2012 in review

As 2013 starts, my best wishes for health and happiness for you and yours, and for some peace and sanity on this planet. WordPress offered up a summary of activity on this blog during 2012. I found it kinda interesting, so I’m sharing it, while realizing only my most dedicated readers will bother with it. Thanks for sticking with me for over a year and over a hundred posts. If you like what you read, tell your friends; if you need a writer or an editor, please consider me. Happy New Year.

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The new Boeing 787 Dreamliner can carry about 250 passengers. This blog was viewed about 1,700 times in 2012. If it were a Dreamliner, it would take about 7 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

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Off leash in DC

One of the hardest things for me to find in DC is a place to let Chico run. Dog parks are, for him, a form of torture. So many other dogs that all want to get to know him at one time in a new setting, lots of them larger than he, and then I am tense and vigilant; neither of us has any fun.

Through some good fortune, I learned about a spot not far from where we’re staying, an informal dog park on the grounds of the headquarters of a national religious organization. There must be an acre, maybe more, bounded on three sides by chain link fence. And, so far, it’s not been filled with other dogs.

You can just make out the back end of Chico, headed for a tree.

You can just make out the back end of Chico, headed for a tree.

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Maybe not the most scenic, rustic spot, but open space where a dog can get a case of the zoomies and not get hurt.

Maybe not the most scenic, rustic spot, but open space where a dog can get a case of the zoomies and not get hurt.

Half an hour here, me walking from one end to the other and back a couple times, does wonders for Chico. And if I’ve learned anything in the last three years (has it already been that long?!), it’s that what’s good for Chico, is good for me.

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Training for the city

Chico and I are in Washington, DC for the next ten days or so. And, as the woman who checked me out at Target the other day said, as if things aren’t good enough, I’ve got a nasty, fllu-ish cold. I’m lucky enough to have use of an apartment, and I spent the afternoon, half asleep on the bed, and every time I heard the door, or a car or people right outside, I happy-voiced ‘it’s the neighbors!’ and dished out the high value treats. Chico’s already giving me the “pay up sucker look” (instead of barking like a maniac) about 50% of the time he hears something. Same approach is working when I walk my reactive dog on the street – various combinations of the word friend – which Chico knows means a treat is coming, proactive pez-dispenser style giving of cookies, asking him to walk beside me with his nose touching my finger (an extended version of a pick-up from agility), and sometimes pulling to the side and playing the  ‘look at me’ game, is making walking in the city quite possible, maybe even kinda fun. Which is something it has not been on any previous visits here.

And last evening, Chico completely ignored a snarling, snapping, enraged, and impotent Schnauzer that was across the street on its walk. Chico didn’t even ask to be paid for his good work. But I shoveled a fist full of cookies at him anyhow, just to make sure he knew how good he was.

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Video from November 15 Run Throughs

Run throughs are one of those mysteriously titled agility activities that Chico and I participate in on occasion. Run thoughs is a chance to meet a course and walk it, like one could at a trial, and run it, like at a trial. Where run throughs differ from trials (in addition to not being judged) is that you get chance to repeat the course. White Mountain Agility has run throughs twice a month, and we go as often as time and budget allow.

My classmate (and great hair stylist, if such a word can be applied to my generally ‘drip dried’ hair do) Alice, shot video of one of our rounds during run throughs last month. It’s cell phone video, so not greatest quality. Please note that Chico absolutely tears up the weave poles.

When this post publishes, we’ll be at an agility trial, I’ll let you know how it goes.

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Two walks

The leaves are all off the trees, temperatures are low, blaze orange is pretty much mandatory in the woods, and Chico and I are still walking as much as we can while the ground is bare.

We walked at White Lake the other day.

I admired the view of the tippy-top of Mount Chocorua.

While Chico experienced the trail in his own way:

Sniff

…and sniff

… and leave a message that you were here.

The lakeside trail leads to a trail that goes to the Tamworth Conservation Commission trails, so we made a nice loop. We hadn’t been this way for a while, and we discovered that there’s logging going on just past the boundary of the TCC lands and what was, earlier this summer, an overgrown woods road, is now well used, hard-packed, two track road. The work will finish and over the next few years, the plants will start to take it back.

The next day, we started exploring the Ossipee Pine Barrens. Pine Barrens are a rare and fragile ecosystem and this is one of the last in the state. There is a large tract owned by the Nature Conservancy, and it’s open to the public.

The tall Pitch Pines are surrounded by scrub oak.

This ecosystem is prone to fires, and many of the tree trunks are burned.

Some of it is quite dramatic.

Amazingly, the trees live and some start to sprout new growth in a very interesting way:

Like this, right from the trunk.

