Encountering the Handyman

Blog Sam Early each morning before the rest of us are even awake, Sam, the handyman who has been overseeing the renovations to the upstairs bathroom lets himself into the house. The pugs, still sleepy, largely ignore him. Sometimes Alfie barks her gentle woo-hoo. Waffles opens one eye. Sam glides through the house like a dancer barely making a noise. He has become part of the scenery to the pugs; not one to bother about. If they are loose as he passes through they may acknowledge him by running up and standing on their hind legs to sniff his knees. They greet everyone this way – with sniffs and snorts and high-pitched squeals. Alfie, my watchdog, has a purpose in her shenanigans. She seems to examine guests, catalogueing them in her “Book of Scents and Identifications.” Waffles becomes excited in sympathy with Alfie. “She’s barking, so should I!” seems to be her overriding thought. Both, however, seem to primarily regard Sam as a piece of furniture, par for the course,  nothing to get worked up about.

All that changed yesterday. Sam was passing through the kitchen just as the pugs came in from outside. They ran in happily, their hindquarters shaking from side to side so frenetically that their rears almost touched their noses with each sweep.  Glimpsing Sam they ran to greet him with their customary snorts and sniffs. That done Alfie stood watching him, her mouth open, tongue half out, panting. Sam suddenly turned from his work, paintbrush in his hand and addressed Alfie.

“This one sometimes barks at me in the morning,” he addressed me, gesturing at Alfie with his paintbrush. She started and looks amazed, moving toward me like a young toddler seeking its mother’s reassurance. “He talked to me,” she seems to say. “He’s never done that before. Did you see that Mom? He talked to me. What do I do?” It might seem unfair to assign such thoughts to a dog, but from my all-too-human perspective, the message seemed all too clear. I couldn’t help but laugh. Furniture doesn’t talk, but Sam was not furniture. He may have become part of the ebb and flow of our daily lives as he works to ready the house for Mom’s approaching surgery, but as Alfie’s encounter indicates, we should not take him for granted.

Under the Bigtop

vet b Taking Waffles to the vet yesterday was a bit of a circus. First, I decided to take Alfie along and get her weighed while I was there so I could figure out how much flea medicine to buy. Bringing Alfie with me automatically doubled the chaos. You would think my dogs never leave the house. At the sound of the leash, Alfie started yipping and yodeling; both she and Waffles spinning in circles around my legs. Waffles began panting in the snuffling/snorting way that only pugs can do. Within seconds she sounded worse than any lifetime smoker and I was sure she would die. Since I hadn't originally planned to bring them both with me, I hadn't put their seats in the car, which meant getting those out of the garage and buckled in while Waffles and Alfie went to work hog-tying me with their leashes. Unraveled and undone, I loaded  the pugs into their seats, making sure to put them on opposite sides to where they sat last time, since the two always manage to crisscross, tangling themselves in the process. By the time I got to the front of the car, they had already made the switch back to their original seating position. I couldn't win. I rolled down the windows to let in some air as Alfie's tongue was already hanging down to her feet and Waffles snorts had become asthmatic gasps. When we got to the vets, the vet tech claimed she could hear them as we drove up.

Surprisingly, the pugs tugged on their leashes and rushed for the door as if they were off on a hunt. Once inside they began barking as loudly as possible at all the other dogs, cats and staff they encountered. I tried to place first Waffles and then Alfie on the scale, but they kept jumping off. Alfie weighed 20 pounds then 19, then 20 again. I couldn't get her to sit her plump little rump down long enough to get an accurate reading. Waffles was much the same, although she looked like she might faint. Once in the office it took two vet techs to hold Waffles down while they clipped her nails. Meanwhile, I got a serious lecture about keeping them cool during the heat. I had a feeling, the techs considered me a careless parent as they listened to the pugs' heavy breathing. "They don't do this at home," I tried to assure, but I'm not sure they could hear me over all the snorts and squeals. As I tried to take Waffles off the table and make the switch so Alfie could get her nails trimmed, the pugs seemed to begin a gymnastic routine, circling and falling all over each other as they practically did somersaults. I expected Alfie to whip out a clown's hat and start squeaking her nose. "They're so well behaved," I joked.

The one good thing about the whole experience is that we caught Waffles hot spot early and were prescribed medicine to dry it up. The vet suggested it may have been caused by taking her swimming in the kiddie's pool the day before. So while the whole event seemed akin to being under the bigtop, the diagnosis at least brought some calm.

No one had informed my pugs, however, that the circus was over. Instead, the two chose to make a dart for the open door in an effort to circulate among the crowds and draw more attention. Although my pugs may never pass  as model patients, I'm sure they could fill the roles of circus barker if anyone should be in the need for one.

