Friday, December 28, 2012

The Solution to a Black Dog during a Power Outage


                Thursday morning, I woke up just after six to find the power out. Blue and white lights down the black street and Mom’s fire radio illuminated the problem as being a tree down on some wires.
                I turned on my laptop for light, made use of the flashlights that usually gather dust, and pulled Grace’s pink coat with reflective strips off my closet door. I borrowed Dad’s bright yellow jacket with reflectors from the closet to take Grace outside for her morning business.
                But the problem with the black dog in the dark didn’t surface until after I brought Grace inside.
                Now my first dog, Max, had black, white, and some tan fur. The white confined itself to his face, chest, and the very tip of his tail, and his back and sides were black. His tail tended to be the only reason I didn’t step on him in the dark middle of the night.
                Grace has black fur with brindle markings. I need a flashlight to see her in the crate at night because otherwise she blends into the shadows. She’d be invisible in a house without light, and she’d be able to get into all the trouble her little puppy heart desired.
                My mind mulled over the problem for about seven seconds until I remembered a neat little collar and leash Mom bought over the summer. They fell into the category of novelty rather than being a leash and a collar I ever thought I’d use. But the glowing collar meant I could keep an eye on Grace even without being able to actually see her.  
                I trotted down the hallway, Grace at my heels, and dug through the basket on the top shelf of my closet. The flashlight illuminated my work as I dumped everything out onto the bed. The limp black and orange collar lay on my comforter, and I turned on the orange light before putting it around Grace’s neck.
                “Free dog,” I told her. “Go eat.”
                The orange light bounced down the hall and into the living room. It stopped in front of the fire place, turned in a circle, and then dropped to the floor.
                Grace must have known I could see her now because she’d decided against trouble.
                Smart puppy. 

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Sense of Space

                The thermostat in my room read 64.5 degrees at six this morning. I wanted to crawl back under my flannel sheets as soon as my feet touched the carpet. I dressed in a long sleeved shirt, a sweatshirt, and jeans before putting on my parka, jacket, gloves, and hat before taking Grace out. Despite all those layers, the cold permeated my jeans and clung to the fabric against my skin.
                That cold got me thinking while I drove home after dropping Grace off at doggy day care. My mind returned to the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia and their constant presence at the edge of the Hollins University campus. It journeyed back over a year to the expanse of road and land around me as I drove away from Charlotte, North Carolina. All the while in the present, I drove down a two-lane road with frost-covered houses and trees crowding the gutter on either side of me.
                I’ve always been a touch claustrophobic while in crowds. But I didn’t realize the nervousness and tension applied to the physical world around me until I stood at the top of a hill on campus and looked at the buildings below, the mountains encircling me, and the wide open sky above.
I miss that sense of space.
                Even now as I type this entry and look out my window my view is crowded by the leafless trees in the swamp across the street. And the trees’ sharp branches scratch the sky, blocking any hope of seeing the openness I came to love in Virginia.
                I admire the charm of New England’s old homes and the diversity in their architecture, but the houses sit close together on small plots of land. A few sit back away from the road, at the end of long, winding driveways which lead into the woods. But the streets I drive through my hometown and the surrounding ones still feel small.
                At least once a week, I think about packing up the car and the dog. I’d drive west along I-84 until I hit Scranton, Pennsylvania and then pick up I-81 for a ride all the way down through southwest Virginia. Then branch off that south of Blacksburg, near Wytheville, onto I-77 and head straight for Charlotte.
                It wouldn’t take the whole drive south to ease the tension hovering in my muscles and bones. There’s a section of 81 in Pennsylvania where the mountains on one side of the highway give way and reveal the valley below. The mountains surround the town in the valley much like the sides of a bowl around the base. And the blue sky seems to stretch above and around the valley for miles.
                Whenever I drove this stretch of highway on my way to or from school, calm resonated outward from the deepest part of my chest. I would feel at peace.
                But the promise of the south and its expanse of space aren’t enough to uproot me right now. Responsibility always breaks that daydream. My savings account isn’t exactly full right now and what about a job to bring money in? I’ve had a hard enough time finding part time work here in Massachusetts, and even that isn’t coming close to paying my loan payments and for Grace.
                Responsibility also reminds me about my plan to attend dog trainer school at National K-9 in Ohio. I know that I’ll love being a dog trainer and that it’s a career I can take wherever I want to live. I’m budgeting just over $10,000 for tuition, housing, and expenses. I already have a quarter of the money, but saving is slow going. I can only afford to put a few hundred away toward it a month. Being me, I did the math and figured out that it’ll take me a couple years to get there. I also have to save for a German Shepherd Dog to take with me and train while there; well-bred shepherds aren’t cheap.
                I’m impatient. I also feel guilty about admitting to being impatient. I hear news stories every day about the unemployment rate in the country, and I think that I should be grateful to have two part time jobs. I should be thankful that I’m getting around thirty hours a week between the two jobs. Heck, I’ve even heard that I shouldn’t get on my employers’ bad sides by cutting hours one place to work at the other because of the flailing job market.
                I’m done feeling guilty. I shouldn’t have to feel bad for being dissatisfied with my jobs because I’m not making enough money to support myself. I shouldn’t have to put a smile on my face when I’m told for the twentieth time that I’m way overqualified for the position I applied for or the job I have.
                I’m tired of waiting in cold, claustrophobic Massachusetts. I want warm weather, my own apartment with Grace, and a job that’ll actually pay my bills. But what I want most of all, with every fiber inside of me, is the calmness I felt when I stood at the top of the Hollins campus and looked out at the mountains and the open sky.  I want to feel free. 

