Wednesday 26 December 2012

Cheese: Probably going to be the most spoiled puppy in the world

This Christmas has been quite difficult to face without Bran and I have to admit that I've been finding it a struggle to get into the spirit  :o(

However, I temporarily forgot about the incredible support network that I have around me and their amazing kindness and thoughtfulness and how well they all know how to make me smile  :o)

From my lovely friend Emma, Cheese already has their first ~ personalised! ~ puppy dummy and dummy keyring

From my lovely friend Jo, a special coffee mug to remind me of the good things to come

From my lovely friend Tina, a necklace to keep Cheese close to my heart

And just a sample of the gifts that Moss and Casey received from us and our friends! The box full of treats was out in the kitchen  ;o)
Not to mention the constant access to the doting "grandparents" who have been on hand 24/7 to play tug with Moss and to cuddle Casey as well as the bowls of turkey and leftover veg that have replaced the usual meals!

What a very lucky pup Cheese is going to be  :o)

Tuesday 4 December 2012

Evaluating priorities and a new obsession??

I had a conversation with Kate recently that made me stop and have a really long and hard think about my priorities in the puppy that will one day be Cheese.

She sensibly pointed out that as the sire of Lara's litter has not yet been decided upon, there are no guarantees as to what colour the litter will be. She knows that I had my heart set on a yellow boy but basic labrador genetics come into play. If she chooses a black boy who carries no yellow, then the litter will be all black (as that's the labrador "default" colour); if she chooses a black boy who carries yellow then the litter may be 50/50 black and yellow; if she chooses a yellow boy then the litter will be all yellow.

I spent an entire night tossing and turning and trying to decide what I needed to say to her. Then, as the sun rose, it struck me that I had prepared for myself a very specific and detailed list of what I wanted from a breeder, some things I was prepared to compromise on but most I wasn't. In Kate and the wonderful Ardenbrook, I had not had to compromise on a single thing, thus far, even on the things that I had really expected to have to compromise on.

And suddenly the sleepless night of fretting seemed completely and utterly ridiculous, because I realised that my number one priority was that Cheese be a happy, healthy puppy born to Lara and raised by Kate.

So. Decision made. Cheese will be what Cheese will be. I still have a slight preference on Cheese being a boy, but if my yellow boy turns out to be a black girl, then so be it. And they will still be called Cheese whatever the sex or colour. I imagine the name will be explained many times anyway, it'll just be a slightly longer story if Cheese is black!  ;o)

Of course, if Cheese DOES turn out to be a black girl, then she will fit in just perfectly with the pattern for every other plan I've ever made for having dogs! Our first dog was going to be a golden retriever, but turned out to be a 7 month old lurcher. My second dog was going to be a saluki, but was actually the world's largest collie. I wasn't having a third permanent dog at all, until I met Flora. We were never having terriers, and then along came Hugo, and, eventually, Moss and Casey. Bran was the only dog who was ever exactly what he was supposed to be  ;o)

In amongst all of the serious thinking that I've had to do, I've also been desperately missing my darling Bran as Christmas approaches and trying to accept that I have yet another dog who will not be receiving presents this year  :o(  I have done several things to cheer myself up. The first is to send presents to all of Bran's most special doggy friends ~ all thirty-five of them! The second was to buy Cheese a Christmas present that won't be able to be used until they are almost fully grown, but hey ho!!

My lovely friend Dee spotted this collar and how could I not get it???

Christmassy Cheese Collar

I bought it from Rescue Me Collars in America and I was supremely impressed with them from the moment I placed my order. It cost only £13 for the collar to be made in a large size AND to be posted from the US to the UK ~ bargain! Rescue Me Collars also ask you to nominate a rescue when you place an order and when a rescue receives 6 nominations, they will send them a free collar ~ isn't that lovely? The choice of fabrics is vast so you'd be bound to find something very special and unique for your dog  ;o)

And then the collar arrived and I was even more impressed. Firstly, it was wrapped in red tissue paper and tied with a green ribbon and looked just lovely. Secondly, a Christmas card was included with my invoice. You have to remember that the lady who made the collar knows nothing of my Cheese plans, but the Christmas card had a yellow labrador puppy on it! She had also written a very lovely and personal message inside the card thanking me for ordering and telling me how much she likes this fabric and wishing me a happy 2013. I will most definitely be recommending them and have no doubt that I will need to be ordering more collars very very soon.

For the record, Cheese now has a baby puppy collar, a bigger puppy collar and a matching lead, plus this Christmas collar for when they are growed up. Too much, d'you think??  ;o)

Saturday 10 November 2012

Double Take!

