Annie’s Hairy Eyeball

Here is Annie on this lovely Sunday morning.

Look. Annie is smelling the roses. One of her favorite things to do. She also finds it a treat if a lizard pops out during the smelling. She’s such a hunter.

Meanwhile, Lilian was working on cracking open a meaty coconut. She got very tired and decided to take a nap.

Then the coconut disappeared from Lilian’s nap.

Oh, here it is! Annie has it. So the photographer of dogs does what she always does, and sticks the camera down to snap a photo. But in this instance, the photographer noticed, after snapping two photos, that Annie was standing stone still. Then Annie’s eye ball grew hair!

The next thing that happened, well, Annie lost her sense and lunged at the photographer while the photographer was snapping a picture. Silly Annie!

Here we have Annie in jail while next door to her, Luna is thanking Mother Nature for creating such a delight for her to eat before digging into that scrumptious coconut meat.

You see, many pieces of coconut were doled out after it broke open. Luna decided to bring hers into her personal cabin.

Afterwards, the coconut shell looks like someone who knows how to use her teeth had done a very good job of removing that meat.

If your dogs want to eat the shell, stop them! Coconut shell is not digestible. It’s important to supervise all coconut shredding activity because of it.

Annie has been moved to the bottom of list, now, for privileges, and will have to work for everything she gets until further notice. That’s the penalty of giving the Hairy Eyeball at Fort Doberdale.

December 1st in Fort Doberdale

Here we are ending the first day of the last month of 2007. Wow. It was a busy day at Fort Doberdale.

Today Ollie turned 7 years old. Happy birthday, Oliver!

Here’s a lovely hibiscus flower that bloomed just for Ollie’s birthday.

In other news, someone changed our daily incoming mail routine. Normally, the mail pops out of our front door like toast, onto our floor, and sits there until I pick it up. But today’s mail moved from inside the house to the back yard, where the rubberband had been removed, and the mail had been scattered. And as Ginger walked up to the pile, I noticed a small band hanging from her mouth.

Ginger was hesitant to share her find with me. Opting, instead, for the infamous “let me see if I can swallow the thing before I get to my mom” move.

She couldn’t swallow it that fast, so we had a bit of a tug-o-war, which is rather unlike Ginger, who is usually more cooperative. Perhaps she has “stepping out of her comfort zone” goals, too!

A Mockingbird watched the goings-on…

…until I won and had the rubber band in my possession. Then he flew the coop, and Ginger confessed to what was obvious.

She has promised me that was the last of her maildog endeavors. Not that I distrust the girl, but next time that mail comes popping through the door and I’m not home, I’m not sure if she can hold true to her promise. So I have to remember to put an ex-pen around the door when I leave. Staying one-step ahead of the FDSP is one of my daily challenges.

Meanwhile, one weekend, back in July or August, I had intended on teaching Luna to sit on command. That didn’t pan out. Luna is one of the most observant Doberdoggies I have met. She watches everything, as if she is planning on doing it next. My first attempt at teaching her to sit wasn’t as successful as today’s. Today, I took her out amongst the crowd with clicker and treats, and did exactly the same thing with her as I had on that summer evening in a private lesson, but instead of being wary of the whole adventure, today, Luna did magnificently well vying for the click-and-treat with all her buddies. Anyone who knew how to sit, did so, and in no time, Luna was sitting along with the crowd, getting her own clicks-and-treats.

Luigi was particularly eager to help out. He is fond of Luna Kahuna, and moreso of treats.

Leissl was another big-time teacher today. She can sit and lie down push-up style.

Raven also had a milestone today. She learned the beginnings of “down” on command. Unlike Luna, Raven has to do her learning without distraction. She did very well in the bedroom with the down command. She was a brainiac. But amongst the crowd, where the picture taking took place, there were too many other things to do. Like shove her toys at me. But, she is slowly piecing things together, and that’s all I ask.

Finally, Baby and I spent alone time to figure out if she is going to compete anytime soon to get her Companion Dog title. We are still figuring that out, but the best part of working, for any Doberdog, is the playing afterwards. And Baby is no exception. She loves her Frisbee, and that’s how we ended the sunshine portion of our December 1st in Fort Doberdale.

