Wordless Wednesday #13: Playing With My New Camera

Nobody really cares if you’re miserable, so you might as well be happy.

~Cynthia Nelms

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It’s Wordless Wednesday again!  Leave a message and I’ll try to return the favor.

Lulu striking a diva pose

Wishing Daddy was home

Talk to the paw

Happy girl... see the grin?

Handsome boy

Running is a lot of work!

Smells like spring!

Nearly 11 years old and 5 1/2 years off the track... and still has muscles!

Guarding his domain.

Wordless Wednesday #12: Recently Found Puppy Photos

The average dog is a nicer person than the average person.
~Andy Rooney

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It’s Wordless Wednesday again!  Leave a message and I’ll try to return the favor.

I just found these of Skah while looking through my thumbdrive. I can’t believe it was only two years ago (he was born 21JAN08) that he was this small!

8 1/2 weeks old:

3 months old:

5 months old:

11 months old:

21 months old (and he still looks like this now):

Wordless Wednesday #11: The Regal Pyr

Silence is more musical than any song.
~Christina Rossetti (1830 – 1894)

It’s Wordless Wednesday again!  Leave a message and I’ll try to return the favor.

Yeah, I'm cool

Total GQ

Guard Dog sleeps with one eye open

 

 

 

Friday Funny #11: Skah the Huge Puppy

I’ve always thought that a big laugh is a really loud noise from the soul saying, “Ain’t that the truth.”
~Quincy Jones

It’s time for the next “Friday Funny.” As a Navy wife with a husband who isn’t home much (and is deployed right now) sometimes things can get a bit melancholy.

Please join me with the “Friday Funny” meme. It can be anything from a comment that made you laugh or a funny story or even a funny photo/video you have seen.  Leave a comment if you post one and I’ll visit your blog to see!

This week’s is another video of our Great Pyrenees Skah.  He’s 21 months old and definitely looks like an adult dog… but he’s still a puppy most of the time!  Here he’s playing “wild dog” in a very small room!

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Friday Funny #10: Skah, the Scary Guard Dog

With the fearful strain that is on me night and day, if I did not laugh I should die.
~Abraham Lincoln

It’s time for the next “Friday Funny.” As a Navy wife with a husband who isn’t home much (and is deployed right now) sometimes things can get a bit melancholy.

Please join me with the “Friday Funny” meme. It can be anything from a comment that made you laugh or a funny story or even a funny photo/video you have seen.  Leave a comment if you post one and I’ll visit your blog to see!

This one is from my own home.  Skah is our now 21 month old Great Pyrenees. We found out when he was 10 months old that he is completely deaf. We specifically chose this breed (well, Huzzy did) because he wanted a guard dog that he could feel comfortable leaving his family with whenever the Navy called him away (which is often, since he’s active duty).

While I was gone drilling (I’m a Navy reservist) the other week, he saw a big, scary garbage can while on a walk at my mom’s house and started barking a “low, mean, scary bark that meant business” (according to my mom). He really was trying to protect her. Which is awesome, because that means his guarding ability is starting.

But it’s not quite all the way there, as evidenced by the other night’s fun….

(please ignore the messy countertops, I’d just gone grocery shopping)

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Wordless Wednesday #10: Caption This Photo!

We must have reasons for speech but we need none for silence.
~Proverb

It’s Wordless Wednesday again!  Leave a message and I’ll try to return the favor.

Since this is Wordless Wednesday, please caption this photo for me! Taken about a year ago when Skah (L) was 10 months and Lulu was 2 1/2.

Since this is Wordless Wednesday, please caption this photo for me! Taken about a year ago when Skah (L) was 10 months and Lulu was 2 1/2.

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Thursday Thirteen #8: Random Thoughts

Did you ever stop to think, and forget to start again?
~Winnie the Pooh

It’s time for the Thursday Thirteen again. If you have a Thursday Thirteen of your own, leave your website in the comments section and I’ll try my darndest to visit it :)

13 Random Thoughts

  1. I suddenly looked down the other day and noticed that our 17 month old Great Pyrenees puppy is no longer a puppy.  He’s filled out and is totally boxy now instead of lean and lanky. It happened pretty much overnight
    Skah at only 11 months... he had lots more growing to do!

    Skah at only 11 months... he had lots more growing to do!

    (which is probably why he’s limping… they do that when they have huge growth spurts).  My puppy is gone!  But at least he’s replaced by a majestic, regal dog.

