White Dog was thrilled. "After all these years, a graduate," she said excitedly. "For dog's sake momma, give that smart girl her trade."
White Dog learned very early as a pup to be an entrepreneur. If she had something she should not have we would "trade" whatever it was for a treat. It did not take WD long to figure out that sticks were a free commodity in the yard...and that momma hated shredded stick bits in the house where they could be stepped on.
WD first went in the direction of bringing in bigger and bigger sticks to trade, often using brilliant problem-solving skills to get the near-branches through the doggie door. Then it struck her: It was the same treat no matter how big the stick traded was.
She further figured out she could increase her profits with very little additional work. Drag the same big stick to the door, she reasoned, but instead leave it outside on the deck and chew off a tiny twig at a time to bring in for a treat. One branch became an all-day supply of on demand treat trades.
White Dog has attempted to share this knowledge with every member of the White Dog Army since Quinn but none ever was quite as interested in the White Dog School of Easy Marketing as she hoped. The Little White Dog of My Heart had just about given up that "trading" would be a legacy lesson...until today:
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