Friday, December 28, 2007

Part III - New experiences, and everything MUST be tasted.

(Click on the pictures to see them full size)
@ December 1-6, 2007

With Lilly's diagnosis in the bag, and Marilyn and I coping with the adjustment, life moved on. Much of this life involved walking Lilly in various places; Marilyn's neighborhood, my apartment complex, and exploring Marilyn's backyard. A 1/2 hour session with Matt at the SPCA showed us the merits of using a
gentle leader to walk Lilly. Gentle leaders are all the rage these days, as they offer the training benefits of a choke collar without the pressure on the neck. This was especially important in Lilly's case, as any constrictive pressure on her neck can send her into spit-up spasms that can be pretty stressful. The Gentle Leader avoids that, if a dog strains against the leash their head is drawn downward, something dogs just don't like. Lilly grudgingly accepted the gentle leader in exchange for being able to go on walks, but its clear that she doesn't care for it. Tough bounce, doggy. Deal with it.

During the first few days, it became quite apparent that Lilly had never experienced some basic things; namely stairs, swimming pools, and rain. My apartment is on the second floor of my complex, and the first time I tried to jog little Lilly up the flight of stairs, she slammed on all four brakes and skidded to a stop dead in her tracks. She looked at me as if to say, "I have no idea where those stairs go cowboy, and there's no damn way I'm going to find out." OK fair enough, it was pretty obvious that she had never seen stairs before, so I initially took the gentle route and tried to coax her up. "Come, Lilly. Come. Come. Come. Come. C'mon. Come. Lilly, COME. Let's GO. You can do it Lilly, lets GO. COME. COME." Etc., etc. I managed to get her halfway up, then she simply decided to become 35 pounds of dead weight and would go no further. I had no choice, I just snatched her up and carried her up the stairs. Once up to my apartment door she was fine, its just the stairs that were freaky. Same thing going down stairs. No amount of coaxing would get her to waddle her little self down the stairs to the bottom. After lots of encouragement, I just had to snatch her up again and carry her down.

Cesar Milan may be a controversial character in the dog training world, but I've definitely learned a few things from the Dog Whisperer. One of them is when you need a dog to cross a fear threshold, don't give them any time to think about it. Just lead them quickly into the goal and they will oftentimes run right past it. Worked like a charm with Lilly. After a few carry-ups and downs, I just ran her towards the stairs one day and she rocketed right up. Same thing going down the next time, and its been smooth sailing ever since. Whew! One milestone achieved.

Another thing Lilly had obviously never experienced before was rain. It started to rain pretty heavily at my apartment one night, and it was time for our evening walk. Lilly got halfway down the flight of stairs and jammed on the brakes again. She looked, sniffed, looked at me, and sat down. The message was clear; "I'm not going out there. What is all that noise and why is water falling from the sky?"
Thus, we were forced to regress to the carry-down routine again, but I promptly plunked her right into the rain shower and that was that.
Typical dog. A few looks around, some hearty sniffs into the air, and hey! Let's go! New smells! Sniff sniff sniff sniff sniff sniff, all is well. Sure was fun watching her try to make sense of it all, though.

Lilly had obviously never seen a swimming pool either. Marilyn has a big one in her backyard, and Lilly is very careful about walking up to the edge, sniffing it, but never getting herself into a position where she could fall in. This dog is one of the more careful I've seen; she is wary (but not scared) of new things and approaches them cautiously.....but with marked curiosity. She's only fallen in once (when I accidentially bumped her in during a horse-around session), and that was just on the first step, yet it freaked her out pretty good. She has a healthy respect for the pool, which is good. When the weather warms up, she can expect to be thrown in and we'll see all the retriever-lab instincts kick in. After all, if I had webbed feet like this pup, I'd want to swim every single day.

Lilly likes to put things in her mouth. Everything. Absolutely everything. So far to this date (Dec. 28), here are the things we've had to extract from her little mug: Bark, leaves, orange peels, apple cores, poop of all kinds, sticks, cyprus berries, acorns, Q-tips, plastic wrap, numerous types of fabric, paper tags, fabric tags, chunks of plastic from dog toys, rocks, a disposable razor handle, pine needles, etc. etc. etc. Normally, this wouldn't be that much of a problem with a dog; whatever they manage to chew up and swallow, they just poop out. Not Lilly. Anything she swallows makes her cough, hack, and eventually throw up if the irritation is bad enough. Therefore, our hands spend an inordinate amount of time doing this,
Because she spends so much time doing this:

Sooo....My apartment complex is full of pigeons, or 'rock doves' for you bird geeks out there. Not a big deal for the dog, except that the local compliment of Red Tail and Red Shoulder hawks make a very convenient killing field out of my complex. They just lazily soar around above the rooftops, and then swoop down and pin a pigeon to the ground for lunch or din-din. Marilyn and I have both caught a red shouldered hawk ripping a pigeon apart outside my front door in broad daylight.
When we're on walks, this of course results in Lilly trying to consume whatever is left of the carcass and feather explosion left behind. I'll go ahead and attest at this time that extracting gritty pigeon body parts out of a puppy's mouth kinda sucks.

OK, so here we are after a week or so: we have a dog that we can generally control, but it eats everything when it should be the one dog that eats nothing. Glass half full, glass half full.....

Coming up in Part IV - SKUNK!

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Lilly goes on her first walks, and why does this dog puke so much?

