The dog is cruising
Just poking my head up long enough to share:
After I spent my FREE TIME this evening steam cleaning the upstairs carpets, Norris the wonder dog decided to whiz all over them.
Lovely.
Just poking my head up long enough to share:
After I spent my FREE TIME this evening steam cleaning the upstairs carpets, Norris the wonder dog decided to whiz all over them.
Lovely.
I was so freaked out about Norris interacting with Eden. He really doesn't like children and usually tries to nip them.
But as far as Eden's concerned, she's the pack's puppy and he adores her. Licks her hands (he is so NOT a licker), whines whenever he hears her cry, and nudges her with his nose in an effort to get her to pet him. (Maybe in another few months.)
Here's Norris supervising a stealth changing session (while Mommy and Daddy were trying to watch Scrubs and feed her at the same time):
This time as military dogs.
A few years ago, Norris was in the habit of wearing my jackets. Really. We'd hang our jackets on kitchen chairs to dry out when we came in each evening, else they'd probably start growing mold. Sometimes I'd look over and Norris would be standing next to the chair, my jacket draped over his back. He would just stand there quietly. To this day, I have no idea what he was doing, and he stopped not long afterwards.
His new bad habit is pulling blankets off the baby. While Eden is swinging in the cradle swing, we drape a receiving blanket over her (she gets chilly otherwise). No matter how well we tuck her in, Norris will come along and pull that blanket onto the floor.
This evening I put Eden in her bassinet while Matthew and I were busy puttering; she was awake and under a blanket (being chilly after some time in the cradle swing) -- and when I came out, her blanket (a thick one!) was on the floor and Norris was sniffing it. He had to pull it through the slats of the bassinet to get to it...
...He's an oddball dog. Nine years old, and I still don't get him sometimes.
Long before there was a blog, we were the Mactyre Menagerie (three dogs and eight ferrets over the years -- definitely a menagerie). It doesn't seem right to be a menagerie with only two species in the household, but when I mentioned this to Matthew, he said, "Don't get any ideas."
It took me a while to realize what he meant. No, no more animals, not now. It used to be that every time I felt the need to have children, we'd somehow end up wtih a pet. This is how, over the years, we've had those three dogs and eight ferrets. (The ferrets overlapped and so did the dogs, but there was a lot of ferret serialization. They don't live long.) Now we have a kid on the way, and it precludes more animals. Irony, I guess.
Tonight we cleaned up the ferret cage and took it downstairs. There's more to do -- tubes we had running around the room, a den one of the ferrets made behind a desk, that sort of thing. Although I can't say I'm going to miss having a litterbox to clean up, it's weird for us to have a computer room without a ferret cage or ferrets bounding around and getting into trouble at my feet. (Or biting toes, or rolling toys around, or wrestling with each other, or....) We keep -- kept -- the ferrets in the computer room because that's where we were the most, so it made sense they'd get the most attention there.
It's strange to be ferretless after 15 years. We started with Gwen and Arthur hidden in the hideous apartment with gold carpet, no pets allowed; if we had maintenance done, we'd hide the cage in the closet. Later, we had them for a year in California as part of the ferret underground before we moved back to Nevada. Sometimes I'd take them with me to college classes, and when I had to do a research paper for a scientific writing class (bio requirement - ugh) I wrote it on weasels. Did you know there are some species of weasels where the males will sneak into dens while the mother weasel is out hunting, and impregnate very, very juvenile weasel females in the litter, and that somehow the little females manage to store the sperm until they're sexually mature? I didn't either, not until I wrote that paper.
I would get so tired of people asking me why we had ferrets, like it was a deviant behavior I ought to be ashamed of. The reason (when I would deign to explain it) was that they're such joyous creatures, it's impossible to be depressed around them (and I need that in my life, I do). All they do is eat, sleep, and play. That's a good gig.
But God, they just don't end well -- all the cancers we've dealt with, the heart murmurs, blood sugar crashes, the leaking lymph systems. I force-fed one ferret through two months of an acute virus (he lived two years more, one of the few who lived past seven) and injected another one four times a day with Lasix using tiny insulin needles. And the pink splatter I'd get all over my shirts when I'd give one of them oral amoxicillin -- that, at least, I won't miss, or the many trips to the vet with the ferret in my lap (or on the way back from the vet in tears, minus the ferret).
(And if you wondered why the nurse in the house doesn't tend the animals, it's because he can't stand hurting them without their understanding of why he's doing what he's doing. He had the same problem, as a clinical RN, with very young children and very old, confused adults.)
In any case, here's to Gwen, Arthur, Llewellyn, Owain, Kai, Brigid, Eleanor, and Gruffudd and the simple, sweet joy they brought us (not to mention the amusement we felt when watching vet techs try to spell their names).
...when you're in front of the vet at 7:25 am in your pajamas, with a seizing ferret who needs to be euthanized asap.
Yeah. Happy Tuesday.
