Doggles


Normally I don't go in for these "Paris Hilton" type dog garments, but in this case, Doggles are very practical and just look cool!

I drive with Albert a lot, like I did George, and he always sticks his head out the window at speeds up to 70mph. Why not protect his eyes from debris and the wind.

Best price here--free shipping and no handling fee


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ST GEORGE


I got off work this morning at 7am and on the drive home noticed a gorgeous Episcopal Church. I have seen it many times and decided to stop. Service is at 8am so I pulled into the park lot. I walk in and find a pew. Big church, high ceilings...stunning.

As I look at the bulletin I notice the name of the church

ST GEORGE'S Episcopal Church!

God is cool


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Albert Stitches Out

Al got his stitches out Friday. He is doing well.

There will be a bulge in the side of his neck from muscle damage, but he is fine.

Thanks for all the kind emails. Those who donated some, thank you as well. I still have about $350 to pay off the bill, so any help is welcome at this point in life.


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Bedham Farms

Go here to see Jon Katz books on dogs


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Remember Crazy Ivan?


click on image for full view

Remember Crazy Ivan? I fostered him last year in August.
At a adopt-a-pet in West Hollywood, someone was interested.
Turns out to be one of the better adoptions.


He's now called Boots...

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Pretty Boy Al





Albert Lookin' Good...
Stitches come out Friday

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This is Albert's wound right after the attack.
WARNING
: Do not click on image or you will
get a larger view

Albert Friday healing well


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Albert Recovering Well

Thanks again to all the emails and private messages about both George and Albert.

Dogs are amazing...Albert has weathered all of this so well. He just moves along like nothing happened. He has slept more than usual and always wants to run. I think he misses the exercise.

Sally has adjusted OK as well. There is a big void in the house, and in a strange way, this is something I need to experience. The whole ordeal has made me much more sympathetic and empathetic towards others.

My current neighbor has cancer and the George incident has allowed me to feel the pain of his wife and family more deeply. In a few words, "I get it"...yet not to the extent of a wife and children towards their father.

What George taught me is quality over quantity. I only had the dog for about eight months, but it was a 24/7 kinda thing. I have known people for 20 years and not felt as close.

There is a spacial community amongst dog lovers.

As an old neighbor's dad once remarked, "I don't trust people that don't like dogs!"

George Remembered

Wolf and lamb will graze the same meadow,
lion and ox eat straw from the same trough,
...Neither animal nor human will hurt or kill
anywhere on my Holy Mountain," says God. (Isaiah 65:25)
Since I had to put down George on Friday April 10th at 3:30pm, I have experience wailing episodes.

I have been in dog rescue for just over a year. Prior to that, I really wasn’t into dogs at all. Never thought about them, was never around them. I really didn’t like my dog as a kid much and felt almost no emotion when he died. I happened to be away for that summer back in college and after 14 years, Scampy just couldn’t hold on any more. I never shed a tear for my childhood dog.

My neighbors back in California had a dog named Joey. One day I saw Caroline running to her Nissan truck with Joey in her arms. He was about to live his last day. This couple had no dogs for over four years and then got Cooper, a Cocker Spaniel.

I didn’t care for Cooper at first because of his high pitched, wailing bark…especially at my bedroom door at 5am!

Over the years, when they would come home from work, they greeted the dog by calling him, “boy” or “my baby boy.” For some reason this annoyed me. I thought to myself that this is yet another couple who have no kids and are humanizing their dog. The dog has now become a child substitute.

Life can be funny.

All these years later, I have joined the club.

During my George wailing sessions, I cry out for “my baby boy.”

It usually starts like this. I am doing my thing in the house or when I am driving and a memory will hit out of the blue. The memory quickly turns to emotion. Like being sick and feeling a heave coming on, I can either try to hold it in or let it fly. In this case, I let it fly and take it wherever it goes.

Let me say this here…the difference between men and women in this one particular area of life is like salt and pepper, cuffs and links, apples and oranges.

As a man, crying as a result of emotions is much harder than getting bit by a dog and dealing with physical pain. As I type, I still have swollen fingers from the three recent dog bits, a back tailbone injury, some type of cough and chest thing that won’t go away, a neck pain, the pressure of starting a new job, and difficult boss. This I’m used to!

I’ve experienced several wailing sessions. I thought I was over them until tonight. I was watching TV with Albert and Sally and felt tired. I got up to go to bed and the first wave of memories hit me. I thought about George’s face when I walked around the hall corner, George sitting on my bed, alert with ears up. I always thought he looked so regal and dignified like this.

