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Disillusion

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Once more my hopes have been cruelly elevated, only to be dashed yet again. A couple of weeks ago a friend of the Mum came to stay together with her teenage son who is almost exactly the same age as the Rory. Apparently the Mum and the Ann met sixteen years ago at Anti-Natal classes (strange – I’d have thought the South African boycotts would have been practically over by then).

Anyway, apart from being remarkably understanding about my need to lean heavily upon other occupants of the sofa (about which the Mum continues to be remarkably dim), the Ann and the David had another, even more valuable asset: a small red motorized CAR!!

Owing to the Mum’s chronic petrophobia, I can’t show you an actual photograph of the car or enumerate its many features and gadgets. Suffice it to say that for a few days I was treated with a modicum of decency and respect and taken on Proper Walks.

A Proper Walk, as any well-brought up terrier knows, does not begin with one’s house-humans walking out of the door and down the road to a nearby park or piece of woodland. Oh dear no. A Proper Walk commences with the placing of a motor vehicle as close as is physically possible to the front door. One is then carried to the back seat upon which one reclines in comfort until the car park of some suitable beauty spot (or out-of-town supermarket; I’m not pernickerty) is reached. The car door is then opened and one is lifted out and invited to sniff the circumference of the car park for five minutes or so before returning to upholstered luxury and the chauffeured ride home.

Now I can’t in all honesty concede that walks with the Ann fulfilled these criteria in their full paradigmic glory. No doubt under the malign influence of the Mum, the walks we went on were a great deal longer than the ideal, and involved terrain that in some cases was almost devoid of all tarmac. Nevertheless, she did her best, and I was most appreciative. (Though I must admit to having not always demonstrated my gratitude to the full, as on this occasion at the Marble Arch Caves, when she wanted to walk along the designated path while I had noticed a most intriguing Jack Russell leaping across the rocky ravine).

Alas! Just as I had settled down happily to the new routine, the Ann and the David callously left, without a single word. (Well, with a few words, actually, ones like Goodbye, but why spoil a nice bit of pathos?) I spent the whole afternoon and most of the next day lying out on the pavement, my tail trailing forlornly in the gutter, but although a few cars passed, none of them were small and red, and none contained anyone prepared to lift me onto the back seat. So it’s back to the Dad (and occasionally the Mum, if the weather’s not too foul) and thrice daily yomps to the wooden bear. C’est la vie, as the poodles put it.

p.s. Thanks to Sabine for her kind words – good to hear that someone is keeping an eye on the Gawain. And yes, Ellie is recovering fast – slightly too fast, in my view. I don’t think she’s fully appreciated the implications of complete recovery – that both of us will be taken off our luxury chunks-in-jelly repasts and returned to the old bags of dried pellets. Vets may well recommend it, but you don’t catch them eating the stuff.

Fervent apologies…

posted in: humans, walks - No Comments

… to my multitudinous disciples for my long silence. To a great extent, this was beyond my control, though I must confess to a mild grumpiness which may have exacerbated the situation.

To put it bluntly, the house humans have gone and moved again. I’d only just managed to accustom myself to their last abode, and succeeded in training them to take me for walks in the playground rather than in the dirty, dangerous and quite frankly detestable direction they called the countryside.

This new place has its attractions, I’ll admit: it’s nearer to town and considerably larger than the last one, giving me a bewildering choice of chairs and beds to sit on. However, all these advantages are massively outweighed by the ridiculous place across the road where they insist on taking me for walks.

To be frank, it’s a wood. Yes, a wood, full of trees, flowers, birds, insects, all that jazz. There’s scarcely a decent bit of rubbish, abandoned wheel hub, half-eaten takeaway or smashed beer bottle to be found.

Of course there are a few interesting smells, but on the whole they’re the dull ones humans find enticing: pine and lilies and all that softie stuff.

Ellie doesn’t seem to object as strongly as I do – I think she’s found a few alternative food-and-attention sources among the neighbours, together with some silly daredevil tricks to distract the Dad’s attention from my more mature meanderings.

She insists on coming for walks with us and gazing soulfully into the lake as though she’s one of Them. I didn’t mention the lake, did I? Nasty watery thing. Clean water, at that.

One thing that the house humans like particularly about the wood is the bear. Yes, you did read that right; a bear.

