Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Pedicure Time

November 18, 2008

I have put this of for too long and both Willow and Nash have long toenails.  This is not one of their favorite activities yet still we can manage without too much distress.  Willow will lay down and let me tip her nails, muscles tense and ready to escape once I let her go.  She grits her teeth and anticipates the pain of cutting too close.  Nash on the other hand, I tie him to the doorknob.   Nail cutting is more of a game for him; he tries to mouth my hands and chews his feet when I try to cut in the prone position.  A short leash on the doorknob works.  I am reminded of a furrier as I move from toe to toe.  A biscuit on the ground out of reach keeps him preoccupied and focused.    I try to make nail clipping a monthly activity to keep the quick short where I usually have to only tip the nail instead of surgically remove have of it for being too long. 

 

Nash’s Turn

November 18, 2008

 

Nash had his turn at the vets on this day.  A trip to the holistic vet was made this evening to get supplements for his intestinal tract. Nash is such a goofy, happy dog. 

 

Willow wasn’t sure at first if she was going to get a needle on this trip.  I tried to explain it wasn’t her turn and she has a break for a while – at least another week.  Her lymphoma is in remission, but her chemo treatments continue, three more sessions to go.  I have no idea where the money is going to come from after great support from friends, family and the yard sale I almost feel the well is tapped.  The usual winter employment will help, I continue to get a random additional massage clients.  We can do this.  We will be OK.  I know there are angels out there watching over us.  I do love my dogs . . .

Http//:willow.chipin.com/willow

 

When two dogs become one.  . . .

Cool weather Bounce

November 17, 2008

Now that the leaves have fallen and the chill settles in, at least today, Nash and Willow both have a spring in their step.  Season changes bring on an element of excitement in the dogs.  Nash is obsessed with digging holes as large as burrows to capture the chipmunks. I have markers around the property to warn of unsuspecting divots in the ground.  What’s the use to fill them in, he just digs the hole again.  Besides, I like to watch his fevered focus as he winds down into the earth.   I too get sucked into his mindset and get lost in the moment. I wonder what does he smell, what must it be like to grab a hunk of earth between the jaws and gnarl it loose.   Exaggerated scent of the earth lodged in nostrils, teeth and throat must be uncomfortable, exciting, and powerful.  Nash snorts, hacks, spits and coughs to clear his air passages and dives back into the hole.  Dig, dig, dig. . .   grab, yank, gnarl, hack, spit, snort, sniff . . .  dig, dig, dig.  dirt flees to safety out between his legs to land loose and fluffy.  Dirt once compounded and packed is now free to breath and watch the sky.  My yellow dog becomes half chocolate and half yellow.  I cherish these little moments, how ever destructive they may be, they are only fleeting and lend to such pleasure and happiness.

A New Day

October 13, 2008

Work was the last thing I wanted to do that day, especially after being up until 3:30 AM helping Theia deliver her puppies.  Adrenaline was still pulsing through my veins and most everyone at the vet office was aware Theia was do any day.  I don’t recall if I arrive late or on time for work at 8:00 AM,  I recall being in a zombie state and wishing the day over soon.  The bike ride to work was an awakening and helped get the blood pumping enough to function most of the morning as well as the excitement of telling everyone of the new arrivals.  After feeding and cleaning the indoor and outdoor kennel, it was time to ‘”air” the patients to let them stretch their legs and relieve their bladders.  Sitting down on the back steps in the kennel yard, the stench of urine wafting in the air from previous dogs.  Early morning dew exaggerated the pungent scent.  The concrete under my rump was cold and rough to the hands touch.  There I sat, slumped down on the course concrete monument to get a moments rest.  I stood to go inside and looked up at the tree line. On the distant skyline was faint rainbow settling in behind the sugar maples.  Morning mist hung from the sky and mingled with suns rays to create this picturesque scene.  I love this town I thought and I love this day. Images of Theia and her puppies whirled in my mind as I embraced the rainbow bridging worlds beyond my comprehension. This rainbow’s pot of gold rested at my Sister’s .  How appropriate and simple, in that moment life couldn’t have been more perfect as yet again mother nature so appropriately defined another chapter.

The Whelp

October 11, 2008

   

The Whelp

      Early spring, March, and Theia was bred to Magnum; two virgin creatures that rather have company in the “love pen” than not.  Neither dog would react to the other if I were not physically inside the ten foot by eight-foot dog pen to watch over the breeding. The outdoor pen was built for Theia to use during puppy-hood, since maturity and now long abandon the woods, grasses and weeds stacked their claim however, and it was repaired and cleared out for the breeding and dubbed the “love pen”. 

