How To Be A Hairy Beast: Lesson #2

HTBAHB: Lesson #2: Sleep all the sleeps2013-12-15 sleep

 

It’s a big job, being a puppy.

So many things to see.

So many things to do.

So many things to hide.

So many things to chew.

And so many sleeps to sleep…

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I’ve been observing the Hairy Beasts these past few weeks. And something important I’ve noticed is that neither Zeke or Zoey let anything deter them from finding a comfortable spot and zonking out when they’re tired.

I’d noticed this before, but never really given it much thought. I just chalked it up to them being a large breed dog and needing the extra down time to keep their batteries charged. But not only have I noticed it again, this time I’m paying attention to it. Because when the puppy sleeps …

It’s not just that he sleeps, but when, and how, too. He’ll play and be rambunctious for an hour, maybe two, then crash out. And sleep hard; don’t bother me, I’m napping. After an hour or so, when he’s feeling refreshed (or thirsty, because sometimes feeling refreshed after a nap makes you thirsty), he’ll get up, stumble over to the water dish, drink like he’s never tasted water before, and then just sit a minute. When he gets his bearings, he’s off to be rambunctious again. Rinse, repeat at least 5 times each day.

     2013-12-10 sleep table     2013-12-09 sleep hanging head     2013-12-16 sleep 1
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He sleeps all over the house. Under the Christmas tree. On the bed. Under the bed. In the bathroom by the toilet. Under the kitchen table. Under the table on the back patio. The big dog bed. Leaned up against the door in the kitchen. The little dog bed. In the middle of the living room floor. Next to Zoey. On Zoey (this one usually doesn’t last very long). The point is, he sleeps when he’s tired.
He’s not too fussy about location.In puppydom: getting tired = taking a nap. And when the puppy sleeps, everybody sleeps. Hmmmm, I could get kinda used to this ….

 

How To Be A Hairy Beast: Lesson #1

HTBAHB Lesson 1: Be your Own Dog Photo Dec 04, 8 14 34 PM

Meet Zeke, Hairy Beast in Training. He joined our family last week. At 11 wks old, he already has a sweet temperament and defined personality.

And a mind of his own …  he’s got a pretty decided independent streak. Which is a good thing; he has big paw prints to fill. Farm Dog leaves a significant legacy. But Zeke isn’t Gabe, and he doesn’t have the same frame of reference (any, for that matter) for expected pattern(s) of behavior.

Zeke is definitely his own dog. He knows what he likes and doesn’t like. He likes his belly rubbed. He doesn’t like being told no. He doesn’t like going to bed when he’s overtired. He likes snow and he loves his new dog. For the first few days, Zoey wasn’t too sure about the little furball, but he’s become “her puppy.” She keeps a look out for where he is. They’ve started to play together, and it is pure entertainment to watch.

Photo Dec 05, 9 40 31 PM

Zeke’s decided he likes toys. Soft ones (the cloth/”hairy”) kind. With squeakers. The more obnoxious the squeaker, the better.

Sunday afternoon, he braved the big scary new world of the back field. He didn’t go too far without his dog. Fuzzy Butt was in seventh heaven, making all the dog angels she could. Zeke would put his nose down, run off a few yards, then stop and sit. Like a sentinel on duty, watching Zoey roll, Zeke would sit and just survey his world and taking it all in.

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He likes helping me change the hummie feeder, and skim the thin layer  of ice off the bird bath. And by helping, I mean weaving in and out of around my feet.

Speaking of birds, he kinda likes chasing birds. Which is fine with me.

Maybe he’ll finally run off the pigeons.

Adventures of Farm Dog: epilogue

There is a GSD-shaped hole in my heart just now.

Last night I had to say goodbye, unexpectedly, to Gabriel my Farm Dog.

While talking with the vet about possible scenarios and options, sitting on the floor in the exam room with Gabe’s face cradled in my hands, reassuring him, he suddenly passed out. The vet and vet tech immediately whisked him to a space with proper equipment. And then came back to say he’d gone.