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

New Toy and Reading Progress


            I’ve come to the realization that I have to throw out two of Grace’s Nylabone toys. Both have had good, three month long lives of hard chewing. Grace reduced one to pretty much stubs and the other she chewed to the point where the two halves crunch together whenever she moves her jaw. While she could probably get a couple more weeks out of them, I think it’s best to get rid of them now. Chew toys aren’t forever.
            So I decided last week to head out to PetSmart with Grace for training and possibly to get her a new chew toy. We practiced her down in the dog food aisles while I checked out grain-free options other than Blue Buffalo Basics. She didn’t bark or ignore me completely when we walked past another dog, and she even made me proud because she behaved better than the other dog.
            Then I put her in a down as I checked out the store’s Nylabone options. The same s-shaped toy I wanted to replace hung on the rack, and I’m sure she would have enjoyed having that toy again. But I wanted to get her something different.
            I spotted a large, tan bone in one of the baskets at the bottom of the shelves. The toy looked solid, like Grace would need to work on chewing a dent in it. Plus the toy’s size made me happy; it was bigger than her front leg and would probably stand up to several months of chewing. The twenty dollars I’d spend on it would be well worth it.
            When we got home and I’d gotten the toy out of its packaging, Grace eagerly grabbed it between her teeth and trotted across the living room with it in her mouth. She looked a bit absurd as the toy was bigger than her head. But her eyes lit up and she got to chewing right away. She still loves the toy a week later, and who knows, maybe Santa will put another Nylabone under the tree on Christmas Eve.
            While Grace has been chewing on her new Nylabone, I’ve been working on thereading goal I wrote about last time. I finished the last book I was reading yesterday, and I’m going to start the next one today. I prefer to just sit and read for a few hours at a time. So the challenge is finding those hours amidst working and getting other things done plus making sure Grace doesn’t get into trouble. But I’m up for it, especially becauseI love seeing the pages and hours fly by.