     I was as virgin about breeding dogs as the dogs were about mating. A week of estimating the timing,   guidance from friends at the vets we were successful.  Sixty-three days later Theia whelped a littler of nine healthy, sturdy, yellow Labrador retrievers all of whom resembled little piglets more than puppies with their pushed in bright pink noses, pudgy bodies, tiny otter tails and little grunting noises.  Willow was the ninth pup delivered at 3:17 AM on May 30, 1996.  She was still unclaimed and unnamed at that point.

        For several anxious hours, she paced outside the house in an attempt to nest under bushes.  I escorted her to the whelp box where she began to give birth

      Theia belongs to my sister.  At the time she had two children ages six and eight year old who wanted to watch the event, but when the evening wore on the kids began to fall asleep slouched on the couch.  My sister even dozed, finally around 11:30 PM the first pup arrived. 

     I woke my sister and the two of us cooed and stroked Theia as she let nature take its coarse.  The first, a male, was all yellow and even before the he was cleaned and suckling the second began to arrive.    

     “They all look the same, they’re all yellow.”  My sister muttered as she slung a last child over her shoulder and disappeared to their beds.   

    Alone with Theia now and I hoped the process would go smoothly and she would handle the situation.  Every fifteen to twenty minutes she whelped a puppy until sleep over came us both around 2:15 AM.  Feeling her belly before dozing off, I sensed there was one more puppy waiting to come into this world and finally an hour later she made her appearance.  It took a while for Theia to clean the sack off the pups face and time passed, I stepped in to help, but clearly this one wasn’t breathing yet.  Theia worked diligently licking the pup and gently blowing into her miniature nostrils as she did.  I was struck by this instinctive attempt to resuscitate, Theia new this puppy wasn’t breathing, she was healthy and required air and worked until successful.  The gently puffs she delivered with each lick were enough to get the pup breathing on her own.  There was a brief moment of panic in my heart as I thought this ninth puppy was not going to survive as she began to turn just slightly in color. 

         Once cleaned up and breathing on her own the ninth and last puppy born instinctively began to search for sustenance.  I had to complete the clean process since Theia was too exhausted to lift her head after successfully getting the pup to breath.  Her job was completed.  Squirming across the sheet, struggling in the darkness and driven by instinct, the last puppy edged closer to my armpit.  Marveled by her strength, beauty and perfectly formed miniature canine features, I savored this moment.  The nudging in my armpit tickled, eventually picking her up, I plugged her into a nipple on Theia’s belly.  I liked this little one, seconds old and we already had a soul touching moment.  Not wanting to make any hasty decisions, there were after all two other female from which to choose.  I pushed the encounter out of mind.  Sleep over came us all, canines and human.  In silence, a new journey was beginning to unfold. 

The Burial and the Birth

October 8, 2008

The Burial and the Birth

        On the day my father was buried family and friends gathered at the Nut Plains cemetery in a torrent of wind and rain.  Most of the day had been over cast and drizzling, but when the time came for the ceremonial gathering the skies began to gush and the wind blew thrashing tree limbs.  Down at Sachem Head the Long Island Sound turned murkier than usual casting an eerie dusk illuminating glow.  Waves crashed into shore sending spay ten to twelve feet inland, nearly washing out the beachfront road.  The following day was brilliantly calm, warm and sunny.  Strangely, the entire Bloody Cove beach had been rearranged.  Once sandy from end to end it became rocky rubble on one end and a sand dune at the other.  The explosive storm waters completely rearranged the landscape overnight.  Was this act of nature pure coincidence, what was mother nature trying to say.  I thought back five months, the weather once again landed its voice; only this time it marked the arrival of great soul.  

 

MGW

www.freewebs.com/cacchaslabradors

Caccha (Kasha)

October 6, 2008

 

   Caccha 

 

(Kasha)

 

       The idea of dog ownership was a fantastic responsibility for a ten-year-old girl in a large family.   My Sister’s dog, Daemien, had a litter of puppies in our barn and I wanted one, parental combinability was the obstacle.

     To be heard over the voices and antics of older adolescence siblings, most of who male, required a distinctive creative effort.  There was no shortage of teenage male hormone wafting throughout the hallways.  The adolescent male posturing was a ritual, as one of my brother, of which I have four, would burst into the house after a Soccer game full of joust and holler a cryptic message to my other two brother’s, “Yak-a-mo”.  A duet could be heard in response with just as much enthusiasm, “yak-a-mo”.  Inevitability the first real words out of soccer brother’s mouth were “Did anyone call?” Which actually meant, “Did any girls call?”  Mystified and in disbelief when the answer was – NO. 

