A leisurely paddle

Back in May, at a charity auction, I made the winning bid on a certificate for two all day canoe rentals from local outfitter Saco Bound. By planning for the middle of September, I was able to assemble enough of my gal pals to make use of the certificate. We’re all busy, but there was a Monday on which everyone could be available and we knew we’d avoid the summer weekend crowds. The weather cooperated, it was a simply spectacular day.

Susan and Alice took a double kayak,

while Nancy, Chico, and I stayed old school and used a canoe.

Our boat was in a leisurely mood and very quickly the kayak was a small spec down river.

The river has a lot of sandy, beachy, banks like the one you see down river, on the right, in the picture above. People pull their canoes over and have a snack, or a drink, or stretch their legs (or maybe rest their arms?) and then continue on after a while.

Kind of like this.

At one point, we floated past some folks resting at one of these little beaches and one of them said in a wistful voice, “Ooh. I wish I could do that with my dog.” I haven’t heard that a lot of times and it just plain made my heart sing.

The more efficient craft, the kayak, with its more energetic paddlers, eventually disappeared around one last bend, headed for the pick up spot. Then we really took off the pressure and pretty much floated and gabbed for the next hour.

Like this.

Because it looked like this:

The Saco River, looking like a mirror.

We all have our own kayak, between us we own or have access to several pick up trucks, after wondering why we hadn’t done this sooner, we decided to do it again as soon as possible. Which could be next year.

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Leash walking and socialization report

This week Chico and I are in Washington, DC, visiting my dad. Chico has to do a lot of walking on a leash here, lots more than up in rural New Hampshire.

After a small incident with a golden retriever a few weeks ago (no one was harmed, but it was upsetting to all involved), I decided to use Chico’s harness when we go to the city. His harness has the ring for attaching the leash in the front, on his chest and that greatly reduces a dog’s desire to pull. It also means that if Chico loses his cool and lunges at something, as soon as he hits the end of the leash, he gets spun around and is facing me, not whatever is bothering him.

And the verdict is that between our leash walking practice and the harness, I am walking a different dog. Yes, he stops to sniff more than I’d like, but he doesn’t drag me all over the place. His confidence has grown too, because  he doesn’t lunge at passing buses like he did a couple years ago, he can sit and watch joggers go by us without thinking they need correcting, he was able to walk right by my side at the ‘heel’ position while a baby carriage went past us in the other direction. It was a whole heck of a lot like walking a dog, not some big battle for control.

When we got back to my dad’s place, there was an activity taking place in the common room by the elevators…

and this woman really, really wanted to pet Chico. I stayed close for a good long minute, but then was able to back off enough to get a picture. Being wedged in between the couch and coffee table is Chico’s choice. In this picture you can tell he wasn’t 100% relaxed, but he was a good camper and went with the program.

And here’s a gratuitous shot of him being cute in the dog bed they keep in this lounge to make it feel homey:

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A week of adventures

Last Monday I made an appointment to have my vision checked and my eyes examined. They had an opening for Wednesday, sooner than I could have hoped for. I asked if they, like my orthopedist, are a dog friendly office. “Tell me about your dog.” I described Chico as a well behaved, forty pound, Collie-looking, mixed breed. “Oh, I think on Wednesdays our office is dog friendly.” OK, sounds good to me. I ought to have picked up that it wasn’t normal procedure for that office.

So, we arrive for the appointment and as I am signing in, I become aware of some rather urgent and intense communication in the area back behind the glass. Within a few minutes Chico and I are introduced a young woman and told that Chico can’t come to the exam room with me, but that “Nina used to work at the vet’s office and she will stay with him.”  OK, I guess that’ll work, here Nina, here’s the treat bag.

After about twenty minutes, as I am sitting without glasses or contact lenses waiting for drops to dilate my pupils to take effect, someone comes to ask me to sit with my dog since Nina has to go back to work now. Hmmm. Chico is happy to see me and lies down by my side. In another ten minutes, the doc comes to get me so he can look deep into my eyes and check their health. Nina was not with the doc and clearly had devoted as much time to this project as they would let her. No one in that office knew anything about Chico except what they had seen for the last thirty minutes – a happy, well adjusted dog. So, I took a cleansing breath, told him to stay, put my sweater on the chair, and followed the doc. I left Chico in the waiting room all by himself for another ten or fifteen minutes while they finished the exam.

Nina is holding the leash while Chico says  hi to Rosemarie in the office. Thanks to optician Ruth Hushhour for the picture.

Apparently, he lived up to their expectations, was a perfect angel,*  made friends with everyone, and one person asked if they could adopt him. That means that when people came into the waiting room, he didn’t rush at them barking. I’m sure if that had happened they would have been in my exam room in under half a second to get me. And I bet my sigh of relief when we left the office created a breeze that could be felt all the way across the parking lot.

