Posts Tagged ‘dogs’

GoodieFest

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Ready for some Wednesday Goodies?

Here’s a goodie to start with…for those of you who read Monday’s Barking Dog Blog (which was written late Sunday)…Monday was the first real test of the Barking Dog Response…that is, would Neighbor listen to the request in the note I wrote?

Monday, I am pleased to say, was quiet.

Tuesday, I am pleased to say, it rained most of the day–so basically, who knows if it would have been quiet or not.  But the rain was a major boon (and it came without the massive hailstorm that ripped apart this area last year at just this time), so either way…definite Goody.

Why, I might even risk riding Duncan on our north flat today!  (But, hmm…I think I’ll have earplugs, just in case.)

Otherwise, on the Goody front?  I got another short story out in the backlist offerings!

Call from the Wild$.99
First Published: 2004, DAW: ReVisions
BACKLIST EBOOKS: ALL FORMATS

In Neil’s world, there are miniature seeing-eye horses, service pigs, stock-guarding llamas, and bred-up Siamese guard cats—because in Neil’s world, dogs were never domesticated, and never will be. But it seems no one’s asked the dogs what they think…

Originally published in the DAW anthology, ReVisions—an anthology of alternate history stories that consider what would have happened if scientific and technological breakthroughs–and challenges–occurred long before they did in real history.

[included in THE HEART OF DOG]

Definite GoodieFest day.  Got any to share?

 

Barking Irony

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

barkbarkbarkbarkDear New Neighbor:

I bet when you saw Beagles in my back yard, you thought, “Oh, good!  She’s used to barking dogs and she won’t mind mine.”

Wrong.  And wrong.

Contrary to common belief, a happy and fulfilled Beagle is not a habitual barker.  (However, if you give them something to bark AT, you’re going to hear it very clearly!)

Also, my dogs live behind the house.  There, they don’t come face-to-face with neighbors who are walking, jogging, or having a little peripatetic quality time with their own dogs.  I very deliberately planned that location for their hangout even though the space is long and narrow and funky beside the Arroyo Minor drop-off, because…less stress for them.  Less stress for the neighborhood.

Peace and quiet for all.

And, as it happens, my dogs do not in fact bark as a recreational activity.  Oh, adolescent Dart flirted with that past-time when he first arrived; we managed, prevented, and otherwise stopped it from becoming a habit until he grew through that phase.

So, wrong.

Also wrong?

To move into your home, dump your huge dogs there unsupervised for a week where they’re in a yard that runs directly along our shared dirt road, and leave the neighborhood reeling under thunderous, relentless barking.

Then, when the first person mentions the problem, simply say that the dogs will settle in, especially now that you’re back.  Then leave them out all day while you’re at work.  And then, when the second person expresses distress, again say that the dogs just need time to settle in.

The weeks pass.  The neighbor across from you, a pleasant retired person, must close her windows in spite of the need to regulate her household temperature.  She can no longer putter amongst her flowers or keep up her yard without an unending chorus of barking.

The neighbors south of you deal with the impact on their own dogs, who are riled and easy to upset, and burst into barking much more readily.  Their new rescue dog experiments with barking as habitual entertainment, taking his example from your dogs.

The neighbor southwest of you—that would be me—takes a single ride in her north pasture and comes back inside with ears ringing and eyes crossed and then her horse is trapped in the paddock for the next four weeks, longeing in a small space.  She has to close up her house to get work done.  Outdoor chores are no longer a restful time during which the muse wanders through stories.  Her migraines do not thank you, either.  Young Dart ponders, again, the value of recreational barking.

Attempts to make friends with the dogs are fruitless; the shy one never gets close, and the very nice one takes tidbits with gentle teeth and then barks at everyone anyway.

It isn’t their fault.  They’re over-stimulated, thrust into an unfamiliar environment, unsupervised.  They’re up against the road where the world is in their face instead of restricted to the many acres behind the house.

MANY ACRES.  BEHIND THE HOUSE.

