Sunday, April 29, 2012
Stand In
The weather has been so drab this week-end that I have not taken many pictures, so Picasso's rendering of his Wiener dog, Lump, will have to stand in.
Hope the sun comes out soon!
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Small Miracles
Rocco's story began with many obstacles, some harder than others, but one by one they are fading away. When he first came to the Dachshund Rescue, he was so unhappy he would not eat and he was very thin. The fabulous Wiener Dog Whisperer got him to eat with the aid of a mixture of treats and food. We used that same method when we first brought him home and he has gained some weight.
Little by little, Lily (who excels at eating) has been teaching him how to eat like a real dog. He has been eating without the mix of treats in his food for about a week now, but only when we encourage him and I have been wondering if that would always be necessary.
I guess not!
Today he went into the kitchen and barked for me to come in! He has not done this before. When I got there he was fixed on his bowl and kept looking at the bowl and then at me (kind of like..."hello, how clear do I have to be with you?"). So I got some food into that bowl and he ate it up. We are happy with small miracles, here.
Little by little, Lily (who excels at eating) has been teaching him how to eat like a real dog. He has been eating without the mix of treats in his food for about a week now, but only when we encourage him and I have been wondering if that would always be necessary.
I guess not!
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Resume Normal Breathing
I’m so happy to be home! Home is good and seems like we have had Rocco
forever. It’s hard to believe that just
two weeks ago he joined our little family, he is so firmly ensconced in our
hearts. Today is a trifecta of happiness
as it is sunny, the Mariners are on and Rocco is here.
We are really enjoying how Rocco’s personality is emerging -
so fun to watch. He loves his toys, but
is good at sharing them with Lily. He
likes moving all the toys from one place to another – one by one. First he
moved them all to his bed, today he has moved them all out on to the deck.
I wonder if we will be able to teach him how to pick them
up?
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| A job well done. |
Happy Picture Sunday
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Saturday Afternoon
Sitting here watching the Sharks play the Blues in the
Stanley Cup Playoffs, doggy on my lap.
It’s just the best. Happy times with a pup.
Watching the sharks play is, in some way, a way to stay
connected to my son-in-law Jesse, because he and our daughter are far away (although
watching grown men chase pieces of vulcanized rubber with big curved sticks - while
skating - is always fun). Actually “playoffs” in almost any sport is
interesting – but this is more so because is keeps me connected to Jesse while he
is off in the wilds of the Bay area saving people from the evils of the super ego,
ego and id. While Jesse is honing his
doctor skills, Julia is breathing cultural life into the youth of tomorrow – so
proud of them - but we miss them so much.
Go Sharks!
Home again, home again, digity dog!
Got home from my meeting, yesterday afternoon. I enjoy this professional group so much and
it was a great conference, but I hated being gone all week. My homesickness was worse than usual missing the
Roc-ster so much. He was outside in the
backyard when I got home and when I went down into the yard he just zoomed
across the grass and about knocked me over.
Guess he missed me too. Happy
Sunny Saturday!
Friday, April 20, 2012
Really?
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Separation Anxiety
I am at a meeting all this week in another city and I am
away from my sweet Rocco-boy. Sad! So, I am reduced to looking at his pictures -
when the presentations lag.
When I look at his picture my hearing fades out and the
speaker starts to sound like Charlie Brown’s teacher – Wah Wah Wah…(well, okay
that might have happened anyway). My
blood pressure and attentiveness decrease as my happiness goes up. Here is Rocco’s first little slide show:
Sunday, April 15, 2012
The Wiener Dog Whisperer
One of the central figures in Rocco’s rescue odyssey, is the
woman who runs the NW Dachshund Rescue. I
will call her the Wiener Dog Whisperer.
This is how I think of her, anyway, as I have never met anyone so in
tune with the idiosyncrasies of this breed.
Beyond her incredibly big heart, she is also a kind of wiener dog training/retraining
wizard. Anyone who has tried to train a
Dachshund, even as a puppy, will understand that RE-training a Dachshund is a task tantamount to teaching a small
child to do a backward summersault, while reciting the alphabet with a mouthful
of marbles. Her skill at retraining
Dachshunds, that have had some kind of abuse or neglect, defies description. Even my chronic hyperbole doesn’t really
capture it. Her love and devotion to
these rescue dogs plus her skill - make her extraordinary.
She is also good with the humans who sometimes lead with
their hearts rather than their heads, when it comes to adopting dachshunds. During the process of figuring out if we were
the family for Rocco, I marveled at how she managed to be compassionate yet
very clear with the boundaries – for the doggie. I couldn’t do it –it would be too easy to give
in to the wants and wishes of the would-be-adopters, just to place the dog (and
because I have a neurotic need to please).
The Weiner Dog Whisperer is committed - not to just placing dogs, but placing
them in the very best home - for them.
Placing them into homes that will last forever.
The day we arrived to meet Rocco there were 20 dachshunds
running around the place. Two that permanently live there and 18 waiting for
adoption, they were all shapes, sizes and colors – with a range of issues. It was so cool. I think of her rescue as a “free range” rescue,
in that the dogs are not kept in kennels.
They live with the Whisperer and her husband as a pack, and all the
training takes place in the milieu. Her
love, treats and consistent discipline work a kind of magic on dogs that have
been hurt and neglected.
I won’t say too much about Rocco’s former home. In reality, we don’t know much and the
whisperer is very strict about never giving out identifying information for either
party in an adoption. It’s just as well,
as the things we do know make me angry, and what happened could easily have
ruined a good dog, if not for the swift and significant retraining he received
from the wiener wizard.