Personally, I have my doubts about him; he doesn’t seem frightfully active and doesn’t even object when I (with a little help from the Dad) jump on top of him, but the Mum seems quite unsuspicious, judging from the way she pats his nose and rabbits away to him.

If only she could read.

Mind you, that’s not the only evidence of her senile decay. One morning in June she disappeared with the Rory and the Aidan, and it took them a week to find their way back here. They’d obviously been taken into protective custody as they came back wearing wristbands embroidered with “Wear At All Times” and “Void if Removed”. Glass Tunberry, is, I assume, one of these new superprisons utilising the latest in electronical tag technology. Well, I suppose I can keep an eye on them…

Cccccold

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I regret that my literary talents have largely deserted me; all my creative energy has been deployed in trying to curl into a tighter and tighter ball in order to conserve what wisps of warmth remain. Yesterday the Dad had the temerity to take me along to work; an unheated breezeblock warehouse. I jumped up on a chair and shivered until half my teeth fell out, then he managed to find me a cardboard box and a hot water bottle pillow to fall asleep on. Memo to self: Terriers’ coats aren’t as warm as they look.

So my loyal readership will have, I fear, to make do with these pictures taken by the Mum on our walk this morning with her new phone. (Yes, I’m sure she said phone. I thought the photo-things were called cameras, but there we are. She listens to music, or what she calls music, on it as well and I daresay it would turn its hand to cooking the dinner given half a chance.)

Well, I’m back on walks.

posted in: television, walks - No Comments

It’s not that I’m inconsistent, or lacking in will-power, or even (perish the thought) any less stubborn than the archetypal terrier. It’s just that this house, this sceptred toybox, this little Ulster, turns out to be less safe and predictable than I had imagined.

It all started last night. Now most house-humans, as you no doubt know, have a large box (or several) called a television, that sits in the corner of their living room and talks to them. In general televisions are not of great interest to us dogs, their conversation consisting largely of human mating behaviour and territorial disputes, with little or no mention of sausages or dead rats. Moreover, they are absolutely devoid of interesting smells.

My own collection of humans, being somewhat odd, even by anthropological standards, don’t actually have a real television. Instead, they watch films, quizzes and so on, most of them featuring a thing called a steev’n'fri (I may have spelled that wrongly) on the small grey trays they call their laptops. (I assume that the word laptop is related to the French lapin, which would explain how there are such an extraordinary number of them.) The sound, which is almost invariably the most interesting part, is then piped through more boxes, conveniently placed on the carpet at terrier-ear level.

Apologies for the diversion, but the house-humans tell me that this set-up was the root of all my confusion, and, though not entirely convinced, I felt that I should lay these facts before you at the outset. To return to last night. The Dad decided to watch a film called Fluke, despite its catastrophic reviews on rottentomatoes.com, and the rest of the family duly joined him in front of the screen. I was mooching about in my usual sophisticated manner (all I need is a silk dressing-gown to become a veritable Noel Coward of the canines), trying to pretend that I hadn’t missed my usual fresh-air-and-exercise, All of a sudden I heard a terrible sound. It was the heart-rending cry of a small puppy, the kind of whimper that can only be occasioned by the loss of a mother or a particularly savoury piece of chicken. I rushed to the source of the sound and scrabbled to find its maker. Somewhere, hidden behind the furniture, a fellow dog was suffering. “No!” cried the Aidan. “It’s not real!” But I knew better. I knocked down the boxes and searched behind them. Nothing. Yet the sounds continued, with more dogs adding to the excitement. I sat back on my haunches, head on one side. The house is semi-detached, but there was no dog I knew of on the adjoining side. Could there be a secret passage between the houses, an unknown portal into a parallel universe of canine domination? I tried more investigation, but still in vain. Or worse – could the place was haunted by the spectre of dogs long past, only audible on the feast of the New Year?

After a couple of hours the noises died away, replaced by the usual human babble. “There you are, Robbie.” the Aidan reassured me. “It was only a film after all.” Maybe so, but I’m not convinced. Since when did even a sympathetic, dog-friendly bunch like our boys watch a movie clearly made exclusively for the canine market? There’s something fishier than Friday leftovers about the whole business. I know one thing – I’m not going to risk being trapped behind that wall. So it’s back to walks, despite the Fermanagh climate. There are worse fates than a little rain.