Just like that, gone. Nearly nine wonderful years, and I wasn’t ready to let him go.

He lived right up to the last moment. Which seems an odd expression … “he lived right up to the last moment” … but he did just that. Yesterday was a normal day for Farm Dog, save for the last 3 hours. The vet assured us Gabe died peacefully, without pain. Whether from a ruptured spleen or ruptured tumor is not so much important as knowing he didn’t suffer. There is consolation in that.

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Gabe wasn’t just another dog. He was Farm Dog, half of the infamous Hairy Beasts duo. He was a four-legged member of the family. And he had wonderful adventures. Exploring the field, the creek, the flower beds, the closets left open. And he took his job as Farm Dog seriously—guarding his people and land—hunting bumbles, rabbits, and wayward skunks.

I will remember the way he would sit directly in front of me, cock his head to one side, and stare me down until I caved and gave him another cookie. That mournful {sigh} coupled with the pitiful arched eyebrow “I know there is bacon on the table” look. How he’d manage to turn extra soft and snuggly of an early morning—and somehow convince me it’d be OK to sleep through the alarm just today, and go swim tomorrow. Farm Dog

He had a good life. He had a great life. He lived happy every moment; he knew he was loved. And he loved back, hard, with every ounce of his sniffy sniffy nosey dog self.

Goodbye, sweet boy.

Championing the Champions

It’s been thundering and lightening this morning. I came home from the pool early to close up the house and reassure The Hairy Beasts.

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It occurred to me on the way home that everyone should have a … defender… a Champion … some valiant warrior who will mount up at a moments notice and gallop off into the fray to slay whatever dragon threatens the tranquility in the land of Peace and Happiness.

Not only does this Champion know what things are dangerous threats, but can anticipate weaknesses in defense and swiftly maneuver to mitigate them. The best of Champions often do this unbidden and unnoticed; so the threat is only at most a slight nuisance.

Sitting here with the pups a few minutes to calm and reassure them, i consider my own Champions. Precious people who know *me* and some of my squishy-vulnerable bits. More than once I have experienced them assessing a situation, noticed the shift as they “suit up for battle” and charge off to challenge whatever ______ menaces my realm of Peace and Happiness. Or simply and unceremoniously shield me from its view (or it from mine) so the threat lumbers by unacknowledged.I didn’t anticipate the thunder this morning. :/ But the first grumble was big enough to rumble the pool (which was kind of … awesome. Never felt thunder quite that way before). The second being equally impressive, I knew there was nothing for it but to high-tail it home, get Farm Dog and Fuzzy Butt in, and shut up the house. Thankfully, with all the door/ windows shut and all the fans on, Ride of the Valkyries and other such epic tunes pretty effectively drown outside shenanigans. At least, that’s what works for the 4th of July.

We should all be so blessed to have these Champions and to be Champions for those near and dear. This demands courage and selflessness on both sides: Ours to know someone else so well as to anticipate and route what might discomfort them without heed of its cost to us. And theirs to be vulnerable, to lay bare whatever insecurity or _____ that can undo them, to trust us to protect that knowledge and use it only for their good and not their harm or our gain. That sharing and baring is scary as hell, but the dividend is more than worth it.

I’m thinking very fondly of my own Champions just now. An appreciating every time they’ve turned on the fans and music and shut out the scary rumbles.

4th Annual Intruder Games

Skunks: 5
Hairy Beasts: 0

There are definite advantages to growing up a farm kid. Learning to drive at age 7 because someone’s gotta drive the truck to get the hay off the field and put up. Mastering power tools like the chop saw and chain saw. Building your own trellis. Knowing the difference between a finishing nail and a galvanized one. Pressure washers!!! (I have 3.)