Book of the Week: The Game by Laurie R. King
Next Week’s Book: Locked Rooms by Laurie R. King

Friday, October 19, 2012

CGC Class and a Reading Goal


            So after putting Grace and myself through obedience lessons, I decided to enroll her in a class to prepare her to take the American Kennel Club Canine Good Citizen test. The Canine Good Citizen certification, simply put, proves that a dog is well-behaved according to the A.K.C.
            While being a great accomplishment for a dog, the CGC certification is also a bonus for renters because it shows landlords their dog is well-behaved. I figured having Grace take the test would be a good for when I eventually move out and have to rent a place.
            We went to the first class on Wednesday night. I figured that there would be a variety of breeds in the class, but I was wrong. Of the six dogs there, Grace was the only non-German Shepherd Dog. She was also the smallest dog. I think the next biggest one weighed at least twice what she does.
            I learned a lot during the class. I learned that Grace is capable of more than I thought. She sat next to me while I shook the hands of other owners whose dogs were by their side. She walked passed German Shepherds without turning her nose to sniff them. She even willingly laid butt-to-butt with the biggest Shepherd in the class. She showed me that she can pass the CGC test so long as I put the work into it with her.
            I also realized how much I love German Shepherds. They’re such big, beautiful dogs that have an amazing grace and presence about them. And I loved watching how the dogs would look up at their owners with such attention and intelligence. Grace looks at me like that, yes, but I miss having a big dog.
            Grace and I have three more classes between now and the test at the beginning of December. We have a lot of work ahead of us. I’m taking her to soccer games tomorrow morning, and I may brave the mayhem that is Luddam’s Ford on Sunday mornings when there are plenty of dogs off-leash. I have to keep reminding myself that challenges are good: if Grace didn’t make mistakes, I wouldn’t have the opportunities to teach her.
            Now to change topics, I’ve noticed that I haven’t read nearly as many books as I’d have liked to since I graduated. I always promised myself that I’d read a ton after graduation, but, like with writing, I always seem to find something else to do.
            This is a bit of an issue since I bought a signed copy of the newest book in one of my favorite series in August, and I promised myself I’d read it once I reread the series. Two months later, and I haven’t gotten through half the series. I’ve actually been working on one book for a month. I’m tired of seeing that brand new book sitting on my shelf, unread.
            I have therefore decided on a reading goal: one book a week. I’m sure I could read more than one a week, but I figure reaching an easier goal is better than missing the mark completely. So I’ll start with one book a week, and I’ll go from there.

Book of the Week: O Jerusalem by Laurie R. King
Next Week’s Book: Justice Hall by Laurie R. King

Monday, October 8, 2012

Three Things about Living with a Puppy


                There’s something to be said about living with a puppy. Actually, there are many things to be said, and anyone who has ever raised one undoubtedly has plenty of stories to tell. So here are a few of the things I've noticed about living with and raising my nine month old puppy, Grace.

1. Troublemakers
                Puppies, unaware of human rules, tend to get into things that we’d define as trouble. They chew on anything they can get their mouths on, they steal things that don’t belong to them, and they excitedly jump all over people.
                Grace’s middle name should be trouble. When I first got her, she stole steal the fuzzy brown bathmat off the bathroom floor. She’d pounce on it and then drag it down the hallway to the living room. She’d be so proud of herself that she managed to catch the dead animal. Training has broken her of that habit, but I’ve got a lot more work and training ahead of me to subdue the sock monster once and for all.
                Dad and I have nicknamed Grace the sock monster because she loves to attack socks. She doesn’t go after them when they’re on my feet, though she will go after Mom’s. Usually she just goes after socks when they’re lying about on the floor. She’ll pick them up, shake them to kill them, and she’ll chew holes in them.
                I outsmarted her once. I didn’t trust her not to go after my socks when I left the room, so I tucked them deep inside my shoes while I went to the bathroom. I thought they’d be safe because Grace looked nearly asleep in her bed in front of the fireplace. I could usually leave her alone during one of her naps because she’d sleep through whatever I was doing.
                Not this time. I came back into the living room to find Grace still in her bed and my shoes strewn across the carpet. I distinctly remembered leaving my shoes against the couch. On top of that, Grace gave me this look that said she knew she’d done something she shouldn’t have.
                I did laugh then, and I laughed every time Grace brought the bathmat out into the living room. I know I shouldn’t laugh because these are bad behaviors that shouldn’t be encouraged. I should be the good, firm owner who doesn’t put up with her puppy’s troublemaking. And I do try to be that owner as I stifle my laughter.
                I’m sure I’ll figure out how not to laugh while I’m correcting her eventually. Either that or I’ll get good at laughing when she’s not in the room. Or maybe she’ll grow out of this faze before I can master not laughing. But I doubt that.