The weeks pass.  And finally, you receive a letter clipped to your gate, from the one neighbor who hasn’t yet spoken to you.  (That would be me.)  It’s as kind as it can be, but it states in no uncertain terms:  Your dogs’ barking, while you are gone, is relentless.  It’s distressing.  It’s affecting the quality of life of the entire rural neighborhood—where everyone loves dogs but everyone also loves their quiet life.  It is time to do something.

NOW.

Dammit.

 

Beagle Ration for the Week

Monday, September 5th, 2011

Some days, the dogs don’t really need words written about them.

Some days, they just have to be themselves.

Stealth FRAPping

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

Shame on you if you came here expecting to find anything other than Frenetic Random Acts of Play in this blog.  Ahem.

It’s not meant to be a FRAP video at all.  It’s meant to be a video of one of Dart’s weekend practice runs.  I try to watch these as whenever I can get my hands on them, because I learn from them–how to support Dart better, and how to handle better in general.

Also, I learned how dorky it looks to run in riding sneakers, but I pretty much already knew that.  The footing at this particular practice venue is a weird sand that gets in everything, though, so…riding sneakers it is.

But back to the FRAP.  There’s a certain look to FRAPping that any dog owner knows…a certain tail posture, a little bit of a hump in the back…it often looks as though the dog is scooting away.

Lately, Dart’s been picking up a little speed during practice, and what I saw in Saturday’s video explains why.  It’s a stealth FRAP.  Not quite random, because…hey, he’s going where I tell him to go!  (Including the moment when he goes where the course doesn’t…ahem.)

But check out that tail.  Check out the moments he’s slingshotting out of the tunnel, or scooting around on a turn.  You’ll see it.  There’s a FRAP lurking there.  The baby boy is figuring out just how fun this agility thing can be…

That business where he takes a sharp turn from the tunnel to the weaves? That was a stupendous weave entrance for a baby dog. However, it set us up very badly for the jump-jump-tunnel sequence afterward, because I should have done a front cross before the weaves; the two errors he made after that were caused entirely because I didn’t. Which I knew might happen, but I wasn’t sure Dart was up to it. Retrospective wisdom: should have tried. But that’s why he’s getting praise for doing it wrong (and then louder praise for doing it right).

Anyway, I love watching that video.  To me it speaks of a lot of fun to come…

And now, I leave you with a Dose of  Dogloo Dogs:

Dogloo Dogs

Looked out the back door. Found this.

The Heart of Dog Easy Button

Monday, July 18th, 2011

The Heart of Dog
Sixteen stories, award-winning authors, and help for a sick dog…

[wp_cart:The Heart of Dog:price:3.99:end]
Nook, Kindle, PDF, EPUB
after payment, click on “return to ferragus@gmail.com” to complete the process/get your file

Award-winning author Doranna Durgin has over 30 published novels and another 19 short pieces. Now her dog-themed stories are collected in THE HEART OF DOG, along with those by other award-winning authors: Jeffrey Carver, Julie Czerneda, Tanya Huff, John Mierau, Fiona Patton, Jennifer Roberson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, & John Zakour.

“If you’ve ever loved a dog, you will love this book…” 
~The Book Faerie

 

[show_wp_shopping_cart]

All About Legs

Monday, July 4th, 2011

Well, Connery has been out of sorts this past week, thanks to a rising eye and sinus infection.  These things are subtle with him–hard to diagnose–but he’s on meds now and shows signs of feeling better.

I’m all the more determined to get him in for a CT scan in early August, before it’s simply too late to deal with the cause (if in fact the cause can be dealt with at all).  There’s been some offhand mention of the potential for cutting his little Beagle head open, but I DON’T THINK SO is where I stand on that.

Sobering.

So what’s the antidote to a week of worrying about Beagle One?

EVIL DART BEAGLE!

Evil Dart Beagle (say that with affection!) is one of those crazy dogs who, in fact, has little awareness or concern about what any given body part is doing at any given time.  He’s the dog who’ll fly off the A-Frame because WHO CARES!  He’s the dog who’ll scramble across the dogwalk with one or two limbs catching air over the side at any given time, because WHO CARES!

