Friday, January 4, 2013

It's Been A Year

Me & Ginger

Hi Pups,
Mom let me, Foxy Boy, take over today.  She's kinda sad.  One year ago today our Ginger went over the rainbow bridge and I lost my eye.  It's when the bad thing happened.  If you don't know, click the link. 

I remember following my beloved Ginger out the side of the gate.  She figured it out.  She was so smart cause she was a terrier.  We were FREEEEEE!!!!  We ran and ran and ran and it was so wonderful to chase her because I loved her the minute I laid eyes and nose on her.  Then there was a bang and I was walking alone on the side of the road and my eye hurt so badly.  A nice lady picked me up and took me to the shelter cause I only had a license on.  Now I wear this tag and it has mom and dad's cell numbers on the back.


When me and the lady were on the sidewalk at the shelter, Mommy came and she was crying.  I was not my excited self and my eye must've been pretty ugly.  Mommy thanked the lady and carried me to the car and laid me on a blankie and drove me to the dogter.  That's when her phone rang and I heard her say, 'OK, thanks for telling me."  She was crying even more.  She called Daddy and that's when I heard her say that Ginger died.

We got the to dogter and she ran in with me in her arms and said, "Please help my dog."  I liked the people at the dogter.  They put a needle in my paw and it made the pain better.  They told Mommy my eye had to come out the next day and I would have to stay overnight at another, overnight hospital because I had to be watched.  They put the cone of shame on me.  Mommy took me in a crate to the overnight hospital down the street and I stayed there.  You know, there were these puppies there all night who made noise and held my interest.  The dogter told Mommy that was a good thing.  Mommy was happy when she picked me up in the morning and I pulled on the leash and sniffed like crazy on the way to the car.  I had my surgery later that day.

The morning after I slept at the overnight hospital.


This is what I looked like after my surgery.  I know, I was hideous. 
Sorry if I grossed you out but you furiends that like to break free need know what bad things can happen.  I learned the hard way. 

I got home and I looked and sniffed EVERYWHERE for my Ginger.  She was gone and I was sad.  I spent the next week laying on Mom's lap trembling here and there and getting well.  By the second week, I felt really good and I wanted to PLAAAYYY!!!




I howled at Mom and Dad every night and finally, Mom said to Dad that I needed a new furiend.  Next thing I know, my Scruffy Doodles came to live with us.  She's more aloof than Ginger but I love her to bits and I love playing tug with her most of all. 

My Scruffy Doodolls the day she came to live with us.
Remember, DO NOT leave the yard without your peep!  OK?  OK.
Love,
Mr. Fox









Sunday, December 16, 2012

Scotties

You may know that I love Scotties and their blogs too!  I may have also mentioned that I grew up with two cute Scotties and my mother is a true Scottie lover.  She travels to visit us kids so she doesn't have a Scottie right now but it's because of her that the love of the Scottie has seeped into my soul. 

Robbie was our first Scottie.  He was the big boy in the litter and we drove about an hour and half from our house in NJ to upstate NY.  I will never forget my mother telling my father and I in a strong voice that we were just going to look, not take one home!  'So don't you two (my father & I) start saying you want one!'  Bwahahahaha!!!  That was funny because she was the one who loved that Robbie boy and we took him home that day.  I was sooooo happy to have a new puppy.  I was maybe 13 or 14 & I think I held that puppy the whole way home.  We signed him up for obedience classes and he didn't so well.  You see, we didn't know about the Scottie's, ahem, uh, independence streak.  Yes, that's it, independence streak.  There was a lot of correcting going on and we all tried our hand at handling Robbie.  My father took over the handling and Robbie came along, graduated and he even graduated from the Companion Dog class too.  My parents were troopers with him.  They worked hard to teach him.  We hadn't had a boy dog in a long time so we weren't used to all of his extra energy either.  He LOVED to dig.  I mean that boy dug so many holes in the back yard!  Huge holes!  Being a fantastic gardener, with amazing flowers, my mother didn't like that but he learned... eventually.
Me and Robbie (remember it was the late 80s so you must forgive the hair, etc)
When I showed Husband this picture and told him that was our dog Robbie, he said, 'Who names a dog Robbie?' in a tone that made me want to slap him.  I told him Robbie was a Scottie who needed a Scottish name.  'Oh,' he said.  I remember when I brought Robbie with me to deliver my papers on my paper route and our Scottish (from Scotland) neighbors were delighted to see a Scottie and commented that his was name was like Robbie the Glasgow Glutton.  See, we knew...

Misty came along about 3 or 4 years later.  She was a brindle girl.  Did I mention that Robbie was all black?  Anyway... I remember when we picked her up too.  She was close by home and she quickly became the queen the of the house.  And Robbie loved her.  He loved her so much that he would gladly move to the 'other' pillow when Misty wanted to lay down.  There were always two pillows right next to each other on the floor next to where my mother sits.  All Misty had to do was give him the look and he'd move over.  My mother also took Misty to school and she did really well.  I mean really!  She even got her CDX and went on to agility training.  She could pick up the only dumbbell with my mother's scent on it out of a whole bunch!  She used to get nervous in the ring.  Poor Misty, I wonder what bugged her about that.  Anyway, when Robbie & Misty went out in the yard, Misty would bolt out the door first, then stop at the top of the deck stairs, turn and wait for Robbie.  Then down into the yard they'd go and bark for all the neighbors to know they were out and ferocious.  These two had a special bond. 

Well, you know the years passed and the dogs got older.  Poor Robbie started to have seizures and bloody noses.  The vet didn't know why and he was 13 years old and it would cost thousands of dollars to find out.  My parents never had that kind of money.  After many months of his seizures and bloody noses he went to the vet and over the rainbow bridge.  We all cried.  A lot.  My dad buried him in the back yard along with a number of other assorted pets that passed away over the years.  My dad always said that when he mowed that patch of grass he always said, "Hi Robbie!"  It's the life cycle, but who likes it?  I sure don't.

Perhaps the saddest part was when Misty would run out the back door to go out.  She would run out hard as she could, stop at the top of the steps and turn and wait for Robbie who wasn't there.  Ugh... she had to be told to go down the steps, go, go it's ok, go.  Sigh....  I think she began to have separation anxiety too.  I seem to recall her chewing a hole in the wall.  That's right, right through the drywall.  I also remember a folding chair being put up on the living room chair so couldn't jump on it and then on a table by the window, thus destroying a lot of things in her path.  This is why I say Scotties are smart.  They may cause damage BUT it is only due to their sheer ingenuity to figure something out or to get someplace.  Misty's time came to go over the rainbow bridge in a rapid fashion.  She got a cold of sorts that lasted about a week.  She was 15. She was my mother's dog.  She'd do anything for my mother and my mother loved her to no end.  Very, very sad.
Me & Misty
I loved those dogs.  I loved all of our dogs.  However, those two, along with my mother's enthusiasm have instilled the love of the Scottie dog even though I don't have one.  And... finding all these lovely Scottie blogs has brought it to the forefront.

Someday I will have a Scottie - a rescue for sure.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Dog Baby

I offer these photos of Mr. Fox sleeping in my lap without further comment.