It's all going. I'm feeling better, Matthew's feeling better. I'm wrapping things up (or trying to) at the office as much as possible. I committed to closing the office the first of June, which naturally means two things would get set over for the beginning of June. I guess I'll just wing it, office-less. It just didn't make sense to keep up the expense for the duration of my maternity "leave." (Is it leave when you work for yourself?) Also, I couldn't imagine trying to get it all moved any later than that. Just the thought alone gives me nightmares.
After this, I have to run to the courthouse and then back (it sounds dramatic, but it's a block away), then make a trip into Portland. Fun stuff, and with gas $3.32 a gallon (at COSTCO!). I know Americans have it soooo easy, price-wise, but it's been less than a year and a half since I was paying $1.79 a gallon.
Our last ferret has taken a nosedive, health-wise. We knew he had systemic problems, but this is probably the fastest I've seen one go downhill. One of life's cruel ironies is that such fun and sweet animals never, ever have "good" deaths. We will probably end up having to take him to be put to sleep this week, which is as close to a good death as it can get. It's the end of an era: we've had ferrets since 1992.
The baby is still very active, and has had some mammoth cases of the hiccups over the past few days -- much more dramatic than they were a couple of months ago. It's amazing how loud her heartbeat has gotten when I listen with the doppler. (Matthew: "Well, it's a much larger heart now.")
Trying to get the house organized has been a nightmare. I organized about a third of the baby closet and got the baby stuff out of the loft and into the room. We may not be worrying about a full-fledged nursery for a while, but that stuff still has to go somewhere. Aiiee, what a mess. Anyone interested in my Batman: The Animated Series VHS collection? (We long ago replaced them with DVDs.) A recumbent exercise bike? An old upright piano?
Anyway, back to the salt mines.
The pet food-related kidney failure reports just break my heart. Fortunately, we don't feed our guys any of of the contaminated products. (In fact, neither animal gets any wheat in their food; it's a major allergen for pets.)
Norris the Malinois eats Solid Gold's Wolf King formula -- bison and salmon, primarily. I don't ever give him moist canned food, but if he's sick he'll get cottage cheese or brown rice and tuna we prep ourselves. He'll also get the rice and tuna if we are careless and run out of food.
Gruffudd the ferret eats Innova EVO ferret food. Occasionally he'll get moist food, but only EVO.
[The downer about both foods is the extremely stinky poops the animals produce.]
There were two Mals and two GSDs at the K9 event in Gresham. Naturally, I gravitated toward the Mals, particularly a sweet little female about Norris's age. She was so tiny! And still acrobatic -- she alerted on several drug caches, but the police officer had concealed heroin somewhere in the engine compartment, and she effortlessly made it in a lovely leap.
From the Oregonian:
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Gresham K-9 unit to give public demonstration
GRESHAM
-- Kyra, Koda, Cvok and Nico may sound like aliens in a science fiction
movie, but they are in fact the names of the dogs assigned to the
Gresham Police Department's K-9 unit.
And weather permitting, the dogs and their human partners will team up
for a 3 p.m. public demonstration Wednesday at Gresham's Main City
Park, 219 S. Main Ave.
Last year, the dogs -- three work patrol and one works narcotics
detection -- were called into service 3,601 times, with 1,378 of those
calls to assist neighboring police agencies.
The three Belgium Malinois and one German shepherd were responsible for capturing 70 suspects and assisting in 57 captures.
Sgt. Teddi Anderson, Police Department spokeswoman, said 11 Gresham
businesses have provided the K-9 unit with space to train, and several
private and public entities have donated money for the purchase and
training of new dogs. All four dogs are equipped with bullet-proof
vests.
The teams include:
Sgt. Mike Leduc and Kyra. Narcotics-detection team that has also been
assisting in patrol duties since December. Kyra is an 8-year-old
Belgium Malinois from Holland.
Officer Shawn Debler and Koda. Started patrol duties in July. Koda is a 3-year-old German shepherd from the Czech Republic.
Officer Scott Cunningham and Cvok. Started patrol duties in July. Cvok
is a 13-month-old Belgium Malinois from the Czech Republic.
Officer Jared McGowan and Nico. Have been on patrol duties for about
five years. Nico is a 6-year-old Belgium Malinois from the Czech
Republic.
Friday's upcoming appointment is at the 17 week mark, which makes it possible that we'll learn the baby's sex for the first time. Early in the pregnancy I KNEW it was a girl. KNEW. Now, I'm not so sure.
This morning, Matthew woke me up at 6:30 as requested.
Me: I dreamed it was a baby boy. Maybe it's a boy.
Matthew: The night before last, you dreamed it was a Malinois puppy.
Me: .... OK, true.
There's got to be a culture somewhere on this planet that views waking up on the first day of the year to your dog barfing as a sign the year is going to be a damn good one. Right?
