My driving trip to visit friends in Denver was the first I have made in a while without a dog. Zeke was a good traveling companion, and I miss him. Since he died I have taken the seat cover off the back seat, for the first time since I bought the truck. Of course I didn’t bring any of the paraphernalia needed for traveling with a dog. And I had no intention of getting a dog any time soon.
So, all of my friends, who are also dog lovers, suggested that we visit the Dumb Friends League of Denver, a no-kill rescue shelter, to check out the dogs. They had been looking at the online pictures and selected a few to view. I agreed to go see the dogs on Thursday, but I had to constantly remind them: I was going to look at dogs, not for a dog.
The Dumb Friends’ facility in Denver is impressive. It is modern. Each dog has its own large enclosure with glass front so the dogs don’t have to listen to the constant barking of other dogs. As in most pounds and shelters, most of the dogs were pit bulls or pit mixes. Some lay listlessly. Some stared hopefully at passersby. We looked at a couple of medium-sized, non-pit dogs, but neither was really my type.
On Friday we went south from Denver and happened to stop at the Dumb Friends Castle Rock branch, where they had recently taken in a dog they thought was a German Shepherd-Doberman Pinscher mix. Now, it just happens that Leah’s favorite breed is thea German Shepherd, and my favorite breed is the Doberman. But still, I was not at all convinced that I wanted another dog, no matter how appealing it might be.
We signed in and asked to look at this particular dog. They brought her into a visiting room, and we all checked each other out for a while. We took her outside to let her run around in an exterior enclosure. Then we went back inside and I said I wanted to adopt her.
Her name is Zoe. The Denver Dumb Friends had transported her from a shelter in Oklahoma, where, apparently, the general population takes about as much care of their dogs and cats as they do in Georgia, which is not much. The Denver shelter people knew nothing about her history, only that the Oklahoma shelter had given her a rabies vaccination. One of their vets examined her and found her to be in good shape. They found a scar that indicated she has been spayed.
They thought she was a Shepherd/Dobie mix, but didn’t really know. The German Shepherd part is obvious in her head and coloration. The Dobie part is not so obvious.
She has been with us for about 24 hours as I write this. In that time she has shown herself to be a very good dog. She gets along with everyone she meets. She is interested in other dogs, but not overly so. She has met Elroy, the elderly dog that looks so much like Zeke. Elroy is not amused with her presence here, but Zoe has been carefully avoiding him whenever she can.
She asks to go out to relieve herself, which is a big deal. She actually stepped into the bathtub to get a bath — all the dogs we looked at had a peculiar, unpleasant shelter smell. She did not like the bath, but she tolerated it.
The only real problem so far is that she has a very strong prey drive, so she is very interested in small animals that run. And, unfortunately, that category includes cats.
She is constantly in motion, walking around the house, checking out everything and everyone, looking for food, avoiding Elroy, so it has been hard to get a good photo that is not blurred. We took her for two good walks on Saturday, which apparently tired her enough that she actually plunked herself down for a while.
This is the best way to show her size at this point.
She is about 80 pounds, and long and lean. She may be part Doberman. The tail looks Dobermanish, a hard judgement to make given that undocked Doberman tails are so rare. One woman who saw her on one of our walks said she looked like a German Shepherd/ Doberman mix, so maybe she is.
It is possible that she is a little over a year old, as the shelter says, but it is also possible she is a little older. It is also possible that she is a little younger, which means she may not have reached her full growth.
Her manners are not good. She tends to want to eat food out of your hand just as you are placing that food into your mouth. She pulls too much on the leash. But these are things that she can learn about as she lives with us.
She slept by my bed Friday night in a bed we made from a foam pad and a fleece throw. She was calm, and slept the night through, only stirring to circle and lie down again, as dogs usually do.
At this point she usually comes by to check on me on her rounds, and seems concerned when I close the door into the bathroom, so even at this early stage she seems to understand that we are going to be a pair.
I bought her a good collar and two types of leashes. She has a food bowl and a water bowl for the almost 1400-mile trip back to Georgia. I have told Leah that I will not be coming home alone, and she seems OK with that. She is a little worried about how Zoe and Mollie will get along, but I think we can convince Zoe that Mollie is part of the pack.
