Across Arkansas in a day

I 40, I 40, I 40.  Correction. Interstate, interstate, interstate. All day. Different ones, but interstate.

Rest stop. People with two Pugs arrive at the same time we do. One slips his harness. Owner panics and runs after, dog runs away. I head away from highway going, “Cookies, cookies, cookies!!!*” Owner snaps into action and follows saying, “Want a treat? Want a treat?” As Pug approaches us, Chico snarls (thanks buddy), and dog backs away, but still stays away from highway. Chico and I left them all to sort it out, and they managed.

A sign on the side of the road advertised Peanut-Pecan-Cashew Brittle at exit 73 (Arkadelipha, AR), so I got off and followed the signs to Juanita’s Candy. The other customer in the factory sales room had driven two and a half hours from Shreveport, LA to buy Juanita’s brittle, so I figured I was on to something. When I made my purchase, I asked the clerk if there was a nearby place to get a sandwich, at “not a chain.” He asked if I like barbeque. I said it seemed like the thing to eat when in the area. He sent me back down the road to Allen’s Barbeque. They provided a very delicious and especially unhealthy lunch for under seven dollars.

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Chopped-beef BBQ samich.

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Fried pie. Take flaky pastry crust, roll into a 6 inch circle, glop some apricot jam on one half, fold, seal and deep fry, adding even more fat to the pie crust. Yum.

Fried pie. Take flaky pastry crust, roll into a 6 inch circle, glop some apricot jam on one half, fold, crimp, and deep fry, (thus adding even more fat to the pie crust). What’s not to like?

And they had the coolest straw holder:

2013-03-02_13-26-55_826Thanks to Gertrude, we made it to a La Qunita Inn in Plano, TX with no problem, ate some dinner from the supply box in the back of the car, and went to bed early. Dallas Dog Sports USDAA agility trial in the morning.

* Thanks to Sylvia L for that idea.

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Across Tennessee

It’s a long drive from Asheville to Memphis so we went for a walk before leaving town.

And I saw my first pussy willows of the season.

And I saw my first pussy willows of the season. This is in a park along the French Broad River. I learned that the French Broad is the third oldest river in the world. And I never heard of it before. Go figure.

The Smoky Mountains were having the dreaded wintery mix, so I powered through to lower elevations before I stopped for gas and a bathroom.

When I got off the highway, I saw a sign that said “PetSafe Dog Park” and after de-watering myself, I followed the signs to what turned out to be headquarters of invisible fence and pet-toy maker PetSafe.

Next to the HQ, there's a center for boarding and grooming, with a giant, beautiful, recently re-landscaped, dog park.

Next to the HQ, there’s a center for boarding and more, with a giant, beautiful, recently re-landscaped, dog park.

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I loved the water fountain with a doggie level.

I very much admired the water fountain with a doggie level.

Lots of water to play in on warm summer days.

Lots of water to play in on warm summer days.

It's narrow, but long.

It’s narrow, but long.

And we were the only ones there. No managing Chico around other dogs, much easier for me.

That was our big excitement for the day. Other than the dog park, it was driving on I 40, and driving on I 40, and some more driving on I 40 mixed with rest-stop stops for both of us.

About 7 PM we arrived to a warm southern welcome from Deborah who had offered her guest room to me for a couple nights. Yummy supper and off to bed.

My day in Memphis consisted largely of laundry and blogging, but we did take a nice long walk in Overton Park, Memphis’ answer to Central or Wissahickon Park. On the way to the park, I noticed two places where edible brassica had been used as ornamental plants. Love it.

At first I thought this to be the biggest ornamental kale I'd ever seen, but it's red cabbage, like I grow in my garden for coleslaw.

From a distance, I thought this to be the biggest ornamental kale I’d ever seen, but it’s red cabbage, like I grow in my garden for coleslaw.

And here, that black Italian kale, what do they call it - dinosaur kale?

And this kale, Eva grows this in her garden as an exotic kale.

So, a relaxing down-day in a polished, feminine, home full of Southern charm and hospitality; not a bad thing one week into a five or six week trip.

When this post goes up, Chico and I ought to be on our way across Arkansas to Plano, Texas where we’ll check in for two nights at a La Quinta Inn. On Sunday, we’ll be competing in a USDAA agility trial organized by Dallas Dog Sports. With luck, I’ll remember to find someone to record our runs and be able to share them with you by Monday or Tuesday.

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Dog friendliest city in the US?

That’s what the Asheville, NC tourist board would have you think. We found that almost all the shops welcomed dogs, there was outdoor seating at many restaurants, and lots of the street art involved, or revolved around, dogs.

