Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Rain, Blessed Rain

 
Don't know what the measurement is yet, but it rained steadily for about 4 hours today, and off and on for another two.  We needed it so very much!
 
 
Trying to convince these guys it's time to start roosting in the big henhouse, where they hang out during the day.  After watching them walk around and around their pen in the rain, I gave in and let them into it.  They don't even fit into the little hutch in there anymore, plus an older hen decided to sleep outside tonight.  Exactly ONE pullet went up the ramp into the henhouse, and I checked to make sure she roosted with the other birds.  It won't be long until they are out of the little pen and in the new henhouse with the others.
 
 
It was this kind of day, and old Ranger was pooped out waiting for me to finish up and go back in the house, where it was dry and warm!
56 degrees right now, and I had to wear a hoodie to do chores both times.
 
 

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Spoiler Alert - Don't Read This Post If Gross Stuff Bothers You!

Grandson Nathan came to help me today while his mom did a little Christmas shopping.  I was glad to see him, as I had told him we would see a movie this weekend, but after yesterday's trip, was just too behind in chores to be able to get away for hours.  He helped me a lot while he was here, and not only carried many water buckets, but also took some pictures which I will feature this week.  He's becoming a very good photographer!

As we went down the road to take him home to Lawrence, I told him that this morning on the way to church I had seen a dead goose in the road.  Going back a few days, Keith called me on his way home one night to tell me there were two dead geese in the road outside the goat dairy, which is about 3/4 of a mile south of us. He speculated that the goat lady's coonhounds had possibly gotten loose and gotten two of her geese (they had done this once before).  He loves geese like I do, and lamented the fact that they were laying in the road, dead. 

Back to this morning, I got out of the car and looked at the goose's body.  It was perfectly intact, as if the goose had just laid down, legs under her, for a rest, but... there was NO HEAD.

It was clean, dry, and no blood.
In my opinion, this looked like an opposum kill.  I have had possums get ducks several times, but never a bird as big as a goose, a big healthy one like this.  When fowl are asleep, though, you can do almost anything to them.

This was to the left of the goose.
It looks like a dog someone hit, stuffed in a bag, and dumped on our road.  I thought it was a coyote at first, but we don't think so. 
Keith has a theory... that it was  someone's dog that killed the goose, and the owners killed the dog and dumped both.
Keith said the goose had a head when he saw it originally, so I stand by my possum theory. (only it got the head AFTER the fact). The other thing is, there isn't a mark on the goose. 
A mystery on a country road.
We sure wish people wouldn't dump their animals here.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Ranger's Story

Ranger, our German Shepherd, is one of the dogs we adopted, more or less.  One morning while I was at church, Keith was on his way to his second home, Home Depot... and since he always takes the back way through farm country, he was enjoying the ride.

Along he came beside a dog who was traveling up the roadway... a skinny German Shepherd who appeared to be either sick or hurt, and clearly had not been eating regularly.  Keith parked the van and got out, and tried unsuccessfully to get the dog to come to him.  Various people came and went, and helped him.  (There is not a lot of traffic on this road in the morning).  Someone finally gave him a donut from a package in their car, and went on.  Keith was finally able to get the poor dog to come to him, and when he did, he picked it up in his arms, and the dog sighed.  Keith put him in the van, and he went to the back and lay down, and home they came, Home Depot forgotten.  When he got here that day five years ago, he told me there was a poor hurt dog in the car, and to look at him.  There he was, laying against the back door of the van, watching us warily. 

Oscar was still alive then, the Min Pin with legs of steel who could leap around like Tigger.  He was not about to accept this big dog or be bossed by him, but within a few days, they were fast friends.  Never did we see them fight, and never did we see aggression on one or the other's part.  They would actually lay side by side and chew on their bones.  So Ranger eventually got out of the van and came to live at Calamity Acres.  He had been thrown from a car, or possibly hit with a baseball bat or board, according to Dr. Tom, our vet.  His hearing was gone in his left ear and his muzzle permanently turned to the side.  An ear infection raged for weeks, but we eventually got it under control.  He still, five years later, will need surgery at some point on his mouth. 

He is faithful and true, he patrols our fence, meets us at the gate, and leads us home every night. He is our burglar alarm.  He has put up with Lilly, who dominated him from the start... with Addie Mae, with Hannah, with Abby.  He tolerated Nickie, who picked on him, and Gwen. He is terrified of little Jenny! He is our most handsome boy, and is not comfortable leaving, so rarely goes anywhere with us.  He likes to stay home and take care of his place, and we like him here.