2. Learning the Quirks
                One of the joys of raising a puppy is getting to know his or her personality. A puppy may be a cuddler or a clown or a people dog. These traits and the idiosyncrasies will become life with the dog when he or she is grown. Puppyhood is a time to discover such things and to see them for the first time.
                Grace has quirks that make me wonder about her and others which make me laugh. One I noticed, one that makes me wonder about her, is her tendency to chew on her back feet. She will stick her whole back paw into her mouth and then chomp on it. I figure she must be scratching an itch that she otherwise can’t scratch.
                I’ve also seen her fearfulness of simple things that I take for granted. The first time she meets something new, she tends to be cautious. I’ll always remember the first day she saw a five pound bag of potatoes I brought home from the supermarket.
                Grace crouched low as she approached the bag in the kitchen. Her nose led the way, cautiously sniffing the offending bag.  She stood a foot and a half from it and wouldn’t move any closer. She even barked at it a couple times. She might have been trying to get the bag to move; I finally had to drag her over to it so she could realize there was nothing to fear.
                Another part of Grace’s personality that I’ve come to both love and find incredibly annoying is her nosiness. She wants to be a part of everything that is going on in the world around her. This can sometimes get her into trouble, but that’s not what I love about this trait.
                Whenever I put Grace in a sit or a down after she’s gotten a bit too rambunctious, she’ll watch me as I move around her. Even if that means she has to tip her head backward until the bottom of her chin is parallel with the ceiling. Her ears are always what get me. They’re flat ears that speak to Labrador Retriever in her pedigree at one point, and those ears open up as she tilts her head back. They look too big for her head: large triangles pointing down to the ground.

3.  Dogs Grow Overnight
                Literally, they do of course. Puppies are always growing and maturing even as they sleep. Out of nowhere, a mischievous puppy will suddenly be able to eat a sandwich right off the counter. Or a once always bouncing puppy will settle down to chew a toy all on his own.
                Grace isn’t tall enough to get at anything on the kitchen counter, though I’ve had to stop her from licking crumbs off the kitchen table once. I’ve also noticed her default activity now tends to be lying in the middle of the living room and chewing one of her Nylabones when just a couple months ago she’d be galloping up and down the hall. She still has her crazy puppy moments, but they’re becoming fewer and less frequent.
                Most of all, though, is that I’ve suddenly been struck by how big my puppy has gotten in the past three months.  
                She was 27.8lbs when I adopted her back in July. At her last weigh-in a few weeks ago, she was in the neighborhood of 35lbs. She’s not only grown. She’s filled out. Those extra pounds are all muscle, giving her a lean and athletic build that makes me think she could be an agility dog. Her legs have also gotten longer, to the point where I sometimes think she’s nearly all leg. She uses them like springs to bounce over the little jumps I point her toward or across the room when she’s having a puppy moment.
                  I could go on. Her head has become more chiseled. She’s outgrown one notch on her pink collar. She’s nearly outgrown her training collar. I have more, but I won’t bore you.
                The point is that I’ve had three months and four days with my puppy so far. I can’t imagine how each day has managed to slip by me and how I’ve missed Grace growing. I feel like she’s changed every time I look at her. The puppy lying on her bed next to me now isn’t the puppy I adopted back in July. She bears a resemblance, but she’s not the same.
                I guess that’s just part of raising a puppy. They change so quickly and grow up within a few years. That’s why it’s important to live in the moment with the puppy: to rub the soft fur on her tummy, to throw a toy for her to chase, and to enjoy her racing to the back door for our morning walk.


