RSS Feed

Author Archives: Donna Black-Sword

Wordless Wednesday: Please don’t eat the coneflowers

Brought out of the archives and dusted off, here we share one of my favorite photos of the lovely Inga

Our first CCI puppy on her first morning at our humble abode. Eating my fading coneflowers while looking directly into my eyes. And our first hint at the challenges to befall us as novice puppy raisers.

Friends and co-workers, would it surprise you to hear that Inga just celebrated her fourth birthday on July 9?  Four, y’all.  The lady’s been a Skilled Companion Dog for nearly two years now.

Time passes by so quickly, we know.  But sometimes it happens in a way that warms the heart, it truly does.

Tired paws

That’s shredded car tires under those webbed toes.

Life is all about choices. Stuff happens and most times there’s nothing to be done about that.  Our attitudes and how we choose to deal with the stuff makes all the difference of how satisfied we are with our lives.

Agree?

Right, so I could choose to continue on in this happy state of mind that includes three amazing dogs in my life. Or I could decide to deal with the fact that Yaxley will be matriculating into Advanced Training at CCI in five weeks. So, that old character flaw of mine rears its procrastinating head to smile its toothy grin at me.

Queen of da Nile or Master of my Fate?

Naw, it’s ok.  I’m all over this one. I’ve hitched up my pants, cowgirled up and all that. We’re gonna get this pup ready to rock the world.  Because it’s not about me, is it?

A shared a checklist a few posts ago (Goal is a Noun) on some things to work on with Yaxley to prepare him for CCI college. Socialization topped the list. And bottomed the list. It’s a pretty important part of this puppy raising business. We want to reinforce confidence when faced with new experiences.

Last summer we took the dogs to Myrtle Beach. The young Yaxley was very unhappy to find sand shifting under his toes. The ground is moving! he cries. That ain’t right!.  But a good sensory experience for him and he eventually was able to process this through his puppy noggin just fine. In fact, he’s developed a fascination for cat litter, but I’m not sure if these two things are truly related.

We don’t know if he’ll encounter a sandy beach again when he begins his new career, but it is likely he’ll be asked to walk over grates in sidewalks and other odd surfaces that aren’t smooth under the paw pads. So it keeps me on the lookout for unusual surfaces to walk upon.

The photo at top is a playground with a shredded rubber ground cover.  Even I found this rather, oh I don’t know, creepy to walk on.  But with a Let’s Go, we did a smooth transition from lawn to concrete to rubber and back.

And here on the playground equipment, the steps and the landing are grated surfaces. A solid Sit/Stay and I release him before his bottom starts to dimple.

We go all out and bump it up a notch by practicing a few commands in this funky environment. The Up command is to put front paws on a surface (park bench, stone wall, big red plastic slide) and hold until released.  Some Sits, Downs, and Unders has Yaxley looking like the working dog he’s learning to be.

A couple of errands to run this day as well. Yaxley grants an audience to his fan base at the local library while I pick up a couple of books on reserve. I admit this isn’t new for him. We make regular trips here, but we still walk around to discourage curious sniffing of shelved books and small children.

Lessee . . . V. . . W . . . X . . . ah, here. Y.
This is where my bio will go. Right next to Yeager, Chuck.

Ok, this one is new.  Somewhere I get this genius idea that I can make my own dog bandannas. You know, like customize them using whatever fabric I want. And maybe even be cheaper than the ready made store bought ones.

Jeezey Pete, where the heck did that thought come from anyway?  I don’t even have a sewing machine. And even if I did, I’m completely clueless as to how to use one. Ah but no matter, we pop into the fabric store anyway to look around. 

Winnie the Pooh fabric, you say?
Sounds like he’s got a serious problem to me [snort]

I did find some cute fabric designs and bought a couple yards. It’s right here on the dining room table looking at me. With a cat on top of it.  I should start a pool to see how long it will sit here on the table until I stuff it all back in the bag and put it in the drawer with the rest of my inspired craft ideas.

Or I could use it to line Bodine’s cardboard hillybilly cat bed!  That would jazz things up, wouldn’t it? 

Hey Yaxley, I gotcher Winnie the Pooh right here, buddy.

Wordless Wednesday: Dear Mr. Bean

Check it out, y’all. I scored me some Labrador flip flops! Aren’t these totally cool! Are you as excited as I am?!

Naw, it’s ok. I’m jazzed enough for the lot of us. I found these in the L.L. Bean catalog and put them on the Must Have list.

Then I was thinking. Chocolate Labs are nice and all, being named after an essential food group. But how about some yellow Labradors, please? Perhaps on a . . . oh I don’t know . . . blue background?

Like the colors of Canine Companions for Independence?

I was so inspired by this amazing idea that I actually wrote to Mr. Bean’s company with my suggestion.  I received a response that same morning.

