We have managed to get Alonso back into the hands of his owners. For the moment, at least π
He went outside, inspected their car, then snuck past me back into the house when I was talking to his owner and had to be retrieved.
Bed and Breakfast are two of Alonso's favorite things.
π π₯
Alonso took himself home this afternoon after spending two days and nights here.
We watched him wander off into the woods while we were stacking firewood. He paused, as he always does, to look back at us to see if we were going to follow, then trotted off on his own. His owner texted us a bit later to say he was home safe.
Alonso seems to be getting the idea that he can come and go between the two houses as he pleases. πΆ
Just a short visit from our wee hero today. πΆ
Alonso ran over to our field entrance by the road to try to lure us into taking him on his favorite walk to the lac. Unfortunately he chose the exact moment that his owner was driving past so he was picked up and taken home.
Chatted with Alonso's owner for a bit, who wanted to check we still had enough food for the boy, and about the various things he likes to eat that he's not supposed to.This could be the subject of an entire Duolingo unit.
Alonso's "short visit" yesterday turned into a sleepover, as he returned a few hours after dark with a WUFF at the door. πΆ
We let him in to supervise dinner and texted his owners to let them know he was safe.
I woke up this morning to a familiar WUFF and leapt out of bed to let Alonso in, then remembered he was already here.
Sometimes he barks in his sleep.
Me, talking to Alonso:

Alonso returned home of his own accord. We took him out to the woods and he decided to pay home a visit. He'd been here for three days and nights straight (again).
He's still not our dog, but if Alonso had to declare a residence for tax purposes it could go either way.
We were outside for a little too long in the cold, so Alonso went home for a visit. Someone must have been there because he didn't immediately come back.
That was 3 hours ago and it's getting dark, so I just put his blankets etc. away. As soon as I'd done this, of course, he returned.
WUFF! πΆ
Just in time for our next coding session.
When our neighbours go away, we watch their house. A day or so after they return we usually find a present on our doorstep. This is usually some sort of nice French food they brought back with them: pΓ’te etc. π
This time, they left us some delightful home-baked gingerbread they made just for us.
Alonso isn't allowed to have any, but he gets VERY excited by the smell.
He KNEW I'd eaten one. He sniffed my breath, then carefully checked my jumper for crumbs.
Alonso was collected just before dinner by his keepers. He wasn't very happy about this.
He returned half an hour later.
Alonso was collected by his owners and is spending a night at "home".
He had been here since dawn on Monday - four nights in a row (a new record).
His owners did collect him on Tuesday evening, but Alonso convinced them on arriving home that he needed a pee, and immediately escaped back here.
Ridiculous boy. πΆ
January stats are in!
Alonso visited every day in Jan except for the 1st, 4th, 11th and 25th. That's, um, 27 out of 31 days.
Alonso has been sleeping here with increased frequency, setting a new record of 4 nights in a row.
On any given day there was an 87% chance of an Alonso visit, with a 58% chance of him staying the night.
The longest time between visits was 43.5 hours and his record fastest for being collected by his owners and returning here was 34 minutes.
We do not have a dog πΆ
When Alonso was collected last night his owner said their young daughter has been asking where he is.
Β«Ou est Titi ?Β»
Titi is the nickname they usually call Alonso. It means something like "clever, mischievous boy" which fits. πΆ
Apparently he's been making quite a fuss when he's at home, whining and pretending he needs to pee so they'll let him out and he can come back here.
Clever, mischievous boy indeed π
Alonso likes sleeping across my lap with his head on my arm while I work. If I'm typing too loudly he has started putting his paw over my wrist and pushing downwards to make it harder to type.
πΆ πΎ β¨οΈ
After breakfast the sun came out and Alonso sat on the front step in the sun, occasionally growling or barking at something invisible to us. I think he's on guard. Guarding us from what? I don't know, but he's doing a Very Important job.
βοΈ πΆ
After another 3 days and nights here, Alonso was taken home yesterday.
Overnight the winds from Storm Nils gave this place a battering. I woke up at just after 4am, convinced I'd heard a bark at the door. I got up to check, but I must have dreamt it so I went back to bed. I knew he'd be hating this storm.
Alonso actually arrived just after dawn, soaked, muddy, and whimpering. He was so worked up he retched a couple of times. Poor boy!
Took a while to get him dry and calm again. He's asleep on my lap now.
I think he deserves a cooked breakfast after that.
πΆ π©οΈ
Alonso wandered off home yesterday when we took him to the woods. He always looks back to see if we're going to follow, before trotting off on his own.
Today it has been snowing. This has never stopped him before. We're keeping an ear out.
πΆ π¨οΈ
I sat down to do some coding, thinking how unusual it is to do this without Alonso (he went home yesterday).
I put my headphone on and 8 minutes later he's here. π π§ πΆ
Back to business as usual.
I opened the door to let Alonso outside.
He stood in the doorway, carefully considered the pouring rain for a while, barked loudly at the weather, and turned and went back inside.
I'll take that as a "no".
π§οΈ
Alonso's owners collected him on Friday afternoon and dropped off some more food for him.
He was gone all weekend, which felt very strange. We've really become used to his constant presence and involvement in everything we do.
But, Alonso is here now, so normality can return. I think we might do some multicast.
@arichtman Correct. Few networks support multicast routing natively. Some academic networks like @geant do.
That's what the overlay is for. The overlay is what makes multicast work across the Internet so we can use it for more interesting applications.
We'll be writing more about this soon. Watch this space! Well, watch @librecast anyway. π
@arichtman There are various ways to tunnel manually, but unfortunately nothing that does what we need.
IPv6 multicast has 2ΒΉΒΉΒ² bits for group addressing, but that no longer matters as the overlay is not using an IP protocol - IP is fundamentally unicast so we don't use that in our overlay.
Easiest to think of librecast as another layer - layer 3Β½ π