Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Meet Cheyenne

Okay, it's not my kind of name, but she is my kind of dog. 73 pounds (33.2 kg) of Labrador love. I picked her up just before lunch yesterday, and we spent a rather hectic afternoon together once I signed the adoption papers and forked over $50- cheap at twice the price in my opinion. The Florida Keys Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has it's work cut out for it; I don't recall seeing a sign like this at any other animal shelter: There were lots of dogs to choose from but my wife spotted Cheyenne at the Holiday Parade Saturday night and my heart was set on her. This was her neighbor, cute and full of life. They are trying to raise five million bucks to build a hurricane proof air conditioned shelter here on Stock Island and they do a great job with what they have, cobbled together pens and kennels and a surprising amount of love: Volunteers walk the dogs and spend time with them. Cats roam free in a large cage, if they are suitable for the communal experience while some of the dogs get to hang together in groups and play madly. Cheyenne was alone in her pen when I arrived:Neither of us needed it but we got a get-to-know-you-walk together and she was as ready to go home as I was.She's a cheerful dog, wagging her tale on her way to saying goodbye to her former fellow inmates. She was dumped at the pound on October 27th 2009 by a military family from Louisiana, who, to my horror got rid of her, their older dog, and kept their younger animal. What a mistake they made. I cannot imagine the cruelty of dumping your family pet because she is old. And Cheyenne is a very young eight. She's never coming back here, that's a promise.
Cathy checked me out and told me about her issues, the usual skin problems caused mostly I suspect by stress, ears itching and so forth. No big deal. She was spayed by the pound (eight years old and not previously spayed- who are these idiot people who dare to own dogs?) and she got a vet's check out before being put up for adoption. No heart worm which is nice and a bit surprising.Before we could leave my wife had to come by and bond with the dog so the SPCA is sure the animal would be compatible in the home. They checked county records to be sure I owned my house, and then all the shelter workers came by to say good bye to their favorite Labrador and we were off.The plan was to take a quick walk, go home and relax. The day did not go as planned. Cheyenne walked straight to the car and climbed into the back seat like a pro. This was going to be easy I said to myself.We stopped by Little Hamaca city park and Cheyenne was off, sniffing and checking every little piece of greenery out. She looked like a dog in need of stimulation, and I think she found the right home because I know every wild dog walk within 30 miles of my home.She rides like a dog raised to be in a car, settled in the back seat, never bothering me at the wheel. I left her to do a little light shopping (brushes, bowls, some food etc...) and she sat quietly in the car while I was gone. It was heartwarming to come back to the car and see the little yellow head peering out looking for me.The beach brings out the juvenile in a dog and I met a couple of my friends who wanted to see my "new" dog on the waterfront. We ate our Badboy burritos at a Rest Beach table (and I was delighted to see no begging!) and let her loose on the sand. She started to run like a newly liberated dog.
Cheyenne doing her pit bull imitation tearing up and down the beach ears flat back:
She apparently has never been trained to enjoy the water and she didn't do much more than paddle around a bit before fleeing back to dry land:Noel thought the water was too cold so I had to explain a little about the Labrador breed's heritage as boat dogs raised in the cold Canadian North. They were first recorded as a distinct breed in Britain arriving off a Canadian fishing boat in 1820. In England they were trained to retrieve birds shot down in brush and bog. They thus have thick oily coats and Key West's balmy waters even in winter are nothing to them.
It really was time to bugger off home and do some settling in. So off we went, Cheyenne doing her duchess thing in the back after a firm rub down with a towel......before settling down for a nap while I did the chauffeuring thing up front. We got as far as Sugarloaf Key when my wife called requiring my presence back in her classroom on Stock Island. Heavy lifting is my specialty. She was in a meeting so I figured young Cheyenne might as well get some more of the great outdoors she had obviously been missing for a while. We went to the Bat Tower.It's pure speculation on my part and I doubtless have an over active imagination when it comes to dogs but I spent apart of the afternoon wondering how long she had fallen out of favor before the bastards dumped her. I wondered about being supplanted by a new younger dog in the family and being sidelined. I wondered even if they had had the gall to breed her and kept one of her puppies to replace the aging version. I really don't understand the prejudice against older dogs. To me they are more deserving of care and love and security. And Cheyenne is great company. She found an abandoned lunch on a utility trailer bed and amused me for a few minutes as she circled and tried to figure how to get it. She leaped up and almost nailed it but gave up.I am a lot less fanatical than some about what a dog puts in their mouth. Emma, my last Labrador sailed with us through central America along with our husky mix. They ate anything and everything they could find in every harbor we stopped in, and along every beach. Chocolate, chicken, greasy nastiness, whatever they found they ate and no way was I sticking my hand in their mouths. I met another cruiser who freaked every time his German Shepherd so much as looked at the gutter. I found my style of travel was much less stressful and the dogs did fine. I have no doubt Cheyenne will too. Though I do want to try to keep the weight off as much as I can in our calorie filled world. Labradors don't age much and I want her as long as possible.The last I saw of her before I went in to work for some late night overtime was a big yellow mound next to my wife's shape under the covers. She stopped snoring a moment and raised her head off the bed. Then she flopped down and I tip toed out and fired up the Bonneville. A home isn't a home without a Labrador and a rescued Labrador is the only way to go. Why buy a dog when there are so many abandoned animals looking for love and appreciating it when they get it? I just don't know why you'd encourage people to produce more dogs when there are more than enough already available.I won! No, my wife and I both won! No the SPCA won! No really, Cheyenne won the lottery (look at her on the bed for confirmation). Now we just need to figure out a new name.
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Post Scriptum: This is, quite coincidentally my 1000th post on this blog. Who would have thunk? I expect there will be quite a few more concerning the maintenance of dogs in the Keys now.