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Pretty sure that Chico jerked the leash as I snapped this shot but I didn’t realize it until later. I guess that’s what happens when you travel with a dog.

We started out in the River Arts District. There are dozens and dozens of working studios with small sales galleries.

We started at Broken Road Gallery.

We started at Broken Road Gallery.

They advised us to visit Circle Studio. To get there, one has to cross working railroad tracks. As there is a roundhouse nearby and trains are being made up all the time, it’s a busy crossing.

We watched tank car after tank car of corn syrup roll by.

We watched tank car after tank car of corn syrup roll by while we waited to get across the tracks.

The owner at Circle suggested we eat at Twelve Bones Barbeque right across the street because it’s really good and “That’s where President Obama eats when he’s in town.” The line was long and there was no way for me to order without leaving Chico tied up outside while I stood in the line, so we went down the road to another gallery complex where, the guy at Circle had said, there was a ring with some agility equipment and a dog training school.

There was a nice man working his standard poodle in the ring, and when I told him our story, he said the equipment belongs to a club, he’s a member of that club, and he thought it’d be OK if we played for a few minutes.

I was so excited, I forgot to take any pictures. But there, in cinder ring, about 100 feet across, we jumped some jumps, did a couple of tunnels, some weaves, and the dog walk. Oh, and of course, Chico’s favorite, the teeter.

By then it was almost 2 PM and I wanted lunch, so we went downtown to find “the place that serves Indian street food.”

The staff t-shirts say "Namaste Y'all."

The staff t-shirts say “Namaste Y’all.”

My lunch was a salad of mixed baby greens topped with grilled paneer – not something I would eat on the street in India, if it were even available, but exactly what I wanted on this day. One problem that Asheville can’t really solve is the no-dogs-in-restaurants health-law problem. That’s a larger cultural issue. So, while Chico could sit with me on the chilly patio while I ate, no one from the restaurant would come out to take my order and I had to tie my dog up and go in to order. When I was a kid, we’d leave the dog tied up outside a store, but I am intensely uncomfortable doing it today, especially in a town I don’t know.

Fortified, we looked at a number of stores, including a great place called Battery Park. They say they are a “book exchange – champagne bar – espresso dog bar” and that’s just about as right as a business card description can get. Lots of cozy clusters of chairs and couches, used and (behind glass) rare books, and dogs are welcomed. This was a place where I could sit for a snack and a drink with my guy at my side. We stayed from about 5:30 to about 7.

I had some dry rose...

I had some dry rose

and Chico, he took a nap.

At this point he'd had a long day of greeting strangers and meeting other dogs

At this point he’d had a long day of greeting strangers and meeting other dogs. At both of which he did a very, very good job.

And Chico’s fatigue, of course, made me realize that I too had experienced a long day of talking to strangers, so we wrapped it up.

Asheville is a city with a big health food supermarket, Earth Fare, so I went there and got some prepared food and ate it back at my home away from home. I packed up so we could leave first thing in the morning for Memphis.  Or as I was thinking of it “Asheville to Nashville.”

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On to Asheville

Tuesday’s drive, from Christiansburg to Asheville, NC was interesting. A line of freezing rain was moving through the area. The morning weather was reporting significant ice accumulations just where I had intended to go. Change of plan. Instead of small roads through the Blue Ridge mountains, I stuck with the interstates. They run through the valleys and lowest passes, so the roads would be most likely to stay clear. In an hour or so, I was through the band of weather, the sun came out, and I saw a gravel road parallel to the highway, right before an exit. So, off we got and went for a walk. There was a hayfield off the road, not posted NO Trespassing, so we went for a short off-leash walk.

That, my friends, is the first green grass Chico and I have seen since last fall.

That, my friends, is the first green grass Chico and I have seen since last fall.

I figured that it would be possible to approach Spruce Pine, NC from where I was, so I decided to try it. Spruce Pine, I had read back in the comfort of my living room, is the home of the North Carolina Gem and Mineral Museum.

My route took me past an independently owned drive-through that had such a long line, I turned around to go back and eat there.

They advocate spay/neuter on their roadside sign.

They advocate spay/neuter on their roadside sign, so they are fans of all sorts of dogs.

I settled on a Pal Dog for me,

that's with mustard, onions, and chilli.

that’s with mustard, onions, and chilli,

and a plain dog for the dog-who-wouldn’t-eat-dinner. Hey, it’s vacation. And, yes, I do realize that might help him not eat his dinner again.

Spruce Pine, it turns out, is a town where lots of things close for the winter.

Including the Gem and Mineral Museum, which is actually part of someone's rock shop.

Including the Gem and Mineral Museum, which is actually part of someone’s rock shop, a stone’s throw from the Blue Ridge Parkway, and buttoned up tight in the no-tourists season.

