Lucy

We had to put down our little dog Lucy on Saturday.

We took Lucy five years ago after my mother died. My mother got her, at least partly at my urging, to keep her company after Leah and I got married. Leah and her father took my mother to a rescue organization and Lucy apparently immediately identified my mother as a sucker. So Lucy went home with my mother.

My mother had never been a dog lover, but they quickly adapted to each other. When I went over to visit my mother it wasn’t unusual to find her reclined, watching television with Lucy lying on her lap. Eventually my mother let Lucy sleep on the bed with her. She went to bed before my mother, which allowed her to pick her spot on the bed.

When my mother came to bed, she made Lucy get out from under the covers, but she stayed on the bed, pushing up against my mother’s back as they both slept there.

My mother overfed Lucy. She gradually ballooned to the point that she looked like a football standing on toothpicks. She was always obsessed with food. One of her favorites after we got her was peanut butter stuffed in her bong.

As they both got older, my mother had more trouble hearing and often didn’t realize that Lucy needed to relieve herself outside. That, combined with what I think were some behavioral issues, resulted in Lucy going into the basement and relieving herself inside. That was a problem that continued throughout her life.

She had been in declining health for a while. Our vet told us she had had a heart attack a few months ago, and she had been acting, let’s say, absent minded. She had started wetting her bed a couple of times a night a few weeks ago. She would wake us up scratching and pawing at her bedding, and I had to get up around 3 am or so and change her waterproof pillowcase and the towels we used in her crate. Her bed was also wet by morning.

On Tuesday she had trouble standing up. I took her to the vet on Thursday. The vet said the symptoms I described were consistent with pretty bad arthritis and dementia. She had prescribed medication to try to control the inappropriate urination, but it wasn’t working. It was almost impossible for her to walk on our hardwood floors. She got up and skittered across the floor, falling several times on her way to the water bowl. There she would look around like she had forgotten what she was doing. When I picked her up to take her outside, she struggled frantically to get down out of my arms.

Saturday morning Leah found her headed into a corner of her crate, struggling to get out.  When I took her outside and put her on the ground, she staggered, fell, and wandered aimlessly. When she ran into something, she just kept trying to go straight ahead. She was confused and agitated. We brought her inside and tried to calm her. She would calm down for a while, but then try to get up and walk, again, aimlessly.

Our vet was not available so I had to take her to another vet we have used in the past. I put her in one of our cat carriers. She did OK until I got to the vet’s office, then she started wildly scrambling on her side, scratching at the side of the carrier. I put my hand on her to try to calm her, but she didn’t stop until she had exhausted herself. When I was waiting in one of the examination rooms, I had to hold her in my arms as she went into another fit of wriggling and scratching, and again she didn’t stop until she was exhausted.

The vet confirmed my feeling that it was Lucy’s time. She went peacefully. I brought her home. We buried her in the yard with her peanut butter bong.

Lucy’s Trouble

That’s starts with “T” and that rhymes with “P” and that stands for “pee.”

Lucy has been urinating indoors a good bit over the last several months. She wets her bed, as well as Sam and Zeke’s bed. She has peed on a bed we put down in the living room for Sam and Zeke when they decide to keep us company instead of hiding in our bedroom. She also pees on our bathroom rugs. In fact, she has peed right in front of us, with us watching as it happened.

She has had a problem with indoor elimination for a long time. I used to regularly check my mother’s basement for little surprises Lucy had left. We blamed my mother’s hearing problems for that. We assumed that Lucy went to the front door and barked to be let out, like any civilized dog, but my mother couldn’t hear. Then, we thought, Lucy eventually had to answer nature’s call.

At least that’s what we thought back in those days.

Lucy continued that behavior after we took her home in my mother’s last days. That was five years ago. She would occasionally poop in one of the back rooms, but not too often. We were careful to take her out regularly, and she barked at the door if we waited too long.

Some months ago she started peeing inside. We took her to the vet to have her checked, but the vet found nothing wrong. We have been particularly careful over the last months to make sure she goes outside often, to no avail. A few times I have taken her out to reliever herself. Maybe she poops but doesn’t pee. Then, a few minutes later, she pees in her bed or on the other dogs’ pad. It seems to be getting worse.

We had to buy waterproof covers for the pillow she uses as a bed in her crate. Then, because she managed to get the pillow wet through the zipper, we started putting two waterproof covers on. When she wets her bed, we have to wash everything including the waterproof covers. We have two sets, but Monday she managed to wet the second set before the first set was washed.