Now the memory turns to emotion. This is the difference between George and almost all other emotions. Rather than the “angry” re-route taking over, the emotion of sadness blasts through to tears. If I stay in the emotion, it grows like a volcano.

As a younger man, I would never allow this to happen…but then again, maybe the loss of a pet would have trumped trying to control the emotion. The fear of “where is this going to take me” would almost always take over.

Not this time.

Rather, I just let it flow and allowed the emotion to rule over the rational. I cried for what seemed an hour, probably much less, and kept wailing, “I miss my baby boy” over and over again. The tears eventually turned to laughter. This is the amazing turn of events.

In the past I would have edited or controlled the emotions. Because of the powerful loss of a dog, I did not and experienced the pain turn to joy.

Sure, I read about this thing, heard testimony from others, but it was as impactful as seeing a lady cry over the loss of her baby at a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles. I felt for her, but it was in between bites of my Subway sandwich before I flipped the channel to watch an episode of King of the Hill.

This is what I call the head-heart gap. Knowing and experiencing can be two totally different realities. I think many men think they “know” because of the rational, but they do not. It is like looking at a picture of a sunny beach verses lying in the hot sand at Malibu. Maybe this is why men are so drawn to pornography. It is clearly not reality, but they make it reality in their mind and live in fantasy.

Who knows how many “George moments” I will have? All I know is I am not going to edit them, but let them flow out of me to dignify the experience.

God will work His way through all of this and teach me what Jesus experienced as He took the pain of mankind into Himself on the Cross. Jesus did not run from the pain, but embraced it fully. This was not an intellectual or academic theological discussion, it was true reality internalized.

Just my thoughts for the day.

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Albert Recovering


Yesterday was the single most difficult day of my life. The circumstances went as follows;
  • Tornado conditions in Middle TN...at work, 4:25am I slipped and fell on my tailbone coming in from the rain to check on George in the car. I drove to work with George every night.
  • I drive home early knowing I have no medical insurance and wonder what I will do. I already had a ruptured disk and now this. It is raining harder than I've ever seen on the freeway and I know Albert is outside because when I went to work the weather was fine. Welcome to the Mid-West where weather changes and in CA weather remains the same...always!
  • George ate half of my car seat before I left. The thunder scared him. He was agitated on the ride home the first 15 mins, them calmed down and slept on my lap like usual.
  • When I get home, I immediately go to get Albert out of the rain and George lunges on him. I fight to pull him off by chocking him and then slip on the mud. George pulls free and then immediately goes back at the neck. Albert seemed fine afterwards, but I was overwhelmed at this point. This was the second attack this week and I was bit three times during three different incidents, one involving the neighbor's dog that got loose.
  • I get George separated, bring Albert inside and notice a huge gashing hole in the side of his neck. I immediately Google the closest animal hospital and believe it or not, there is one a mile away in this small town. I call the emergeny number and wake the Dx up. He tells me to cover the wound until 8am when they open.
  • Albert needs surgery that cost $500.
  • I drive home knowing George has to go down. I call the Dx a few hours later on no sleep and hearing George snoring in the next room make a scheduled appointment to euthanize him the same day.
  • I walk into the bedroom, see him sleeping, and start weeping. I know I only have an hour left with him. My mind floods with happy memories. I cry like thunder
  • I drive to the pet hospital, get out of my car, look over at him and he is wagging his tail anticipating a walk. I cry again. I finally get to the door and as he walks into the exam room, he is thinking he is in for a good time. I will never forget leaving him in that condition knowing it was the last time I would ever see King George again.
  • That day I am restless and empty. I have to work the night shift for the first time solo. Of all nights to work solo. I want to call in sick, but I walk by faith. God provided with my co-worker Pam. She helped me. I will always be grateful for her and Judi's call to me to see how I was doing.
  • During the drive to work, I cry the whole way thinking of how George would poke his head out the window and I'd see the wind blow up his cheeks. I always laughed out loud at this. My head played tricks on me feeling George was at home. I felt confused.
I do praise God in all of this and seek His perspective. He gives life and takes it away. He allows for such intense emotions. It is Easter and what a perfect way for hope in Christ...that this would is passing away. The pain and suffering is only temporal for those in Christ. I believe this and my heart was deeply saddened, but I have hope. I feel like being alone now for a time.