It was a nice drive on small roads to get there, and a nice ride back to the interstate. Turns out, I picked just the right routing because I passed a sign pointing to a place I have heard of and never seen.

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Once again, my timing was a bit off.

Penland is sort of a Mecca for crafts people. It’s a beautiful setting, spread over acres and acres with what must be beautiful views (it was pretty foggy when I was up there) and of course because such important craft work goes on there, many people stay in the area to do their work, so the studio-galleries in the surrounding area number in the dozens.

In a few miles we were back on the interstate, headed for 96 Frances St, Asheville. I found a dog-friendly room through Air BnB and we came and settled in.

I awoke this morning to birdsong; forsythia is just about to bloom, and it it’s warm today I bet those daffodils will open up. Yay. I finally bumped into Spring.

Off to explore Asheville.

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Monday, PA to VA

Long day in the car.

We started in ugly, late winter landscape.

We started in ugly, late winter landscape.

And drove almost all day on I 81, through

. . . ugly, late winter landscape.

. . . ugly, late winter landscape.

Target for the day was the Super 8 Motel in Christiansburg, VA. We arrived around 6:30, took a walk, checked in, went across the street to a (sigh) Wal-Mart Super Center where I obtained some salad greens and microwaveable rice and beans. Antiques Roadshw is on PBS on Monday nights at 8 here too, so I watched that and fell asleep.

The motel is located in one of those commercial areas that surround cities. There’s a lot of pavement, a lot of cars and it doesn’t appear to be a great place to walk a dog. And it isn’t; except, I discovered, at 6 AM. The stores are closed, the parking lots empty, no one is driving by. I felt safe letting Chico off the leash for 5 minutes, which he adored.

The staff of the Christiansburg, VA Super 8 were friendly, considerate, and truly welcoming of me and my dog. The construction workers down the hall were perfect neighbors – like me and Chico, they go to bed early and get up early. Breakfast was fine – cereal (enhanced with some blueberries I picked up at the store last night) and tea for me, part of a cinnamon roll for Chico.

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Day and overnight clerks confer about the pet charge for our room.

Chico never alert barked during the night (keeping the bathroom fan running for background noise may have helped), he was polite to people we met in the lobby . . . and way too nervous to eat his dinner.

Now, on to Asheville, NC.
 

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And so it begins

Sunday provided the first unplanned travel adventure of this trip. We’re staying with Kathy and Ben at their place about thirty miles south of Binghamton, NY, and Kathy, Chico and I hopped in the car to go for a Sunday drive. We drove small roads and ended up in Ithaca, New York.

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First stop was the famous Buttermilk Falls State Park, where we found it a bit slippery for our city shoes and had to make do with a very short walk.

We drove into town, letting Gertrude (my name for the navigation program in my Droid) direct us to a Vietnamese restaurant we had identified in a quick on-line search. Saigon Village did not disappoint, Kathy and I had a great lunch while Chico waited in the car.

Many Ithaca’s attractions revolve around hiking and/or water, and late February isn’t really the time for that, so we went and walked the Ithaca Commons for a while.

We stopped in to an artists' collective to look around.

We stopped in to an artists’ collective to look around.

On entry, I asked “Are you a dog-friendly store?” and the clerk acted as though it was the very first time anyone had ever asked that question. She and her boss decided that they probably were dog-friendly for a well behaved dog, and once Chico did some tricks he was deemed to be such.

There was some cool stuff to look at, including the work of one artist who paints shoes.

There was some cool stuff to look at, including the work of an artist who paints shoes.

We loved lots of things, and bought nothing.

Lots of the stores were closed on a Sunday afternoon, but we did wander into a cool second-hand store that was quite dog-friendly.

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There was furniture, there were household goods, there was art – it was an interesting mix.

Chico was a perfect gentleman in both stores, he was quite interested in the trees and lampposts of the Ithaca Commons, and he scored some leftover duck for dinner.

And we got an invitation to spend a couple days in Memphis with someone we met a couple years ago at the wedding of Kathy and Ben’s daughter.

On Monday morning we’re off for seven or eight hours driving down I81 to Christiansburg, VA, where I have a reservation in a pet-friendly motel.

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If everything goes to plan. . .

by the time you read this Chico and I will be started on our giant field trip across America, in my car, to California and back. We’ll be exploring new places, trying a couple of agility trials in new places, taking care of some business, and visiting friends and family.

It's still winter, so I'm planning a southerly route.

It’s still winter, so I’m planning a southerly route.

We’ll head south to Virginia and North Carolina, before heading west to arrive near Dallas Texas in time for an agility trial on March 3. I’ve planned a full day in Asheville, NC, and short driving days with plenty of time to stop, walk the dog, and look around.