Grace at 6 months old
Grace just shy of her 9 month birthday

Friday, September 21, 2012

Time to Write


                I’ve almost finished my second official week as a cashier at Stop & Shop. I got my first paycheck today (though I have to take it back to get a few things sorted out), and I’ve got my schedule for next week (which consists of morning and one afternoon shift). I’ve pretty much got the whole cashier figured out. There are a few things I still need to learn, but I am still new.
                One problem I’ve found with working is that I don’t seem to have time to write. And before you say anything, I did say “I don’t seem” to have the time. Maybe it’ll change when I work during the day rather than at night. But the problem is that I seem to get home when my parents are home, and I feel like I have to spend time with them. Then there’s Grace to take care of, who is usually bouncing off the walls because she’s been stuck in her crate for five or six hours.  And by the time I sit down to write, my watch reads ten at night, and I have to shut off the computer to have any chance of falling asleep by eleven.
                As for the mornings, I could be writing then (are here are some excuses why I’m not). But I don’t get out of bed until eight-thirty or nine in the morning. That, I know, needs to change. Even then I still feel like I have a hard time getting things done in the morning. It’s as if I need those morning hours to get myself amped up and moving.
                I’ve got a bunch more excuses too.
                Grace for one. She’s active and looking for trouble for about an hour after we get up, and then she crashes in her bed, sleeping for the next three or so hours.
                Number two is my laptop. The battery is slowly becoming less and less happy about holding a charge. As a result, I may get two and a half hours out of it before needing to plug it in to charge for somewhere in the neighborhood of four hours.
                I could always write at my desk, where the laptop can charge. But then I’d have to move Grace into her crate, and she just looks so peaceful lying there in her bed. I don’t trust her not to get into trouble if she wakes up and I’m not there.
                See? Excuses. If I had more time, I’m sure I could come up with a dozen more.
                There are always reasons not to write. I’ll always have something I think I should be devoting my time toward.  That’s exactly how I felt when I was at school and why I loved workshop classes that gave me a hall pass (so to speak) to write. And when I didn’t have workshop classes, I consoled myself by saying that I’d have all the time in the world to write once I graduated. So I would work on something else that needed to get done before writing. I would work on a history paper, a thesis, or a literature paper. I would study or read for class. I wouldn’t write.
                Now my excuses are lacking the time amidst the puppy, family, and work. I need to stop letting those excuses keep me from writing. I want to write, I really do. I just need to make a schedule and stick to it.
                I need to pick one or two hours a day, put the dog in her crate in my room, and sit at the computer with the wifi turned off. I need to make myself stare at a blank Word document and force my fingers to move over the keyboard until the screen in front of me is no longer blank. I need to make myself write again because I love it when I do. I love writing and getting lost in the story and characters. I miss it.
                And so the point behind this post is really simple. I’m sure you’ve all figured it out despite my convoluted and repetitive writing. I need to quit making excuses. I need to start writing. 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