Matthew and I are in a not-quite-undisclosed-location along with our trusty sidekick, Norris, celebrating our 14th wedding anniversary (yesterday). Today we had some blue skies in the morning and early afternoon, so we took our three-legged-monster to the beach. (You can't tell from the pictures, but so did everyone else -- there were more dogs than people, it seemed!)
A couple of years back, I bought a hideous planter from Fred Meyer: a plastic, hollowed out head of David. It was a really, really bad "reproduction" of Michelangelo's David. I bought it because it was so hideous I knew my husband would take one look at it and be instantly horrified and yell "AH!" For $19.95, that was worth it for me.
What I didn't count on was Norris's reaction. He saw the thing and growled, and I, the mature pet owner that I am, chased him around the house with it. I later went to bed and forgot the whole thing.
The next morning, Norris couldn't walk past David without growling and barking, and I saw a photo opportunity in the making.
(David now lives in the yard, and the dog completely ignores it -- but it took a couple of weeks before he wouldn't start at the sight of it.)
Really, that's my life right now. I get up and work, either at home or at the office, and while I can make it through the day without a nap, by 7 I'm flagging. The past few nights I've gone to bed between 8-9.
I feel pretty good most of the time, though. (Last night, one my neighbors pointed out it was like night and day from the previous pregnancy. True.) No nausea unless I go way too long before eating or sleeping, and the bloating (so long as I avoid dairy, which is hard, because I've been craving it) is doable. Next Friday we go in for the First Screen, the set of blood tests and ultrasounds where initial risks for genetic and other abnormalities are detected. We're nervous about it; this is the 12th week, and we're coming up on the point we were at with Starbuck.
Still, I've managed to finally find the right fit for a new office situation: in Hillsboro, across the street from my favorite antique store (and next door to a great garden art shop) and just a block up from the courthouse and the law library. When I walked in (to meet with an attorney about a contract job) I liked the place immediately -- wood panelling, lovely wainscotting -- and could tell it had been an attorney's office for quite some time. (The current attorney-owner's father practiced there before he did, and it's his dad's office that I'll be in.) My office not only has a regular door, but a little pocket door that leads into the library, too. I really like it, and the price is right. The only logistic I have left to figure out is parking, but I'll worry about that later.
The dog is doing pretty well -- back to driving us crazy at times -- and mostly is leaving his foot alone. Mostly. (He is a Mal, after all.)
Even though our menagerie now numbers only two, we still use our steam cleaner on the carpet quite often. Sometime this afternoon, I'll have to tackle them again -- it looks like a murder scene downstairs. (Well, not really. Maybe a mouse murder scene.)
For those not keeping score at home, we have a three-legged Belgian Malinois who hates our neighbors' dogs. Last night, after we got home, we put the dog out, and he predictably started barking at a dog. We heard: "Woof-woof-woof-- YELP!" and both looked at each other with wide eyes. "That's not normal," one of us said, and opened the door. He limped in, bloody tracks all the way across the living room.
(I suspect he cut himself on a glazed pot in the back, but haven't gone outside to check the evidence.)
He really cut himself -- on his ONLY front paw, which made walking a bit difficult. It took us ages to get the bleeding to stop, and then we dosed him with his sedatives and codeine so that he'd be unconscious and unable to mess with the "pediatric bandaging" Matthew applied. (I asked what that meant. He said, "You cover the bandage up in so much tape that it takes them a long time to get it off; at least while they're working on it, the wound is protected.") He had it off by this morning, when I woke up with him on the foot of the bed. Today he's coned and not drugged, but can't get to the wound to tamper with the (half-assed) bandages I applied (I'm not the nurse).
Yes, that's the kind of fun we have on a Saturday night.
It's weird to have one dog and one ferret; I think the last time we had only two pets was in 1994, when Arthur and Gwen (ferrets) were joined by puppy Nika (the border collie). As much as I hate to say it, though, it is a lot easier than three dogs and five ferrets. I guess I'll have to come up with a different title for this blog at some point, because Menagerie hardly seems appropriate.
Today is contract-work-at-home-day, not for the SCA,* but other projects. My car, mysteriously, is fine -- which has me worried there's an electrical short somewhere, since it's not the fuses. Who knows why, but at least I don't have to worry about it today or tomorrow. Maybe Friday.
I'm still 9,000 words away from being done with NaNo. Kai dying took a lot of the wind out of my sails, and I barely scraped together 850 words yesterday -- just didn't have the energy for it. My feeling now is that I'll finish if I finish, and if I don't, well, I still have a damn good start on the novel I was planning on writing anyway (which is more like a 150,000 word project -- there was no "finishing" in 50K).
Yesterday I reduced the turkey carcass to soup stock, being oh-so-efficient -- and discovered my pregnancy-brain can't stand the way it smells. In fact, thinking about it turns my stomach -- and so it's out of here as soon as I can cope with it.
*Super-Cool-Attorney I work for two days a week.
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