• HOME
  • THE SHEEP
  • THE WOOL
  • THE ART
  • Prairie Island News
  • CONTACT

Commitments

8/30/2018

5 Comments

 
Picture
How can it be that our shelter belt ash trees glow more golden than green, that blackbirds gather and fatten on our garden corn before I can claim the ears for personal enjoyment, that this week's flip of August will reveal September's hopes and happenings? I note these autumnal omens only peripherally, for canine commitments have driven my routine and continue to be my focus.

My promised birthday gift to Katrina, honoring her late cocker spaniel, Ash, is matted, framed, and delivered. Katrina provided the photo--taken on a special camping trip that she and Ash shared during her senior year at U. of Puget Sound--and asked that I render it in a blue medium. Katrina visualized the scene in colored pencils; I pictured the moment in watercolors. The finished piece satisfied both of us.   















​


Additionally, Toot and her duo of pups--Dozer and Dot--are on track to share life with us forever.
All three had their 8-week check-up at the animal shelter early this week. Toot received booster shots, and her pups each received preliminary shots, de-wormer, and an identity chip. Dot weighed in at a sinewy 13 pounds, while Dozer crushed the scale at 16 pounds. Their vet appointment, set for mid-September, will squelch any further puppy mill nonsense. In the meantime, Jim and I, both neophytes to puppy rearing, have learned the following:

​1. Cucumbers, nicely chilled in the fridge, are the best sort of chew toy. Here's Dot resting with one that she claimed.         

Picture
2. Serious dogs need serious toys. Dot's on the skull while Dozer deals with a cow's leg bone. Both toys arose from an ancient cache that Toot discovered I know not where--certainly not Petco. 
Picture
3. Barricades and closed doors are essential. Behold Dot resting ever so angelically behind the porcelain throne, shortly before attacking its tempting soft hose.
Picture
4. Consummate foodies beget consummate foodies. I have no pics, but Toot's frequent forays to the basement--where we have stored a box of nectarines and a box of peaches--confirm her love of fruit; Dozer stations himself underfoot to catch and devour any cherry tomatoes that roll off the counter during their sorting and washing; windfall apples inspire fierce battles between the pups; as for Fritos . . . they are best dropped on the floor if one values ones fingers. 

5. Weaning house pet pups from house pet mum demands more energy than weaning either lambs or calves. Thankfully, both Jim and I are retired from 8 to 5 routines so we can focus on 24/7 canine responsibilities. We hustle puppies outside to tinkle, toilet, tear at each other, tread water in their feed tub wading pool, terrorize low hanging branches, and traumatize our flower beds until they are exhausted and ready to return to their kennel for a nap. In between, Toot is out and about with us. Of course, we could relegate either the pups or mum to a barn, but that would entail hard-hearted self-weaning from the joy of their constant companionship. It ain't a gonna happen!

For now, Dot and Dozer respond to "No", "Out", "Come", and "Kennel up." In the upcoming days, they will experience a collar, a leash, and a few more voice commands. Toot kinks and high-jinks in anticipation of her role in our morning and evening sheep chores. She remains too eager to charge and move the ewes too fast, so when we're trailing out to pasture early and back to the corral at dusk, she must be leashed, but within the constraints of that leash, she sweeps back and forth  and moves them effectively. She's not the quick, eager-to-please, strategic thinker that Weed was, but she's devoted, she's trying, she's helpful, and I am grateful to have found her.      
5 Comments
Toneybeth Clark
9/3/2018 03:46:54 pm

As usual, you astound me. Where do you get your energy? I would be daunted by the time and energy required to render two pups house trained. My balance is still iffy enough that I would find pups underfoot dangerous to them and me. I loved the watercolor of Katrina's Ash. Your watercolors are always wonderful.

Reply
Margaret Eller
9/7/2018 05:11:14 pm

Chores are at a bit of a hiatus, allowing us to focus on our bups, yes, bups with a "b". They make us laugh every day--a priceless gift. As for house training. They are either in their kennel or outside. They do not like to foul their nest, and they hold it during the night. I must admit that they occasionally piddle in the garage. That's not the house, right? As for the painting, I know that the perspective is a bit odd, rather like the lion king in spaniel form, but it's the shot that Katrina wanted and she was tickled with it. Me, too. Thanks for your kind words.

Reply
Carolyn Zieg Cunningham Underwood
10/13/2018 02:01:57 pm

Decided to use ALL my names just to see how it looks. Yikes! Anyway, am just now catching up with email, facebook, blogs, etc. Yours are just a delight, sis. Am so, so happy about the new doggies in your life. Thanks for a great weekend at Big Fork...again! A really special event for our entire family. And I always think about Philip and how much he would have enjoyed these gatherings. I feel him smiling & chuckling his special chuckle as I type this. Keep on rollin' like the Fremont River, by golly.

Reply
Margaret Eller
10/14/2018 03:40:19 pm

I like your extendo-name.

I'm so glad that you and Jerry and Brookie joined the fray in Big Fork. I had fun on opening night and was simply smitten by the workshop presenter. My paintings may not reflect it, but . . . Did you go home via the Swan? I had to brake hard for a fast-galloping black bear somewhere north of Seeley, and was glad to get home at 8:30ish on Sunday w/no large animals embedded in my bumper..

Reply
margaret eller
10/15/2018 12:40:34 pm

I like having all those names in your post. How Philip would have enjoyed the opening treats and dinner. You bet! Thanks for your kind words.

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Margaret zieg eller

    ​For 25 years, Prairie Island has been my anchor, my core, my muse. The seasonal rhythms of land and livestock sustain me. The power of place inspires me.​  

    Picture

    Archives

    November 2024
    June 2023
    January 2023
    August 2021
    April 2021
    January 2021
    October 2020
    July 2020
    April 2020
    February 2020
    November 2019
    September 2019
    June 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017

    Categories

    All
    Dogs
    Scenery
    Sheep
    Weather

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.