The shelter named her Zoe, so we could change her name if we wanted to. I was concerned that Leah wouldn’t want to name her Zoe, since that was the name of the cat she had when we got married, and who disappeared in the night a few years ago. But she seems OK with that name, so I guess we’ll keep it.
I’m looking forward to some things. I hope Zoe and Sam become friends and can sleep and play together like Sam and Zeke did. I hope that Zoe becomes a part of our family. So far she seems like a very good dog.
I am in Littleton, Co, right now, visiting old friends. Leah, unfortunately, had to stay at home with Sam and the cats.
I arrived at my friends’ house around 9:30 local time on Friday after an almost 900-mile drive from O’Fallon, Il, where I had spent the night after driving from the New River Gorge in West Virginia. The weather along the way was quite nice, and it continued into Saturday.
On Saturday most of us went to see a car museum and then to a brewery, where they were having an animal benefit. There was a big crowd that had spilled outside into the bright and warm afternoon. There we sat and (most of us) sipped a beer while watching the people, the dogs, and this:
A French bulldog disguised as a mountain lion.
The weather has turned cold and snowy, resulting in this scene in my friends’ back yard on Monday.
Today, Tuesday, the snow is around 4 or 5 inches deep. There is light snow falling with more expected through the day. The roads are slippery enough that a trip to see a motorcycle museum in Colorado Springs this morning was cancelled, along with some school and work. My weather app tells me it’s 17F now in Littleton, while it’s 67F back home in Georgia. We’re going for a high of 19F, and a low tonight of 9F.
My friends have a dog, Elroy, whose picture I have posted before. Here he is getting ready to go outside for a quick bathroom break.
Poor Elroy is suffering from arthritis that makes it hard for him to walk and painful for us to watch. He’s snoring right now on a pad next to where I am typing this.
I have remarked before on how much he looks like Zeke. When I hear his nails tapping on the floor I expect to see my old dog.
The first time Zeus, my last doberman, and I saw Zeke, he was lying in our across-the-street neighbor’s front yard. Our neighbor had brought him home for the kids, but the dog stayed outside and I never saw anyone interact with him. I guess they fed him, since he didn’t seem to be losing weight. On weekends when I took Zeus for a walk, Zeke always watched us hopefully. I was a little uncertain about this dog with what seemed like such a big head, so I usually ignored him, and Zeus and I went on our way. One day I gave in and said, “OK, come on.” It was all he needed.
After that, Zeke went with us on our walks. He eventually gravitated towards our house. The neighbors apparently thought we stole their dog, but Zeke made his own decision. But we already had a dog. I had adopted Zeus from a doberman rescue group in 2003 after my previous doberman died. We all got along well, and everyone was happy with the way things were.
So we did what we always do with the abandoned dogs up here, we took Zeke to the vet for vaccinations and then advertised for someone to adopt him.
Someone did adopt him. As they left, I warned them not to let Zeke out of their van off leash because he would run away. Even that long ago he always took off if given an opportunity. So they assured us they would keep him on leash, and they drove off.
Shortly after Zeke’s adoption Leah and I drove out to Yellowstone for a two-week vacation. When we got home, we had a message from our vet. Someone had found “our” dog, checked the rabies tag and called the vet. “Our” dog was being boarded on the other side of town. We decided it was fate telling us that Zeke really was our dog, so we brought him home. That was in the fall of 2006.
Zeus was familiar with Zeke by that time, and Zeus was a good-natured dog, so they got along well. Zeke naturally assumed the position of second dog. Zeus had a bed beside our living room sofa, and Zeke had one against a wall. When we went to bed, Zeus came into our room to a bed beside our bed. Then Zeke got up and went to Zeus’s bed beside the sofa.
Sometimes they shared the bed.
Zeke loved Zeus.
Back in those days I sometimes took both dogs on walks into the woods off leash. Zeus stayed pretty close, but Zeke immediately disappeared into the woods. Sometimes he came back out with us, and sometimes he didn’t. Sometimes Zeus and I would get a couple of hundred yards up the road before Zeke followed us up. Zeus seemed worried about that, because he kept looking back over his shoulder for Zeke.