When a dog has no body awareness, it’s really hard to teach him things like “do a nice straight SAFE splat at the bottom of the contact obstacle.”  Or a straight recall in obedience, or a nice heel-sit.  He’s got no idea he’s crooked in the first place, or that his sloppy butt-sit has pointed his hind legs in so many different directions at once.

This is also the dog who has no idea he’s digging his claws into the tops of your bare feet, or that he’s just atomically vibrated himself up into your face right as you bend over, or that you really didn’t need that nose broken.

So for his sake and mine, Evil Dart Beagle is learning that he has legs, and he’s learning where his legs attach, and what they do when he might otherwise not be paying attention.  And this is how I’m doing that…

PS: This is in gallery set-up, so clickie on the piccie for something larger…

O Sweet Temptation

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Oh, Dart Beagle.  How you teach me patience.

Or, as my agility friends say, “The most willpower, ever.”

Dart’s learning to keep his brain in his body on a trial agility course, because failing to do so results in warp speed excursions across the grounds, little of which includes taking obstacles.

At home, this means we’re working tons of off-course focus and obedience, proofing, and lots of premacking & choice games (ie behavioral work).  We’re working agility skills, too, but secondarily.

At trials, it means…massive willpower. Because while Dart can navigate advanced drills at home, for the last couple of months, he’s been benched for trials.  Only last weekend did he venture onto a course again–entered only for the just first day of the trial, and running only…one…jump.

Even with those lovely big sprawling novice courses out there in front of us…beckoning…luring…calling…

Well, this weekend just past, he did his third perfect start line in a row–in a crowded, noisy venue at that.  He gave me perfect attention at the start line, a lovely little first obstacle, and a precision recall: come, sit, present collar, “Thank you, Judge!” and praise party.

Then loometh the jumpers course. Three perfect “outings” in a row, and up pops temptation, sitting on my should just like the devil.  “TRY THE WHOLE FREAKIN’ COURSE, DURGIN!  HE CAN DO IT!  HE RUNS EXCELLENT STUFF AT HOME!  YOU KNOW YOU WANT TO!”

(I’m telling you,  that Temptation totally uses all-caps.)

Well, it was time to up the ante, but not quite that far. We did four carefully planned jumps: A start line, a longish and very difficult lead-out, and two additional jumps, very pretty!  Between #3 & #4, he got a bit stressy.  But he took #4 without delay, and then presented himself to me in his recall sit as requested.

All in all, perfection. He stretched his boundaries without breaking them, and he was completely successful.  Not too much, not too little.  Willpower wins!

Just don’t ask me what I’m going to do in July, when I’m standing there at the start line looking out over the next lovely big sprawling novice course…

Dart

Baby dog jumping--all sprawled out and grinning. PS Dart's ears don't weigh very much.

Pssst!  You know you wanna–!

 

Song of Connery

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Glamor BeagleSome days, there is no bawh loud enough.

I went to the three-day Amarillo trial with Connery’s second MACH (Masters Agility Championship) looming, but too many points outstanding to have any hope of earning them out.

MACH: Twenty double-qualifying runs (QQs, or standard and jumpers on the same day) and 750 speed points (1 speed point per second under standard course time).

MACH2: SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!

Some dogs have a bazillion speed points and struggle for double Qs; some go the other way.  Connery has decent QQs, but as a square-built little Beagle who’s usually both the shortest and heaviest dog in his height class, he scraps for every single speed point.

SO…

I went into the three-day Amarillo trial with a dog boy who’s been head-hurting since last fall (there’s a reason I’m selling an anthology to fund his CT scan) and then, the week before the trial, started a new med which, as compounded by the specialist pharmacy, held substances that made him sick from both ends for several days.

SO, YANNO…

I just wanted to see him run happy at this trial. No expectations, no assumptions that that ConneryBeagle will be okay to run in the June trials (which is how we’ve been operating for months now: no assumptions).

BUT, YANNO…

Have I mentioned that Connery Beagle loves his agility?

After Saturday’s Double Q and times, I figured we were decently set up for a MACH2 in June if he can run.

