred because of it.


Part Two: Pagan Festival Co-opted by the Early Christians:






In ancient Rome February was traditionally the month of  fertility celebrations dedicated to the Roman God Faunus.  During the festival a goat, and yikes a dog!, would be sacrificed and Roman men would go about slapping young women with the bloody goats hide in an effort to make them more fertile.  How this helped anyone in the romance department is a bit beyond us.   Anyway, the early Christians new the Roman's didn't want to give up their goat hide slapping sex festival so they co-opted it making it about the St. Valentine story and a purer, less animalistic version of love.  


Part Three:  The Comercialism of Romance and the start of Valentine's Day Cards





In the 17th century it was already popular for people to exchange hand made cards on Valentine's Day as tokens of affection.  In the 1840s a clever woman named,  Esther A Howland, saw the market for store bought Valentines and began mass producing them in America.  Her idea certainly caught on and today over a billion Valentine's Cards are purchased in America each year. 




Dogs are not much for cards.  


Can you eat this?






so how do you honor the furry love of your life?  The one who is always there for you and with whom you likely share a simple love filled relationship blissfully void of the myriad complications in human partnerships.  Food is the obvious answer.  So this year mom showed her appreciation by whipping us up something special:  


Lamb Love Loaf


The nutritious ingredients




1 1lb ground lamb (lamb is fatty so you can substitute ground turkey if you wish but the hounds simply LOVE lamb so it seems an appropriate choice for the holiday)
1 sweet potato baked in the microwave (10 min on high)
1 apple diced
5 tbsp rolled oats
2 tbsp wheat germ (optional)
1 egg, beaten
1 tsp cinnamon (cinnamon is a natural anti-inflamatory making it a good choice for dogs with arthritis and it also helps to regulate blood sugar)


Preheat the oven to 350 and stir all of the ingredients together in a large bowl. Line an 8 inch square baking pan with foil and lightly grease the foil.  Spoon the lamb mixture into the pan and bake for one hour.   Serve to your furry special some ones!









Monday, February 13, 2012

Monday Mischeif-Easy Knitted Valentine's Day Dog Collars



Mom knitted us up some super easy Valentine's Day Collars.  They only take about an hour or less to make.  This would be a good first project for someone just starting out in knitting.  For the small dogs I cast on about 40 stitches of worsted weight yarn (the collars will be stretchy so the size is forgiving) on a size 4 40 inch circular needle.  For the large dogs I cast on about 90 stitches  Then I divided the stitches and joined in the round for magic loop.


I knitted in 2 by 2 rib (knit 2 purl 2) until the collars where the width I wanted then I bound off in the pattern.  That's it!  I sewed some little pink heart buttons on with the left over yarn and they were done.


One ball of Knit Picks worsted weight yarn in Gypsy was more then enough for five collars.