On Saturday, the Agility Club of New Hampshire had a picnic at American K9 Country. Julie said it was a perfect chance to Chico to socialize, so we went. It was so much fun! We ran late in the morning and didn’t arrive until the event was half over, but we got our licks in. There was an agility course to run (and we got in three runs), there was a photographer with a straw bales and chrysanthemums portrait background set up on the lawn outside. There were hamburgers, hot dogs and chicken off the grill with nice sides, there was a dog groomer giving free trims, a canine chiropractor giving free adjustments, and someone with a massage chair for the humans.

And there were lots and lots and lots of Shelties. Shelties, Shetland Sheep Dogs, are believed to be part of Chico’s background. They look like miniature Lassie dogs and have a trait that, for now, is crucial to Chico being socially successful – they are smaller than he is. So Chico was able to touch noses and sniff bottoms with at least five different dogs without ever thinking of even curling his lip. Yay!

Chico also had a chiropractic adjustment from Dr. Bruce of Indek Chiropractic. That involved letting a complete stranger touch him all down his back. It wasn’t easy for Chico. Not at all easy. The doc found three places that wanted adjusting and eventually Chico was able to let the places release. Chico moved around a lot, trying to get away from the strange person who was pressing on his sore parts. he pressed up against me and kind of rolled his eyes up at us, but he never snarled or growled. He wasn’t happy, but he trusted that I hadn’t put him in a situation where he needed to protect either of us. That’s a far cry from the dog of two and a half years ago, a dog who told the vet in no uncertain terms that she was too close when we were all in the same configuration (dog between two humans).

And next week Chico is going to Washington, DC with me. We’ll be staying with C and her dog Joey. With a separate apartment in the basement, it’s possible to arrange things so that, if the dogs don’t get along, they never have to share space. We’re all hoping that it doesn’t come to that, but it’s great to have the option.

*Except that he didn’t stay exactly where I told him to making it a less than perfect down-stay. The duration and distraction factors were sky high, so I’m cutting him a lot of slack. Compared to what could have (or would have in the past) happened, he was a rock-star in that waiting room.

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Chickens and bears, oh my!

At the beginning of the summer, I had a happy little flock of thirteen chickens. On nice days, they, Chico, and I would hang out in the yard.

Like this.

Chico had his bone, the chickens looked for bugs, I weeded.

Then, all over my rural neighborhood, the bears started making problems in chicken coops. Last week, they made a problem in my coop. In fact, it was a slaughter. The remaining six chickens are going to a safe house tonight. Maybe some day they can come back, but for now, it just isn’t working here. I’ll really miss them. Many people believe that chickens are stupid. I know I used to. Real chickens, the so-called heritage breeds, are bright and a real delight to watch. Oh well, they won’t be far away and I’m sure I’ll be able to visit them if I want to.

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Hikin’ Herons patch arrived

Chico’s Hikin’ Herons patch (read more here) came in the mail with an extra one for me and nice note explaining that dogs don’t usually get patches, but the Conservation Commission was sure that he would wear it in public and promote the program.

So I sewed it onto his safety jacket. Chico is almost exactly the same color as our dirt roads, so the vest is a reasonable precaution for a dog who goes off-leash.

To celebrate the arrival of the patches, we went and revisited the Jackman Pond loop. It’s close to home, it’s long enough to be a good walk, but short enough to squeeze into a busy afternoon, it’s shady enough to be comfortable on a warm afternoon.

And it’s lovely, with little views of the pond at a few places on the trail.

Of course, there’s also views like this:

This cell tower is on adjoining property at a place where the CC trail goes quite near the edge of the conserved property.

And he’ll wear his safety vest next time we go to town, so people can see the patch. I wonder if we can go for any other similar patches from local conservation groups?

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Eastern English Springer Spaniel Club trial

I promised to report on the trial Chico and I attended last weekend, just after I picked him up from his stay in Pennsylvania and my trip to DC.

So I picked him up in the afternoon, drove to Massachusetts, stayed with friends, got up early and drove to the trial. We didn’t even get in a good walk, and our first class was the first class of the day. Not surprisingly, Chico and I were not in synch for that run. Or the one later that day. Or the one the next morning. But on Sunday afternoon we had a qualifying run in the open standard class. And since no other dog in our class got a ‘q’ we also won the class. That is so going to end when we ever get to excellent level.

The final class was in the heat, on a super fun course (which included back to back tunnels that were actually easy-peasy but looked hard and made for a total psych out for many handlers in open, and had the course builders who run excellent dogs saying “*I* want to run that course!”) and we were so slow and careful that we were only tenths of seconds under standard course time.

All the runs had their moments and the photog got great pix of a happy dog, so I know Chico was having fun. And we socialized up a storm and met classmate Katherine’s new puppies and won treats that Chico really, really likes in the worker raffle. And it was one year ago pretty much to the day, in the very same ring where we q’d in open, that we did our first B match. Chico, you’ve come a long way baby.

