How many air holes do you think this needs?, asks Yaxley.
What’s that you say, big guy? says Bodine. “You want some more air holes? I believe I can help you out on that.”
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| Micron (on right) is totally owning the bunny ear look. Yaxley? Eh, not so much maybe. That focused look is lasered in on the dog biscuit in my non-camera hand. |
He knows you’re showing these to his girlfriend when he grows up, says my niece. Called my house crying. Couldn’t understand a word he was saying, but I’m pretty sure he’s sick of it. “Bunny ears Ash. I did the Santa hat, but freaking bunny ears?!”
Oh sure, I took photos of the dogs wearing bunny ears. And then posted this gorgeous shot of my two yeller fellers on Facebook. Which prompted Ashley to come to their defense. I’m guessing she’s feeling protective of Yaxley’s tender psyche, as Micron is pretty much rocking the look, wouldn’t you say?
And, as I told Ash, just wait until you’re an empty nester. It’s either dressing up dogs or a concrete goose on the front porch.
I’m ok with the occasional reference as the Dog Lady. But being the neighborhood’s Concrete Goose Lady implies a whole different category of crazy. So I’ve made my choice and stand by it. Dogs it is.
As entertaining as this was to put together a photo shoot of dogs in bunny ears (aargh! quit knocking them off, darn it!), I had a solid reason for wanting to do this. No, really I did. And it involves training for the two yellows.
Both Yaxley and Micron are training for different careers. Yaxley as an assistance dog for Canine Companions for Independence and Micron is going to school with Miami Valley Pet Therapy Association to be a member of a pet therapy team. I’m finding a few of the skills needed for both occupations are similar.
Consider this for a moment. You’re enjoying a meal at your favorite restaurant. A lovely chicken picatta and maybe a glass of chilled Pinot Grigio. Deep in conversation with friends about the latest controversy in news, weather or gossip. Ah, nice, isn’t it? Now what’s the last thing on your mind at the moment? Perhaps, oh I don’t know . . . the floor?
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| Can’t get the ears to stay on Jager’s pointy noggin. They’re resting on his withers. |
You ever notice the carpets at restaurants? Walk in with a CCI pup in training and you will, gare-un-teed. As puppy raisers, we are training these fuzzies to ignore any delicious morsels they come across as they stroll to the table. Tough enough to be sure, but the real challenge is when the pup has settled at your feet. Do you know what’s been safely stored in that cave under the table?
Well, El Dorado’s city of gold for dogs, that’s what. Blackbeard’s lost treasure chest. The family jewels. Oh wait, that doesn’t sound right, does it? But do you see what I mean? There’s some good stuff under there and it’s likely been fermenting for some time to ripen into an odoriferous temptation.
So instead of tucking into that hamburger with reckless abandon, we instead pay a lot of attention to the pup. Ah! Don’t!, we say, until the message gets through.
Because our goal is this . . .a person partnered with this pup will be able to enter their favorite restaurant with the confidence that they can simply enjoy their meal. Their canine companion is there for them, not the glimmering treasure in the dragon’s cave under the table.
Ok, now let’s think about the environment in a medical facility. A pet therapy team is likely to come across a plethora of non-noshables as well. Think beyond floors here. What about open trash cans in patient rooms or personal items stored on easily reachable surfaces?
With the CCI pups, we use the commands No! or Don’t! With the pet therapy training, I give the Leave it! command to Micron. And yeah, I sometimes will confuse the commands in the heat of the moment, but the intonation has the same level of business-meaning. Keep your pie-hole away from that, Buster Brown.
Yaxley doesn’t give me much reason to worry about this. He’s a pro, turning instantly invisible once under a restaurant table. The feller just curls up and naps lightly with one ear cocked awaiting his next command. What a good dog this guy is.
But the mighty Micron, well, we’ve got some work ahead of us. That dreadful word, distractability, is our nemesis. Ooh, fuzzy thing!, says Micron, mmmph. I just want to roll this around in my mouth for a minute, ok?