Hot Spot

Waffles hot spot I'm scheduled to travel to Glens Falls tomorrow to meet with my web designers about some future plans for the blog, but just about an hour ago I noticed a nickel-sized spot on Waffles where her fur is missing. It looks relatively dry, just her skin with a few darker red dots. I think it's probably a hot spot, a case of moist eczema in dogs that is more common in the summer. I have seen Joan's dogs get them at times and know it is possible for them to spread quickly, although this is not always the case. I've also seen cases where pugs have become ill very quickly from bites, scratches and hot spots because of bacteria trapped under the skin, so I think I'll call the vet first thing in the morning. I'm hoping that I can work out getting Waffles checked and still making my appointment in Glens Falls.

Test 2

Alfie closeup Sorry for the test messages and some repeat photos. I had to change my facebook password because I was having some spamming issues and now I'm having trouble getting my blog posts to broadcast correctly. Just troubleshooting. Please bear with me and try to enjoy the repeat photos. Thanks!

Writing Prompt: A Day at the Dog Park

Today was girl's day out. For my pugs that meant a couple of hours frolicking at the dog park. For me and my mom it meant manicures and dinner out. Our local dog park (when I say local I mean thirty miles away) has a big dog and small dog section. Today, both were pretty full. My pugs got to meet a 9 month old Maltese named Abby; a terrier mix named Remy who has blonde fur on the top of her head that looks like a mohawk: a min-pin/Chihuahua cross named Kirby, who also happened to be the star athlete in the group; a pug/Chihuahua mix (also known as  Chug) named Farrah; a pug/terrier cross named Iggy; two miniature poodles name LiLi and Tussa and more.

I loved watching the dogs interact. Most stayed fairly close to their owners at first, maybe going over and sniffing each other if someone looked interesting, but if one started running or went to catch a ball they all eventually joined in. My pugs, in typical pug fashion, were not the greatest of athletes, but they gave it the old college try. Alfie, stood like the nerdy kid on the playground, taking everyone in and then suddenly prancing up to the cool kids in an effort to fit in. Waffles was more like one of those weird, arsty girls that keeps to herself. She joined in when she wanted to, but spent most of the time roaming the fence looking to make her prison attempt. She broke the boundaries of the class system, ignoring the various cliques and idling over to King Kirby whenever she felt like it.

The owners were as equally diverse and from all walks of society. I met a math teacher, a woman who couldn't pay her rent, but was checking her cellphone to spring a death row dog, a couple who purchased their pretty puppy from Craig's List, another who had saved a rescue. One woman had gotten her poodles from a breeder. As varied their lifestyles and paths to their animals were, they were all obviously united in their love for them. And, as I sat in the sun, watching the dogs run and play and the people come and go, I realized we are all players on a giant playground -- all wanting to have fun and each alternating between the cool kid and nerd at times.

Writing Prompt: Where did you fit in on the playground? Were you the nerd in high school? The bully? The cool kid? The weirdo? Write about it.

Writing Prompt: Gardens

Tori, Vader, Humpie Doggie, Catherine and Avery I do not plant my own garden, but I revel in the gardens of others. Across from my house, in an island of pavement is a small grassy triangle. Members of the community maintain this small, patch of earth each spring by planting flowers that change as the season progresses – evolving from tulips and daffodils to daisies and irises. I await the arrival of the first buds each year, seeing them rise as the sun ascends and shares its warmth with us. It is my signal that spring is upon us. Every time I see her, I rush to inform one of the women in town, the one who helps tend this garden, how much it means to me. She seems thankful, if sedate, as I gush over the flowers.  Her own lawn is equally adorned, so perhaps she cannot digest just how much I appreciate her efforts, how tied I am to those blossoming patches of color across the lawn. They have been a backdrop for photos of my nieces and nephews, a garden hideaway to retreat amidst the fairies, a place to witness their inner men and women emerge as they strike magical poses well beyond their years. It has allowed me a reprieve from computers and deadlines, a minute field in which to roam for 10 minutes, camera in hand. It has been a place to say goodbyes, a train platform to see my dying dog off to another world.

Vader died a year ago June 1st and for the month leading up to his death, my nieces, nephews and I would frequently tote his limp form, along with his constant companion, his stuffed “Humpie Doggie” across the road to sit him in the flowers and allow him a few moments of sun. His body carved out a small sunken dent in the hollow of the flower bed and I imagine I see it there still, although the flowers this year have arranged themselves in a different pattern. There are yellow irises now, tons of them, although last year I remember varied colors. It would be easy to say that the color has faded since Vader’s death, but it is not true. I miss him, but the world is warm and golden. Waffles and Alfie frolic in the back yard and wait eagerly by the gate as I water the tomato plants my father chose to plant this year. Life wilts and grows, ebbs and flows.