This afternoon, Sophie, my mum and I went to visit Whitehall Garden centre in Bristol to have a look at their Christmas displays.

We often visit this garden centre as it's quite small, quite reasonable and very dog friendly. It will undoubtedly feature heavily in Cheese's socialisation as they have chickens free roaming, plus rabbits and guinea pigs in hutches, as well as lots of pushchairs and wheelchairs around and exciting things that can be sniffed but not nibbled.

I had a bit of a "moment" as I remembered all the times that I'd brought Bran with us to visit, but caught my breath as I spotted one of the gorgeous garden ornaments that they had for sale. I really had to do a double take as it looked so realistic!



It was very tempting to buy him so that I could have a yellow lab in my house/garden NOW, but at a smidge under £100 I felt that the money would be eventually better used on lovely things for a REAL dog  ;o)

Wednesday 31 October 2012

What's in a name?

"Why on earth have you called such a cute puppy Cheese????"

This is a question I'm expecting to come up against quite a lot once Cheese arrives in our lives. And then "puppy" will be replaced with "dog" and it will (hopefully!) go on for 15 years or so.....

So, why Cheese?

The truth is that it started as a joke. I was having a very silly, giggly telephone conversation with my silly, giggly friend Jules and we were still being silly and giggly when we got on to the topic of potential puppy and then potential puppy names. We decided that the name should be food related so started trying out all sorts of yellow food as names: "Custard?" "Butter??" "Cheese???"

After a big giggle, Jules decided that she preferred the name Cheddar.

However, by the time it took her to get those words out, my head and heart had locked together and screamed "And the puppy will be called Cheese". Uh oh.

And so then the silly giggliness explored all the fun opportunities that were to be had with a dog called Cheese:

1. To start with, Jules has a yellow lab girl called Pickle and when we met up for the first time this year, we had to get this photo....

Branston/Pickle
...so now, clearly, we need to get a Cheese and Pickle photo  ;o)

2. It feels quite nice to have a pup called Cheese following my darlings Flora and Branston Pickle. All we need is a bread related option and we have the perfect sandwich!

3. Photo opportunities as we travel around the country for camping/walks/visiting, etc to places that have their own cheese named after them are immense. The easiest one will be to visit nearby Cheddar and take a photo of Cheese underneath the "Welcome to Cheddar" sign.

4. Training tricks could be brilliant using cheese related commands:

  • "Cheese Twist" ~ spin
  • "Say Cheese" ~ grin/show teeth
  • "Squeezy Cheese" ~ hug
  • "Cheese Spread" ~ lay flat

5. It's actually quite difficult to say "Cheese" in a cross voice so encourages positive vocal commanding.

6. It is very easy to elongate "Cheese" into a recall ie. "Cheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeese".

If you can think of other positive reasons for calling my pupster Cheese, or have any other cheese related training suggestions, please feel free to share  :o)

Until real Cheese gets here, I have a pretend one who was a gift from my lovely friend Tina. He's not great at taking cheese related commands though  ;o)

Pretend Cheese

Thursday 25 October 2012

Cheese's First Gift

My lovely friend Mandy came to visit today with her boys: gorgeous black labrador Blue (who was Bran's bestest friend ever) and handsome springer Tom.

As always, she came bearing gifts: there were chewies for the puppies and the boys to enjoy, a 16 month yellow labrador calendar for me (yay!) and ~ sob ~ Cheese's first present.....

Teddy and blankie

Teddy

Mandy has put odds on it not lasting more than 3 days once Cheesy pup gets hold of it, so won't be too offended if it ends up in a soggy fluffy pile of ex-toy  ;o)

And then we had a little fun with Blue and Tom and a set of devil horns  >:o)

Devilishly cheeky Blue

Devilishly handsome Thomas

It's their shadows that make me laugh the most! Don't they look like they were enjoying themselves?  ;o)

Saturday 20 October 2012

First big hurdle

Well today was the today!

I woke up 2 hours before the alarm went off and sat tapping my toes until Sophie came home and we could leave. I had lots of excited texts from my lovely friends wishing us a safe journey and lots of luck.

My brain was just buzzing with excitement at the prospect of meeting Kate and Lara at last!

We hit traffic as soon as we left the house ~ grrrrrrrrrr! ~ and then there were roadworks on the M5, but we eventually arrived just 10 minutes past the arranged time. Phew!

Kate greeted us and then we had to pass the Squidge the cat test! Thankfully, she purred happily as Sophie stroked her head and then she joined us in the kitchen while we had a long chat over a cup of tea.

