Studied indifference

Back before my mother died, her little dog Lucy almost always found a place on Mother’s furniture if not on her lap. Since we inherited Lucy we haven’t let her on our sofa much, but occasionally Leah lets her up. She likes to bury her head under a pillow like this:

lucy hides her head

Smokey the cat also likes to jump up on the sofa between Leah and me. He does a little nesting, usually testing how soft my leg is, and then settles in lying as close as he can to me. Odd, since Leah is the cat person and I’m the dog person. I do usually give him an ear massage, and he turns his purr machine up to 11.

Smokey and the rest of our cats get along reasonably well with the dogs if their paths happen to cross, but they usually retreat pretty quickly when the dogs get too nosy. The other night Smokey and Lucy found a way for both of them to get their full sofa time.

lucy and smokey 2They ignored each other.

 

Dogs in coats

It was quite cold here Thursday night, especially for mid-November. The low up on the mountain Friday morning was 23 F. It had not warmed much by the time I took the dogs out for their morning walk. Lucy, who is small and shivers if she sees the refrigerator door open, wore her fleece-lined coat. Even Zeke, who is too big a galoot to notice things like cold weather, wore his coat.

dogs in coats

It was not only cold, it was windy. Lucy was shivering from the very start, so we walked until Zeke did his business, and then turned around. This was the first time I can remember that we didn’t complete our morning walk once we had started.

Lucy makes a distinction between her raincoat and her fleece coat. She acts like she is paralyzed when we put her raincoat on, but I think she likes her fleece coat. She would probably like to wear it all the time.

Bella, the second Doberman

Zoe’s disappearance has made me think about my Doberman Sheba’s disappearance, and that has made me think about the long search for her that eventually resulted in my finding my second Doberman, Bella.

I said in my post about Sheba that I read the lost-and-found section of the Huntsville newspaper for a year after Sheba disappeared. It was a year before a Doberman appeared. It was a female with uncropped ears and a docked tail, a description that fit Sheba but also fit many other Dobies. I was certain it couldn’t be Sheba, but I had to look anyway.

And, of course, it was not Sheba. It was a Doberman that had appeared at a family’s house and stayed, probably because they had dogs in their fenced back yard. They wouldn’t let the Doberman into their back yard, and they said if no one claimed her in the next few days, they would take her to the pound. I said if no one claimed her, I would take her. And that’s how I ended up with my second Doberman.

There was no way to know her name, so I called her Bella. She jumped up into my truck and we went home. Bella was mature, and I think she had led a hard life. She showed signs of having had puppies. Every bony point on her body had calluses. It was obvious that she had spent a lot of time on a hard surface. I imagined that she had been bred, probably more than once, and that she spent her life in a kennel with a concrete floor. In her new life, she had a soft bed next to the wood-burning stove in the living room. No more hard surfaces for the rest of her life.

Right after I got her I tried to train her to her name by sitting next to her every evening petting her gently and saying her name over and over. I think that kind of attention was new to her.

Bella seemed to settle in pretty quickly. As with the dogs that came before, she went everywhere with me. When I first got her and was trying to acclimate her to her new life, I took her in to work with me when I had to stay late. She had an unfortunate problem with gas at first, so she was not popular at work. I eventually found a dog food that didn’t contain soy, and that seemed to resolve the issue. However, I think her digestive problems were a sign.

Bella had health issues for most of her life. On one occasion I took her to the vet with vague symptoms that ended up being what the vet called a “toxic insult to the liver.” That seemed to indicate that she had somehow ingested some kind of poison, but since I controlled her food and never let her run loose (I learned my lesson with Sheba), I have no idea how that could have happened. All the vet could do was give her fluids and let her rest. It was not at all certain that she would survive.

One a couple of occasions she became lame, and I had to carry her down the front stairs of my house to let her outside. She showed signs of hip problems all her life, even on her best days.

At that time I was still trying to run. I took Bella on walks every day, but when I ran I didn’t want to take her with me. I knew she would make it about a mile and would then have to walk, which meant I never got a full run in when I took her with me. When I closed her up on the deck and left, she barked and whined until I was out of sight. I knew what would happen if I took her with me, but sometimes I couldn’t resist her pleas. And she would make it about a mile before she had to walk.

I have no idea how old she was when I got her, but I suspect she might have been as old as five or six, possibly even older. Whether it was from age or from poor treatment in her early life, by the time I got her she was not an athletic dog. But she seemed happy enough. She took several trips with me and my parents when my parents were traveling with their RVs. Here she is on one trip to Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho.

bella at craters of the moon

It’s not really visible here, but Bella’s tail had been docked too short. It occasionally bled. I suspect that the original owner docked the tail himself. I have found that some Doberman owners think docking a tail is easy. All you have to do is cut it off with pliers. Or so they think. Most are smart enough not to try to crop the ears, and Bella fortunately escaped that particular mutilation.

She was house trained from the start. The only time she ever pooped in the house, it was my fault. One day I was working outside for most of the afternoon, and I left her inside. Later that evening as I laid on the sofa watching television, I noticed that a little rug I had in front of the sofa was folded in half. I opened it up, and there was a little deposit, which Bella had very neatly covered up.

