Friday, March 10, 2006

Windy and Warm


T-shirt weather at long last. Phoebe gambols and frisks like a spring lamb; she jumps from place to place. Woodcocks are going full bore; I couldn't count higher than six last night, but I'm sure I heard more than that from our backyard. It was intoxicating. The spring peepers started last night; I walked out, feeling that something must be going down in the woods, and there they were, calling merrily deep in the holler. Though we've had not enough rain to dampen the leaves for a couple of weeks, and we're running a terrible deficit of moisture, with only a couple of measurable snows the entire winter, they've found a damp spot and they're singing about it. When I was a kid my blessed dad used to pile us all in the car and take us to the nearest place he knew that had peepers. It was Midway Road, and it was where all the black kids from my elementary school lived. One boy I knew used to ride his bay pony to school from Midway Road, which was the height of coolness as far as I was concerned. Oh, how I wanted to live on Midway Road. There were peepers and ponies and chickens and old houses with porches and swings, all of this buried in deep woods, and such a contrast to our mannered brick/lawn suburban street. To this day I never play Monopoly without remembering Midway Road. I won't try to find it the next time I'm in Richmond. I've gotten burned so many times trying to find beloved places in Richmond. There's usually a Circuit City atop them, if I can even navigate to the former location.
E.L. Doctorow is smiling; I'm driving in the fog here.
I've been taking walks with Chet, and Liam when he's not in school. I'm always amazed how the woods works on Liam's mood, how he just comes to life when he goes outside.
I have to cajole him out the door but once he gets a deep breath he's off and running. It's lovely to see. Of course, dog medicine helps, too. Liam and I both need to take a hit of Chet every hour or two. There's something about the way he smells that sets us right.

Chet has turned a corner with the leash. I leash him at the same points in the trail (as we near cattle and other dogs) and now he stops and waits for me to attach it. For as long as I've walked him on a leash, I've asked him not to pull on it, with very uneven results. Yesterday, he started to pull, then slowed down, without being asked, to leave slack in the leash. Of course, I praised him. And he remembered every time. Today was no different. I read somewhere that it takes an average of 1,000 repetitions to teach a dog something moderately difficult. I'm pretty sure we were approaching 1,000--and finally it just sank in and he keeps slack in the leash. Divine. He doubtless would have learned faster had I used a choke collar and jerked on it, but I won't do that to my buddy's soft throat. I have always envied people who can walk their dogs with slack in the lead, instead of being pulled along as if by a sled dog. We'll see how he does the next time we go into town, where the temptations are many.
Chet watches cattle on the far hill, wistful but obedient. These are the ones he chased when he was wearing his blue shirt and got busted by the farmer.
Chet's reward for being good on the lead is to be let off it, and he exults in his freedom. I carry acorn caps in my pocket to whistle him back should he get too far ahead.
I found some massive acorn caps in a cloud forest in Guatemala that make an incredibly loud, hoarse whistle when you blow into them (you partially cover the cap with both thumbs, and make a slot at the top to blow into). The Guatemalans were fascinated by my acorn cap whistles; I couldn't believe they didn't know about this trick. I salt acorn caps in the pockets of every coat I own so I'm never without them. It's handy to be able to make a far-carrying noise when you're alone in the woods.
The young beeches are about to lose their leaves at long last.
They start out the loveliest shade of fawn in late fall, and slowly fade to white, just before they fall. They're like girls who don't want to take off their confirmation dresses.
Back home, Chet and Charlie played peekaboo around the antique flat file that stores all my paintings and drawings. Charlie has Chet totally bamboozled, and he has only to feint in the dog's direction to send Chet skittering backward, yodeling.

They both enjoy it immensely, but not half as much as I do. I laugh like a pirate.

8 Comments:

At 10:19 PM, Blogger LauraHinNJ said...

I love that photo of Liam with his back to the camera.