I'd secretly taken a list of 27 (!!) questions with me, but rest assured that I had hoped to cover the answers to most of them in casual conversation rather than by interrogation  ;o)

Kate and I chatted easily about lots of different topics ~ some related specifically to potential Cheese and some not ~ whilst Squidge tried her best to sneak on to the kitchen table. It was lovely to feel so welcome and relaxed and the time just flew by, but then ~ at long, long, long last ~ it was introduction time! Eeeeeeeeeeeeeek!!!

Kate brought Lara in and she is absolutely everything that I'd hoped for and dreamed of ~ beautiful and friendly and wiggly and beautiful. I could very easily have just scooped her up into my arms and smuggled her out to the car  ;o)  We spent some time fussing the gorgeous girl and then Kate fetched Kalli (Lara's 14 month old daughter) in. Kalli is adorable! She's a very different body shape to her mum as her dad is a working boy, but it was easy to see her beautiful mum in her too. She is bags of fun!

And then I could stand it no more and had to ask Kate directly if we would possibly be allowed on to her waiting list for a puppy from Lara....................and she said "YES"!!! Wooooooooohoooooooooo!!! I could have cried with relief. I was SO worried that she wouldn't like us or would think that we couldn't be trusted with one of her girl's precious puppies, but now I can sleep at night again and look forward to our gorgeous baby boy joining us in the future  :o)

And it is some time in the future, as Kate had warned us very early into our communications. She is hoping that Faith will be having a litter next Spring and then it'll be Lara's turn in 2014. Very kindly, she suggested contacting the Warringah kennels as they had been expecting a litter at the beginning of October and they'd be a good place to start if we wanted a puppy earlier. However, I feel so sure that Kate and Lara will be the best person and dog to give our pup the best of best starts that I have no qualms at all in waiting for them to have a litter.

I also feel that it'll do us all good to give our hearts some time to heal over all we've been through with our big dogs, before we bring another big dog home. It's very very strange to not have a big dog in the house after 8 years of constantly having at least one of them around, but we are all very much looking forward to the day when we can bring our Cheese boy home.

Kate kindly let us go out into the garden to meet Connie and Faith and the wonderful Summer girl and then we had a bit of a photo shoot with Lara and Kalli, so here are the results of that........

Lara









Kalli









Lara and Kalli







Thank you so much for having us, Kate. It was lovely to meet you and your gorgeous girls and we had a lovely afternoon x


Thursday 18 October 2012

Bottled excitement.......sort of!

Squeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Only 2 more sleeps until we get to meet our potential puppy's mummy and human granny!

My camera battery has been charged in the hope that either me or Sophie will be able to stop fussing dogs and chatting long enough to get some photos  :o)

I need to collect my parents' sat nav tomorrow, but I have already programmed it with Kate's address. The car will also be filled with fuel tomorrow, so that when we leave home on Saturday we have no need to stop until we get there  :oD

I forgot to share before what it is that keeps me excited about Cheese (apart from the neverending thoughts and plans!): I decided that I needed to buy his first collar. Almost everything else that he could possibly need is either already here or already has plans in place to be borrowed, so I felt that I needed something tangible here to reassure myself that he will be here one day. That involved lots of discussion about which colour would look best against a boy's yellow fur and I eventually decided that chocolate would be perfect and was a nice nod to my Bran boy too. I found a pattern with Red Dingo that had chocolate backing with green spots, but I often buy Red Dingo stuff from a really lovely lady on Ebay whose shop is called Wagtails so decided to check what she had before I made a decision and that turned out brilliantly because she had a pattern that isn't available in the UK: chocolate with little green stars.
Cheese's First Collar

Soooooooooo I may have got a "little" carried away, but I really liked the design so bought a small collar, a medium collar and a medium lead. Eek! By the time he's a big enough boy to be in a large size, I can find a more mature design and lead for him, but the little stars will be lovely to see him through his puppyhood.

I've put the bigger collar and lead away for now, but wanted the baby collar on display somewhere prominent ~ where I could see it all the time. So this is where it is...........

Collar on Display

Just 2 more sleeps!

Tuesday 16 October 2012

The search is on....

Ok. So the biggest decision is made and my next pup is coming from a breeder. Having never bought a pup from a breeder before I had no idea about etiquette, but had already drawn up a list of what I wanted from a pup/breeder and was not prepared to compromise on many of those things because I am in no rush and really want my pup to have the best possible start before joining our family.