28 comments:

Unknown said...

And just in time for the holidays, no less! I hope the new addition to your family brings lots of joy, though since you've had labs in the past, you know that they can always bring a smile to your face. You and your wife are to be commended for taking in a pet that just needs a place to be happy and to be loved. Best of luck!


Andy

Conchscooter said...

The only thing is she isn't allowed on the ferry to the Tortugas (like propane) but she can be on the island outsid ethe fort if she can get there by private boat. Luckily we have some other islands closer to hand and in range of my skiff so we will have to see if she likes sleeping in a tent.

Jack Riepe said...

Dear Conch:

Congratulations!!! There is nothing to compare with the muzzle/nuzzle of a Lab. I knew you were going to go back and get this dog. In a day or so, it will be hard to have imagined how you got along without her. The iguanas in the garden are about to have their little green asses run off.

I will now send you a Ural catalogue, and a left-handed Russian axle-bearing wrench, complete with directions and a family curse in Cyrilics.

Congratulations again...

Jack • reep • Toad
Twisted Roads

Jack Riepe said...

PS: So camp someplace else without the stupid federal regulations and the skin-heads that enforce them. Buy an island, and call it "Propane Key." Let the dog determine who gets off the boat.

Cheyenne is a cool name. The dog could have been named "Irving, Harold, Florence or Peaches."

Conchscooter said...

I want a nice socialist hell raiser. My last lab was Emma Goldman and her buddy was Eugene Debs. I actually knew a woman who voted for Debs in 1920 when women got the vote.
Which has nothing to do with anything. We keep slipping up and calling Cheyenne "Emma" so we need to figure something out. She comes to her name though which is excellent.And she chews rawhide without choking which is a trick Emma could have used.

Jack Riepe said...

Dear Sir:

I once dated a woman named Emma Goldman, and she chewed rawhide while I sipped a drink. Why not get a second dog and you could call them, "Sacco and Vinzetti?"

Our dogs are named from characters in "To Kill A Mockingbird." My mother could never remember to call the Shepherd Atticus. She used to call him Gregory Peck.

Fondest rgards,
Riepe

Andrew in Seattle said...

Awesome. Good luck and congratulations!

Anonymous said...

Welcome Cheyenne!

George Collins said...

Congratulations on your 1000th post. It was an especially moving one, and right on target. You and your wife are to be commended, and I wish you many years of happiness with Cheyenne.

Anonymous said...

Congrats! If she continues to have skin issues, change her food. We use AvoDerm, all natural, it really works.

byrdman6969 said...

congradulations ! and they say that when you die you want to come back as a key west cat ! nonsense I want to come back as conchscooters dog and live on ramrod key ! its 56 and rainy in south carolina........BYRDMAN

Judi said...

Congratulations on adopting a rescue, and an older dog at that. I rescued a chocolate lab almost two years ago. She was almost 5 at the time. She at a backyard breeders house. Needless to say I reported the woman for having way too many dogs and from what I know shes out of business.I have always said that a rescued dog makes the best pet. Best of luck with the new family member.

682202 said...

Congratulations on the adoption, and a rescue at that, Kudos to you.

Singing to Jeffrey's Tune said...

That dog suits you and you suit that dog. May you all find a little sliver of happiness.

Joni said...

New to your blog.... thanks for adopting this honey! I just lost my Siberian, and this post may just be what I needed.

I love Singing to Jeffrey's Tune comment about finding a 'little sliver of happiness.'!