And on Monday, we went to the (tiny) Guilford, VT fair (Chico’s first fair, at least with me) where he raised nary a lip to any of the other dogs – often choosing to keep me between us (nor did he pull to meet them – mostly), he pressed into my side in the cow barns and had me run interference while watching 4H heifer judging:

“I better keep my person between me and those funny smelling horses.”

“Well, they seem to be confined in the ring, I guess I could look closer.”

Later Chico ventured to the edge of the midway before it was too much, then sat and watched the midway for a bit and had some cookies, and lay later politely at our feet while we ate the BBQ chicken we bought to support the Guilford Fire Department.

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It might not seem like much

I am working on my computer and Chico is lying quietly in the unfenced front yard, even when cars go by.

For some dogs, many, maybe most, dogs, this would be no big deal. For me and Chico, this is huge. Two summers ago, he had no idea that he didn’t have to protect us from cars and trucks on the road.

He had to learn where ‘home’ is and how rewarding it is to stay within the boundaries of the ‘home’ zone. He had to learn to associate vehicles with treats so that if he was tempted to bark at one, he had the alternative behavior of coming to me for a treat.

And, genius boy that he is, he did those things.

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I’m here, Chico’s there…

I’m back in Washington, DC, visiting my father. Chico is in Pennsylvania with his friends Harley and Flossie.

I’m staying with my friend N and her newly moved in beau, L, and their respective doggies.

This is Bella. She was here first. She’s twelve and quite reserved.

This is Zoe. She’s much younger, more energetic, and pretty pushy about attention and play. And I just reminded her that her humans prefer she not be on the nice rug she is on.

Chico was going to come with me, but this is a complicated situation, Zoe lives somewhere else part of the time, and she and Bella are just getting to know each other. We all think adding Chico to the mix would have made a lot of work for all three humans and all three dogs. Maybe next time things will work out differently. It’s interesting to be in this situation because some days I’d like a second dog and it’s good to experience this integration process. Gives me more information as I ask myself if it’s the right thing for me and Chico.

I’ll go get Chico on Friday, and on Saturday we start two days of agility competition in Westfield, Mass.

I’ll let y’all know how we do, and try to get some video, so stay tuned.

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Agility trialing update

Chico and I have been competing at about one agility trial a month since last September, and in July we worked our way out of Novice level into Open level. Courses are longer and more challenging than in Novice, judging is considerably less forgiving, and we are not getting qualifying runs. We are having fun! It’s fun to be challenged. Odd as it might sound, one advantage is that in Open, dogs face a twelve-pole set of weave poles. In Novice, competitors get a break and the weave poles (generally considered the hardest obstacle because it is not a movement dogs make in “real life”) are a set of sic, not twelve. Chico, for some reason,  really doesn’t take a set of six weave poles very seriously, so this is great. And Julie‘s practice courses are all at the Open, or even Excellent, level, so Chico and I are kind of used to boldly trying maneuvers that might be a shade beyond our collective abilities.

The first weekend of August, we competed on two days  in an Agility Club of New Hampshire trial  at American K9 Country. My camera got the hiccups and Saturday’s runs were not successfully recorded, but, thanks to my class mates Joyce and Margaret, we got Sundays runs. Some parts are very good and some parts are horrid.

The majority of agility competition takes place in the Excellent division, for dogs jumping 16 and 20 inches. When we get to Excellent, we’ll be in classes with thirty, forty and even fifty dogs. I’m perfectly happy for it to take another year to get there. Right now, as the video shows, Open courses are challenging enough.

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Have I been manipulated by my dog?

This morning around 8 the noises of heavy equipment arriving came floating in my windows. Banging and clanging and driving down a ramp sounds were followed by chainsawing and more clanging and scraping.

When we finally headed out for a walk around 9, Chico walked as far as the driveway where the work was going on, and stopped. He wasn’t willing to walk in the other direction either, so I headed back in the original direction. He went a few feet and stopped. Some treats and games got him a bit further, but he really didn’t want to go, so I headed back home again. When we got to the top of the driveway where the work was taking place I started down the drive to see if that was what he wanted.

Indeed it was. The guy driving the dump truck looked at me, turned off the engine so he could hear, and I said, “He’s desperately curious to see what’s going on down here, he won’t go past the driveway until he take a look.” Chico dragged me past the now silent truck to look at the backhoe, still clanging away. “Look,” I said, “it’s a big machine, you know about machines. Here’s a cookie for the machine.” And he didn’t bark at the machine and we went on our way.

And a few minutes later, I started to wonder…did he drag me down there just so he could have a cookie for the machine? He does know that he gets treats for not barking when heavy machinery goes by the house or works nearby, it’s not impossible that he the association is so strong that he seeks out machines so he can be rewarded for not barking.

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