Dog Gone It
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Back in July
I took a big step in my single life. I adopted Lola, a sweet dog, raised by
friends who had rescued her mother, abandoned, heavy with pups, from homeless life
on the streets of Oconahua, sleeping in doorways, eating garbage.
I like
animals. I like pets. Dogs. Cats. Pigs. Rats. Yes, rats. When my daughter was
three, I went to buy a guinea pig but the pet store owner talked me into a pair
of Chinese Hooded Rats.
Rats make
excellent pets, are intelligent, affectionate and are not nocturnal like guinea
pigs. I warn against getting an opposite sex pair, however, unless, perhaps you
have snakes which need to be fed. Just saying.
Snakes? I
draw the line at snakes.
Back to
Lola. Lola is a fine dog. An excellent dog. She is a good companion. She is
affectionate. Intelligent. Obedient. Has a loads of personality. She is a fine
dog.
Best of all,
every single day, my dog-pet-companion makes me laugh. Every day.
I know,
slowly I am turning into one of those pet owners who bore you with stories of
how wonderful their little snookums is.
Lola is not
my child. If you every hear me say, “Ooh, sugarpie, come to mommy,” shoot me.
However,
every silver lining has a cloud.
About three
weeks ago Lola came prancing up to me where I sat reading on the patio and
dropped a trowel at my feet. She sat down, tail wagging, waiting for my high
praise. I picked up the trowel, looked at it carefully. This trowel was not
mine.
Leo was
working in my yard. I handed him the trowel. “Oh, yes. This belongs to Janet.”
Both our gates were open that afternoon so Lola simply walked next door and
helped herself. I know we anthropomorphize pets, but Lola truly did seem proud
to bring me a gift.
A few days
later, my hairy companion and I were out walking. I wasn’t paying attention as
she obediently bounced along behind me, a long-past-its-use-by-date welcome mat
tightly clamped in her jaws.
“It’s mine,”
Julie said. “I put it out for the garbage truck. Now you can deal with it.” I tossed
it into my garbage can.
One
afternoon I was next door talking with Crin. Lola was rooting around beneath Crinny’s
bougainvillea hedge and found one of those black plastic pots, the kind in
which you bring plants home from the nursery. We watched her trot with her
prize across the lane and through my gate where she placed her gift by my
favorite chair.
Next it was
a work boot of Francisco’s. Then a heavy-duty rubber glove that belonged to
John. See a pattern developing here, folks?
Yesterday,
Leo asked me, “Have you seen my scissors?” Scissors is his word for secateurs
or garden clippers. We both looked down at Lola. She wagged and smiled. We
still haven’t found them. Maybe they accidently got tossed out with the trash.
Today it was
a large knife Leo uses in his garden work, last seen on the yellow chair, used
when he re-potted that feathery-ferny plant. All I can say is, “There is no evidence
of blood.”
Tomorrow is
Thanksgiving. My neighbors raise chickens. They aren’t home this week. I’m
thinking of taking Lola for a moonlight stroll. If I sit on their patio a
while, Lola might drop a fat hen at my feet. Roast chicken for Thanksgiving
dinner?
I suppose my
goat bell on the gate will ring daily. “I’ve lost my pliers.” “Can’t find my
glasses.” “Wonder if you’ve seen a stray white tennis shoe?” Good thing my
neighbors like Lola.
“Lolita,
sweetums, come to mama. What did you bring me today, my sweet poochy-woochy.”
Dog gone it.
Happy
Thanksgiving.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
November 24,
2021
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