Tag Archives: pet adoption

House Proud?

In the very best sense, of course. When we came back south this fall to my husband’s family home in Texas, shortly after we arrived a starving little yellow dog was dumped upon us. I think it knew I was coming and decided this was the place to go. I’ve been called The Dog Lady for years, it fits.

She’d been severely abused and, weeks later, is still hand-shy and only my husband has been able to pick her up. She won’t abide a collar and she’s terrified of a slip lead. Once, my father-in-law closed the gate on a dog pen only to find out moments later that she’d escaped its high fence, earning her the nickname “Sneaky.”

After trying to adopt her out through the local Humane Society, which wasn’t much help at all, my in-laws decided to adopt her as “ranch dog” (unlike our little indoor Mini-Aussie Princess Lucia, aka Lulu) and named her Sara. That was my idea. As she started getting less frightened of humans, I saw her one day frolicking in the pasture around the three newest bulls, who I call “The Three Amigos” and smiling. I remembered Sara Smile from Hall & Oates all those years ago. So Sara it is.

In the old days down south the rich folk would sit out on the front porch after supper fanning themselves and drinking iced tea. This would demonstrate to all the neighbors walking by that they could afford both ice, and sugar. No small feat in those days before refrigeration.

Sara started making herself useful right away, patrolling the house regularly. She makes the rounds quite often and is always here for breakfast and dinner. Her new owners got her some high quality puppy food and have an appointment to have her spayed. She’s put on several pounds so that her ribs are no longer visible, and she probably weighs about 20-25 lbs.

The dog next door stops by to visit (hopefully nothing more) and play chase in the pastures. Miss Lulu plays ball with her in the back yard.

This morning Sara was lying in the front yard by the State Hwy. , watching. Her “toy box” is the driveway, where she keeps marrow bones, a priceless tennis ball, my husband’s tied up old tee shirt and now a plastic three-ring tug toy that Lulu only wants to destroy. She and all her worldly possessions are out front for all to see, because now this is HER house and these are HER people.

Hopefully we’ll be able to get her on a leash or in Lulu’s crate for her spay. My husband and I sprung for a new collar, and an ID tag that arrives today. Plus Lulu’s puppy collar and leash with a southwest theme, as nearly six years ago we picked her up from a breeder in Tucson and dressed her appropriately for her flight north.

So, Sara has reason to be house proud. She lets us get a bit closer every day and she has a wonderful temperament. Sad to see that she was dumped on our unsuspecting family but it’s good to know that she has a home. Soon she’ll be hopping on the Gator to go out and feed the cows. Until then, the house is safe from intruders with its new guard pup. Neuter and spay, the kindest way! Dee

Cooking for…..

kittens? Yes. In 1987 my sister sent a five-week old kitten from CA to NYC on a plane with my brother as a surprise. Surprise, dog gal, you now have a kitten that fell off the 7′ shelf he was born on at two weeks of age and his mother would not feed.

Gorgeous Burmese/Tuxedo talker. I never got the last word until I held him in my arms 13 years later as he was euthanized with heart dysfunction exacerbated by pneumonia.

I knew absolutely nothing about cats. He didn’t even know how to drink water because he couldn’t see it. I left him milk when I went to work, had no A/C so it curdled during the day because it was so hot.

The first day I got a book on cats that told me to only feed him raw kidneys and to keep them in the freezer for four days to eliminate bacteria. OK. Then I got a book I still use (or did, when I lend it out it tends to disappear) that said build a mouse from the ground up.

I bought a chicken, ate the breasts over a couple of days and took off all the other meat for my Nathan. Hebrew for “gift.” My current dog is Zoe, Greek for “life.” Yes, that’s how I name my family, you’re glad right now I don’t have kids.

I mixed it with all kinds of stuff, cottage cheese, lecithin powder, kelp, bone meal. He barely ate it. I finally learned about organics. When he died at age 13 he was on Innova canned. I do much better with what is out there today.

For birthday and Christmas I got him and his little brother, Mickey, each a can of Fancy Feast trash food as a gift. Mick was named Mick Dundee, after Crocodile Dundee, because he was fearless when I adopted him at nine weeks. He took my dog’s bed for a year and then taught himself to fetch crumpled up post-it notes and retrieve them to me. His name morphed to Mickey Mouse and then just Mickey. He liked the twice a year Fancy Feast treats as well. Dogs ran away from home just to play with him.

My dog just turned eleven. She is on frozen raw and dry food. The dry is to prepare her tummy for long road trips. We’ll be moving soon and I can’t get dry ice here to keep her frozen food cold so I’m mixing the two now.

In my life I have “owned” two cats and two dogs. I love all of them but can no longer have cats because my husband is deathly allergic to them. I yearn to live on a farm so all the unowned cats will visit and I can see them outdoors, capture and have them spayed/neutered and if they forgive me for that, feed them. I continue to bathe Zoe every two weeks so her dander doesn’t make my husband sneeze. She loves the bath, not the comb-out 24 hours later.

After my first Nathan surprise, all our animals are from shelters. Please adopt from shelters. I worked with Greyhound Pets of America (GPA) for years and saw pitiful dogs coming off the racetrack of last resort, Caliente, and turning around in two weeks with good food, health care and human care. You may get a diamond in the rough, but it’s your diamond to polish.

I follow the no grain formula, frozen raw and my dog has the softest coat in the neighborhood. Yes, it’s expensive but at 11 our Zoe is happy and healthy. I bet she’d love that chicken mix I made for Nathan back in the day! Dee