You know I like all your photos and I like this subject of dogs and cats very much, so all the time I was reading this post with a smile on my face and feeling a lot of affection and admiration for you.
From the last picture comes out a great story. I thought about that empty armchair, the look of the dog and everything in the scene, lights and shadows included.
So you plant extra plants to feed the snails...Lol... I would expect nothing less from you.
Regards and take care, @jlinaresp.
It's a complex story about those snails. They started appearing years ago in the village and are considered a pest. At first there weren't many so I found out that my wife collected them and put them in bags and then threw them in the rubbish, but I started to feel sorry for the poor critters and started to take the bags of snails and take them to the nearby river and lagoons... But now I've spent a couple of years colonizing a large part of them in a courtyard surrounded by walls and banana plants... They live by consuming the remains of cut banana stalks but do not damage the fruits and stalks of developing plants!... I have also planted dozens of bromeliads propagated from plants in my mother's and my wife's garden in my ‘banana and snail yard’ and (please don't let my wife know) I fertilise them with our dogs' poo (my wife assumes I throw them all in bags in the street toilet, but that's not entirely true)... Anyway, that was kind of like ‘my dad's private backyard doing crazy things’ and now it's totally mine... It's a good place for snails now!... :( I just have to take care to remove the snails that climb up the walls during the night and put them back... I also keep taking a lot of them to rivers and densely vegetated terrain at the base of the mountain... No wonder some people here want to put me in a place to be treated!... hahaha :)):) Thanks for stopping by and appreciating my work @nanixxx friend!!!!
THANKS for visiting and supporting dear friend!... HUGS & BLESSINGS!
!PIZZA
Are you talking about the African snail?
https://www.ngenespanol.com/animales/caracol-gigante-africano-el-molusco-invasor-que-escupe-parasitos/