Funny, I haven't heard any peepers here in NJ yet. I hear them at the college where I teach. It's nice to pause and listen to them on my way out at night.

An idea for Chet if he keeps pulling on the lead. My 90 lb. obedience-school drop-out Lab pulled me to the ground too many times. My vet suggested a Halti Collar (sometimes called a Promise Collar). Choke collars didn't work with him - his neck is so strong - and I wouldn't ever use a prong collar like the obedience school suggested. The Promise Collar goes around his muzzle and the back of his head - sort of like the way you lead a horse. It worked wonders for us.

 
At 10:34 PM, Blogger Julie Zickefoose said...

Thanks Laura!
A headstrong Golden came to visit here a while ago and her owners swore by that collar--said they got it from England. My only concern was that Chet has so little nose to wrap it around--his muzzle is about half an inch long from stop to nostril--and I'm leery of anything that might further restrict his breathing (genetics seem to be enough!) Hoping his behavioral trend continues. Thanks for the note, though. I'll look into it should he relapse.

Julie

 
At 10:46 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

They are also called by the brand name Gentle Leader - a much more catchy name than 'choke collar'. They are supposed to emulate being carried by the mother dog! A discipline they remember, so they say.

 
At 11:01 PM, Anonymous jemkagily said...

Dear Julie,

I think you're right and that there's no way a Halti would work on Chet Baker's short snoot. The Easy Walk harness might work for him...I recently trained a Lab puppy for assistance work and the Easy Walk harness was the only way to stop him from pulling like a freight train. Then again, if you've reached that magic 1000th repetition and he's giving you a slack leash, maybe it's not broke and you shouldn't fix it!

I should add my thanks for your diligent blogging, your fantastic photos, and your generosity in sharing your family and the adorable Chet Baker with the world. When we gave up our puppy for the next phase in his training, we discovered your blog (through the BirdChick) and have been Chet Baker devotees ever since. I am especially grateful that my 4-year-old has latched onto the adventures of Chet Baker: it's kept her from missing the pup she helped train. She's even acquired a toy Boston...no need to guess what she named him!

 
At 8:16 AM, Blogger Julie Zickefoose said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 8:18 AM, Blogger Julie Zickefoose said...

Thanks everyone for the helpful suggestions. I'm going to a dog show today (!) and the vendor mart is calling. I'll look into the Easy Walk harness. There are situations where Chet is bound to pull, and I'd like to have something that will relieve the pressure on his esophagus.
Jemkagily, you made our day. We have two stuffed Bostons named Chet Baker, purchased when we were waiting out the weeks until he was weaned. Kiss your daughter for me!!and tell her Chet would like to give her a million more. Major breed trait!

8:16 AM

 
At 9:30 AM, Anonymous jemkagily said...

Julie, I'm glad to have been of some help. The Easy Walk harness won't even touch his throat (no snarky, snoring noises while pulling!) but you'll just have to be careful that he doesn't go into sled dog mode and end up chafing under his arms as our puppy did. Make sure you get a knowlegeable vendor to fit the harness to Chet Baker or he may be able to wiggle out of it and if you choose to buy him one, check his "armpits" after wear. Have fun at the show! And tell Phoebe that the "Littlest Pet Shop" brand of toys has a cute Boston if she wants to add to her collection. (That's what 4-year-old Fiona has as her CB.)

 
At 12:13 PM, Anonymous NoBlogID said...

I did not know about acorn caps, and I live under an oak tree. Well, sorta', you know how that goes. My Grandad planted a seedling at the northwest corner of the house. His Dad told him he'd never see any shade from that, but actually, he did, plus lots of stories have been told there. I'm still trying to sort out the fact from the fiction, and my Grandad's been gone for over 40 years. He was a great story teller, and had a stash of bamboo poles to send us to the creek with when he tired of our company. And not a day goes by that I don't think gratefully about him and his tree planting and many other delightful attributes. Enjoy your blog!

 

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