I sometimes took both dogs outside if I happened to have work to do in the yard. Zeus would stay near, but not Zeke. Unfortunately, Zeus followed Zeke if he decided to go exploring. Once he led Zeus about two miles down the mountain, where one of our neighbors recognized them and called us. They were covered in mud.
The two dogs were pretty much inseparable for the next three years, except for when I had to drive somewhere in my truck. I could put Zeus in the back seat of the truck and leave the windows down if the weather was warm, and he would never try to get out of the truck. But Zeke would always try to get out of the truck if the windows were low enough. That meant Zeke couldn’t go if the weather was warm and I had to get out of the truck without the dogs.
So it was that I drove over to my mother’s house one Sunday with Zeus but not Zeke. When we got out of the truck, Zeus began to stagger. He had never done that before, so I had no idea what was happening. I called our vet to have someone come in to the office, then I rushed over. The vet hooked up an ECG machine to check his heart. The trace looked like a bug had crawled through ink and then across the ECG printout. Zeus was suffering from cardiomyopathy, a heart condition that is not uncommon in doberman pinschers.
The vet prescribed some medication, but there is really no effective treatment for the condition. Zeus seemed OK for a while. Then one day in late December he was lying in his bed beside the sofa as we watched television. I would usually have one hand on him as we sat there, but not this time. I got up for something and looked at Zeus. He was twisted backwards as if he were trying to look over his back, and he was not moving. He had died right there beside us. That was December 29, 2009.
So Zeke became our only dog. Who knows whether dogs understand what death means. He seemed OK, but we knew he missed Zeus.
In any event, we continued to live our lives and so did Zeke. He was one of the good ones. Other than running away if a door was left open, he was an almost ideal dog. He knew what we wanted him to do, and he did it. If we took him to the vet, he almost automatically walked over to the scales and climbed up to be weighed. He remained calm while the vet poked him, and he stood stoically when he got his temperature taken or had vaccinations.
When my mother died in 2013 and we inherited her little dog Lucy, Zeke was perfectly OK with it. They didn’t have much to do with each other, not a surprise given the size difference. But Zeke never tried to eat her dinner or take her treats. He respected her.
Zeke got out of the house pretty often. At least it seemed that way. He would roam all over the top of the mountain and sometimes far down towards the bottom. One time someone who lived in Texas Valley found him running loose in the rain and brought him back to our house in her backseat. He was soaked, and so was her back seat. Another time a county police officer brought him back.
That was essentially Zeke’s only fault.
I knew that after 13 years Zeke’s days were numbered. He had been turning gray and slowing down. But when I took him in for his annual shots last week, I told them to give him a three-year rabies vaccination. On Monday, he started acting like he was in pain. We assumed it was his arthritic back, which occasionally causes him some pain. I gave him one of his pain pills and we waited. It has always taken a couple of days for him to get any relief, so we weren’t surprised that he was restless Monday night. Then on Tuesday, he threw up everything he ate. On Wednesday he didn’t. But Wednesday night he became restless again. I noticed that his breathing was shallow and quick. I considered taking him to the emergency vet clinic that recently opened in Rome, but I decided to wait till Thursday to take him back to our vet.
She palpated him abdomen, and he yelped. She decided he had some kind of stomach upset, so she prescribed an anti-nausea pill and some antibiotics.
Late Thursday night, Zeke was in distress. He was obviously in pain, and although he politely ate his dinner around 4 in the afternoon, he refused anything later, no matter how tempting it would normally be. I wanted to give him another pain pill, but I couldn’t get him to eat a marshmallow with a pill hidden inside. Or even a little bit of ice cream.
By 11 pm he was so bad I decided to take him to the emergency vet clinic. I had to carry him to the truck. Along the way his rear end fell off the back seat and got wedged between the back seat and the back of the front seat. That would never have happened to him before.
At the clinic they did blood work. His liver and kidneys were not functioning, and his white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets were all off. His abdomen was very painful to the touch. Then they did an ultrasound. That’s when they found the big mass on his spleen.
He was in such pain and discomfort that I decided to leave him at the vet’s so they could give him some strong pain medication. There was no way he could possibly have gone home and not been in unacceptable pain. I got in bed around 2 am, with the intention of getting up around 6:45 to pick him up and take him to our regular vet.
The clinic called around 6 am to tell me he was still having pain despite the strong medications they were giving him.