  2. Why do people insist on being stupid? Ignorant I can deal with but stupid is a whole ‘nother ball game.
  3. I hope I get gained by my Navy Reserve command in the next few weeks. I’d love to start drilling soon.
  4. My commissioning ceremony is Saturday. Holy Moley, it’s turned into something huge! Apparently the CO of the recruiting district has made it mandatory for all recruiters in this zone. Probably has something to do with the good connections both my place of work and myself have with him.
  5. I’m terrified that I’m going to show how new I am that day. I had to ask the local Chief with help on how my combo cover is supposed to fit.  And I just finally figured out today a good way to do my hair the way I’m supposed to.
  6. I was about to cut off said hair to my chin just so I didn’t have to deal with putting it up the “proper” way, which I couldn’t figure out until today.
  7. This past weekend marked 3 months that Huzzy and I have been married.
  8. By the time I see him, we’ll have been apart 11 out of 18 weeks of our marriage. Most will say that it’s the Navy life, but he’s not on deployment.  That will happen sometime this fall.
  9. I need to make a page on OPSEC (Operational Security) so people know why I can’t be more specific than “this fall.”  I got the idea of doing a page like this from To the Nth. I hope she doesn’t mind me copying her idea.
  10. I am really craving some Olive Garden Soup, Salad and Breadsticks lunch. Huzzy and I need to save as much as we can since we are supporting two households (and I am working two jobs to do that). But he went out with friends to see Transformers last night and I think I should get something, too. Besides, that lunch won’t cost as much as the movie did.
  11. I really need to get my house finished and on the market. I’m glad my mom and brother are coming over this weekend to help. Too bad I have to work on Sunday, too.
  12. My mom is bringing over a twin mattress. WOO-HOO!!!! No more sleeping on couch cushions on the floor (though they are infinintely better than sleeping on an air mattress that can’t hold its air)!
  13. I need to start doing these things days in advance so they are already up and I don’t have to scramble around every Thursday morning to get my morning stuff done AND my TT.

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PCSing Part 2

If you break your neck, if you have nothing to eat, if your house is on fire, then you got a problem. Everything else is inconvenience.
~Robert Fulghum

Moving Day #1 was easy. Which should have had me prepared for what happened on Moving Day #2.  But it didn’t.

The truck driver who is driving our stuff out to Washington showed up on time at 8 a.m. The movers (two of the three guys who were here packing the day before) showed up abotu 45 minutes later. But that gave me time.

Time to do what you ask? To find my missing cat. We have several animals, including two cats named Jake and Sadie.  We needed to have all the animals put into two rooms so that there was no risk of anyone getting out while the movers had the doors open. Dogs in one room, cats in the other. Dogs are really easy to get into the room.  You just tell them and they go.

Cats don’t operate that way. Jake is easy to corner into a room because he’s totally food motivated. Sadie was born a

Sadie laying on the couch.

Sadie laying on the couch.

feral cat and if she thinks there is any way that you are going to pick her up or that she is going to be corraled somewhere, she wants no part of it.  So after being locked in a room the first day, Sadie sure as heck wasn’t going to allow me to do the same to her the second day.

I fed the cats in the morning and, of course, my foodie Jake was easy to lock in once he heard the food. Sadie, on the other hand, took off running toward the basement. I followed her because the last thing I wanted was a loose cat in the house when the movers were coming in and out.  She saw me, so headed back up the stairs and I again followed her.

But it was then that I lost track of her. I looked everywhere: behind the furniture, under the furniture, in the fireplace, behind boxes–I even went back to the basement to look for her.  No luck.

So the movers arrived and as I held back tears, I let them know that there was a cat loose. I figured that she’d hide and not move a muscle until whatever she was using as cover was picked up to be put in the moving truck. Then, she’d hightail it somewhere else, but that I’d hopefully catch sight of her. I was hoping that she didn’t try running up or down the basement stairs only to be met with another mover. You see, the only thing that scares Sadie more than the unknown outside world is unknown strangers… and especially male strangers. So I had a feeling that she’d choose to run outside instead of trying to run by a strange man. And if she ever made it outside, there was no way I was going to get her back. She’d be gone for good.

So Huzzy and I manned the doors and would periodically try and look for the missing calico. I had a radio interview that I had to do at work at 10:15 in the morning, so I headed to work for a couple hours, expecting that there would have definitely at least been a sighting of Sadie by the time I returned.  When I got back a couple hours later, Huzzy was manning the side door and all the doors in the house were open.  He said that Sadie had not been found yet.

