Dog-Ma Give-a-way

Here's a chance to win some really wonderful items:

SPONSORED DOGTASTIC GIVEAWAY !!
10 WINNERS !!
EACH WILL RECEIVE...
A DOGGIE SWAG BAG WORTH $150
PLUS
A DOG-MA AUDIOBOOK GIFT CODE FOR DOWNLOAD
for US entrants
Want more winners?
15 more winners will receive the Dog-Ma audiobook gift code to download aswell!!
to all worldwide entrants

Plus the 'very first winner' will also win a really cute dog outfit (US only)

Ending on Thursday 12th December at 11.59pm EST
So what's inside the swag bags?
Dog-Ma Audiobook gift code for one download from ACX rrp $18

Barbara's vivid and dramatic stories, told with a wicked sense of humor, will make you laugh out loud. She definitely gets what living with rescued dogs (nine of them!) is all about.When Barbara meets her future husband, Ray, it is love-and dog-at first sight. Over the course of thirty-two years, seventeen relocations and nine dogs, their mutual love of dogs guides them on their unconventional path. The love that Barbara and Ray get in return is literally lifesaving, with one dog attacking a lethal intruder and another discovering Barbara’s cancer. Her own survival story underscores the story of how her dogs become survivors themselves.

Each new dog adds its own dynamic to the family, sometimes upending it. From Turbo (whose Spock-like ears may have provided super powers), Barbara learns about the will to live; Lexington demonstrates incredible patience and an inexplicable love of golf; Madison teaches that laughter is truly the best medicine and that the whole “nine lives thing” is not reserved just for cats; Morgan should be sainted for tolerating Izzy, who is as cute as she is bad. Barbara is certain that somewhere in doggie heaven there is a poster that says “If you are sick, injured or in need of really expensive medical care, FIND THESE HUMANS!”

Sponsored by

PurOtic Ear Cleaning Solution from Innovet rrp $16

What is PurOtic™ Ear Cleaner?

Purotic® is a non-irritating wash designed by veterinary and health care professionals to breakup wax and prevent ear infections. Made with a pharmaceutical grade emulsifier and combined with all natural ingredients, PurOtic instantly eliminates odor. PurOtic is the first ear cleaner for home use that comes with an soft ear applicator for quick and precise delivery; A must for pets that resist ear cleaning.

Benefits and uses:

•Anti-inflammatory agent

•Breaks up wax

•Silicone applicator for deep cleaning

•Alcohol and sulfate free

•Clean natural scent

Sponsored by

Blanket ID Gift Card for One ID tag of choice and a three year membership rrp $47

Blanket ID Features:

Online information available 24/7

Missing pet email broadcasts

Report lost and stolen pets

Print your own lost pet posters

Found pet GSP location mapping

Support your chosen rescue

Sponsored by

Paw or Bone Keyring from Hot Dogs All Dressed rrp $10
Sponsored by
Naturally Shed Moose Antler from Got Antler? rrp $25
High quality naturally shed moose and elk antler chews
Sponsored by
Artisan Refrigerator Magnet of Dogaaurus Rex1424322_10202734891720336_1386796226_n from Karen Mcclain Visuals Inc. rrp $25

"An artisan is a craftperson and a skilled worker. Karen McClain Visuals, Inc. has more than 20 years of artisanal experience providing clients with professional, inspiring, and unique results. Karen McClain specializes indecorative painting and faux finishes, painted furniture and sculpture, as well as design and consultation. ..."
Sponsored by
Gift Card for one box of Pawflex Bandages from Pawflex rrp $10-15
PawFlex™ is a disposable non adhesive fur friendly super stretch all in one bandage that maintains a secure comfortable natural fit. PawFlex™ is hands down the quickest and easiest bandage system to use.
Sponsored by
Plus the 'very first Winner' (US only)
will receive this marvelous doggie outfit (dog not included !!) from Issa Bella World
Nurse Costume - Size Small - Fits a dog under 12 pounds.
Sponsored by
Issa_Bella_World

photo

Enter Below & Good Luck !!

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Seeing Lisa Marie

A sense of the venue My first introduction to Elvis Presley was a boy in our high school, who had a glass eye, dressed in leather and must have imitated the King or maybe it was just the high neck of his leather jacket that conjured this image, but in any case I associated him with Elvis and the connection was not good.

Then somewhere around my junior year I saw Elvis’s 1969 Comeback Special and I fell in love. I made my friend Sheila watch (I don’t think she cared much for him before this) and the attraction spread. She had introduced me to Neil Diamond and Stephen King, so this was only fair. We watched that special over and over until we knew it by heart and it created a mild obsession with Elvis’ ever since.

In college we had a book named Orion, complete with a cassette recording that claimed Elvis was alive, living under the name Orion and the recording was of him singing. I visited Graceland while on a trip to the National Pug Specialty amidst Hurricane Rita. My friend Joan, who was driving, let us do a flyby tour, taking pictures at the gates, and allowing us a quick walk thru so I at least got to see Elvis’ grave.

