🌈Percy Fezziwig ❤️Billy & 🤍Flossie

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🌈Percy Fezziwig ❤️Billy & 🤍Flossie banner
🌈Percy Fezziwig ❤️Billy & 🤍Flossie

🌈Percy Fezziwig ❤️Billy & 🤍Flossie

@PFezzwig

Billy Sunshine & little Flossie have taken over from the late great Percy Fezziwig. What could possibly go wrong? 😃🐾💕

County Durham UK Katılım Eylül 2017
3.7K Takip Edilen5.1K Takipçiler
Adele and Rex (former staff to Monty🌈& Jilly🌈)
OMG I was in the garage and threw Rex’s ball outside. Didn’t know he was on the wooden bench, he shot off and must have caught his leg, took off a lump of fur, right down to the skin. Thankfully nothing seems broken or sprained. I feel so guilty 🥺
Adele and Rex (former staff to Monty🌈& Jilly🌈) tweet media
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Pebble PR Terrier
Pebble PR Terrier@PebbleTerrier·
Happy burfday @BorderJoss ! Hope you haz a splendiferous day with lots of walks, games of ballee an cuddles 🎉🎉🎉
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BeMoreBob
BeMoreBob@bemorebob2·
Is my biffday and dad asked what I wanted to do, and me, a Bob, said I wanted to play ballee - so here we are 😃🧡 Frow it dad!!!
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Joss Naylor (the dog) CBE OBE
We have blue tits nesting just outside the kitchen and every morning they provide entertainment for mum as they do acrobatics by the window!
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A LOVE SUPREME
A LOVE SUPREME@ALS_Fanzine·
IVOR BROADIS: IN MEMORIAM Ivor Broadis died on this day in 2019, at the age of 96. Unitil his death, he had been the oldest surviving England international footballer. He was also the first manager to transfer himself to another club! Broadis, who was born in Poplar, London, was posted to Crosby-On-Eden, Cumbria towards the end of World War Two. As well as his sporting achievements, Broadis was also recognised for his 500 flying hours during the war. He helped return hundreds of troops home to Britain in his role as a navigator. During the war, he featured for Tottenham Hotspur as an amateur. Tottenham is the reason he's known as Ivor, his legal name is actually Ivan but the club misread his name as Ivor and it became his alias. When Carlisle heard how close he was, they offered him the player-manager role despite Broadis being just 23. Of living so far up north, the forward said: "Until after the war I'd never been so far north in my life, I thought I'd need a dog team to get up here”. A player-manager was a common role, but at 23 Broadis remains the youngest ever person to have the job. In 1949, he became the first manager to transfer himself to another club when Sunderland paid £18,000 for his services. The Black Cats were known as the “Bank of England Club” at the time due to their huge spending power and influence in the transfer market. Even after signing for Sunderland, Broadis lived in Carlisle and actually kept training with his former club, under new manager and future Liverpool legend Bill Shankly! Alongside Sunderland stars such as Len Shackleton, Dickie Davis, Willie Watson and Trevor Ford, Broadis scored 27 times in red and white in 84 games. Broadis’ highest ever league finish came with Sunderland, who finished second in 1950. The forward was disappointed with the season though, claiming: "The sad thing about that Sunderland side was that we should have won the league in 1950. They played me at centre-forward against a relegated Man City with three or four games to go and we lost. We finished third in the end. We should have won the league that year, it would have made such a difference." In 1951, after impressing on Wearside for several seasons, Broadis joined newly-promoted Manchester City. It was during his time in Manchester where the forward earned his first England cap, as well as writing his first newspaper column as he began the switch to becoming a journalist. He earned 14 caps and scored eight goals for England between 1951 and 1954. Broadis enjoyed a goal against Scotland, netting a brace against the Tartan Army in the 1952/53 British Home Championship and scoring another time in the 53/54 edition of the same competition against our northern neighbours. The inside forward twice played in front of crowds in surplus of 130,000 at Hampden Park but the highlight of his international career would probably have to be when he became the first England national team player to score twice in one game at a World Cup, that came in 1954 in a 4-4 draw versus Belgium. He spend a few years playing for the Mags, winning one FA Cup in 1955, before soon returning to Carlisle for a second spell. He eventually ended his career in Scotland, playing for Queen of the South until 1960. After retirement, he enjoyed a 45-year career as a sports journalist, and was awarded the Freedom of the City of Carlisle in 2018.
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Bertie Lakeland
Bertie Lakeland@bertie_lakeland·
Oh my word I’m a very very proud Lakeland Terrier …… Just look at me on the cover of the Lakelander Magazine from the United Stated Lakeland Terrier Club ❤️❤️❤️
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Bertie Lakeland
Bertie Lakeland@bertie_lakeland·
When I was no bigger than a shoe and a little bit poddgy ❤️❤️
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WalterDog ☘️
WalterDog ☘️@WalterofWexford·
Not sure why Mum is agreeing with that gentleman on #crufts2026 who says that Cairn Terriers are difficult to train and can be stubborn 😳. Moi? I am a 😇.
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WalterDog ☘️
WalterDog ☘️@WalterofWexford·
Good Morning Everyone, hope you have a great day 👋👋😃😃
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