I looked around the house at the absence of furniture and boxes knowing that she should have been sighted by then. The worry and frustration of a missing cat and the sadness of the upcoming separation of Huzzy welled to the surface and spilled over my cheeks. Through the tears, I told Huzzy that the movers were not going to be allowed to leave until the cat was found. The last thing I wanted to do was unpack a dead cat months later.

I knew that if she had been mistakenly taken into the moving semi that she’d be terrified and would probably be meowing in the truck. I could go in alone and in the quiet and start talking to her and she’d finally talk back.

I decided to take one last look around the house and re-checked everything. Including the fireplace. Which is where I found her. Sadie had managed to wedge her self into the corner of the fireplace and was camoflaged because only her calico parts were showing… which blended perfectly with the bricks. I picked her up (one of her most hated things in life) and took her to the room where the other cat was being held. She clawed me and meowed pitifully the whole way but there was no way I was going to let her go. She actually tried to jump down into the room in joy… since that room hadn’t been touched by the movers and was familiar.

That should have been enough stress and strain for the day… but it wasn’t. After going to hug Huzzy in relief, I asked him if the dogs had been let out since breakfast (they go out when we get up and then again after breakfast… then they are set for the day until the evening two or three let outs). He said they hadn’t, so I started with the youngest dog, our deaf Great Pyrenees puppy, Skah, who is 15 months old.

Skah at 1 year old... and 10 pounds lighter than he is now at 15 months!

Skah at 1 year old... and 10 pounds lighter than he is now at 15 months!

I took him by the collar and, after checking to make sure the fence was still intact and closed, let him go outside to potty. I called him inside (okay, yeah he’s deaf, so I guess it would be better to say that I “signed to him” to come inside). He took a great big run up the ramp and after noticing that I had missed my grab for his collar, promptly took off for the wide open side door.

I hightailed it after him screaming for Huzzy to come and help. Knowing that he was not only a puppy who was enjoying “freedom” but also a deaf dog who couldn’t hear us calling him or hear cars coming, I started panicking. I didn’t run behind him because I didn’t want him to think that I was chasing him. So I ran in the street parallel to him while he ran across lawns and down sidewalks. I told Huzzy to get the truck because I wasn’t sure I could keep up with him for long (he was running really quickly). He started slowing down to check out things at the neighbors, but was still moving quickly.

Then I got lucky.

Skah decided to try to check out a backyard that had a dog in it. He went to the side of the house and went up to the chain link fence. But there was the house blocking one side and a stockade fence blocking the other. I knew that he had a lot of space to try and dart around me (it was about 10 feet of space) but I was ready to jump on top of him and tackle him.

But I didn’t need to do that. He saw that I had him pretty much cornered and gave me a look of, “Oh crap. Jig’s up.  I give up.”  And he walked right to me to let me grab his collar.

I walked him home as I panted the entire way (I really need to start running again, or I won’t make it through DCOIC when I do the reserve Navy officer mini-boot camp later this year). I pretty much collapsed after that.

I was done. PCSing had nearly killed me that day. And I haven’t even told you about our resident ghost showing up. That’s for another saga in the PCSing story. It’s a funny one, so wait for it!

-Wifey

What a load

Everything is funny as long as it is happening to somebody else.
~Will Rogers

Last week added to my list of “why I’m really not looking forward to being apart from Huzzy” reasons.

Wednesday night I came home from work and noticed that Huzzy was not yet home. He had taken our Little Brother (we are a Big Couple through Big Brothers/Big Sisters… if you don’t know about that organization, it’s well worth it to find out and to volunteer) fishing for one of the last times before our match ends when Huzzy leaves for Washington.

I walked into the house and immediate smelled it. It’s a smell that once you have experienced it, you’ll never forget. The smell that reminds me of my youth when the farmers around us–my uncle included–would stir their liquid manure pits. The moment I walked in the door, my first words were “oh, $hit.”  Literally.

I dropped everything in my arms to run and see which dog had had an accident and not knowing which I’d prefer to have an accident… one of the two easily-cleanable short-haired Greyhounds who are on not-so-easily cleanable white Berber carpeting or the hard-to-clean white long-haired Great Pyrenees who is in an easily-cleaned crate.

It was the latter. And the crate was filled with the liquid, putrid-smelling stuff.  And it was all over his rear and the bottoms of his feet.  Some if it had spilled out of the crate onto the aforementioned carpeting and some had gone up the walls a bit. Ugh!  I quickly opened the crate and took him outside where he immediately began retching and vomiting yellow bile.  And that the same time, more putrid stuff came from his other end. Great.  A geyser at both ends.