The grandmother of the boy I loved is dying in the garden room of the local hospital where my grandmother, too, passed away. He and his cousins make plans to fly home for her funeral even while she remains alive. Our lives are busy and do not slow, but the world is green and full; the sky blue with marshmallow clouds. If we had a choice, we would not leave it today. We would sit in the garden and enjoy it a spell, feeling the warmth on our faces, reveling in the life around us.

I try to remember this. So on the anniversary of his death, I visited Vader’s tree on our front lawn; the place where I had rested with him in the hours before his death, looking up at the leafy canopy, embracing the light from the sun. I stretched out on the dirt and grass, not caring if my dress clothes became grass stained and soiled and I looked up once again – thankful for his small life and all the life that has occurred in the year he’s been gone. I sat up and stared across the lawn at his garden, thinking how tall my nieces and nephews had grown in a year, how much life had changed – my niece Ellie was only a baby in a basket when she visited last Memorial Day, now she is a rambunctious toddler – “go, go, go” is her catchphrase. I got Waffles once Vader was gone, joined a Writer’s Group, gave a reading, welcomed and bid farewell to three classes of students, started a blog. I traveled to Laguna Beach, Washington D.C., Woodstock, NY. My brother went off to boot camp and my Mom had a cataract removed. I wrote articles and stories, drew pictures and paintings. My niece spoke my name. Life is full. We bud and we bloom. We bid goodbye. And, on a good day we are aware of it all and thankful for our gardens.

Vader's Tree

Writing Prompt: Return to a memory from last year. Write about it.

Business Card

I had some new business cards made up a month ago in anticipation of Blogpaws and the Creative Sparks reading at Hubbard Hall. The new cards not only feature graphics from my blog, but also a QR code that when scanned take people to either a reading of the story I shared at Hubbard Hall the other night or the animation of my Dogs Dancing at the Carousel collage. Here, is the card that leads you to the story and a video of what you see if you scan the code. This way those of you who were not able to come, will be able to share in what I read. My new business card

 

Lost

Waffles Lost Blog I lost Waffles today. For a whole half-an-hour my baby was missing. I always call her my little Pugdini and today she made good on the name, disappearing right before our eyes. We were preparing dinner – my father grilling steaks, my Mom setting the table, and me as quickly clearing it of my paperwork. Dad had the back door to the fenced-in-yard open and I had just run some files upstairs with Alfie and Waffles in tow. Next thing I knew I saw Alfie peaking around from in back of my father’s legs, but no Waffles.

Up to no good again, I assumed and shouted her name. Typically, she comes running, stopping short at the baby gate that she hopped over to get up the stairs, but which impedes her journey back down. This time, she failed to show when I called. I called again – trying first my high-pitched excited voice, followed by a sterner cry, and then back to nervous screeching. When she didn’t appear, I ran to the backyard searching for her and then back up the stairs, tearing into my nephew’s room, my office and bedroom to no avail. I ran back down the stairs and to the car declaring her missing. I drove up and down the street looking for her, by this time in tears. Logically, I couldn’t figure out how she could have gotten out. In the past she had escaped through a hole in the gate on two occasions, but the hole had been repaired and even when she had gotten out she usually just sat outside the fence trying to find a way back in to be with Alfie. She had never wandered off. I pictured someone nabbing her from the backyard, envisioning horrors like animal experiments being performed on her. When I calmed myself enough to deem this vision unrealistic, my next thought was of a big eagle sweeping down while we weren’t looking and flying off with her. “I’ll never get her back either way,” I thought.

Beside myself, I returned home only to learn that my parents hadn’t found her yet either. Another search of the house ensued and then I heard my Mom’s voice calling to let me know she was found safe-and-sound in what we assumed was a locked bedroom. I should have realized. The door was shut because of the bathroom renovations, but I had noticed that she had found a way in the other day. The problem is the door swings in to allow her entrance, but just like the baby gate, once it closes she can’t get it to swing out, impeding her exit. In my terror, I hadn’t thought of this, however.

I scooped Waffles out of Mom’s arms and held her close. She wiggled and wagged her usually stoic tail, while Alfie did the same. The two, sensing my excitement, got all worked up, like two children on Christmas morning. They didn’t know why I was so happy, but I could tell they both hoped it meant something tasty for them. In the end, it did. I placed both Waffles and Alfie securely in their pens with a bite-sized morsel of the grilled filet mingon. And, as she ate it I think Waffles was as happy as I was that she hadn’t gotten permanently lost.