I'm keen to work through the Kennel Club Citizen levels again and am excited about doing this with a puppy. I'd also like to have a go at doing some gundoggery with Cheese and Sophie has made noises about having a go at showing him. There's also a question mark over whether we may work to have him trained as a mental health assistance dog, as I suffer with depression and anxiety, so we have lots of things on the table at the moment, but I'm sure they'll all have been finetuned by the time he actually arrives.

Whenever extensive online research is needed, I call on my lovely friend Mandy and we'll both sit at our computers and Google ourselves into a stupor. I'm also lucky to have 2 friends who are experienced with showing ~ lovely Dee with her Tibetan Terriers, Muppet and Dave, and Clare with her handsome labrador boy Eddie ~ so I also enlisted their help. And Jo likes looking at photos of puppies and doggies so she was helping too  ;o)

My list of requirements was as follows:

  • yellow (not fox red) labrador
  • both parents to have below the average labrador hip score of 14
  • both parents to have 0 elbow score
  • not a large scale breeder
  • if a pure showbred pup, then parents to be of the slimmer build, but ideally a 50% show/50% working pup
  • breeder's dogs and pups to live indoors
  • a pedigree that isn't crammed with the same kennel name or to have the same dog repeated over and over
  • ideally, dna tests for eyes and EIC to have been done with good results on both parents
  • in a perfect world, the breeder would have introduced the pup to raw meat as I hope to raise him on a raw diet


I know, I know. I was expecting a lot, but after not much research I knew that I wasn't looking for the impossible.

Very quickly into our scouring of websites and forums, we managed to identify what looked like the perfect potential daddy ~ Ludalor Lunar Orbit aka Seth.

Seth ~ Ludalor Lunar Orbit

Seth ~ Ludalor Lunar Orbit
He has excellent health scores, several championship certificates and a working gundog certificate too. Perfect! Mandy was absolutely thrilled with him as his sire was Amberstope Blue Moon and she is a full-blown Manchester City fan who named her own labrador boy Blue.

After speaking to Clare, she suggested also looking at one of Seth's sons, Warringah's Gundaroo. He is a stunning dog but showed an elbow score of 1, but, and I know it's being incredibly picky, when I know that there are lots of dogs out there with elbow scores of 0 I just didn't want to compromise even to that extent. As we discussed the Warringah dogs, Clare suggested taking a look at the Ardenbrook dogs.

Before I'd had a chance to fully check out the Ardenbrook website, I sent the link to Jo who quickly sent me a message insisting that I had to take a look at their Lara because she was beautiful. Being a girl who ALWAYS does as she's told........ahem.........I clicked on Lara's page. Jo was absolutely right, she was beautiful. Before I allowed myself to fall too much in love, I took a look at her pedigree and was amazed to find that her dad is Seth and her mum is a Warringah girl! The 2 lines that I'd been hankering after had both met in this gorgeous girl.

Lara ~ Warringah's Wilarra

Lara ~ Warringah's Wilarra

Her health scores are brilliant, apart from the fact that she is an EIC carrier, but that can easily be managed if mated to a clear stud. So then I let myself start falling in love with her and watched the videos of her that are posted on the website and that's when I truly fell head over heels. The videos show her to be incredibly waggly and happy and clever. Lara has had just one litter before and Ardenbrook have kept one of her daughters, Kalli. The videos of the progress of her previous litter were just wonderful to watch and told me an awful lot about how they were being raised before even making contact with Kate at Ardenbrook.

As far as I was concerned, I had found the potential mum of Cheese!

Again, just to reiterate, I have never done this before so have no idea about etiquette so I decided to do what I'd like done if someone was making the enquiry to me. I emailed Kate almost my entire life story (as far as dogs were concerned anyway) and included photos of the puppies, the cats and my darling Bran. I explained how I had found my way to her and Lara, then sat back and chewed my nails waiting on a reply.

Just a few days later, Kate replied to say that she had really enjoyed my email, although was sorry to hear about Bran, and that Lara would be having another litter but probably not for some time yet as Faith (gorgeous Ardenbrook black girl) is slightly older and may have her last litter first. By now, I had devoured the entire Ardenbrook website and loved everything that they stood for and what they were trying to do with the breed and the fact that their show bred girls are frequently worked. I couldn't believe my luck that I had struck gold with my very first enquiry.

After several emails had passed between us, I spoke to Kate on the telephone and she was just as lovely as I'd expected and she kindly invited us to go and visit the Ardenbrook home and dogs. She suggested that if I wanted a pup sooner, that maybe I contact Warringah or Ludalor to see if either of the boys had sired expectant litters, but I explained that I was fully prepared to wait for as long as necessary as it was Lara that had stolen my heart.