After Sunday’s Double Q and times, I figured we were in a great position for June…except I’d just watched Connery display an odd choke-cough through the first half of each course, so the “no assumptions” volume was turned up pretty high.  (Pulling him in mid-course would have felt like a punishment to him–I let him make that decision if we seem to have a problem.)

After Sunday’s rockin’ first course, I just figured the odds were against us.  But I spent a looong time memorizing and walking the jumpers course.  Obsession beats panic, any day of the week.

AND, YANNO…

ConneryBeagle really loves his agility.

MACH2 CONNERY

CH MACH2 Cedar Ridge DoubleOSeven CD RE XF EAC EJC CGC

CH MACH2 Cedar Ridge DoubleOSeven CD RE XF EAC EJC CGC

Did I say?  There’s a reason I put together a whole anthology for this boy’s CT scan…and why it’s called The Heart of Dog!

Memorial Day — A Trialing Experience!

Monday, May 30th, 2011

I’m off at an agility trial, right this moment! How cool is that?

Dart is currently too evil to run; Belle is running in jumpers only, as befits her semi-retired self, and Connery…

Connery is sooo close to his MACH2. His illness has slowed but not stopped this progress, and as long as it gives him joy…we’re gonna play!

(Here he is as the 20th Beagle to earn a MACH1.  I don’t know how many have MACH2…there are some really nice Beagles running right now!)

 

MACH ConneryBeagle

ConneryBeagle says, "BAWHSOME!"

 

Blown Away!

Monday, April 11th, 2011

WIND.  Agility.  WIND.  Cold.  WIND.

WIND WIND WIIIIIIIND.

Every once in a while, a trial comes along that turns into a defining mark. “Remember that trial when…?”

Remember that trial when Friday’s 45mph gusts turned into Saturday’s day-long 60mph wind and mutated to Sunday’s blustery cold snap?

wind ears

Early in the weekend with Wind Ears. Before it got bad.

First to go, the jump wings. The ring crews worked heroically to secure them.  Some couldn’t be saved, depending on their angle in the wind.  This led to a certain number of one-winged jumps and an ever-mutating course.

Next to go, the obstacle numbering cones. Well, we’re supposed to have memorized the course anyway, and who can read those things on the run?  But they did end up in some…inconvenient places.

Dog on the Run: What the heck is THAT?  Super-power: LEVITATE!

The background evidence

Early Saturday, before the wind hit peak, between gusts at the start line. The background tells the tale--contorted tunnel, traveling cone and chair in the ring...

Then came the set-up chairs. The set-up canopies were safe, because we’d all had warning…they were all tucked away, and the field was dotted with naked shade shelter frames.

That’s when it got fun. Tumbling crates, blowing jackets, flying trash, stinging desert grit, wayward hats, misshapen tunnels… Keeping the courses intact turned into a community project, with the ring crews in constant motion.

And jump poles! Even with rubber bands (which hold the poles gently in place but don’t prevent a knocked bar), they were scattered across the course.  Connery ran one course with four missing jumps.

ConneryBeagle: This is not RIGHT.  I will pretend the bar is STILL HERE.

But he still bayed into the wind and Double-Q’d.

Connery at start line

Connery at the start line, spurning the wind

Unfortunately, he’s had a tough weekend as far as his pain is concerned, although we had him bundled away in a protected crate.  Little Dart was dazed and frazzled, and I was really glad he wasn’t scheduled to run; I’d have pulled him.  Belle…well, Belle did what she does best.

Belle: Oh!  Woe!  This must somehow be MY FAULT.

Sunday was a relief after that, bitter biting cold wind and all.  Thirty miles per hour, suddenly not so bad…

As for the hamstring, bless its little heart… I didn’t re-injure it.  I did my share of lurching, skipping, and jumping, and if I can get my hands on the video taken of Belle’s run from the worst of the wind, you might just get a gander of that.

Or not. I have to hold on to the shreds of dignity that I might possibly have remaining, after all…

(Hey!  I hear that!  STOP THAT LAUGHING!)

Meanwhile, it’s time to go check the mirror for my wild windburn, and do some laughing of my own.  Why waste the opportunity?