As a "feeler" personality, without Christ, I would be a goner. Life is too devastating to me. I feel things too deeply and can get paralyzed. Faith is all I have.

Yet, even with faith, I am sad and still tearful. I miss my big boy.

The Dx and staff at the White Oak Animal Hospital were fabulous. Thank you very much for what you did.

RIP GEORGE

George
Put to rest 04/10/09

It wasn't your fault boy...the wages of sin is death.

Whoever put you in those fights when you were just a pup is accountable for your hairless trigger to fight. Their ripple sin is still reaping consequences today all these years later.


I loved rubbing your chubby belly at night when you were sleeping and hearing you snore so loudly.

Your were a good dog.

I loved you George.

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Asking For Help

This morning George attacked Albert and tore a hole in his neck.

I have to take him to the vet and just don't have the cash to pay for it.

Any PayPal assistance is a great help...thanks!

George attacked Albert 2x this week. I've been bitten three times and of all days...I slipped at work after a thunderstorm and landed on my tailbone.

I come home to get Albert out of the rain and George locked onto him. Then I finally got him off and he locked again.

Sadly, this is it, I have to put George down after 8 months of trying to rehabilitate him. A sad day indeed.

Joe

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Update 9:13 am CST
Albert is in surgery now and I think he will be OK. He really got gashed and the right side of his neck was tore apart. I will be straight up to all dog lovers that want to help. It will cost around $500. Many of you have been generous to date and to ask for help again is probably not quite right.

The worst part of all this is I have to put George down. I love this dog and travel in the car with him daily. We go everywhere together. He goes to work with me at night and sleeps in the car. I've already cried for about two hours thinking about this, but I have no other choice. I've already been bitten three times this week alone in fights. I have scars on both arms because George attacks Albert and then Albert bites me trying to save him and get them free.

George is fine with me. He has never made any attempt to bite me, it is just his trigger with other dogs. 95% of the time he is fine, but that 5% is really adding up. Nobody will ever adopt him.

The irony of all this is only just yesterday, with the help of a friend, did I decide to put both Sally and Albert up for adoption with running ads! I was going to keep George alone.

Then I slip and fall this morning at 4:25am at work, fall on my tailbone hard. I felt faint, filled out a work injury report, drank some juice and left early. I get to my car to find George literally ate half my front seat. The thunderstorm scared him and got him agitated. I drive home worried that I won't be able to cover my shift this evening, get home, park the car, and BOOM...George jumps on Albert.

This was one of the only times I broke up the fight and didn't get bit.

Albert is out of surgery and should be home by 4:30pm today.

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Update 12:42 pm CST
Hey...no way this day could get worse right?


HOW ABOUT A TORNADO WARNING!!!

The city warning siren is going off now

Thunder and lightning on steroids

You know it's bad when the radio station goes to
all weather call ins from around every county.

Gotta love life


Update 04:13 pm CST
Albert is back from surgery and healing. He is still groggy. The wound was much deeper than expected and he has a drain tube inserted which will have to be removed next week.

I experienced the longest drive of my life. I drove 2000 miles to TN in a flash, but the one mile to drop off George for his final rest was longer than my lifespan. These dogs really get a grip on ya!


I'm Glad I'm Not A Supermodel



How's my week going?

Well...
I got bit by my dog Sat in the leg when a local dog was running loose and they got into it.
I got bit by Sally taking two ticks out of her
I got bit today when George attacked Albert in the kitchen as I pulled them apart

I am now officially tired of getting bit by dogs. This is about the tenth time now in a year.

Oh yeah...Albert got out under the fence even with a 30 ft rope on and was gone for 12 annoying hours until animal control called last night at 9pm and delivered his sorry ass.

AND MY LEFT HAND KILLS ME NOW...I have to type at work also all night!

So after today's incident with George and Albert, I decide to make a hot cup of instant coffee. Still frazzled, I put a container that is not microwave friendly and I hear an explosion and a nasty smell.

I'm afraid to go outside right now! lol


So how YOU Doing?

Albert got out AGAIN this morning and is not back...
I just finished putting down some welded wire and he dug
an inch from it. He is getting very sophisticated.

I won't lie...it is disappointing when he tries to escape.
I mean...why would he want to leave paradise?

UPDATE: Animal Control called 9pm tonight
Albert was tangled with 30 foot of rope under
a house about a 1/2 mile away.

That's Albert!
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How I wish!
Albert dug a huge hole yesterday while I was gone...
Anyone got a spare wheelbarrow?