I was ridiculously excited about actually meeting Lara in the flesh but, true to our luck, Sophie fell ill a few days before we were due to visit and was far too ill to travel on the day, so I had to cancel. Kate was incredibly kind and sympathetic and I agreed to call again when Sophie was better.

So, a week later, I managed to get hold of Kate whilst she had her diary to hand and we are now booked to visit on Saturday 20th! I'm not quite sure how I'm going to contain my excitement until then, but I cannot wait to meet Kate and Lara and the other gorgeous Ardenbrook girls!

Monday 15 October 2012

Decision making or Why buy when so many rescue dogs die?

To date, my little family have owned 25 pets. We have had 6 goldfish, 3 guinea pigs (2 were rehomes), 2 rabbits, 1 hamster, 6 cats (2 were adopted from Bristol Dogs and Cats Home) and 7 dogs (all rescues and more information to follow). We've loved every single creature wholeheartedly and cared for them to the best of our ability as cherished members of our family.

I'd had dogs in my family home since my teenage years (after MUCH nagging) and my children had had the pleasure of the company of Jessie ~ my parents' dog ~ in their early years. Jessie was a terrier cross that my parents adopted when she was at the age of 1 and who had yapyapyapped her way along to the grand old age of very nearly 18.

Jessica Fletcher

We had wanted a dog of our own for a very long time, but I hadn't wanted to commit until I felt physically able to poo pick behind a dog with nothing more than a sliver of plastic between my fingers and the warm waste <shudder> Once we had cats, I soon found that poo picking the litter tray frequently was far more economical than emptying and replacing the litter every time one of them decided to soil it. I also wanted to wait until I didn't have the commitment of cleaning cages and/or hutches alongside caring for the cats and a dog, so we waited until the sad day when our last hutch dwelling pet ~ Gryffindor the guinea pig ~ made his way to Rainbow Bridge before actively seeking out our first dog.

It was now very early in 2004, the children were 7 and 5, and, after thoroughly researching breeds, we decided that a golden retriever was the dog for us. It never even crossed my mind that our golden retriever would be anything other than a rescue dog, so we spent the next 6 months trawling the local dog rescues waiting for "our" dog to find it's way to us.

Unbeknownst to us, Fate had decided to play a rather hearty trick on us and had decided that we were not going to have the golden retriever we craved, but a 7 month old lurcher boy who had already been diagnosed with hip dysplasia! The day that we laid eyes on him in his kennel at Bristol Dogs and Cats Home he just stood quietly amidst the barks and wails and howls of the kennel's background and wagged from the very tip of his nose to the very tip of his tail. We fell hook, line and sinker. Within 2 weeks of Bailey's arrival home, we knew that he had Separation Anxiety and not just mildly, but chronically. If we dared to leave him alone at home he would destroy EVERYTHING in his path and then poo and walk it through the entire house, howling at the top of his lungs as he did so. We worked hard with the rescue and behaviourists and vets to try and help give him the confidence he needed to cope with being alone but we never succeeded. In the end, we just gave in and if he really and truly couldn't join us somewhere, then he would stay across the road with my mum. However, as bad as it already was, the Separation Anxiety actually got worse as the years passed until we reached a point ~ 4 and a bit years after he'd come home ~ that Bailey was screaming every time I left a room and woke up howling every hour on the hour throughout the night. After 5 solid nights of terribly broken sleep, I snapped and admitted defeat. We had literally thrown everything we could at trying to settle our boy, but nothing worked and I had no idea what to do next. In the end, I contacted BDCH and made a date for him to return to them for rehoming. However, they couldn't take him for a month and in that time he had already been booked to have a holiday at Lizzies Barn Sanctuary with my friend Fionna whilst we went away. As we were living nearby at the time, Bailey knew the open layout of the Sanctuary and Fionna very well indeed and Fi noticed just how much more relaxed Bailey was when he was there, so she phoned me on holiday to ask whether BDCH would allow him to be rehomed by her instead. It wasn't a problem at all and we watched in amazement as Bailey flourished and oozed confidence when he was surrounded by other dogs with whom he could play and chase all day. Between us, Fi and I drew up a very strict list of what we wanted in the perfect home for Bailey, then decided what we could compromise on. However, the very first home offer that came in met everything on our dream list ~ no compromises! He was to become the newest member of an already established pack of 4 dogs who were all larger than him, plus his new mum would be around but not accessible all of the time. I was there to witness the first meeting between Bailey and his new family and it really couldn't have gone any better. The reports back stated that he howled for half an hour the first time that he was left alone and then he never did it again. It broke my heart to give up our first dog when I'd thought we'd grow old together, but a darling friend pointed out that maybe Fate had only ever intended us to be a stepping stone for him until his forever family were ready for him. I like to soothe my conscience with those words and I know that he is far happier and more confident now than he ever was with us, but it doesn't completely block the feeling of failure. He will always be our "first" though  :o)