Dear Ms. Sword,
Thank you for contacting L.L.Bean.  Customer comments help us to improve L.L.Bean products and services. I have passed your suggestion on to our Corporate Office.
While our Product Developers are not able to reply personally to suggestions, they do incorporate comments from customers when developing or improving products. The reputation of L.L.Bean products is largely the result of our listening to our customers over the years.
I also want to mention that our Web site at www.llbean.com now allows customers to also rate our products. Our product pages let shoppers “Write a Review”.
Please feel free to contact us if you have any further questions, we are available 24 hours a day either by email, live chat or phone.  I hope you have a wonderful weekend Ms. Sword.
Sincerely,
Stacey S.
L.L.Bean Customer Service
800-441-5713
llbean.com 
It’s lovely that the product developers may pay attention to this amazing design request. But I’m only one voice in the wind.  Fellow CCI supporters . . . do drop Mr. Bean a note if you want to help inspire the flip flop designer people.
And yes, I know Leon Bean has been gone for about fifty years or so. But his adventurous spirit lives on, right?

Click here for the path to the Labrador flip flops.  More designs available. But they’re just stupid flowers and stuff. Not dogs.

 

Addendum June 2013

The Summer of 2012 has come and gone. And as we find ourselves here in June of  ’13 getting a second season out of those rockin’ Labrador flip flops.  Regrettably, L.L. Bean answered the call of other consumers this year. No yellow Labradors nor the lovely black version of this awesome breed.  Instead the designers came up with pointers on a pink background. 

Sure, pointers are great dogs. But not the canines of my chosen lifestyle. [sigh]. Holding out for next summer.

Hey there hot stuff

It’s a Gentle Leader, people. See? I can still
stick my tongue up my left nostril.

I trudge up three flights of stairs to be met by a museum security guard. 

Excuse me, ma’am, she says, stepping into my path of the exit. We were wondering why your service dog is wearing a muzzle.

Ok, that was three flights, chick. Up. To claim I’m out of shape would imply that somewhere in the recent past I was once in shape. I am intent on breathing through my nose so that I won’t actually pant like a black dog in the sun. But great. Now I’m expected to talk in a coherent and sane manner.

And I just hoofed it up here because I got the gotta-potty-please look from Yaxley. We’re on important and urgent business here, security guard person.

But wait . . . just a sec here. Who is this “we” anyway? We were wondering . . .? So the collective security guard force has been talking about me and the dog? Huh.

Isn’t he a handsome fella?, I start off with. Because it’s true and I say this to everybody. You know, he’s not wearing a muzzle. Actually that’s a head collar, a Gentle Leader.  It’s a training tool we use which gives the handler better control of the dog by controlling the head.  

Ok, now read that again, but pause between every three words or so. I’m making a sincere effort to not suck in air like I’ve had my head held under water. Which is only making it worse, really.

See?, I hold open Yaxley’s mouth to show his pearly whites. He is still able to eat, drink or bark with the Gentle Leader on. It’s not restricting in any way.

Oh, we’ve had the Gentle Leader 60 Second Training session many a time. Every CCI puppy raiser has, I would wager. Instead of being frustrated with the muzzle doppelganger issue, I try to see this as an educational opportunity.

As in I taught someone something today! My work here is done, kinda thing.

The security guard is an all business gal, but polite enough. She assures me that she’s not being confrontational. (I do believe she may have misunderstood my labored breathing as some sort of panic attack.) And continues on to share stories of small dogs smuggled in purses and attempts to bring ill-behaved pet dogs through the museum because it was too hot to leave them in the car.

I’m courteous in return, wanting to keep things all sunshine and rainbows here. Yaxley and I strive to be good ambassadors for CCI.  But this valiant effort will be all for naught if I don’t get that sloshing canine bladder out that door rather soon-like. I’m anticipating a double-duty event, actually.

Double. Duty. #2 doody, get it?  Bwa ha ha [snort]. Alrighty then, moving on.

We make our apologies to the security guard. I could stand and talk about dogs all afternoon with her, really I could.  But I need to toilet the puppy, won’t you please excuse us and all that kinda thing.  No worries though, Yaxley and I have a system down on this toileting thing with body cues and mind waves and stuff.  We make it in plenty of time, bag it and tag it, and are back in the museum refreshed and ready to roll onward.

With our final weeks together quickly coming to a close, I thought it good to walk Yaxley through the multi-sensory environment that is the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal.   I was especially interested in checking out the Day in Pompeii exhibit that had been enjoying some rave reviews.

