Lazy L Farms Australian Shepherds

Lazy L Farms Australian Shepherds AKC Breeder of Merit, breeding Australian Shepherds for 25 yrs. we breed for a sound versatile Aussie. Puppy questionnaire


Puppy questionnaire
1.

Have you owned a dog before?
2. Have you owned an Aussie ?
3. Do you have time for a dog?
4. Do you have a fenced yard or play area for a dog?
5. Are you willing to attend training classes with your dog?
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6. What role will your dog play in your life? 7. Does your family want a dog? ​
8. What is your family activity level?

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Our pups are from parents that have undergone all of the health testing for our breed. Parents have hips evaluated by the Orthopedic Foundation for Animals, Eyes checked
clear of hereditary defects by the Canine Eye Foundation and DNA tested for MDR1. We place our puppies carefully and will turn away unsuitable buyers. Our puppies are not merchandise, they are little parts of our heart. The least pup from a well bred litter will grow into a much better dog than the best pup from a poorly bred litter. We are resources for our buyers for the life of the dog. Purchasing a puppy from Lazy L Australian Shepherds is not the end of a transaction, but is the beginning of a relationship. Our goal is a happy healthy puppy placed in a forever home.

05/12/2026
11/04/2025

Thank you

10/31/2025

BREAKING: The Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV enrages MAGA world by urging prominent labor unions from the city to stand up against Donald Trump's fascist immigration crackdowns.

This pope is quickly becoming Trump's greatest nemesis...

“While recognizing that appropriate policies are necessary to keep communities safe, I encourage you to continue to advocate for society to respect the human dignity of the most vulnerable,” Leo told the union officials during their visit to the Vatican.

The meeting comes in the midst of Trump's escalating ICE terror campaign against minority communities and his authoritarian efforts to deploy the National Guard to crush his political enemies in Illinois.

According to Fox 32 Chicago, the city's Cardinal Blase Cupich accompanied the labor delegation to Rome. He said that Leo was "well aware of the situation on the ground" in Chicago. He also stated that the pope has "made clear" that "migrants and the poor must be treated in ways that respect their human dignity."

"I really didn’t have to tell him much at all, because he seemed to have a handle on what was going on," Cupich told the AP.

Cupich further stated that Pope Leo has urged American bishops to "speak with one voice" when standing up for migrants.

"This has to be front and center right now. This is the issue of the day. And we can’t dance around it," he added.

"He wants us to make sure, as bishops, that we speak out on behalf of the undocumented or anybody who’s vulnerable to preserve their dignity," said Cupich. "We all have to remember that we all share a common dignity as human beings."

Earlier this week, Pope Leo released his first major document entitled "I Have Loved You," in which he urged Catholics to combat the structural problems of poverty and to protect and love migrants.

Quoting his predecessor Pope Francis, he wrote that Christians must use four verbs for migrants: "welcome, protect, promote and integrate."

"The Church, like a mother, accompanies those who are walking," wrote Leo. "Where the world sees threats, she sees children; where walls are built, she builds bridges. She knows that her proclamation of the Gospel is credible only when it is translated into gestures of closeness and welcome. And she knows that in every rejected migrant, it is Christ himself who knocks at the door of the community."

