60 degrees today, and the backyard is filled with melting
snow and mud and, well, dog excrement.
It’s disgusting. On days like
this, one actually has to actually (gasp) walk the furry ball of kinetic energy
or risk total destruction of one’s home.
You’d think the lack of the front right long might slow even
an Australian Shepherd down, but alas, when she’s running, you can’t even tell
she’s missing a limb. Case in point: the
other week Daniel let Kiah out the front door.
She took off like a bat out of hell, and within seconds, was completely
out of sight. I thought that was it. She was gone.
It was over.
“She’s gone,” I told John.
“Well, that’s it then.
It’s over.”
We're a worst-case scenario kind of a couple.
The kids sobbed and moaned.
We all piled into the van and drove slowly around the neighborhood
calling her name and waving beef jerky in the air. Ten minutes later, we pulled into our driveway
and found Kiah sitting in the middle of it, staring at us imploringly: Why did
you guys leave? How could you do
that? How was I supposed to get into the
house? You know I can’t live without my
toilet water and the kids’ favorite stuffed animals.
The thing with having a three-legged dog is, every time you
venture out in public with her, someone assumes you adopted her three-legged
furry self from a shelter.
“Wow. Good for you,”
they say before you can explain. “More
people should adopt special-needs dogs.”
And I pause.
“Yes, well, we just couldn’t resist her,” I say. And for a brief moment, I feel really proud
of myself for rescuing a special-needs dog.
Except I didn’t. But
explaining the whole convoluted story of how we lost Kiah, thought her for
dead, and then got her back minus a leg is exhausting. And retelling it makes me feel like a truly
rotten dog owner, though I know in my heart the story of how her leg came to be
no more is nobody’s fault.
The kids opened the van door and Kiah hopped into it, ready
for a road trip. There was great rejoicing
in the land. Then we put her safely back into the house and
debated whether or not to give her the beef jerky, because we didn’t want to
reward her running-away behavior. That
is exactly the kind of behavior the dog obedience class was supposed to get rid
of.
I want my money back.
Today, I don't feel like dragging the kids out for a walk so I put her into the backyard to go to the bathroom, and she curls up
in a puddle of mud, sticks her nose in it, perks up because she hears something
in the distance, and runs frantically to the fence and begins barking like a
maniac. When she runs, she is fluid,
beautiful, a soft streak of black and white fur. The mud flies off of her like rain.
I’ve never wanted it to snow so bad.
3 comments:
lol. you always make me laugh. the worst part about having a dog is the mud for sure!
but.... then again, there's rejoicing in the land! Traci
Great post. Oh, I miss those days, yet am glad for not having to wipe dog legs every few hours anymore. We used to have 'Lake Jazzy' in our backyard; she'd run right to that low spot and into the 'lake'. Oh how I loved when we had deep snow. She'd run out, bury her head in it, and pop up with snow on her nose, and a big question-mark-look on her face. Loved it.
I'm glad for the warmer weather myself (even though we have a large mud trench practically in our back yard). But I must say, I LOVE the cartoon you posted! :)
Post a Comment