(Click on the pictures to see them full size)
Part II -

In our first few days together, we took Lilly on our first walks around Mare's neighborhood and my apartment complex. Lilly immediately proved to be a bulldozer of a walker, straining against her leash as hard as she could as she huffed and puffed her way down the street. OK, so we have some work to do here. One thing we noticed on these walks is that she spit up food pretty regularly after straining on her leash. OK, she's a puppy, and puppies puke. No big deal. One woman at my complex commented how nice Lilly was, and Lilly promptly barfed her up a colorful thankyou.
Hmm...funny but a little strange. It was too frequent, and the dry kibble she was yacking up didn't look very digested. Ah well, we had an appointment with Dr. Schmidt at Arbor View in a few days anyway for him to give her a good onceover, and I'm sure he'll tell us what's up. She's happy and healthy, so everything is OK, right?

We took her in to Arbor view several days later for her checkup. Upon describing the puking problem to Dr. Schmidt, he indicated it sounded a little suspicious. He said she might have a stricture in her esophagus, and there was a longshot possibility it was a serious condition called Megaesophagus; a condition where the esophagus isn't formed properly and doesn't have the pliability it should have. They kept her for a few hours, fed her some Barium laced dogfood, and took some X-rays. They said they would call in a couple hours with more info.

The call I got from Marilyn a few hours later was definitely not what I wanted to hear. Megaesophagus it was. This was bad news, and took some time to absorb. We were pretty upset to hear it, and it took a good deal of handholding and deep breaths to ready ourselves for the options.

It wasn't as bad as it could be. She was clearly happy and healthy, which meant enough food was reaching her stomach for her to grow and feel normal. He recommended a few drugs that would help tighten up the esophagus, and coat her esophagus to avoid the inevitable irritation that she felt with all the food just sitting there. We also had to change her food regimen; the dry kibble had to be replaced with canned food mixed with water....into a pea soup consistency. Also, we needed to start feeding her with her head held high, so simple gravity would help the food get down. OK, we can handle that. The downsides were significant; she is very vulnerable to secondary pneumonia, and it will always be a question if she is getting all her nutrients. It may shorten her lifespan significantly, or she could live a normal life. No way to tell. We left the Vet very shell shocked, but not disconsolate. We could get through this, and hopefully everything would turn out fine.

It was upsetting though. Mare's previous dog Lucy was a special needs dog, with liver issues and Cushing's disease that required a variety of drugs to keep her functioning normally. The whole reason for getting a young dog was that we wouldn't have to deal with those issues, puppies are supposed to be turn-key! Yet, here we were with another special needs dog. It was very easy to see how this condition went unnoticed by the SPCA, she is otherwise happy and healthy and there was clearly no reason to suspect anything was amiss. Her previous family mentioned nothing of this condition when they turned her in, but Mare and I are convinced that they at least knew she was an abnormal puker....if not the whole story.

No matter. They crate trained her, and for that I'm forever grateful!




So there you go. New dog, bad engine. Nevertheless, Lilly hit the owner jackpot because Mare and I are both totally devoted dog lovers, and experienced with special needs. No way would we give her back, she's here to stay. We just need to have a more focused routine than most folks. Full steam ahead with our little doggie.

Coming up in Part III - new experiences, don't take no for an answer, and why do you have to put EVERYTHING in your mouth, Lilly?

From Lucy......to Lilly

(Click on the pictures to see them full size)
Part I:

This blog will cover the ongoing life story of the dog Lilly. A rescue from the Placer County (CA) SPCA, this little bundle of destruction....I mean joy....landed in our laps on Monday, November 27th 2007. Marilyn and I had just finished a nice relaxing Thanksgiving weekend in Santa Barbara, when an email from the SPCA showed up in Marilyn's Inbox on Monday Nov. 26. It said they had a golden retriever-yellow lab mix, female, about 5 months old that needed a home. She came with impeccable credentials; crate trained, housetrained, smart, very well socialized with people and other dogs. We immediately went to see her that Monday, and played some fetch and got to know each other. She was so sweet, obviously intelligent, and really wanted to please. Marilyn and I looked at each other and knew we had hit the jackpot. We said we would take her. They asked if we could take her home right then.

Woah! Oh geez, we weren't not ready for this! Neither house was puppy-proofed, we didn't have any crates for her to sleep in, etc. etc. Do we have dog bowls? Food? We needed to buy a little time and go on a big shopping spree at PetSmart. We decided to pick her up the following day, Tuesday. That's when the adventure with this little doggie would begin.

Lilly is the replacement for Marilyn's dearly departed Lucy. Lucy was a golden retriever that Marilyn rescued through Homeward Bound Golden Retriever rescue and sanctuary in Roseville, CA. Lucy was trained as a search and rescue dog, but ended up being a little too 'freeminded' to make the final cut. Their loss, Marilyn's gain. She had Lucy for 13 wonderful years, and finally the old girl's body failed her in April of 2007. We sent her to go run and play in doggie heaven, and took some time to heal from the loss.







We took Lilly to Marilyn's house on Nov. 27, 2007. She looked awfully nervous on the ride home, with two relative strangers and an unknown destination. We also realized that her last ride in a car wasn't the best experience of her life, as that was the ride that saw her first family go away and she stayed at the SPCA. We got her home, let her sniff around in every room and the backyard, and she began to get comfortable. Some pictures from that first day:

As can be seen from the pictures above, there were periods of playfulness, exhaustion, and finally relaxation that first day. We figured, "what a sweet, wonderful little dog. An absolute angel. She is going to be just perfect"

We couldn't really figure out why the folks at the SPCA kept telling us that she was a handful, she seemed perfectly well behaved to us. Perhaps we should have looked a little closer at the picture below....which seems to reveal a glimpse of the colossal amount of mischief underneath the surface of this doggie's "sweet" personality....



Coming up in part II:
Everyone settles into their new routines, Lilly goes on her first walks, and why does this dog puke so much?