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10/31/2025

At 40, bedridden and trapped by her father's tyranny, she wrote "How do I love thee?"—then eloped with the man who inspired it. But if you think Elizabeth Barrett Browning's story is just a romance, you've only heard the greeting card version. Born March 6, 1806, Elizabeth Barrett was extraordinary from the beginning. By age 8, she was reading Homer in original Greek. By 11, she'd written an epic poem. By 14, her father had privately published her work—remarkable for any Victorian girl when most women received almost no education. She seemed destined for greatness. Then, at 15, everything shattered. A spinal injury—possibly from a riding accident, possibly from illness—left Elizabeth in chronic, agonizing pain. For the rest of her life, she would battle partial paralysis, be confined to her room for years, and depend on laudanum to survive each day. Most people would have been crushed. Elizabeth wrote. Despite being bedridden, suffering, and morphine-dependent, she produced poetry that made her one of the most famous writers of the Victorian era. By her late thirties, she was internationally celebrated, considered for Poet Laureate, critically acclaimed. But personally, she was a prisoner. Her father, Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett, was a tyrant who forbade all twelve of his children to marry. Not just Elizabeth. All of them. Anyone who disobeyed was permanently disowned. At age 39, bedridden and financially dependent, Elizabeth seemed trapped forever in her father's house. Then, in January 1845, a letter arrived: "I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett..."Robert Browning—a fellow poet, six years younger, completely captivated by her work. Over the next 20 months, they exchanged 574 letters. They fell in love through words before they properly met. Literary admiration became intellectual partnership became profound devotion. But Elizabeth's father would never allow it. He'd disown her immediately—especially for a younger man with less money and no social position. Elizabeth faced an impossible choice: remain trapped but safe, or risk everything for freedom and love. On September 12, 1846, Elizabeth Barrett, age 40, walked out of her father's house for the last time. She met Robert Browning at a church with only her maid as witness. They married in secret. A week later, they fled to Italy before her family discovered the elopement. Her father never forgave her. He returned every letter she sent, unopened, until his death. He disinherited her completely. She never saw him again. It broke her heart. But she never regretted her choice. In Florence, Italy, Elizabeth transformed. The warm climate improved her health. In 1849, at age 43, she had a son—Robert Wiedemann Barrett Browning, nicknamed "Pen"—a child doctors said she'd never survive carrying. And she wrote some of the most beautiful love poetry in the English language. "Sonnets from the Portuguese" (1850) contained 44 sonnets written during her courtship. The title was deliberately misleading—they weren't translations but intensely personal poems. Robert had called her "my little Portuguese," so she used it as cover. Within that collection is Sonnet 43:"How do I love thee? Let me count the ways..."Those eight words have echoed for over 170 years. Read at weddings worldwide. On greeting cards, in movies, in popular culture. But if Elizabeth Barrett Browning is only remembered for love poetry, we're missing most of her story. Because her pen wasn't just for romance. It was a weapon. "The Cry of the Children" (1843) exposed horrific child labor in British factories—children working 16-hour days in coal mines and mills. The poem was so powerful it contributed to labor reform legislation. "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point" (1848) was a searing anti-slavery poem told from an enslaved woman's perspective. This was radical—and deeply personal. Elizabeth's own family wealth came from plantation slavery. She wrote against her own economic interests because it was right. "Aurora Leigh" (1856)—an 11,000-line verse novel about a woman artist fighting for independence and recognition—addressed r**e, illegitimacy, women's work, and freedom. Topics considered shocking for Victorian literature. It was controversial. It was criticized. And it outsold almost every other poem of its era. Elizabeth Barrett Browning wasn't just writing pretty verses. She was fighting slavery, child labor, women's oppression, and political tyranny through poetry. In an era when women were expected to remain quiet and domestic, she was shouting about injustice. Her marriage to Robert remained a love story for the ages—intellectually matched, mutually supportive, deeply devoted. Their Florence home became a gathering place for writers, artists, and revolutionaries. But her chronic illness never left. On June 29, 1861, at age 55, Elizabeth died in Florence—in Robert's arms, exactly as she would have wanted. Robert never remarried. He was devastated. Her legacy outlived them both. During her lifetime, Elizabeth was possibly more famous than Robert. She influenced Emily Dickinson, who kept her portrait on the wall. After her death, her reputation declined as Victorian sentimentality fell out of fashion. But in the 20th century, feminist scholars recovered her work and recognized what had been overlooked: Elizabeth Barrett Browning was a major poet whose political writing was as important as her love poetry. She lived 55 years. For most of them, she was confined by illness, controlled by a tyrannical father, and limited by Victorian expectations for women. She became one of the greatest poets of her century anyway. She fell in love at 39. Eloped at 40. Had a child at 43. Wrote revolutionary feminist literature in her 50s. All while managing chronic pain and disability. "How do I love thee?" is beautiful. But it's not her only legacy. Her legacy is that she refused to be silenced—by pain, by patriarchy, by poverty, or by prejudice. She wrote love. And she wrote revolution. And both changed the world.

10/30/2025

Thank you Padmā Bhadra

10/25/2025

⚡ LIVE SHOWDOWN GONE WRONG! ⚡

Stephen Miller came to corner Jasmine Crockett — but she turned it into an exposure. Calm, sharp, unstoppable, she ended with the viral line:
“I DON’T ARGUE WITH MONSTERS. I EXPOSE THEM.”
Details in comments👇👇

The studio fell silent. The internet exploded. 🔥

Address

16925 SE 165th Avenue
Weirsdale, FL
32195

Telephone

+13528214405

Website

http://www.gate.net/~llf

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