Her Tour Bus

 

I admit I first became obsessed with Lisa Marie Presley because of whom her father was, the fact that she was married to Michael Jackson, and that she was only a year younger than me making us peers of sorts. But as the years passed, I began to love her for who she was – she struck me as a survivor, someone striving for her own identity and staking her claim to it despite all the hype around her. My Mom was a fan of both Priscilla and Lisa Marie so it was something we shared as well. When her first album came out I bought it and then the subsequent ones. I loved watching her on Oprah, always finding her somewhat angry, somewhat nervous, but always honest and direct. I liked that.

All this is my way of introducing where Sheila and I were tonight – in White River Junction at Tupelo Musical Hall for the last night of Lisa Marie Presley’s Storm and Grace tour. I have to admit it was a surreal experience. I think perhaps because I wasn’t there so much for her music as to see her. It wasn’t just about her Dad although that was a big part of it, it was also because, like I said, I kind of identify with her and did I mention it’s really cool to see how much she looks like her dad.

 

How I Hoped to Look

 

I was even a little nervous to go. Would I be cool enough to be in the audience of music royalty? Honestly, this worried me, although it needn’t have. The audience consisted of your average Vermonters, many, if their age was any indication, were there because they were Elvis’ fans. Because we had never been to Tupelo before Sheila and I left early to check out the venue first before dinner. We got there around 5:30 and the town was dark. Not just the Freight House where Tupelo is, but also the whole town. “Must be because it’s a Sunday,” Sheila concluded, but the street lights weren’t even on.

How I Actually Looked

 

We had dinner and headed back to Tupelo to find any icy driveway, limited parking and a long, long line. Someone eventually came out and told us to go wait in our cars. There had been a power outage earlier (That explained the dark town) and they were doing a sound check. We skated our way back to the car, waited for 10 minutes and returned back to the line. I needn’t have worried about looking cool. As the above pictures indicate, all that mattered was staying warm. Sheila and I huddled in our long black L.L. Bean coats looking like penguins waddling in the crowd. They eventually let us into the lobby and eventually the concert.

Sheila Trying to Keep Warm

 

Lisa Marie was fascinating, skinny, tense, and entertaining all at once. Some people paid extra for a meet and greet. I settled for a t-shirt, a CD and a wonderful memory and I’m glad my best friend was there to share it.

Sheila and Me waiting in line

 

 

 

Art is Everywhere

photo 1 copy Today was one of those days. I woke up with a rare event – a little spare time on my hands. I thought of going Christmas shopping or to a matinee. Then, I realized I could use the time to change over my old dresser for my new. This task is a lot more challenging then it sounds. First, my old dresser is an antique with narrow drawers that don’t hold much and when they do are too stuffed to shut. Hence, the need for a new dresser. Also, my large screen television, DVD player and cable box all sit on top of the dresser with wires spread to and fro across the room. In order to move the dresser I needed to move all this, unplug the machines from the wires and rewire everything to get it to work. My brother, an IT specialist who does a lot of wiring, suggested taping the wires to the wall. I thought it was a great idea, so I labeled them and taped them up. Then I kind of lost my mind. Moving the TV and the dresser proved more challenging than I thought and I realized that in order to tidy everything up it was going to be an all day job. I was getting pretty discouraged when I looked up at the wall and noticed the above picture. A mask sits on the wall behind my television and now that I had moved the TV I could see the mask amidst the wires. It looked like a strange art display. I hurried to find a camera to take the picture, but I had buried those beneath the clothes I had removed from the dresser drawers. My iphone was handy, however, and I took this interesting photo. A midst all the hectic hustle and bustle it made me smile. I was able to find beauty and art  in the wires and the clutter. Art is everywhere.

Uncle Sam

SONY DSC A couple of weeks ago I visited Troy, NY. I attended a writers workshop and when I was finished I roamed the town taking photographs. I posted some of them here on the blog. One of my fellow writers in the Hubbard Hall Writers group told me I put a good dress on Troy and maybe I should contact the chamber with some of my photos. I didn't, but they got a hold of me. Not the chamber, but a downtown nonprofit responsible for Uncle Sam statues  around the city. It seems they are putting together a calendar of the statues, they saw my photos online and want to use the above one in their calendar! I think that's pretty cool!

Spreading Sunshine

McD's “Oh Amy Look! Look at that one! She’s so cute!” An older woman around my friend Joan’s age squealed at her McDonald’s coworker. “Look Amy! A black pug!”

“There’s another in my back seat,” I offered.

“Oh Amy, Look! There’s another one!” She squealed again as if she had discovered Alfie for herself instead of me telling her.  “Look, Amy, it’s a fawn.”

“Ohhhh, look! They’re so cute! Mary!”

“Oh, that one is so cute!” The older woman says pointing at Waffles!

“They are so cute!” The two women exclaimed.

This was my encounter when I took the pugs through the McDonald’s drive thru the other day. An hour later we were walking in downtown Randolph when a woman in an old car, shaking from the volume of the music on the radio, rolled down her window and squealed at us. “They’re so cute!”

I had to smile. Dogs have a way of bringing people closer, encouraging conversation among strangers. Pugs have a way of spreading unadulterated joy!