I picked him up around 7:30. The vet at the clinic had been talking about going to Atlanta or Chattanooga to a specialist for a more extensive ultrasound, or possibly a biopsy. Since it was Friday I figured there was no way I could get him to a specialist until after the weekend. Zeke needed some kind of immediate attention, so I took him to a different vet we had used before, one that I thought probably had an ultrasound at the clinic. The emergency clinic sent all Zeke’s test results so they could look at it before I got there.
I took him into the clinic and waited in an exam room for a while. Zeke was still in obvious pain. As we waited for the vet, he was shivering and every breath turned into a moan.
When the vet came in, she had looked at the test results and said there was so much going on with Zeke that trying to resolve anything at that point would be useless. His organs were just giving up. She said the only realistic course of action was euthanasia. It was not a surprise to me. I had already told Leah that I did not expect Zeke to come back home.
I took Zeke home and buried him in the yard next to Lucy’s grave. Back in 2009 I had Zeus cremated. I put his ashes in the grave with Zeke, along with Zeke’s collar and his peanut butter bong.
Zeke seemed to crash suddenly. One day he was feeling OK, and four days later he was in such bad condition that it was intolerable. As we look back, though, we think we see signs of problems going back weeks if not months. For one thing, he had been drinking abnormally large amounts of water for a long time. The trouble he had making the climb back to the house on our regular walk down the mountain, which I had attributed to age, might have been the result of his cancer. Dogs, like most animals, hide their pain and worsening health as long as they can. I hate to think he might have been having pain for weeks before we realized it. I also have to wonder whether something might have been done if we had know about the tumor earlier.
Zeke is the fifth dog I have had euthanized, and it doesn’t get any easier with practice. In every case I have known that the only alternative was pain, and a painful death in a short time. But I still feel guilty about doing it. I feel like it’s a betrayal of my dog’s trust. I’m supposed to help them, and they trust me to do that. In the end, I can’t help.
We let Sam see Zeke’s body before I buried him. We don’t know whether he realized what he was seeing, but we think Sam is going to miss Zeke terribly.
I wrote this Friday night, after picking Zeke up, taking him the vet, deciding to have him put down, digging a hole in the ground, putting Zeke in it and filling it back up.
We did our usual Friday night stuff. We went out for chicken, and I thought now we only need to bring home two french fries, not four as usual. We had just gotten used to not having to bring home a tiny extra piece for Lucy.
We watched Secret Life of Pets 2, and went to bed. I thought I would sleep soundly Friday since I had only about four hours of sleep Thursday night. But I didn’t.
This morning Zeke was still gone.
This was too sudden. We really didn’t have any warning that it was coming.
How can a dog fill a house? Even a dog of Zeke’s size? As I went about my morning routine this morning, every time I turned around there was a hole that Zeke used to fill. When Zeke slept by the bed, I had to pet him a little every time I passed by, getting into bed, getting out of bed to go to the bathroom, going back to bed, getting up in the morning. He needed a scratch on his back, or on his belly or on the top of his head.
I put on my socks this morning, and I didn’t have to give Zeke a little pat on the head between socks. He didn’t stick his head between my legs as I tried to put on my shorts. I took Sam out, and I didn’t have to wait while Zeke stared off down the driveway, thinking whatever doggy thoughts he did in the mornings.
I ran our battery vacuum around the house to pick up the dog hair, and I didn’t have to let Zeke skirt around me to get away from the sound. I wondered whether the vacuum would have half as much hair from now on, because there wouldn’t be that snow-shower of dog hair every time he shook. We won’t need that hand towel by the water bowl that we used to wipe his mouth after drinking — sometimes he forgot to swallow that last mouthful of water.
He won’t be watching hopefully when I pick up the keys to my truck. He always wanted to go for a ride.
He was only a dog, but he left a hole in our lives that was bigger than a dog.
I have been able to walk outside with every dog I have ever had and trust them off the leash, except one — Zeke. We have had Zeke so long that I had forgotten what it was like to have a dog off leash and not have him immediately run away.