Bailey

After adopting Bailey, I became somewhat more involved in dog rescue and took on the responsibility of organising transport runs for Hope Rescue, as well as carrying out homechecks and transport runs myself for Hope and other rescues that needed the help. We also started fostering for Hope and Houndsavers and had chalked up several successful rehomes before Fate stepped in again.

I had always insisted that we wouldn't have a collie as I believed that our lifestyle just wouldn't suit such a high maintenance breed. However, one day in 2006 one of my organised transport runs fell apart when the end foster home pulled out at the last minute and I had to rush out to take charge of an old collie boy for an hour until a run booked for later in the day caught up and he could be moved on to his foster home. The only problem was, this collie stepped out of the previous transporter's car and I felt that familiar *thud* as I laid eyes on him. He was the biggest collie I'd ever seen and I'm still not convinced that he wasn't collie x Bernese Mountain Dog, but he was gentle and kind and cuddly. Anyway, the story goes that he went on to his foster home on the Saturday, I cried all the way home and spent the weekend on the phone to the Oldies Club's foster co-ordinator at that time (who was on a weekend away with friends!) and she ended up bringing him back to me on the Monday evening. Bear walked into our house with a distinguished air of calm about him and took charge of everything. My old boy turned out to be several years older than anyone had suspected so Old-Man-itis set in not very long after he joined us. We had just 2 and a half wonderful years with our handsome collie but eventually we had to let him go with a scrap of dignity as dementia, dual incontinence and collapsing back legs threatened to steal him away. He was a dog in a million and stole the hearts of everybody who met him, although he had his moments of naughtiness, believe you me!

Bear

Whilst having Bailey and Bear as permanent residents, we continued to foster although now it was mostly for Lizzies Barn Sanctuary as our friendship with Fi strengthened. It was lovely having "our" two dogs whilst also being able to help a needy dog on their way to their forever homes so I was harbouring no thoughts about taking on a permanent third dog.

Until I saw a photo early in 2007 that set my heart a-flutter.

I quickly arranged to go and visit Fi as she was the one who was currently caring for the dog I'd fallen for. I stepped into the Barn and sat in one of the few chairs that didn't have a dog snoring in it and then Flora was let in. She did the fastest wall-of-death laps I'd ever seen, then landed in a heap in my lap and grinned at me. And she was no chihuahua. She was a 20+kg 7 month old American Bulldog!! We took her with us, along with friends and Fi with some of her dogs, to Pembrey Country Park. She leapt into the back of the car with Bailey and Bear without batting an eyelid and then promptly shredded the duvet they were sitting on. She nicely walked the mile to the beach but, once there, decided that it was FAR too cold for a ruffty tuffty bullbreed to walk so divided her time between clinging on to the back of my jeans with her front paws and bouncing her back feet off of the cold sand and actually climbing up into my arms. I had to carry her the whole way back to the car when she refused to walk it! Flora came home with us and it was as if she'd always been there. The only bullbreed experience I'd had before had been a lovely older staffy girl called Stella who had spent 3 months with us on foster before going on to her home, so it was a sharp learning curve, but Flora was just so full of joy that she was a pleasure to have around. Our lives were constantly shadowed by the threat of the Dangerous Dogs Act and I was always in fear that someone would suspect that she was a "dangerous dog" and have her taken from us, but I was in regular contact with the lovely Allie of DDA Watch who had me well versed in my rights and, thankfully, that knock at the door never came but it is hard to live with the burden of plans for "just in case". My girl was never destined for an easy ride of it: she originated from a puppy farm, where she was bought along with her brother at 6 weeks, then they were both handed in to rescue at 6 months; we adopted her at 7 months, at 10 months she had a fit that lasted for 24 hours and made her blind and paralysed for the duration of it; 2 weeks later, she had another mammoth fit and was rushed off to Langford for an MRI, where a grade 4 heart murmur was diagnosed alongside idiopathic epilepsy; 3 months later, Flora was diagnosed with bi-lateral hip dysplasia, although her left hip was considerably worse than her right. After a year of managing her diet and exercise and medication, Flora needed a Total Hip Replacement on her left hip, which was again carried out at Langford. She bounced back from that operation like nothing I'd ever seen and her life changed overnight. 18 months later she started to have head bobbing incidents and her whole body would be covered in hives. The vets felt that it was an allergic reaction to her food, so she was put on a raw food diet. However, a few months later, my best girl had another mammoth fit that she couldn't recover from and we had to say goodbye when she was just 4 years old. Flora had a beautiful heart-shaped patch on her side and I always said that it illustrated the fact that when I was made a little bit of my heart was kept back until I was ready for her to be made and that it showed her love for me. I now wear the image of that patch on my wrist as a tattoo to show my love for her.

