Friday, July 6, 2012
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Swimming Instructions Inside Box (Turtle) R. Brabham
Cliché, everyone knows the line you can't teach an old dog new tricks. Not so, proven to me by our dog Snowy. She adopted us 12 years ago, she had me at hello. I was sprawled out in a lawn chair tanning in the yard when I heard a barreling noise and panting coming through the field headed directly for me. Snowy leapt into the chair and proceeded to lick me all over my face. The neighbors started calling her back, I was sad to see the sweet bundle of yellow fur leave with her tail and head drooping down. She belonged to the neighbors.
My quiet time of the day is early morning when the dew has evaporated from the wings of the birds and bees and they begin their chorus of chirping and buzzing. Coffee mug in hand I would head to the back steps under the shady Elm tree, my favorite place for morning meditations. It just happened to be the time of the morning that the neighbors let Snowy out. Searching for the prime spot (out of her own yard) to do her business, she wandered up on me. Snowy sauntered up the steps and sat flat on her butt right there by me for over a half an hour. She seemed to enjoy the peace as well. The neighbors opened their door and called her back. She left me obediently but reluctantly, looking back until I was out of sight. The next morning I heard their screen door squeak to let Snowy out. She stampeded across the field stopping cold at the bottom of the steps to see if I were sitting there. She gleefully climbed the steps and perched by me quietly. We sat like this every single morning. One day I got up to go back in the house and she hadn't been called home yet. I opened the door and she sat there looking at me like "Aren't you going to invite me in?"
I opened the door and introduced her to Don as he was pouring his coffee. He rubbed on her and we talked about how sweet and pretty she was. I let her out of the door before the neighbors would start calling. Sometimes if I were outside, she would ignore her owners and take off for me. I was always scared for her to do this, they always hollered at her or popped her when she went back. I walked her back across the field one day to tell them that she wasn't bothering me and could visit me anytime. I hoped this would keep them from being so mean to her. It didn't. I have never understood why anyone would get a dog just to be mean to them. Anyhow, the young man asked me on one of my ventures to walk Snowy back home if I wanted her? He said they were moving to a new town in a few months. Snowy walked back across the field with me and didn't go outside alone again until they moved. I was so scared they would take her back. We were elated. Snowy laid down at the foot of our bed that night and has been there for 12 years now. She knows peace. She has something to compare it to and she chooses it.
We accepted her the way she came to us. We didn't expect more. She doesn't play ball. Fetch is an unnecessary workout. Her preferred cardio workout is squirrel treeing. She likes 2 squares and two milk bones a day. She thrives on routine, she hates baths and deems them as punishment for some crime that she would never commit again if she knew what it was. She hates water of any kind for that matter. And so be it. We have tried many times over the years to show her how much fun water can be, she is a lab mix after all. Her face peels back and a tense crazy look comes to her eyes at the sight of water, so we never push the matter. She shakes her paws if the slightest water gets on them.
One summer we purchased a pontoon boat. We envisioned summers with Snowy as mate at the helm of the boat with her skipper. That vision was squashed quickly, like the first time we took her out on the boat. I had ordered a large dog lifejacket, we put it on her. Don jumped into the water to show her how wonderful it was. I eased Snowy down into the water from the side. When she left the side of the boat she frantically pawed at don, ripping his stomach open with her nails to climb out. We sold the lifejacket on Ebay. And Snowy barely acknowledged that we were leaving her on any boating morning afterwards.
High and dry is where she has been since. And so be it. We moved back to SC a few years ago. We now have a pond and fountain behind us. I love the sound of the water as the fountain sprays and I sit on my back patio. Snowy, not so impressed. For over a year she has traversed the pond and treated it with indifference. Until she saw the turtles. They came out in droves on the banks of the pond this year. Snowy loves to sneak up on them before they topple into the water. Some she victoriously helps nudge back into the water with her nose. The turtles are now the focal point of her morning. The once invisible pond has became her utopia.