2007 NaNoWriMo comes to an end

Tonight is the last night of NaNoWriMo. I’m not going to make the 50,000 word mark by midnight. There is no way I can write 31,000 words in less than 8 hours. Though if I included e-mails in the month of November, and other such creative sort of writings, I am certain I would be a lot closer to making that mark. I can write about my dogs all day and all night. Somehow I have to figure out how to do that and put it into a novel. I won’t stop now that NaNoWriMo is over. I’ve nearly got 19,000 words under my belt, so might as well keep going with them. Though I have hit another wall. That wall is, I have nothing to say! This is where I have to figure out how to move ahead without my muse until she is ready to come back into the picture.

Before NaNoWriMo started, I pursued something WAY out of my comfort zone. That is going to be my new year’s resolution, by the way – comfort zone expanding. I will have to be more concrete on that, but will think about that later.

As a precursor to my new year’s resolution, I had set it up to call a life coach on a satellite radio who was going to help me with this NaNoWriMo goal being I’ve done it for two years (three now) and have not crossed the finish line with a full basket of words. Instead of calling up the radio show on the spur of the moment, I was given a time to call in on a certain day, and that’s when we would discuss my lack of focus on this thing. Everything had been set up through e-mail because, the male assistant to this woman explained, they like to plan the show.

That day, I luckily had an opening at work to shut the door to an office, call, and enjoy the privacy of a 15-minute chat with a million people listening. I hadn’t been thinking about the millions of people part. Till now. But I was really OK with talking to this coach, who I had admired for her cut-to-the-chase sort of work. When I called, I identified myself, and was promptly put on hold. I held for 25 minutes without a word from anyone. The only thing that I heard was the radio show as the life coach talked to other callers.

The time I was alloted had come and gone to this woman who was meandering around an issue on the air that was really a non-issue. It was so much of a non-issue, after the break, she was not brought back on the air. Instead, another woman was brought on the air with an issue that wasn’t mine and she wasn’t I.

I was really let down by this whole adventure, and it pained me to hang up, but I did. I was pained and terribly angry that I had been steered in such a manner by the men that worked for this dynamic woman. They scheduled me, then left me on hold for 25 minutes without so much as a peep. What sort of competence is that? The kind with “in” before the “competence” part.

I wrote to them, I wrote to the station, and to the satellite provider to make sure that the life coach got the message. And she did. The man who was responsible for scheduling my time slot on the show wrote me an e-mail of apology and hoped the whole episode didn’t make me less of a fan of the woman. Sadly, it did. I think if she’d taken the step to contact me, just with a few lines, it would have helped. But the fact is, I had cleared it with my boss, spent the whole night and morning fretting over what I would say and how it would go, and having it end in a big fat zero because of incompetence was so anti-climatic and so part of today’s typical way of doing business that the awe I had for this awesome woman died that day by her choice of mediocre assistants.

And since this month has nearly past, I’m weary, but not from writing. I am weary from watching myself veer off my goals again. I’m weary of all the unexpected things that came up that I had to deal with. But that’s all part of life, and no matter what intentions are set up for writing all these words, life can intercept your plans and run with them in a different direction. I would have been curious what an excellent life coach, such as the one I’d admired, would have said to me along this process. Perhaps it will happen another time for another goal. But whatever the case, I am a writer in my soul. And whether a novel ever comes out of me, or not, doesn’t make me less of a writer. I write because I enjoy it and I have met others through e-mail who are elegant communicators with the written word. Amusing, succinct, bright writers, who I enjoy reading and writing to because of our shared love of one very special topic. Our beloved dogs.

So I bid adieu to NaNoWriMo and move on, still with a goal to write a novel, still with the full intention of one year finishing this challenge with all 50,000 words in my basket. Until then, I will move ahead and plug along with a month’s more experience in my head for me and my muse to use.

Posted in POV

Peppermint Leissl

Watch out Peppermint Patty. You have competition!

Peppermint Leissl, known as Leissl to her friends, is a sweet smiling lover girl. She was recently voted the kissiest Dobergirl in all of Fort Doberdale.