Flora Dora

After losing Bear, we waited several months until we were ready to take another dog into our lives and after discussing it with Fi, we decided that a puppy would be the best fit for Flora. Not 2 hours later, she took a call asking if Lizzies Barn could help a 12 week old chocolate labrador boy who was unsold from a puppy farm litter. Bran was on his way to us! Flora and he adored each other from the moment they laid eyes on each other and, to a degree, I was always a viewer on their life together rather than a full participant, but she taught him well and he was an utter delight. He had his typical "puppy moments" but they were few and far between and mostly he was a dream. At 6 months, however, my baby had the first incidence of lameness in his front end. By 10 months, we had a diagnosis of bi-lateral elbow dysplasia. At 2, he had his hips, elbows and shoulders x-rayed and both elbows arthroscopied. We discovered that he had shockingly loose hips and something like a 90-95% chance of developing hip dysplasia. His shoulders were fine, but his elbows were terrible. He had little cartilage left in either of them and as the camera had been flaking off more cartilage as it did it's thing they hadn't stuck around in there for very long. So we started to manage the elbow dysplasia. Never did Bran complain. Not once. And then we lost Flora and he became this incredible companion who was always at my side. I started taking him to training classes and he quickly worked his way up to his KC Bronze Citizen test, which he passed with flying colours but was very quiet throughout. The next day we were at the vets as I suspected the hip dysplasia had kicked in. Unfortunately, it was much worse than that as he had lost a lot of weight and they were worried that we might lose him. Eventually, after weeks of tests and scans and cameras, Bran was diagnosed with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Thankfully, he'd been put on a raw diet when Flora had started with her reactions so managing him wasn't too terrible, but so many more things came to light. Over the space of 9 months, we nearly lost him 3 times, discovered he was allergic to bee stings and had atopical allergies to 8 known allergens, had the elbow dysplasia and then both hips became dysplastic too, although he still enjoyed his training and he eventually became a Kennel Club GOLD Citizen! As he had so many problems tolerating medication because of his IBD, it was almost impossible to keep on top of the pain in his legs, until we had a night where he couldn't sleep or settle for the pain. After speaking to the vet who'd cared for him since that first appointment at 6 months, we knew there was nothing more that could be done and we had to let Bran go, again he was aged just 4 years. In the 15 months that we had together after losing Flora, Bran became a part of my soul and I have no doubt that I will never be lucky enough to share my life with another dog like him again.

Branston Pickle

When Bran was just 7 months old, Fi asked if she could bring a rather special little pup to come and see our vets. Highcroft are spectacular vets and each vet has their own specialist field. The team includes a wonderful cardiologist in the shape of Oliver Garrod. Fi had taken in a jack russell girl and her 4 month old grandson when their owner could no longer keep them. She had easily identified that Hugo pup was too small for his age and it was easy to feel his heart "fizzing" through his chest. From the moment Hugo strutted through our door, Sophie (my daughter ~ 10 years old at that time) fell head over heels in love with him. "No terriers" was another phrase that could often be heard resonating throughout our house as Sophie adored terriers and I found them too much like hard work! Hugo had only been with Olly for a few hours when he called Fi to break the news that there were four major problems with Hugo's heart ~ none fixable ~ and he gave him just 6 months to live. Sophie immediately offered to foster him for as long as he had, with Lizzies Barn covering his vet bills whilst we took care of everything else. Life with Hugo was a rollercoaster ride as we learned that terriers were indeed very hard work, but you just had to admire the amount of personality and feistiness that had been crammed into that tiny little body! His health took turns for the worse and then he'd get much better and then he'd dip and then he'd be fine again and we just went with it. Olly and Fi both fully supported our ethos of cramming as much life in for him as possible without wrapping him in cotton wool and just letting him do what he could manage. As we passed that dreaded 6 month mark, we celebrated. And then we celebrated again as Hugo hit his first birthday on Christmas Eve 2010. Just 3 months later, his little heart finally gave up and we said goodbye to the bravest little terrierist we'd ever met, our lives forever changed. 6 months indeed! Pah! Our soldier boy had managed to cram 11 years of life into 11 months.