And then it happened. Don takes Snowy for her evening walk, she meets a friend along the way. The box turtle appeared at the bank of the pond, teasing Snowy as it popped it's head up out of the water and then disappeared. Snowy immerses both paws looking for the turtle to reappear. Up pops the turtle pulling back a little into the pond as it continues the tease. Snowy now has all four in. The turtle weaves around her coming up near her side, Snowy starts putting her paw out to touch it, splashing some. Snowy has a wet belly! Don tells me the story with the same exuberance he had when he took the training wheels off of Abby's bike and she took off.
Snowy has circled that pond now for a week in search of her pundit, each turtle that pops up could be it. But no, they all avoid her. And then on a hot July 4th evening. Snowy sits on the bank of the pond and her friend comes to join her. Snowy forgets that she doesn't like to swim and dogpaddles out to meet her friend.
Now when Snowy lays asleep at our feet with her legs twitching as she sleep barks, we know her dreams have changed. She just needed the right inspiration.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Humans: The Benevolent Species
We all like to think we have contributed to enriching the lives of humans and animals on our journey. Maybe even saved the life of something, or tried.
Hence the story of the mystery Folly Beach dolphin rescue in the Post and Courier this week. The story drew a lot of attention after being hyped and posted on Folly Beach's Facebook page with a picture that obviously didn't depict the true story. The public outcry was enormous, the masses requesting the true story. No one seemed to be able to find out if it were a fable or what really happened. Possibly the story died when the baby dolphin died. Fortunately the web mob wouldn't let up and as broadcaster Paul Harvey used to say, "Now for the rest of the story."
Maybe the Folly Facebook page administrator thought that we wouldn't want to know the sad ending. We are kind of wired like that aren't we? Gone are the days when stories go past the point of mystery to become legends. With phone cameras and pda's in even the remotest places, a legend squashing photo is sure to surface somwhere. Such is the case with the mystery dolphin. But the real story is in the participation and continuity of life.
Brien Limehouse and Rick Maupin spent a considerable amount of time and effort trying to save a baby dolphin that was found later to have been born prematurely. Marine mammal biologist suggest not to try to rescue but to leave them be. I fully understand the warning, but seriously, could a father stand by as his son is watching a baby dolphin die in the surf without casting a glance at it?
Yes, I know, everything isn't supposed to live forever. But when we realize our mortality and do what's right in the moment that's when we begin to live. Which decision will let me sleep tonight? Letting that dolphin lay on the sand in the hot sun to die while children splash around in waves? Or cradling it and pouring water over it while it passes away in my arms?
It goes against human nature to turn a blind eye to a dolphin, a whale, an eagle and hawk lying helplessly in a place that they wouldn't normally be. I smile when I think of people like Brien and Rick and all the unnamed ones that pull up to animal hospitals with injured dogs, cats, birds, snakes.. all hoping that they can be fixed. Maybe not, but they tried. A few weeks ago my hubby picked up an obviously hot and distraught box turtle crossing an asphalt parking lot and took it to a pond to release. A friend on his way to work found an injured hawk and took it to an avian rescue center. Another friend, lol..even helped a mole cross the road.
Ironically, the night before I read this story, we watched Dolphin Tale. A sweet Disneyesque true story of an injured dolphin that is rescued and given a prosthetic tale. He lives in Florida and is an inspiration to many paraplegics. My favorite story comes to mind. Two strangers walking on the beach. One man is paces ahead, near the surf. The other follows, weaving in and out of the way of hundreds of beached starfish. The man ahead reaches down every minute or two and picks up a starfish and throws it back into the ocean. Eventually the second man catches up with him and ask "Why are you throwing that starfish back, there are hundreds of them lying here, how could you possible make a difference?" The man picks up another starfish smiling and tosses it back into the ocean "I made a difference to that one, didn't I" he replied.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
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