Here she is with a trash bag serving as a waterproof pillow cover.

The vet said that Lucy’s problem may be behavioral, which will be hard to resolve. Leah and I suspect it might have something to do with old age. We don’t know Lucy’s age, but we think she’s pretty old. We’re pretty sure she’s profoundly hearing impaired. She also may be suffering some early-stage dementia. Who knows?

All we know is that it’s getting to be a big problem. We don’t know what we’re going to do, aside from continuing to change her bed every so often. It’s almost like having a baby, but we know she won’t grow out of it. It’s kind of sad.

After I had finished this post, Leah and I went about our business. Some time around 9 pm, Leah went into the bathroom and found that Lucy had peed on the rug in front of the vanity. We had been in the living room or the kitchen with Lucy in plain sight the whole time; neither one of us saw her go into the bathroom. We have no idea what to do about Lucy.

The Peaceable Kingdom 2

Zeke, Sam and Chloe get along pretty well, as I have mentioned before. I can’t say the same for Mollie and Chloe. In the old days, pre-Mollie, Chloe often spent the night inside on our bed, especially in cold weather. Since Mollie came into our lives last July, she has jumped on Chloe every time Chloe comes inside.

Last week we managed to sneak Chloe in and put her on our bed. We closed the bedroom door to keep Mollie out. I went in to check on her later and this is what I found.

Chloe had apparently decided to jump down with the dogs, who share a bed next to ours. I wasn’t sure how that would turn out, since the dogs move around a lot on their bed. But it seemed not to be a problem.

They stayed this way for several hours.

Old Zeke

On Wednesday the dogs and I took our first walk after I decided Zeke didn’t need to walk two miles in the Georgia July heat. We turned around at the halfway point. The dogs would have happily gone further, but they don’t ask questions, so they were happy enough to turn around.

Zeke had been walking pretty slowly on the way back up the mountain for some time. I noticed, but didn’t necessarily attribute it to old age. We have had Zeke for 11 years, and he was fully grown when we got him. He’s at least 12, maybe older, and that’s getting pretty old for a big dog like Zeke.

I think I see graying in his face, but it’s hard to tell. Here he is in December 2008.

And here he is on Wednesday.

I tried to get him to stand up so I could get a frontal shot of his face, but he was lying the floor, cooling off after our walk, and he didn’t want to get up.

I showed Leah these two shots without telling her which was which, and asked her which one she thought showed Zeke as older. She picked the one from 2008. I really can’t see much difference in the pictures, but when I look at him it seems like I should be able to.

He has always been an active dog, or at least as active as we can let him be. He still plays with Sam like a puppy, although he seems to prefer wrestling while lying on the street. The signs of aging are subtle so far, but I think I see them. Even so, once the damned heat retreats, I think we’ll be seeing what’s going on a little further down the road.

Disheartening

Lucy usually sleeps through the night, but she woke us up around 3 or 4 am Thursday morning with a weak, whimpering sort of bark. We thought maybe she needed to go out to relieve herself, so I got up and went to the living room, where we keep the crate she has to sleep in because of some inappropriate urination. I opened the door and called her, but she couldn’t get up. She struggled for a few moments, then I reached in and brought her out onto the floor. She couldn’t stand up. She normally has a kind of splayed stance because of her hips and knees that gives her trouble on the hardwood, but this was different. She would just topple over.

So I took her into the garage where we have a utility carpet strip leading to the outside door. She was still very uncertain on her feet. She continued to stagger around and fall over. I picked her up again and put her in the flower bed, where she often relieves herself, but she couldn’t stand up.

I brought her back inside and put her into her crate. She kind of half stood, and looked around like she was trying to figure out where she was. I thought maybe she would be more comfortable if she could lie down next to Sam and Zeke, and possibly even us, so I brought her crate into the bedroom. After I turned out the light, every time I checked, she was still looking around. After about an hour and a half, I finally heard her snoring.

Thursday morning she seemed much improved. I took her to the vet, who said she now has a heart murmur that she didn’t have a couple of weeks ago when she was in for her checkup. Although the symptoms aligned with the list for a stroke, the vet said Lucy had suffered a heart attack.

Now, Thursday afternoon, she’s barky and snippy when we give her a treat by hand, so pretty much back to normal, but she’s on a veterinary medication for congestive heart failure for the rest of her life. For some time she has been balking at taking the regular long dog walk every morning. From now on, she’s probably going to get a pass on that, unless she volunteers.