Sophie and her Prince Hugo

When we lost Hugo, Fi promised Sophie that she'd find her a healthy pup ~ one way or another ~ to thank her for the incredible love and care she'd given Hugo, but Sophie had replied that she didn't want her to, that she'd be ready when another pup needed her. We had to wait 8 months for that to happen, but happen it did. 

On a cold, snowy day, Fi received a call to ask whether Lizzies Barn could take a litter of puppies that had been found abandoned in a cardboard box. "Of course", was the answer. The litter turned out to be just 4 day old tiny black and tan scraps and there were 6 of them. Sadly, within just hours of starting a handrearing regime, one little boy was lost. For the next 2 weeks Fi's life centred around the puppies and they thrived. Fi had a holiday booked over Christmas so two puppies came to us to be fostered and the other three went to another foster home together. From the start, it had been decided that if one of the little boys survived then he would be Sophie's next terrierist so she had got to name Moss at 4 days old and then just hoped and prayed until he arrived with us at 2 1/2 weeks of age ~ eyes not long open, just starting to move, tail just starting to wag. His sister, Casey (named by Jacob ~ my son) came to us to be fostered alongside Moss so that they could keep each other company until she went to a new home at 8 weeks. Sophie and I spent Christmas 2010 bottle feeding every few hours, cleaning puppies, changing newspaper and napping as often as possible! The puppies continued to thrive though and eventually it transpired that Jacob and Casey had bonded too tightly for her to be rehomed so both pups stayed with us! Moss has been to training classes with Sophie and is now a KC Bronze Citizen and Casey has attended several clicker workshops with Jacob where she has shown that she is more clever than the rest of us! Both pups (they'll always be "the puppies" even as they approach their second birthday) had been sickeningly healthy until just a few weeks after we lost Bran, when we discovered that Casey has quite a severe flea allergy. Unfortunately, the flea allergy triggered a full body skin infection and, whilst we've been managing that, we've also discovered that she has luxating patella and will probably need surgery to fix it *sigh*  It doesn't bother her though and the pair of them are like little tasmanian devils whipping through the house causing noise and chaos and laughter most of the time.

Casey and Moss

And so here we are, today, with a family of me, Jacob, Sophie, Moss and Casey plus Summer and Mika (the cats). 

If you've made it this far, you've probably started to get an idea of just how much emotional trauma we've been through in the last 8 years. We wouldn't have missed a second of any of it, because the amount of love and joy that we received from these dogs far outweighed all of the bad stuff, but our hearts are sore and bruised after loving these special creatures so very much and then having to watch them suffer and leave us after such short periods of time  :o(  

And that is where we come to the decision making. I know that my heart will never be happy without a big dog in it and I'm struggling to not have a big, dopey dog to snuggle up to. The puppies belong to the children and they are responsible for their care, training and exercise. We've worked hard to establish firm bonds between them and their children, so they are most definitely not mine, as much as I love them.

I have ~ to a lesser or greater extent ~ been involved in dog rescue for over 8 years now and I know that I have done a lot of good. We have given a permanent home to seven rescue dogs and directly helped 20 or so other rescue dogs on their way to new homes by fostering them. Indirectly, we have helped many many more into new homes. So, as I start to make plans for bringing my next big dog home, why am I not thinking about rescuing again? I would like to think that the emotional journey you've just read about will answer that question!

I want another labrador ~ a yellow boy with a black nose and black eyeliner. Bran ignited a love of the breed that dictates that it must be another labrador. The trouble is, this glorious breed is riddled with the joint problems that plagued Bran's short life and I cannot bear to watch another dog suffer as he did. I know that no guarantees can be made, but this time around ~ just this once ~ I would like to bring a puppy into our home and hearts that we know comes from healthy lines and has a better than average chance of making it into old age at my side. I want a boy that I can cherish from his first of everything as a baby to his last of everything as an old man. Unfortunately, those sort of promises don't come with rescue dogs, so I have chosen to turn my back on all I know of rescue ~ all the terrible figures of dogs being put to sleep, abandoned, waiting for homes ~ for the chance to have my special boy. I am quite sure that there will be people out there who think that I have made the wrong decision and that I am being selfish, but I feel that I have earned the right to be. I have given a lot of myself, my time, my money, my heart, my love to rescue and I am quite sure that we are not done with rescue dogs altogether yet, but right now I need to heal through a puppy that carries some hope for me.