Joni

Conchscooter said...

Thank you all. It's been three years since Emma died and I now find myself picking up pounds of dog shit once more, though happily she stands still for her bath, and we have a slight yelping problem when left alone in the house. Doubtless training will solve that. My wife is at work and finally I've walked Cheyenne into a coma. Peace and quiet.

Orin said...

Congrats on your new pet! All three of my (since-deceased) cats were rescued from circumstances not much less ignorant than Cheyenne's. OTOH, at this particular point in my life a pet would be another mouth to feed, so I am a bit more circumspect. Not so much more that I don't think anyone who tosses an animal over a fence shouldn't be drawn & quartered...

__Orin
Scootin' Old Skool

Anonymous said...

Woof!
What one may describe as a house-broken critter.
Mind she's had her oil and filter changed and the body reveals no major problems.
Have been a cat person all my life,
they look after themselves and stoop and scoop is not usually in their owner's vocabulary.

Mind Cheyenne really should be renamed Duchess as you noted elsewhere.

Now as Jack has suggested a motorcycle with a sidecar should be on the list, your Triumph will handle a small chair quite well.
Maybe Scooter In The Sticks has ideas, although suspect his Junior
hasn't been chaired, yet.

However as you already have the
boat try her first in the boat and see what happens.

Seems DINKS have pets, SINKS too
if they wish. All my neighbours have dogs, ironically two different
Labradors, one black (Coal), the other chocolate brown (Hershey), within three houses of each other. Across the street fixed year old
Labrador German Shepherd mix from
an Amish farm up north Bailee)
and is a very good watch dog.

And next door, two standard poodles,
both getting on in age yet both very friendly.

Am the lone person on this very long downtown Burlington cul-de-sac
without a pet of any kind.

Carry in my car two containers, one with small treats for dogs, the other container with treats for cats. Yes there are cats in the neighbourhood, and they all know me, and they know, see me...food.

Neighbourhood pets are as withgrandchildren, or children...
you can always give them back.

Having never married have no off-spring that I know of, but then there are all these animals that
come to know me and know my being, with food in hand.

Without food, well they still appear and want to play with a tennis ball (dogs) or get their ears scratched (cats), so life is not all bad.

Thing is as a recovering cancer
laden person just over chemo don't really want a pet; too many possible complications so it's best to borrow the neighbour's pets.

Anonymous said...

Congrats to all of you! Nothing like a dog in the house.

Diana

Anonymous said...

PS - and congrats on 1000 posts, too! I can't believe that I've read them all, but I have!

Diana

Unknown said...

Big hello to Cheyenne.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to the family Cheyenne! You have chosen great parents. They are truely dog lovers and will spoil you rotten! I know you will be welcome on any chair, bed, car trip and resturant your parents have or attend. How lucky you are! Oh, and Happy Channukkah! Did they tell you, you were half Jewish? Remember a present for 8 nights! WooHoo
What's wrong with Cheyenne????
Nancy

Conchscooter said...

So if Diana has taken the time to read every single entry in this blog I cannot presumably start recycling the ones I wrote in the summer of 2007 that started this whole thing off?
By the way Cheyenne is not allowed on the leather couch though when she goes to Ocala for a visit I expect that rule will not be enforced. She has taken over the wife's yoga mat as a satisfactory substitute.

cpa3485 said...

Great lookin' dog! We have gotten many pets over the years from our local animal shelter. Almost always make great pets. And congratsyupbs on the 1,000th post. But what I want to know is how many pictures would be in those posts?

Conchscooter said...

It beats me. Maybe 15 or twenty average per post? The early ones had fewer picture sand some posts have none when i am just ranting. The streets of key west posts have about 20 each. Luckily blogger expanded storage limits this year and I went from filling 20% of the space suddenly back to 2%. Which is a long way of saying I have no idea how many pictures.

Unknown said...

Mr Conchscooter:

sorry to be so tardy. I've been locked up for 3 days counting all your posted pictures, 15,723. & You have a great dog.

We still miss ours. We had two Chows and still when I have left overs or cut cheese I really miss those waiting mouths. I know what you mean about picking up all that poop. I don't miss that part of it at all.

bob
bobskoot: wet coast scootin

Anonymous said...

Congrats! Both of mine are shelter dogs. Best pets ever.
She looks like a very happy girl and seems to be well behaved. Hopefully once she relizes that you two will always come back the barking will stop. Good karma to you for adopting this sweetie.
And I agree Orin. Drawn and quartered.

Z said...

Aaawww! I'm so glad for both of you!

P.S. That sign is just too scary -- did people really do that? Of course they did.