No, it’s not ok, I have to tell him. Give that kid his teddy bear back, will you?
With that, I’ll share with you my mastermind-inspired Grand Plan . . . I’m gonna desensitize this goober dog to fuzzy toys.
Here’s a stuffed toy impaled upon my cubicle in the office. Right there at Micron eye level and everything. The thing makes a eerie singing noise when the belly is pressed, which co-workers do. Press the belly, that is, not make eerie singing noises. A rather successful experiment, I think. I only had to remove it from a canine craw a couple of times over the week. Heck, if I tried this a month ago, it would have been eviscerated before lunchtime.
We’ll move onto another stuffed animal next week. Because it’s a good idea to keep it changing and well, because of the complaints by co-workers of the non-belly pressing type. When are you taking that creepy thing home?, they ask politely.
Ok, about the bunny ear photos. If you notice the photo at top, there are yellow objects at Micron’s feet. Those are Peeps. You know, those sugary treats that show up in Easter baskets every year even though nobody actually eats them? Try and describe the taste, I dare you. I popped in one of the yellow harbingers of empty calories just to try to come up with a analogy of the flavor. And, people, this is what they taste like. Nothing. Not cardboard or styrofoam or food, but nothing. Maybe the appeal is that gritty mouth feel. Peeps must have an excellent Marketing Team, I gotta say.
But anyway, I’m using them as Leave it temptations for the yellow dogs in training.
Ooh, another successful experiment. But only because even dogs won’t eat these things.
Well, let’s step it up a little then. On the dog paws with their sugary goodness.
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| Aw, come on. Give me something challenging here. Or at least something edible. |
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| Rocket shooters, peep style |
Bumping it up one more notch, Yaxley displays a well-ignored dog biscuit on a paw.
And there it is, good dogs understanding Leave it. After this shot, I turned to see Jager sniffing around the open Peeps box and thought I might have a problem here. But no, even potato chip, chocolate, cat poop eating Jager won’t touch ’em.
Maybe I could try the pink Peeps next time.
Not that I’m still fixated on this Peeps thing, but I came across a Time.com article with some trivia on the sugary globules that’s worth sharing.
For example, I found this amazing:
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| Yaxley looks upon his grassy expanse |
A gorgeous summer day. And one of those workdays that we find it rather torturous to be chained to a desk, so a fine time to eat lunch outside at the picnic area. Fresh lunch meat sandwiches, purty butterflies flitting about and a handful of us are enjoying watching our dogs at play. Ah, ’tis a peaceful lunch hour.
So what is your dog? asks my co-worker and fellow puppy raiser.
What? I ask while trying not spit a Subway ham and cheese when I talk, do you mean what breed is she? She’s a full Labrador retriever.
Are you sure? he asks.
Oh, for the love of . . . Yeah, I’m sure, I reply, getting unreasonably annoyed. Why?
Because it appears she may have some cow in her, he says.
Huh?
I move my eyes over to the lovely Inga in all her ethereal Labrador beauty. And see that indeed she’s binging upon the lawn like a cow busting out of an ill fated Weight Watchers program. Gaa!, says I, actually losing some of my ham sub this time, Inga! Leave it!
What is it with dogs and grass anyway? I thought that left to their own resources dogs preferred more odoriferous offerings such as an overturned kitchen garbage can. Or heaven forbid, that elusive delicacy that is goose poop. Why this precision manicured lawn?
Oh, theories abound on this subject from all styles of experts (upset stomachs, instinctual need, dietary imbalance, the call of the wild) which really means that only dogs know the true appeal. Some eat grass, then toss it back up later on your precious oriental rug. Others process it through without even a cursory burp.
We do know that a dog’s sense of smell is more developed than their sense of taste. And the retrievers that have come through this household have fixated on such things that have an intriguing mouth-feel. Stuff like sticks and rocks and the occasional small toad. Does it all taste good? I’ve gotta guess that, no, probably not. But it may have felt pretty darn good on the molars and smelled even better. At least to a dog’s value system.