          Piles of worn out Nike running shoes, soccer cleats, and dress shoes defied their holding place, scattered here and there across the floor as items for trippage.  Earth Wind and Fire cranked on the turntable, its harmonic beat boomed over homemade speakers strategically place upstairs and down.  Four brother’s and a sister all of whom to look up too and emulate, or not, came and went in deliberate missions.  Doors opened and closed, and footsteps swiftly padded over floorboards. 

     The household pets consisted of two cats, three dogs, and a cockatiel named Jericho who domineered the sunroom and whom had a crush on Hestia the torishell cat, a notorious bird hunter.  No one, not canine or human could enter the sunroom without a hiss and charged by the four-inch gray-feathered fowl.  Jericho was allowed to fly free, his cage door open allowed for a return to roost at the end of the day.  It was amazing how the two species, cat and bird, connected with one another.  Hestia, virtually ignored her loyal guard.

     Miss Pig, and her seventeen suckling piglets that frequently squeezed through the sheep fencing to scour the yard for munchies with their firm, rubberized snouts to leave perfect miniature ruts occupied the barn.

      This possibility of personal ownership came the day my sister’s dog, Daemian, had a litter of ten puppies.  It took some convincing (I still have the note), but with eloquently phrased sentences and a smile, I managed to talk my parents letting have a puppy. Exactly what the household could use, another dog and a pooping, peeing, disobedient puppy at that.  After painfully writing up my terms of care, my parents agreed to let me choose a puppy.  My mother shared her wisdom on how to pick the right one.  The key she said was to let the puppy choose me. 

     Down to the barn I went and there I sat in the straw laden stall, among must, mildew, spider webs and ten puppies. There were five longhaired and five short haired, five were female and five male.  A female was the hearts desire.  A momentous occasion in life and still to this day it is easy to recall the ecstatic delight when Caccha presented herself to her young mistress. 

    

     Caccha became my princess, spoiled, pampered with a tendency for the dramatic.  All she wanted was to be by my side.  She brought happiness and warmth wherever she went and gave it to whomever she met.  A devious, proud and affectionate little creature, sitting tall with her head held high, ears cocked, watching, listening to every motion in her world.  It seemed she would live forever and in my heart, she does.  Photographs capture her in various phases of life and places spark memories.  From the seashores of Maine, to the lakes and winters of New Hampshire, to the long travels in between she was always. Caccha became what I had dreamed someone to cherish and to whom I could talk to, walk with, something to hold and make me feel extra special.  She watched my every move and I watched hers.  We had a special link that only we shared.  A special way of communicating, a special way of loving, No one will ever know what that link was or how it felt, except for she and I.  That is what made us for each other.  She was the true description of love and affection and that is all she ever wanted, so simple and easy to share. 

   

     She Departed from this world, not by her own will, and leaves a space that no one could ever possibly fill.  Until eight years later after Caccha’s death, at the age of twelve and half, on a spring morning in May. When eight weeks later I would be chosen again this time by a Labrador retriever puppy eventually to be named Caccha’s Willow of Theia – Willow.

 

MGW

The Dog

October 5, 2008

The Dog

  The dog quietly awakens the human soul.  It is a sumptuous discovery when the private and discrete connection subtly evolves between the two species.  The four-legged creature in need of sustenance, exercise, and grooming becomes a shadow, which quietly follows from room to room, rides in the back seat of the car, and watches every move with vigilant eyes.  While walks through woods, down a street, and everyday puttering become more vivid with the essence of life.  The human senses evolve as a new perspective develops and a letting go occurs.  A connection is made while each species learns the others language and a common means of communication are gradually established.  Not one merely of words, but involving all the senses.  It is complete, reliable and with out questions convincing.  Simple eye movements, vocal tones, and body movements become the basis of this language. 

     After Caccha’s death, my soul gradually fell dormant and life’s luster faded until eight years later when a brilliant, beautiful yellow ball of fur was delivered into this world.  At which time the thunderous clouds, pelting rain and blustering winds gave way to an early dawn displaying life’s infancy and a glorious rainbow.  There in the early hours of that rainy spring morning a breath of life was taken awaking two souls who would, unknowingly, reconnect.

Photos on website: www.freewebs.com/cacchaslabradors

MGW

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October 5, 2008

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