That’s why it feels so odd when I let Sam off leash. We have had him for about three and a half years, and in all that time I have walked him and the other dogs on a leash. Recently I decided to let him off the leash and see what he did. What he does is act like a normal dog. He doesn’t run away. But he is very happy to be off the leash. I take both dogs into the front yard and then let Sam loose. He usually runs around for a while like he’s crazy. He runs figure 8’s around the yard. I wanted to video him doing that, but this is the best I could do.
The bare ground where he stopped for a second is one of the sections of the yard I prepared for grass but never got any grass to grow. The dirt is well tilled and soft, so the cats consider it a perfect toilet. Dogs, as you may know, sometimes eat cat poop. I have read a bit about that particular disgusting habit, but I can’t say for sure why they do it. But they do. And Sam does.
One afternoon last week as I was sitting at my computer, Sam came in a laid down beside my chair. Then he threw up a big mess of liquid, a few pieces of dog food, and a couple of pieces of still-recognizable cat poop. Now you may think dog vomit smells bad, and you may think cat poop smells bad, but you don’t know the meaning of “smells bad” until you smell the two together.
I keep an eye on him now to make sure he doesn’t get too interested in rooting around in the loose dirt. It is fortunate that he minds reasonably well, like all of my other dogs except Zeke.
And now, as to Zeke. A little after lunch on Thursday Zeke got out. I immediately started driving around to try to find him. I actually saw him in a neighbor’s yard almost right away, but he disappeared before I could get to him. I drove around for about a half an hour with no luck, and then decided to give up for a while. As I drove up the driveway, I saw him lying in the shade of our pet maple tree. This was just as Leah was coming down the front stairs. By the time I parked my truck and came back around to the front yard, he had disappeared down the driveway. Leah said he was not moving too fast, so I gave chase.
In my case, “chase” is a charitable way to describe the way I followed him. I couldn’t go much faster than a fast walk down the driveway because it’s too steep for my knees. But I saw Zeke and I was gaining on him. He looked behind him, saw me, and quickened his pace. Not long ago he would have easily left me behind, but not today. When I reached the road, I managed to speed up and catch him. I don’t think he actually heard me because of his hearing problem, but he stopped as soon as I put my hand on his back.
Fortunately for me, I had taken a naproxen the night before, and it really helps my knees. Otherwise I could probably not have managed the “run”, and my knees would have been hurting afterwards.
But how sad for Zeke that an old man with bad knees could catch him.
Zeke has been our dog for about 13 years, and he was around even before that. He was grown when we first saw him across the road from our house. So he’s probably around 14, which is quite old for a big dog like him.
The deep brown patch centered on his right ear is graying, but he has always behaved like a young dog. He’s up at the barest hint of action. He’s ready to go out for any reason, and always ready for a ride in the truck. He rough-houses with Sam on our walks. If not for the gray, you would never guess his age.
Until Tuesday. On Tuesday we left the house around 9:30 for our regular morning walk. We turned down Fouche Gap Road and headed down into Texas Valley towards the bottom of the mountain as usual. I let the dogs operate on dog time. That means we stop for interesting odors, and we make sure to mark various limbs and blades of grass, just in case another dog should happen along. At that pace, it takes about 30 minutes to make it to the bottom of the mountain. At the bottom of the mountain we stop for a minute, and then we turn around. Turning around is usually a sign for Sam to start nipping at Zeke and dancing around him. Sam growls and they bite each other on every surface they can reach. Sam does most of the work, but Zeke does his part, too.
But that didn’t happen on Tuesday. Zeke turned around and began a slow trudge back up the road. My pace is usually somewhere between a dog walk and a dog trot, so the dogs will trot for a short distance and then slow down to walk for a time. But on Tuesday Zeke walked slowly and deliberately, putting one foot down and then another. When Sam invited him to play, he barely acknowledged it. It took 45 minutes to get back home, and I was wondering the whole time whether he would make it. I was thinking about how to get Leah to come and pick us up. Zeke just wasn’t himself.
Or rather, I guess Zeke was himself, only it’s now his older self. I’m afraid this means no more long walks. We won’t walk down Fouche Gap Road; instead we’ll go up the mountain to the top, a fairly short walk, and then, when we turn around, it’s all downhill back home.
I have wondered how long Zeke would be able to keep up with Sam, and now I guess I know.
This is Zeke today.
This is a shot from about two years ago.
Copyright 2013 Mark V. Paris
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