With the early Spring season we’ve been enjoying here in southwestern Ohio, our lawn is popping up very green and lush. There seems to be something about the tender, new green blades that appeals to my yeller boys. While the terrier is off ground squirrel hunting, Micron and Yaxley are channeling their bovine spirits to become One with the fresh, new fescue sprouts.
In my rather less than expert opinion, this grass noshing thing is really not a problem I spend much time pondering. I will ask my dogs to please not do that in a command that sounds exactly like Don’t! Not because I’m inconsiderate of their instinctive dietary needs, but rather because I can never be sure if this particular salad bar has been chemically treated. You just don’t know where that grass has been.
And actually, I do rather prefer my yellow fellows to be paying attention to what is going on beyond that tender patch of fescue, in spite of the lawn connoisseurs that they claim to be. A pup chewing cud has their noggin in a happy alternate universe where squirrels can’t climb trees and the command Here is just a buzzing sound.
And really, I tell Yaxley, it’s just not becoming of a future service dog to be seen doing such things.
Whether a CCI pup or your beloved pet, I will say if it something is bothering you about your fuzzy companion to not hesitate to consult with your veterinarian. Is the grass eating behavior new or does your pup seem to have a bigger hankering than usual for the green stuff? Never (Never!, I say) ignore that gut feeling that you need double check on something. But you already knew that, didn’t you? Who knows your dog better than you do? Right.
Ok, now I’m off to finger swipe small sticks out of Labrador maws. And to check on what just the heck the terrier is into now. Is that a mole? Holy cow. . . Jager!
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| It’s like eating an elephant. One bite at a time. [sigh] So much lawn . . . |
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| A guy can dream, can’t he? |
“Do you want butter topping on your popcorn?“
This my 1978 version of “you want fries with that?” I’m hard at work behind the concession counter at the Salem Mall Cinemas. My first real job and I’m totally jazzed up about it. Gettin’ paid by a corporate printed check and everything. We gotcher first run movies that I can see as many times as I want! For free! Mmm, surrounded by the aromas of cola syrup and warm popcorn. Rows upon rows of colorful candy boxes aglow under the fluorescent lights in the glass display case. Minimum wage in 1978? A cool $2.65 an hour. You don’t get this kind of payola babysitting the neighbor’s kid, I gotta tell ya.
This heady buzz actually lasted nearly an hour before I was able to check off this concession job as a solid 8 on the Suck Scale.
A mere few minutes after donning the stylish brown 70’s era polyester uniform, some power hungry jerky usher hands me a rag mop dripping gray water. With an aura of all the authority a part-time usher can manage, he tells me the newest employee gets to clean up after the clogged john in the ladies room. Seeing me blanch at the prospect, I was saved by the smell by a compassionate co-worker who calls his bluff and sends him on his merry usher way. But my relief was short-lived as during concession training, I discover that there are no cash registers. No calculators and not even a scratch pad allowed. All concession sales are to be added in the noggin, the total snack dollar investment shared with the hapless popcorn eating public, then accurate change made. Augh, math! My high school nemesis.
We did not cover this in the interview process.
Which by the way, was not much more than, are you a cute 16-year old female, what’s your social security number and can you start on Friday? Not a single warning about doing math in your head. The mop is starting to look more approachable.
Things just go south from there. The popcorn, as I soon discover, is delivered already popped in huge yellow plastic bags. That’s right, pre-popped from some prior date in time and tossed from a panel truck by a guy with a cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth. And that yummy butter topping is a coronary-to-be packaged in a hefty day-glo orange brick of shortening. We’d thunk the lard loaf in a warmer for about an hour until it melted into an aromatic imposter of slick buttery goodness. So you want a Diet Pepsi with your butter-topped popcorn? Chick, I wanted to say, going diet cola ain’t gonna save ya from that bad decision.