From the Cinncinnat Museum Center’s website: 

The Roman city of Pompeii was frozen in time by the catastrophic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 A.D. Pompeii’s archeological treasures rarely leave Italy, and this national touring exhibit marks the first time that these rare treasures will come to the region. Room-sized frescos, marble and bronze sculptures, jewelry, gold coins, and hundreds of priceless ancient artifacts join body casts of the volcano’s victims, eerily preserved in their final frantic moments. Don’t miss this glimpse through a unique window into the ancient past.

So a double-duty trip, so to speak. Ugh, no not that duty. You know, checking off two things in one event. Honestly, people.

Yaxley was his usual rock star self. Staying by my side and alert for what I needed him to do next. Sit, Down, Let’s Go, all that went well. We watched a short film on the destruction of the city of Pompeii by the volcanic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius. Complete with a surround sound effect of booming noises and vibrating walls. Yaxley? No problemo. I can’t say he’s bomb-proof, but he should be pretty stable around a volcanic eruption.

Is it hot in here or is it just me? heh heh

The last feature of the Pompeii exhibit leads us into a darkened room with the body casts of victims from this disaster of 79 AD.  Rather somber and serious in this room. I’ve read about this event over the years in various magazine articles. I recall the striking photos of the natural  phenomena that created these ashen body casts. It was more than surreal to be standing in front of them now. I could have reached out to touch each one. But I didn’t of course. Not with the security team already whispering about me on those little headsets of theirs. That just wouldn’t be prudent.

The room was blanketed with an eerie silence as folk moved through. A reminder that it is a tomb of sorts. I noticed that Yaxley showed a sense of curiosity here. He observed everything, his nose twitching as I stopped to read each placard. What does a dog think when in the presence of such things? I wonder.

And then we came to the dog.  The brave creature that was chained to his post as a guard dog to his owner’s fuller shop. The body cast revealed the studded collar, the chain that held him to his fate. All the funereal body casts were hard to look at and I found this just as hard to process for what it was. An image can be found on Wikipedia’s Pompeii page.

I saw that dog, Food Lady. I need a hug.

In the silence, a voice. Don’t look! she says, looking at Yaxley. Ah, humor. Thank you kind lady, we needed the break. I shield Yaxley’s eyes and we move along.

The exhibit ends as all have before them. Into the bright, clear lights of the gift shop.

Ha! I’m stepping on our house. And Canada gets a special view.
Full moon tonight, eh.

As the day’s still young, we have time to explore the Natural History side of the museum as well.  On to the Ice Age for us for a meetup with a prehistoric wolf.

Back off, ye dire wolf. One more step and my
laser eyes will vaporize your shaggy self.

We slip further back in time to the cretaceous period for a face off with an ankylosaurus. Sure it’s a plant eater, but just look at that beak, willya?  Even get tagged by a cockatiel or some other pet bird? Yeah, times that by about fifty and you’re gonna lose more than a fingertip.

But that’s nothing to the brave Yaxley. He’s all bring it on, parrot head.

Because I’ll just shoot my laser eyes at ya [pow pow] and you’ll be stuck dating Barbie.

________________________________________

The Husband, Yaxley and I enjoyed the company of my favorite kid and his lovely girlfriend. Derek and Sam pose in front of the Cincinnati Museum Center, formerly the Union Terminal.  Yaxley is between them to keep an eye out for ill tempered dinosaurs.

If you have a nagging feeling about that familiarity of that art deco architecture, then you may have to embrace your inner geekness for all to see. This design was indeed the inspiration for The Hall of Justice for the Justice League (DC comics). 

Which I think is way cooler than it probably is.

Red, white, blue and yeller dogs

Sorry no, actually we can’t dial down the good looks.

Got me some gorgeous dogs, I do. Natural good looks that just love the camera.  And oh so well-behaved for their Fourth of July photo shoot.

Naw, just kidding. They’re goobers, the lot of them. With no puppy wranglers at hand this morning, it was just me, the dogs, and a handful of dog cookies. To capture the two portraits above, I now have a memory card filled with blurred images and doggie misdeeds.

Stuff like the obligatory bandanna removal shot.

And the terrier forgoing the Sit Stay because I was taking way too long to hand out that dog cookie. See ya losers! says Jager.

You know how dogs twist their heads hard enough to slap their ears? whap whap whap. We call that little phenomena head farts.

Most favorite word in the whole world?

Release!

And Bodine the cat wants you to know that it is indeed possible for a feline to rock the awesome with a patriotic bandanna as well. 

He suggests you put on your shades so as to not get too sunblind with the blazing cat handsomeness.

And he invites Yaxley to stick that tongue out just . . . one . . . more . . .time.


What!? This was Jager’s funky bandanna?, cries Bodine.  Phew! I thought the drain had backed up again. Oh My Dog, get this flippin’ thing OFF OF ME!

Bodine employs the Claw of Death to neutralize the thing.