My list of places to visit and people to see is too long for the number of days I have to make this trip, so surely some places and people will not get visited, but an ideal itinerary takes me from the Dallas area to Tucson, over the border to visit a friend 20 miles south of Tijuana, then to my cousin north of San Diego; north through California to Santa Cruz, the Bay Area including Marin County, a side trip to Humbolt County, then an agility trial in Sacramento on March 23, and east to the Grass Valley, CA area, on to Denver, north (here’s a detour) to Chisholm, MN to see my mother’s home town, then back around the southern sides of the Great Lakes, passing by Worthington, Ohio to see my cousin and his family, returning to New Hampshire by April 13. Sound a bit ambitious to anyone else?

I’ll do my best to post every day or two and let y’all know of our adventures.

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Self-control depletion

An interesting phrase, no? The research summarized here says that dogs do not have an infinite supply of self-control. They reach a point where they can no longer exercise the self-control needed to stay out of trouble. Or, as Julie once said to me after I described Chico being good all day and then unreasonable, “Yup, he’d reached the end of his good nature.”

And in the big wide world, it’s our job to observe, and learn, and judge when they are just about to have had enough. Not easy work.

 

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Chico in the snow

My last post was pretty wordy, so here, for your amusement, is a visual interlude: some quickly edited, cell-phone-recorded video of Chico playing in the snow.

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Day of errands & treats

On Tuesday, Chico and I went to town, that is, the bigger town near me where things like stores and medical appointments happen for me. With a dozen or so errands to run, a number of them in dog friendly establishments, it was a good day to work on socialization.

We started at the accountant, where Chico was well received, doing his tricks to the delight of the front office staff and earning some cookies. Then, while I met with their office, Chico worked on a big chew bone.

Then we went to the bank. There were some folks waiting to meet with a bank officer, one of them was a young man with what seemed to be some special physical and cognitive challenges. But he was not so challenged that he couldn’t say “A dog! I love animals.” So I asked Chico if he wanted to “go say hi” (he knows these words mean that if he feels brave enough go away from me to see someone calmly, when he comes back, I will give him a cookie), and he did. This guy was one of those people that Chico found, from the first moment, to be absolutely OK. So I gave him a treat or two to feed Chico. Then when we finally did our banking business, the teller had a dog treat for Chico.

This picture of a snowy-faced Chico is here to break up a wordy post because I was so busy doing erreands I took no pictures of the adventures I describe here.

This picture of a snowy-faced Chico is here to break up a wordy post because I was so busy doing errands I took no pictures of the adventures I describe here.

The car wash didn’t result in any treats, and we moved on to Staples, where Chico had a chance to do some tricks for other folks waiting in line with us. More treats for him. Next stop was For Your Paws Only, to buy kibble. There was a big black lab shopping at the same time. As soon as Chico saw it, he came right by me. As we moved around the store, when we got near that dog, it started to bark. Chico ignored it. Several times. When we were checking out, the Lab could see us and it barked and barked, but Chico just looked at me, waiting to be rewarded. For two and a half years, in class, every time a dog gets loose, has the zoomies, or otherwise acts up, what the rest of us do is give our dogs treats. This was the first time I have seen Chico put together what happens in class with a real world situation. he chose not to engage or react, but turned to me for a pay out. And he got one. Big time. Add that to the day’s cookie total.

Next stop was the store for used hiking and camping gear where Chico patiently waited while I combed the racks. Then Eddie Bauer to return something, more cookies for Chico – they keep TWO kinds behind the counter for canine visitors – which he would not eat until they let him do the two-paws-on-the-counter trick, and on Paris farmer’s Union where Chico got a giant baked dog bone that he carefully carried to the car to save for later.

Next, at the storage locker place, the man waiting behind us was a well equipped dog lover with a biscuit in his pocket. He was quite gentle, and had a beard (one of Chico’s triggers) and Chico didn’t bark at him, and eventually accepted the biscuit, so that was a very positive social interaction.

The last stop (of the ones where Chico could join me – no amount of training is going to make it OK for him to enter the food store, ever, there’s laws about that stuff), was the mechanic, to schedule a service before Chico and I go on our cross-country adventure. Even after lots and lots and lots of interactions with strangers, all day, he was gracious, curious, quiet, friendly, and calm (well, mostly…Chico did bark for the owner when he didn’t come out of the garage into the office fast enough) to another couple of folks he’d never met before.

But he didn’t want any dinner that night.

Because you've been patient enough to read this far, here's another snowy-nose Chico picture.

Because you’ve been patient enough to read this far, here’s a second snowy-face Chico picture.

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