A New Game


            I foresee Grace not eating again this morning when she bolts past her full food bowl, into the living room, and pounces on her Nylabone toy. She growls and tosses it across the floor. Her muscles quiver in all the excitement as she darts around the room.
            “Grace, enough,” I say.
            I know exactly where this is going: this slight bouncing will lead to an all out energy explosion with Grace running on the couch, down the hall, and into the kitchen. She’ll jump on me and nip if I don’t get the leash to control the situation in time.
            I step toward the end of the six foot leash, and Grace bolts. I get my foot on the end of the leash before she can pull it away from me. But she doesn’t calm down. Grace leaps at me, jumping up and biting my t-shirt. I dodge her teeth as I grab the leash.
            “No.” I yank the leash hard, and I hear the metal of the training collar chink as it slides. “Sit.”
            I pull a handful of times before Grace parks her butt on the carpet. I don’t see any sign of malice in her brown eyes, only excitement. She’s not being bad on purpose. She just has a lot of energy and doesn’t know where to put it.
            Still, I’m annoyed. My puppy may be wound tighter than a spring; however that doesn’t give her the right to jump and nip.
            “Heel,” I order.
            I march into the kitchen with her at my side, and I stop suddenly. Part of me hopes she doesn’t sit, despite her training to the contrary. But Grace sits, and she looks up at me with her big eyes so full of energy. She just wants something to do.
            An idea pops into my head. Grace’s trainer suggested something at one lesson to focus her energy. I’ve never done anything like it before with either Grace or my first dog. What’s a better time to try than now?
            I put Grace in her crate, head downstairs to the garage, and grab five milk crates. I placed them in a straight line in the backyard before remembering that I need her favorite outside toy, a red octopus that squeaks. I find it in the toy bucket and then toss it under one of the crates.
            Anticipation pools in my stomach, making me feel lighter and infusing my muscles with a shot of adrenaline. I can’t wait to get outside. This is going to be fun.
            I head back inside to grab Grace.
             “Let’s go,” I say.
            She scrambles out of the crate, through the kitchen, and to the back door. She almost flies down the stairs to the garage, and I tug on the leash to slow her down.
            “Easy,” I tell her.
            We step on the porch, and Grace spots the milk crates.
            I ease the tension on the leash. “Find toy, Grace. Find toy.”
            She trots over to the milk crates, sniffing the hard black plastic. After pacing the line twice, her nose hones in on the middle crate. She keeps sniffing it, and she doesn’t seem to be interested in the other ones.
            I smile proudly.
            “Good girl, Gracie-Gray,” I say.
            I flip over the crate and toss her the red octopus. I watch her leap onto the toy, her teeth clamping down on the squeaky head. I’m not sure if she realizes that she’s supposed to use her nose to find the toy yet.
             And I don’t think she realizes the implications of this little game. We can train to track a scent during competitions to see which dog is the best tracker. Or we can enter the world of search and rescue dogs, responding to emergencies all over the country and world. We may also just keep this little game of ours in the backyard. It may end up being just a little game we play whenever someone has more energy than the house can handle.
            “Come on, Grace,” I say. “Let’s do this again.”
            I put her in the garage and reset the milk crates for another round. I feel excited when I bring her out a second time. I knew I could do a lot of things with my dog. I never thought I’d actually be doing them. 

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Lady Grace of Louisiana


                I believe I owe an explanation as to the name of this blog. Specifically, I’m referring to the reason why I call my dog Lady Grace of Louisiana. It’s not a very long story, so I’ll do my best to keep it as short as a puppy’s attention span.
                The Sterling Animal Shelter has a connection to Virginia and the south, just like I do, and that’s the reason I liked it right away. The shelter accepts dogs transported north from a shelter in Virginia and another in Tennessee and then adopts them out. Due to overpopulation in the south, this prevents hundreds if not thousands of dogs from being euthanized yearly. My personal assessment of the Sterling Shelter is that a majority of their dogs and puppies are transports.
                I asked the shelter volunteer about Grace’s history when I adopted her, and the information I received was that she came from the shelter in Tennessee. She was transported north the week before with a group of puppies ranging in ages from three to six months. The assumption, therefore, was that Grace was born in Tennessee.
                “Why don’t you name her Lady Grace of Tennessee?” Dad joked.
                I laughed him off. “That’s too big a name for a little dog.”
                A few days later I looked at Grace’s rabies certificate before I went to get her a dog license, and I noticed neither the address for the vet clinic nor the shelter which owned Grace at the time was located in Tennessee. Both addresses were in Louisiana. From there, I figured Grace was probably born in Louisiana, rescued there, and then transported to Tennessee and then Massachusetts with the hope that she’d be adopted.
                “How about Duchess Grace of Louisiana?” Dad asked.
                “I like Lady Grace of Louisiana,” I said before turning to the dog. “What do you think, Grace?”
                Grace ignored me as she chewed on her squeaky toy. 

Grace (6.5 months) looking very regal.