I had Bella for five years before she showed signs of osteosarcoma in her right rear leg. Osteosarcoma is a type of bone cancer that large-breed dogs are particularly susceptible to. It is a terrible disease for which there is usually no treatment. It appears at a joint. The first sign is usually a slight swelling of the joint. The only treatment is amputation, but by the time osteosarcoma is diagnosed, it has almost always metastasized. Here’s what the North Carolina State University vet school Web site says:

With surgery alone, most dogs experience a good quality of life for approximately 4-6 months. With the addition of chemotherapy, survival times extend to approximately 10-12 months.

That is probably optimistic, although maybe treatment has improved since the late 1990’s when I had Bella.

At any rate, Bella’s right rear leg eventually became essentially locked. She was obviously in pain, but Rimadyl worked well for her. Amputation for pain relief was not an option for Bella. I don’t think she would have recovered from the surgery, and I don’t think her hips could have taken it anyway.

The disease and her hips caught up with her when I was visiting my friend Tom in New Mexico. She went down and wasn’t able to get up. After a full day of watching her struggle to move around and to have a bowel movement without standing up, I decided that it was time to end it. We took her in a stretcher to a vet and I had her put down. That was in 1999. I still have her ashes.

 

Catching up

A few things have happened in the last week, so this is a catch-up post.

First, we had to call an ambulance last Friday, October 17, because Leah was having severe abdominal pain and vomiting. This is the second time we’ve had to do that. The first time was in 2011. That resulted in surgery to fix an intestinal blockage. The blockage was the caused by adhesions and scarring from the colon cancer surgery she had back in 1999.

Leah has had relatively minor episodes several times this year. An x-ray in July had shown what was characterized as a chronic, partial blockage. A colonoscopy in early September (Leah’s second this year) did not show anything in the colon, so we (and presumably the doctors) were left not really knowing what was going on.

This time there was no question that something bad was happening. Fortunately, Leah began feeling better fairly quickly and the blockage, if that is, indeed what it was, resolved with no surgery. She had one CT scan and an x-ray while she was in the ER, and at least two x-rays after she was admitted. The first scans they took during this stay seemed consistent with the July x-ray, but a later scan where they followed an x-ray opaque liquid through her small intestine showed quick passage, indicating no blockage in the small intestine. At one time her surgeon thought it might be gastroenteritis, but that did not seem to be the case.

In any event, Leah came home on Tuesday and has been on a liquid/soft diet since. They told her at the hospital that it might take two weeks to get back to normal.

That means two weeks without huevos rancheros.

Once Leah made it home, I started tramping over our new property to find the middle of the lot, which is where we plan to build. The most work I did was clearing a wide enough path to drive our side-by-side 4-wheeler (a Kawasaki Mule) up to the site with a chainsaw and other tools. There are lots and lots of trees, ranging from small enough to cut with large lopping shears to large enough to require a lot of planning before cutting with a chainsaw. Clearing for construction will take a bulldozer, and the operator said he wants the trees uncut so he can uproot them with his dozer. That’s fine with me.

And, finally, on Thursday I performed an experiment with a free-range dog. Leah has been telling me to take Zeke with me and let him roam freely while I work. She thinks it will let him get all his wandering urges out of his system. So I put him up in the front of the Mule and we rode up to the lot.

Zeke wandered around while I worked, and gradually left orbit. I didn’t see him again for about two hours, when he plodded up my newly-made path to greet me. One a scale of one to 10 (with one being perfectly clean and 10 being completely covered with mud and cow manure) he was about a three. Not too bad, but he needed a bath.

He was tired. Here he is resting after Leah and I went back up so I could show her what I had been doing. The tree with the yellow ribbon around it is the approximate center of the lot.

zeke_at_the_lot

Later in the evening we began hearing some noises from Zeke’s direction. He was lying on his bed at the end of the sofa. And then a revolting odor wafted up in my direction. I wasn’t sure which end of the dog it came from, but eventually we figured out that he was burping. That continued through the evening. I had to keep a box of matches nearby. He woke Leah up at about 5:30, and Leah woke me from a dream (I didn’t mind; I was dreaming about writing reports at work.) I had to take Zeke outside to relieve himself. He has been having intestinal disturbances of his own all day today (Friday), and his burps can still cause paint to peel. I’m hoping he can work this out of his system.

The good news is that he came back to me. That’s encouraging. But I don’t think the wanderlust is over, and when he wanders, it seems he’s living up to the omnivore name. I’ll try this experiment again. Maybe Leah’s prediction will be right.

 

A question of size

Robin commented in the previous post about the size of a persimmon seed. Here’s a picture of a seed from one of the two trees where Zeke has been finding and eating persimmons.

persimmon seedIt’s small enough to fit onto a dime, but still a relatively big seed. I could certainly see that eating a large number of these seeds could cause digestive problems for a dog, but I don’t think the seeds from one of two persimmons will cause any harm. Nevertheless, I’m going to try to keep Zeke away from them. It’s going to be hard, though, because he seems to have developed quite a taste for them.

Just for the sake of information, here is the entire fruit from which the seed came.

split persimmon

I don’t know whether every persimmon has four seeds, but the seeds are a large part of every fruit. It’s hard to tell from this image, but there is not much persimmon in a persimmon.