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| I’ll tell you another thing. Luke didn’t have abs like that. |
But 1978 is coming of age time for my teenage geek selfness. The cinema is celebrating the one-year anniversary of Star Wars. This is is Episode IV – a New Hope, people. Where it all begins and I could watch it pretty much anytime I wasn’t working concession. Oh yes, do envy me y’all. Over the summer months of 1978 I do believe I clocked in about a thousand and two viewings. I’m kind of a a fan of the Star Wars franchise, you might say. The question to ponder, what did geeks talk about before 1978?
So, with all the authority a concession girl can manage, I will tell you this. Greedo did not shoot first.
Good or bad, that job only lasted the summer. I moved onto another genre of mall employment at Spencer Gifts, the split personality of mall retail. The red shag carpeted purveyor of adult-themed accessories awkwardly in the same line of sight as the innocent plush toys for kids. Oh, but stories for another day. Like how we dealt with the fella back in the blacklight area interacting with the Farrah poster [shudder]. Ah, memories.
So anyway, my intent is to convince you that I have some experience in the world that is shopping malls. Been around that block, so to speak. I’ve gone from wage slave to shopper of family material goods. As a mother, I’ve marched that solitary walk of ten paces behind a young teenager (don’t walk with me, Mom) just to observe with an odd mix of horror and pride that my young son is turning the heads of teenage girls. But as I’ve aged grown, malls have changed as well. We now see stores marketing to the youth of today of pretty princesses, custom-made teddy bears and t-shirt shops suggesting anarchy is truly the way of the future.
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| Yax processes this new place in his noggin. |
And because a shopping mall is just one more place that people enjoy, a service dog should be comfortable in the environment as well. As a CCI puppy raiser, I understand that the pup in my care must have a been there-done that attitude with the all around sensory experience that that is mall shopping. So our local puppy raising group arranged a training session at the nearby Tuttle Mall.
We meet in the food court, dogs and puppy raisers, for a quick intro. We count fourteen pups, some as young as six months. But we’re geared up and ready, training capes and gentle leaders on. Let’s do this thing.
Yaxley, I say, Let’s go.
And off we go, riding in the glass elevators and walking through various and sundry shops. We practice Ups, Unders and appropriate greetings with shoppers. Fourteen dogs march through the indoor kiddie playground to experience the spongy cork flooring under the paws and the distraction of kidlets playing. We emerge from the playground with several kids in tow. Not a problem, let’s put the pups in a Down and allow some quality time to encourage calm greetings with their young fan base.
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| Little boys smell like french fries |
Build-a-Bear has potential doggie distractions with a gazillion stuffed toys watching you with their black button eyes and that freaky machine that has bear gut stuffing tossed about. Yaxley did a fine job keeping focus, while I was distracted by the discovery of tiny Build-a-Bear underwear briefs. Teddy bears wear tidy whities now? With flys? My, times have changed.
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| Recovering from the tidy whitie trauma. |
A handler swap is always helpful in pup training. Same commands, a different voice giving it. We’re reminded of the pickle test. Does the dog react to the command word or the situation?
Think about this . . . I open the car door and say “Yaxley, Car.” He jumps in every time.
How about if I open the car door and say “Yaxley, Pickle” and he jumps in, well, what does that mean? That he’s reacting to the situation, not the command word. Time to mix things up then. We’d try training using a different car. Or give a series of other behaviors while the car door is open, before giving the Car command.
Same philosophy for changing handlers. How does the dog react to a Sit or Down given by someone not so familiar?
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| Yax working with another puppy raiser and doing a stellar job (middle of shot). |
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| And yet another handler. Good dog. Yax. Do me proud, yellow one. |
The dog toy store could be a powerful mind bender for a young and playful pup. Think of the analogy of a kid in a candy shop. But our working dogs managed it all with finesse. And here’s Yaxley being all professional and looking pretty darn comfortable.
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| [yawn] I gotta Jager squeak toy at home. |
Back in the food court, we’re done. Training mission accomplished. Time for a celebratory dog biscuit and good ear ruffle for all.
Well done, yeller feller.