Monday, August 6, 2012

From Squeaky to Crazy


                The ribbed, light green ball lying on the floor holds Grace’s attention even though it’s pinned beneath the toe of my sneaker. She never breaks eye contact with it, as if blinking would cause the ball to disappear into a black hole. Her muscles tense until she looks like a statue. Her brindle colored front legs are stretched out in front of her in a play bow stance, her flat, black ears perk forward toward the ball, and her black and brindle tail curls toward her spine.
                I remove my foot from the ball and kick it down the hallway.
                Grace gallops off in pursuit. Her black nails claw into the green carpet. Her back paws leave skid lines as she catches up to the ball when it bounces off the closed door at the end of the hall. Her teeth clamp down on it hard enough to produce a squeak, and she runs back toward the living room.
                She chews on the ball as she runs, and the high-pitched squeak hits my ears in a regular beat. Each squeak seems to be getting Grace more and more excited. She pounces on the ball and then throws it up in the air to pounce on it again. She starts growling at the green toy before bouncing back and forth in front of the toy.
                Suddenly the playful bouncing becomes an energy explosion. Grace bolts down the hall, and then she bolts back toward the living room. She takes a running leap onto the L-shaped couch and scrambles across the faux leather. She pops off the couch to take another run in the hallway before hopping on the couch again. This time Dad manages to grab her mid-stride, wrapping his arms around her stomach and snatching her out of the air.
                “Sit, Grace,” he says.
                She struggles a bit, but Dad forces her to sit. He makes her look at him as he rubs her chin and neck. Then just as quickly as the explosion began, it ends. Grace collapses onto the floor and falls into a deep sleep. She’ll be out for two hours now.
                The dog trainer says this energy explosion is a puppy thing. He explained it as air being let out of a balloon, that last bit of craziness before she’s completely out of energy. He recommended keeping a leash on Grace so she’s easier to control when she does go a little crazy. I’m behind that idea, but I’ve also made a change myself.
                Squeaky toys have been officially banned from inside the house. I no longer get to hear that high-pitched sound from the floor or to see Grace becoming more and more excited about the small green ball on the carpet. Yes, that does mean I have to take her out for a high-intensity game of fetch in the backyard at least once a day. But I would rather do that than have a puppy explosion once a day.  