New Year’s Day 2008

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My New Year’s resolution is not to go on any more walks. Or, to put it more bluntly, I’ve gone on strike. It occurred to me this morning that trotting down the road in the January chill on the off-chance of meeting a mate or two is really not as much fun as staying in the warm with my toys. So I’m not going to do it any more. The Dad ended up having to carry me to the bit of waste land where I do my morning ablutions and, those complete, I scampered straight back again. Later on, when, I must confess, it was quite pleasantly warm outside, I stuck to my guns, and, more importantly, my bottom to the drive, so that after a bit of tugging he gave up, and I was allowed back to watch Bedknobs and Broomsticks. A lot of nonsense is talked about exercise, in my view. So what if the vet says I’ve put on a pound or two. A chap needs a bit of padding at this latitude.

Christmas Eve 2007

posted in: Christmas, bones, dogs, humans, walks - No Comments

A bit of an unfortunacy, as I think the humans call it, this morning; and I’m rather surprised not to be in more trouble.

I have a nagging feeling that it all started last night, when the Dad (I think that must be the proper word; it’s what most of the other house-humans call him) took me down to the park after his dinner. To both of our surprises, it was full of my friends, including the nice rather dopey old labrador. We had a bit of a runaround, and a chat about the weather, and why there are so many coloured lights on the outside of the human houses (mostly electric blue, though the Lab tells me that most years they are red and green). Anyway, after a while the Dad suggested that we might be getting back, and that’s when I realized my bit of luck. You see, usually when I’m at the park with the gang it’s daylight, and though I’m pretty good at pinching things from the others, the Dad always notices and makes we give them back. Last night, though, it was too dark for him to see, and I managed to get all the way home with the Lab’s new bone. How I managed to get it up the hill, I’ve really no idea, as it’s as long as one of my legs and at least three times fatter, but sompehow I did it. Desperate times, desperate measures, I suppose. Anyway, I sneaked it into the kitchen, and just managed to nudge it over the threshold into the dining room. I’m both observant and highly civilized, you see, and having noticed that the humans take their food out of the kitchen to eat it, I try, whenever possible, to do the same. It’s a sad reflection on their woeful inconsistency that they (well, the Mum, principally) periodically object to this, even going to far as to close the kitchen doors when there’s a steak pie or chocolate fudge cake for me to finish off. Anyway, this time they decided that the combination of marrowbone and carpet wouldn’t be too disastrous and that the Lab would have gone home by now (and in any case they weren’t quite positive that was who I got it from ), so they let me bring it through and gnaw on it for a few hours.

That, in retrospect, was our mistake. You see I’m not really accustomed to bones, being more of a custard cream sort of chap, and it seemed to have an unfortunate effect on my digestion, and hence on the kitchen floor overnight. But the Dad and the Mum were quite calm about it, getting to work with kitchen towels and mops and nasty smelling stuff, and letting me go outside without even a shout. Anyone would think they’d been through it all before. (Note to self: Must not ponder too deeply on this point. It may well be that I am not their First Dog; after all, as they know very well, they are far from being my First Owners; but I can certaintly aspire to being their Last.)

Anyway, when the floor was all shiny and smelling horrid, the Dad decided that a long walk would do me good, so we set off for Work. I will tell you about my Work another time; it is highly skilled and sensitive, and far too important to be explained in a footnote. While I was Working, my stomach righted itself, and I felt so bangersnmash that I ran all the way along the Sligo-Leitrim Way. (I must confess that this athletic achievement is not quite so supercanine as it sounds; the Sligo-Leitrim Way extends into neither Sligo nor Leitrim, but is a few yards of disused railway in the centre of Enniskillen. Nonetheless, it’s quite an feat for anyone with paws my size. (Feat, feet, get it?) Again, with hindsight it perhaps wasn’t the wisest course of action. By the time we got to our side of town, my legs were completely trotted-out and I had to lie down and get the Dad to carry me. He usually does this quite happily – I’m really quite pleased with his training progress – but today he seemed a bit slow on the uptake. It might have had something to do with all the bags he was carrying, but instead of simply picking me up and taking me all the way home, after a while he stopped, got out his little black box and starting talking into it. Then, a couple of minutes later, I saw the Aidan (the smallest of the house-humans and the best to be licked) running along the pavement towards me. Perhaps it was the excitement of seeing hiim, perhaps the small Jack Russell who got mixed up with us, but somehow I found myself back home under the power of my own four paws. Some sort of hypnotic trick no doubt. It really shouldn’t be allowed.