Decomposition

SONY DSC I posted a color picture of this scene on my local photoclub's favorite's page the other day. I knew it wasn't the best composition. It was a piece that I had struggled with, taking numerous shots of the truck and the solar panels in the waning light. As I was shooting the moon came up, the solar panels moved and everything changed, but I was struck by the moment -- the moon over the truck and the panels -- and although this shot wasn't great it at least preserved all the elements for me. The leader of the club quickly noticed some of the flaws in the shot and offered advice on how to make it better. I thanked her and explained what I had been trying to achieve. Sometimes a picture is worth a 1000 words and sometimes you can can say it better with the words themselves, here's my attempt at that. And, thank you Lisa for inspiring this poem:

 

Decomposition

 

I struggle to create a composition that can take it all in –

            old blue truck, modern army of sun-seeking solar panels

            stalwart lavender mountains, golden grass,

            all under a rising moon

 

“You have to pick and choose,” the photographer warns me,

“Decide what it is you are trying to say.”

 

“It’s the photo journalist in you that craves it all,” she concludes,

            with a nod and a period,

            as if that settles the matter.

 

It doesn’t. The story pretty much tells itself.

            I have nothing to do with it.

An innocent bystander like the rest of you

            Observing it all –

 

Blue truck giving up the ghost, array of solar panels

            following in its wake, old giving birth to new

            giving birth to old, giving birth to new

                        again,

            Hope bowing to disappointment

                        Under the watchful eye of the stalwart mountains

            And the moon that never ceases to rise.

 

It is the only composition there is

            Yet, we remain optimistic that we can change something

            while the moon and the mountains smile

            And the truck and solar panels

                        and all our best made plans

                        decompose.

Kid versus Pug

blog waffles Last week my niece 22-month-old niece Ellie came to our house for Trick or Treating. She loves my dogs and loves their toys almost as much. It’s hard to deny her anything so when she picked up Waffles favorite stuffed dog, a fluffy, cream creature, and asked to bring it home. It was hard, no impossible, to say “no.”

Waffles has lots of toys and although she favors some, she likes new ones even better, so I was convinced that she wouldn’t miss her doggie too much. Ellie went home with it and life continued as normal.

Tonight, Ellie and her parents swung by again on their way to New York on vacation. Excited to see Ellie, my Mom decided to give her an early Christmas present – ad stuffed, pale peach pig. She placed it on the kitchen table waiting for Ellie to arrive. A few minutes later I heard her call me.

“Don’t mention the pig to Ellie,” she said.

“Why,” I asked.

She motioned to Waffles pen and I looked inside. Waffles was happily curled up with the pig and upon seeing me jumped up with it in her mouth to play! It was precious how excited she was by her find and even if she hadn’t suckled it until it was damp and grimy, it would have been impossible to take it away from her. I certainly couldn’t and besides it seemed like turnabout was fair play – Ellie had taken one of her toys after all.

When Ellie arrived she seemed to care little for Waffles’ wet pig, but she did have a good time playing with a handful of her bone-shaped chew toys. At one point holding one that resembled a baby’s teether to her Mom saying, “This isn’t a baby’s!”

Gretchin agreed. “No, it isn’t,” she said, holding the blue bone out to Ellie. “Whose is it?”

“ELLIE’S!” She declared, gleefully grabbing it in her tiny hand.

And, Waffles who was suckling on her pig, not teething on the bone, didn’t seem to care at all.

 

 

Exploration

SONY DSC A head cold was settling in as I explored the streets of Troy, NY, near The Arts Center on River Street. It was my first time in the city, having visited to attend a memoir class with memoirist Marion Roach, author of The Memoir Project, a book that I use in the memoir class that I teach at my small community college.

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Though my head was growing fuzzy, I took the time to meander and browse the streets and funky boutiques. I stared as the sun started to descend over the Hudson River, wandered past an actual record store and a shop that sold cheap, plastic dangling earrings circa 1980s. I bought three pairs. In some ways I felt like I had gone back in time to the days I would visit the boy I loved in Cambridge, Mass. and wander through bookstores and comic shops with him and my brother, biding the time until we’d attend a concert outside of town. I might have been in a cold-induced daze, but a part of me also felt invigorated by the workshop, my environment and the freedom to wander.

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When I was young I had few dreams of traveling anywhere especially alone – now it is one of my favorite things to do. As I browse bookstores, drink tea in hide-a-way cafes, scour sidewalks for the perfect shot, I feel like I am discovering a little bit of myself – a part kept under, stunted from blooming by circumstance. It has taken me longer to travel beyond borders than it should have. But now I investigate freely. Here, in photos, is some of what I saw.

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Coffee with a Canine

There's a wonderful little blog I recently discovered called Coffee with a Canine. And, guess what? Alfie, Waffles and I are featured there today. We grabbed a cup by a beautiful lake on our way back from the Chestertown Pug Parade. The blog is great! It basically asks dogs and their owners to go enjoy a cup of joe and then be interviewed about the occasion and other aspects of their lives. Lots of fun reading and photos there. Go check us out and leave a comment!