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Adopting a New Puppy


                I had more boy names than girl names picked out when I headed to the Sterling Animal Shelter in search of a puppy. Almost all of the names came from books, which isn’t much of a surprise for a writer, and they tended not to be the kind seen often in veterinary offices. No Rex, Fido, or Daisy for me. Instead, I had Mycroft (boy), Atticus (boy), Talbot (boy), and Sookie (girl).
                So it figures that I’d end up with a girl dog that didn’t have the personality to justify the name Sookie.
                The Sterling Animal Shelter is located on a back road in Sterling, Massachusetts, at the very end of a driveway with trees on either side. Thick green leaves prevent passing motorists from seeing the buildings from the street. Barking from the dogs in the outdoor pens at the kennel can’t be heard beyond the end of the driveway.
                To the right of the parking area sits the administrative building which houses the cats and is where volunteers process adoptions and sell pet necessities. Left of the parking and across from the administrative building is the veterinary office where the onsite medical procedures are done such as wellness exams and spaying and neutering. The final building at the shelter, at the very end of the driveway, is the dog kennel.
                The dog kennel consists of a long, white building with chainlink fence forming pens on the front and back of the building. An overhang covers all of the pens so the dogs can be outside for exercise and fresh air no matter the weather. The building itself isn’t very deep, the pens the widest part of the structure.
                I had two puppies in mind before I even stepped out of the car and onto the driveway in front of the dog kennel. I saw them on the shelter website the week before, and I scanned the pens for their faces. They weren’t in the first pen, but the three dogs in there did catch my eye. Specifically, I noticed the black dog in the group. She had brown markings on her cheeks and charged the fence to be the first to receive attention. The puppy climbed over one of her lighter colored pen-mates before having the other climb on top of her.
                I want to check that one out, too, I thought briefly as I walked along the fence.
                I focused in on a blonde puppy, and my heart skipped when I recognized her from the website. She stood far back in her pen, on the concrete pad next to the kennel building and away from potential adopters. Her ears laid flat against her head. She avoided looking at anyone and refused to come near the fence. I got a chance to meet her inside her indoor kennel, and she ignored me, staring through the chainlink door instead.
                Well, that was one puppy crossed off the list. And I had already convinced myself she would make an excellent Sookie.
                The second puppy I originally had in mind was housed with what I took to be a littermate, a black, white, and brown male. The male struck me more than the black female. His coloring reminded me of my first dog, Max, and I asked the shelter volunteers to see him outside in one of the outdoor pens. The volunteer who brought him out handed me some treats, and those ended up being the only way I could get the dog to come near me. Even then he took the treat only to walk away and eat it.
                By the time I decided he wasn’t for me, another couple had adopted the black female I originally came to see. That crossed the second puppy off my list.
                The kennel at the shelter still housed a number of dogs, even though that number decreased by the minute. A handful of puppies were adopted while I surveyed the dogs, and I began to feel a small fog of disappointment form in my stomach. The whole hour and a half trip up to Sterling would have been in vain if I didn’t come home with a puppy, and I won’t end up getting a puppy for another month because of all the things that’ll be going on in the house in the coming weeks.
                I took another walk through the kennel to check out the puppies one more time. The black and brindle I noticed when I arrived again caught my eye. She’d been with a lighter colored puppy in the indoor kennel earlier, but now she lay all alone on the raised bed. She didn’t seem to mind, though, as she chomped on a squeaky toy shaped like a mallard duck.
                I let myself into her kennel, and the puppy turned her attention to me. She jumped on me, her tail wagging.
                “Off,” I said as I pushed her off.
                She jumped again, and I pushed her off again. We repeated this little dance of ours several more times until she decided to keep all four of her paws on the concrete. When I crouched down to pet her, she licked my hand and wagged her tail. Her eyes made me ask the volunteer if I could see her outside. She looked at me with more love than I thought possible at a first meeting.
                “Sure you can take her out,” the shelter volunteer said as she picked out a leash and choke chain collar. “But I’m not sure how good she is on the leash.”
                In fact she wasn’t good on the leash at all, and I discovered that as soon as I took her out of the kennel building. She leaned against the choke chain, coughing and wheezing as she tried to get at the dogs still in the outdoor pens.
                We rounded the corner of the building to the short side where the other dogs were out of sight. I knelt down and touched the puppy’s chest, effectively getting her to stop choking herself.
                “Take a chill pill,” I told her. “Relax.”
                Her tail never stopped wagging as she leaned her chest against my knee and looked up at me.
                I felt excitement at the prospect of training this puppy. Obviously she needed to learn how to walk on a leash, and she probably didn’t have any obedience training. That meant I would get to train her and mold her into exactly the dog I wanted.
                The final test for this puppy, a test both of the other dogs had failed, was in the outdoor pen. I led her into it, closed the door, and let her off leash. She wandered away for a moment to sniff the gravel and the toy and for a potty break. But then I called her to me, and she came. She followed me around the pen, a few feet behind my heels.
                I felt unsure about her. She passed all my little tests of temperament and training, but she wasn’t the puppy I imagined bringing home. I had my mind so fixed on the blonde female puppy that I couldn’t see a black and brindle puppy as my own. I also couldn’t see having a dog as reality. I’d only had one dog in my life, and I didn’t think I could love another dog as much as I’d loved him.
                Then the adoption process happened. I signed all the forms, listened to the instructions of the shelter volunteer, and loaded up our new puppy supplies into the car. I settled into the back seat of the car and looked into the rear at my new puppy, cowered against the back of my seat.
                “I don’t like Sookie,” Mom said from the driver’s seat. “What are some other names?”
                I kind of agreed with her about the name. Sookie just didn’t seem to stick with the puppy. So I scrolled through a number of dog-naming websites on my smart phone, listing off names like Roxie, Duchess, and then Grace. I rolled the name around on my tongue, glancing over the seat at the puppy curled up against the seat.
                Grace.
                That sounded like a good name for this six month old Labrador/Terrier mix transported up north from a Tennessee rescue organization. That sounded like a good name for my new puppy.  
                “I like Grace,” I said.