While he was outside doing that, I attempted to pull the crate into the family room where I could open windows and get some cross-ventilation in the house to try to air it out. I wanted to get it outside, but I also needed to watch the pup to see if the eruptions had ended.  They hadn’t. So I called Huzzy and asked him to come home and help.

I attempted to give the pup (well, he’s 14 1/2 months now and 106 pounds, so not quite a pup anymore) two Pepto Bismal pills. He managed to bite my hand very hard (the other two are relatively easy to pill, but he has automatic bite reactions to anything–hands included–going down his throat) three times. One pill made it down but the other pill was spit out on the ground.

By the time Huzzy got home, it had been 20 minutes since he’d had any spewing–I’m sure thanks to the Pepto–but I knew it was just a matter of time until the Pepto stopped working. And I didn’t want to give him much.  Huzzy had to check out of his recruiting command the next morning 2 1/2 hours away and I had to be at work early so neither of us had time to take Skah to the vet in the morning. Plus, as bad as he was, I was worried about him getting too dehydrated and getting even more ill.

So we made the decision to take him to the emergency vet (since the regular vet had closed already).

So off to the e-vet we went. I was pretty sure I knew what was wrong with him as both Chase and Lulu had gone through the same thing at the exact same time as one another two years ago. Basically, nothing is wrong but it’s some sort of stomach virus or doggie flu.

The e-vet costs $105 just to walk in the door and get checked out. Any tests, medications, etc are overly-priced extra. Of course, this vet wanted to do all the expensive tests first to make sure nothing was seriously wrong. When Chase and Lulu had what I swear is the same thing, my regular vet (because it happened during the day) said, “They are both young, so I doubt it’s anything serious… let’s just treat it as an infection and if it doesn’t help, then we’ll do the more expensive tests.”

When all his blood work came back negative they pretty much just said that we have a dog with severe nausea and diarrhea.  Duh. We knew that. However, they did give him sub-c fluids (fluids under the skin) to re-hydrate him, gave him a strong anti-nausea shot and sent us home with pills and instructions to get some 10mg Pepcid AC over the counter for him.

A photo of Skah on his first birthday (about 10 pounds lighter than he is now). This is how he's SUPPOSED to look... all white and fluffy cute.

A photo of Skah on his first birthday (about 10 pounds lighter than he is now). This is how he's SUPPOSED to look... all white and fluffy cute.

 

$423 later, we walked out with the smelly not-so-white-anymore dog.  His time at the e-vet cost more than the Great Dane that was in there because the… uh… wrapper on his… uh… manliness… was stuck and had to be pulled back over under anesthesia.  Let’s say that while that dog looked really happy when he came in, I’m sure he was much happier once the procedure was over.  Yeah, our dog cost more than the much-larger dog who had to be sedated. Lovely.

But wait! The saga isn’t over yet!

Thursday night I was home alone with the pups because Huzzy was at his weekly pool league. Chase, the older Greyhound, started pacing and whining to be let out. So I did. Yup, another one with the Big D.  He got some Pepto because I wanted to try to stop the geyser before it started. And it was so easy thanks to the pill popper that I bought at the pet store (yay for my hands not being bitten anymore by the puppy!).

And as I was walking through the house, I smelled it. Yes, that smell again. And so I went in search of it. I found it in the bedroom next to a pair of Huzzy’s uniform shoes… which were splattered a bit in the process.  And when I saw it on the floor, I had to shake my head wryly… because it was only half there. The other half had been eaten.

Only one dog could have made that mess there and only one dog could have eaten it since one of my two poo-eaters was still confined to a crate in hopes that the illness wouldn’t spread to the other two.  Yup, Chase had deposited it and Lulu  had tried to help clean it up. Which meant that if she wasn’t already sick, Lulu was most likely about to get it.

It’s now been three days of chicken-and-rice feedings to the two sickos. As of this morning, they are both on regular food. Lulu–thank God–still hasn’t been sick and I don’t expect her to get it now.

Though I’ve done most of the cooking for the dogs and all of the pilling (my choice as I have more experience and Skah still is a pain to pill and does still try to bite), Huzzy was a huge help in cleanup. He was also the one to get up with the sick dogs the first couple of nights when they needed to go out several times a night.  Though I’ve done cleanup on my own before with two dogs, I can’t imagine trying to do it with three. And I hope that it never happens to me while Huzzy is deployed or while we are apart. But I’m sure that’s how it will happen.

Why? ‘Cause it’s the life of a Navy wife.

-Wifey