Ranger Boy.  

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Our Dear Little Addie Mae


I should start this story by saying that once, there was a little Min Pin named Oscar, dog of my heart.... and he lived with us in Leavenworth, where he escaped from the yard with the ease of a ghost, and pulled us around the block and along the river bluff with his harness, pulling us off our feet he pulled so hard! He had feet of springs, and could jump two feet off the floor, and if bacon was in the air, three. He hated the woodchuck who lived under the porch next door, and stood upright at the window to watch for him, going nuts if he ventured out to eat the grass. At night, he growled under the covers if we tried to move our feet... and we laughed, because he was a Heat Seeking Missile. When we came to Calamity Acres, we found he could get through the 4 inch x 4 inch livestock fence, and he ran around the neighbor's yard. A sheepskin harness stopped that for a while, until he learned to turn sideways and get through. We feared he would get hit by a car or truck on our country road, as he began to chase them up and down the fenceline, inside the yard. And one night, he got out the gate when it was left open accidentally, ran down to the highway, and was hit by someone. Keith found him there the next morning, after we had searched for him in the dark. We buried him under the tree in the yard forever after known as "Oscar's Tree".


Ranger was alone then, and we decided to get him a companion, since he and Oscar had been such good friends. Two males, they never fought over anything, including bones. We went to the shelter, and there we found ... a puppy, the last thing we wanted. Lilly Ann chose Keith though, that day, and was the boss from the time she was two months old.


After a few more months, when it became aware that Lilly was truly Keith's dog, we argued over the fact that I had lost "my" dog. After the argument one day, Keith called me at work to tell me to get him through our guard shack, so he could show me something in the car. I went down to the front door, and there, in the seat next to him in a crate, was a tiny little pug, happy to see me through the gate of the crate, wagging her little curly tail. I said "Who's this?" and Keith said "This is Adeline Mabel, and she's coming home with us!". So Addie Mae came home. She was my first pug, though not Keith's, and she was sweet and winsome. She also became our protector, and did not take anything off the big dogs, who did not bother her. When a stranger came in, she got between the person and us, always guarding. If there was a noise in the night, her bark was right behind Lilly's and Ranger's. At night she would snuggle in bed against Keith, burrowing under him almost, and in the morning, switch to my side, resting against my shoulder and pushing her little behind against my pillow. In the evening, we would sit on the loveseat, and she would rest her forehand on my lap, and i would stroke her back and sides until she fell asleep on her red blanket. On the nights I didn't sit right down after supper, she and Hannah would worry until I sat and they could arrange themselves, coming up the dog steps to the loveseat. She loved to share my popsicles.


She loved the farm, she liked to wander around the yard, a little fawn-colored spot moving around on the fence-line. Oscar had been attacked by a young eagle one day, so we always tried to keep an eye on her... but she loved to go down in the pasture or into the hen-yard. One day a goose nipped her on the behind, and after that, she was not so interested in the birds, but she loved to be outdoors. Winter was hard on her, pug's bellies drag close the the ground, and the effort to get through the snow was great.


We got Hannah finally, to keep her company during the day while we worked, and she and Hannah bonded closely, Addie was Hannah's eyes. Hannah was content to follow her lead, and often rested her head on Addie's back. We marveled at the fact that two dogs that did not know each other until they were 8 could be so close.


Tuesday night, Addie coughed, some hard barking coughs. Since I was off work yesterday, I took her to Dr. Tom to get checked. The vet listened to her abdomen.... and then asked to take an exray. He came in to show me that her abdomen was filled with fluid, causing the hard breathing. He gave her an injection and then sent me home with medicine and a request to bring her back Monday, but he mentioned that she would have been gone in another 48 hours if I had not brought her in. She rode quietly back, looking at me through the carrier door as I talked to her. She got home and breathed very hard, panting and gasping. Keith looked at her when he came home and shook his head, then got his blankets and pillows and slept on the living room floor with her. She got on my lap for a minute, but could not breathe, and got next to me, where she was a little more supported by the couch cusion. During the night, Keith put her in bed, and this morning, she put herself next to me. I stroked her, she had gasped all night, and I was going to take her to Dr. Tom again. Keith put her on the floor so she could get a drink, and we heard her lap.... and then she was gone.


We have cried all day, and we buried her in the pasture, under the mulberry tree, next to Nickie. We will miss her little happy barks as we come in the door... and we know she's waiting with Oscar and Nick at the Rainbow Bridge when we get there. Goodnight, Little Addie Mae, Little Monkey Face, Daddy's Little Girl.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009