There are a lot of snowmobile trails in this preserve, and over 200 acres, it’s close to home, but a very different landscape – sort of a mini-field trip – so we’ll be going back to explore further.

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Just plain funny

My friend Lori directed my attention to this video and it is such an accurate portrayal canine and feline tendencies, I have to share it.

Most of us wouldn’t really want a human companion with the traits we treasure in our companion animals, would we?

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And still more things to appreciate

My Thanksgiving weekend was spent at Eva’s garden, where we’re lucky enough to be able to take lots of off leash walks, eat good food, and breathe nice clean ocean air. The very best thing that happened to Chico this weekend happened when I was without my camera, and I most likely would have missed it anyhow; so, if I’m able, I’ll paint a picture with words.

Eva was going to visit many members of a large family she knows in her neighborhood. They live down a long driveway, off a quiet dirt road, so Chico and I walked the last mile or so to the house. It’s a doors open, come on in kind of place, so we did. After about ten minutes a little Shih Tzu-type, dust mop of a dog, surfaced and came wandering over to Chico. Chico was fine, not super friendly, but fine. This is what I interpret from what I saw happen almost before I knew what was happening, the dog was pretty meek and she backed off from Chico pretty fast, but there was no discernible – to me- tension between them, and certainly no nasty stuff. Yay.

And on the way home from Eva’s, we passed this doggie daycare place, right on the side of Route 1 north of Boston:

It makes me so happy that this is not the best alternative for where my dog spends his days.

I’m sure the dogs are safe, and well cared for, and it beats being home alone all day, but my dog and I are both much happier living on less and being out of the city.

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Time to give some thanks

Here it is, Thanksgiving already. My favorite part of the holiday has always been the going around the table, each person naming at least one thing for which they are thankful. There are a number of, appropriately, dog related things for which I am thankful.

I’m thankful that the universe delivered Chico into my life even though I didn’t really want him, immensely thankful that we easily found our way to a philosophy of dog training and a dog trainer both of which are just right for both of us, and that I could repair the lobster toy one more time:

The eyes are off to one side now, but it’s still among the most-loved of Chico’s toys.

I’m thankful for friends who support me in my work with Chico, for the new friends I made through canine agility,  for my family who stand behind this dog even though he isn’t theirs any more, for all the beautiful places I see walking Chico, and for the chance to find out that I really, really, really needed a dog.

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Dreaming of a road trip

Are you packing for a road trip?

I have to go to San Francisco this winter (I know, poor me) and I’m dreaming of making it a road trip, a grand and giant field trip for Chico and me. That may not be practical, and what plays out no doubt will be revealed here, but I did google “drive cross country with my dog” recently.

One of the top results was a Washington Post article from 2009 that makes the idea sound not quite as insane as I first thought. Not simple, but possible. The writer is a realist, and offers a top ten list of things she learned, cheerfully assuring readers in the final one that “at least 10 percent of your drive will be wretched.” But she’s done it twice, and had, overall, a wonderful time.

Still, January might not be the easiest time of year for such a journey, that’s worth taking into consideration.

 

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October visit to Eva’s, part two

After the long walk on the beach, Chico, in his doggy way, was ready for a nap.

Very ready.

He’s sleeping on a coffee bean sack. Eva uses these sacks for everything from making them into doormats to mulching the paths and edges of her gardens with them to keep the weeds down. Note to those considering doing this: the sacks will biodegrade, but the stitching won’t, so don’t use where you want to roto-till. I heard it from the pros – Eva’s workers.

The day never really cleared up, and I chose to throw myself into some of the indoor work.

All around the stove are flats holding lemon verbena that was drying to be used as a tea. In the pot on the stove are the stems left after I had stripped the already dried lemon verbena. Eva is going to play around with them and see if any more of the flavor can be harvested from the plant.

Autumn Olive, also called Autumn Berry, is an invasive ornamental with a delicious and largely unused (because it is full of small seeds) fruit. Clever Eva has figured out many uses for the pulp and juice of the fruits: sauces, sorbets, drinks…lots of things*. To make any of them, one must start by getting the small berries off the branches.

There were several large storage bins of branches waiting to be stripped of their fruit.

So I did that.

And, in his own way, Chico helped.

Somewhere in the day Eva and I moved about 100 pots of lemon verbena into her neighbor’s basement where the clipped back plants will hibernate until spring.
By the time we finished all that, ate dinner, and I picked and packed some greens to take home with me, it was bedtime. Another great, if short, visit to one my favorite places.

*Chef Didi Emmons spent a year cooking in Eva’s kitchen, using ingredients from the garden and wild crafted by Eva. It’s a good read, there are neat ideas for growing and using all sorts of foods that are often ignored, it’s called Wild Flavors and you can read more about it at Didi’s website.

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