There are definite disadvantages as well. Like the weather not cooperating so haying season always manages to land over the 4th of July holiday. Like the myriad of mundane maintenance required to keep equipment in good working order. Like wild blackberry bushes that grow everywhere you don’t want them.

And skunks.

I’m not a fan.

These four years, our two mobile security units, otherwise known as The Hairy Beasts (or Farm Dog and Fuzzy Butt), have started strong, but in the end lost the annual competition.

Now The Hairy Beasts are brilliant at knowing something has breached the perimeter. They know every inch of their property, and everything that belongs. Ever vigilant (they take the job very seriously), one or both or either will raise a ruckus at the first sign something is out of place. Sesame Street would be proud.

These are not the skunks that participate in the annual Intruder Games. *Those* skunks are much more ... not cute.

These are not the skunks that participate in the annual Intruder Games. *Those* skunks are much more … not cute.

The first year, a skunk made it all the way to the sequoia by the pump house. This is in the far corner of the back yard. The back yard, people. Like 50 feet from the house. Farm Dog backed the black-and-white up to the tree. Skunk was big, maybe 10 pounds. And not happy. Do skunks know they are being profiled and proactively discriminated against? At any rate, Skunk #1 was quick for his size and squeezed off a warning shot across Farm Dog’s bow, so-to-speak, all the while somehow keeping his back up against the tree trunk.

Did I mention this was around 10 pm?

Oh, free tip of the day: tomato juice doesn’t cut skunk smell. Ketchup doesn’t work either.

I know–I’ve tried.

Farm Dog confronted Skunks #2 and #3 at the north border crossing. Technically, he won each round–their entry visas were not approved, but once again, each expressed displeasure over the conversation and managed to get in the last word (or spray. whatever).

Technically, I should give Farm Dog 1/2 a point for #3. He managed to “corner” it in the culvert. Where it got stuck. Yay. A stuck skunk. Guess what? That stuck skunk stunk. Only humane thing to do was shoot it. Then proceed to tear out the culvert (originally placed three years prior, it had a great cover of grass growing over), remove said stuck skunk, and replace the culvert. Since the two-legged had to do all the work, the four-legged doesn’t get his 1/2 point.

More free trivia: apparently, electric fences don’t phase skunks. The first hot wire is 4″ off the ground along that back fence line. How exactly they know to duck still baffles me.

We think Ghost Skunk got hit by a car and managed somehow to haul himself a good 500 yards into the field before succumbing to his injuries. It remains a mystery where he came from, how long he lay there, and the ultimate cause of death. Forensics never got a chance to review the case. Fuzzy Butt was the first to notice something amiss in that section of the field.  All I will say is that skunks and mowers … it wasn’t pretty … And yes, Ghost Skunk still stunk.

Skunk #4 tried a stealth approach from the south. Fuzzy Butt sounded the alarm, and Farm Dog went to red alert and set off to locate and identify the intruder.

Now, the Hairy Beasts bark. That’s what dogs do. Sometimes I think they bark just because they can. I’m certain a few of the neighbors dogs bark just because they can. So, it’s not out of the ordinary to hear a woof or two at random hours. And what I dread every year happened earlier this week: random woofing wafting in the open window on the evening breeze. Followed in the next instant by that smell.

I’ve decided that SKNK is a four-letter word. Cheeky little critter was using the motorcycle trailer behind the barn as cover. And he was digging in. And I don’t have a pole long enough to use as a poker safely from outside the spray radius.

Not only is Farm Dog color-blind, but he believes in confronting a problem head-on. So obviously he HAD to tell #4 the Farm Rules from less than 2 feet away. It’s hard to praise him for doing his job so well when he smells so bad.

Where’s the Pollyanna Perspective in all of this, you wonder? I’ve discovered two stink-be-gone recipes that don’t work. And at least one that does. One part dish soap, one part hydrogen peroxide, two parts baking soda. It dries a little crusty, but it’s effective!

That, and one item to add to the proverbial list of certainty: death, taxes, and skunks carrying the day.