When he arrived at the rescue, Rocco was biting, hiding and so
unhappy he didn’t want to eat. He
couldn’t trust people or the environment.
When we got him, after six weeks with the Wiener Dog Whisperer, the
biting was on it’s way out and he was eating with the help of treats, though he
was still hiding some. We have had him a week and though it does take patience,
his rehabilitation is going well. We are
continuing the instructions we were given and Lily helps a lot, as she is an
old hound who knows the ropes around here. Rocco is very social with us – though
sometimes still scared, he is eating with Lily like a real dog and treats are
only needed for training. The behaviors
he learned - to survive - in his old environment are slowly receding.
What the Weiner Dog Whisper did with Rocco was a marvel, and
the result is that a gentle being who was thrown away by a family – and likely
would have been euthanized for the nipping alone, now has a new life. A life that is happy, healthy and
joyful. He is a dog that goes quickly to
delight, who loves being loved and is getting more comfortable with being handled. He eats plain old dog food when it is
offered, doesn’t hide at all and loves to play with his toys. That change was affected in six weeks. It is a miracle made possible by one woman’s
devotion and we will be forever grateful.
Cute Picture Sunday
This was a big week for Rocco. He has been working hard to adjust to our home, new rules and the alpha dog, Lily. He is doing well - though there are still issues to be dealt with - and we are pleased with how he is handling the transition. Here are some pictures from the week.
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| Rocco and Lily in conversation |
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| Hello there |
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| Thinking |
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| Are you coming with me... |
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Learning To Conquer...The Snake
| Rocco is settling in and today he got a new toy - Snake. There are
actually two snakes (one for each of the two dogs) but they are virtually the same and Rocco treats them as one. Today, snake was the
center of the universe! . ![]() |
| Snake was taken to the yard |
![]() |
| To be conquered |
![]() |
| This is my Snake! |
![]() |
| Bringing Snake back in |
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| The struggle |
![]() |
| Conquered |
![]() |
| So proud of myself |
![]() |
| Snake Whisperer |
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| Poor ole snake |
Friday, April 13, 2012
You Can’t Rescue A Dachshund With A Prius
I have no idea what the woman who runs the Dachshund rescue assumed
about us when she decided that we were the right home for Rocco. All the questions she asked of us were,
appropriately, about our fitness as “doggie owners”. She certainly never asked about the fitness of
our vehicle to travel to the rescue site and we certainly never thought to ask
if a Mars Rover would be necessary to get there.
She knew by our address that we lived in the city and we
knew she lived in the country, but we didn’t really give it a second
thought. I should have started to wonder
when she sent the final okay and told us we needed to use her directions to get
there. This was true, she said, because
GPS wouldn’t work, and that there was no cell service near the rescue. Perhaps
I didn’t give it a thought because there is no cell service in the building
where I work – in the middle of the city. Or it might have been that we were still just focusing
on the things we needed to do to get ready for the dog - at the house. I don’t know, but in retrospect we should have
thought to ask more about where we were going.
Just for the record, when people tell me “your GPS won’t
help you here”, I believe them. My
experience with digital cartography has been frustrating at best and it seems
as though the people mapping most areas have likely never interfaced with an
actual car. Thus, we took her at her
word and used the directions she sent.
However, my brain didn’t really trip to the fact that we were taking a
trip to the wilderness.
And wild it was. Maybe she knew instinctively that we could
take care of ourselves or maybe it was some kind of a test. An unspoken gauntlet to examine our
worthiness as wiener dog rescuers; perhaps a type of merit badge examination for
empty-nest, city-dwelling dog lovers. It’s
hard to say. At any rate, her directions
started about a half-mile out of the last city we came to. We turned off the highway and so began an
odyssey worthy of a Humvee! After the
first road, all the rest were - by turns - mud, gravel or a combination of
both. One three-mile stretch was clearly
designed as a suspension test for secret military vehicles. It is clearly impossible to rescue a wiener
dog in a Prius, a regular sedan, or any kind of vehicle driven by reasonable
rational adults.
Fortunately, I drive a Jeep!
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
National Pet Day
I am home late from rehearsal tonight, but Rocco won't let me go to bed until I mention that today was National Pet Day. He reminded me by grabbing Lily's "reindeer" and shaking it so hard it flew through the air and hit me in the head! It was very exuberant conquest.
It's Different Here
The Unexpected Happens…How a cup of coffee and a restaurant fire equal a dachshund.
One morning, a few weeks after Cecil
died, we were drinking coffee and watching the morning news, when a story came
on about a fire at a local restaurant. They interviewed one of the owners
and I thought she looked like a local woman who runs a pet rescue. It was
confusing as this person was a restaurant owner and not identified as
the “dog rescuer” we knew. Being the
information junkies we are (and unable to tolerate confusion), we both quickly
went online to figure out if the person on television was, indeed, the pet
rescuer.
No big deal, just interesting and an
“it’s a small world” moment. One of our
friends had gotten her dog from this woman’s rescue and the woman also works
with our vet. Who knew she also had a restaurant? We didn't...so
it's an interesting small world and the story should end here.
Right?
Well… not so much.
The news played on and while we were continuing to drink our respective coffee's, Laurel was on the woman’s dog rescue site - looking at Dachshunds. Again, this could have been the end of the story because there really weren't any young dogs and her rescue is expensive – our friend’s dog cost $500.00. So, just looking –aren’t they cute – no big deal.
Well…not really.
The unique thing about this woman’s rescue website is
that her site functions as a kind of regional clearing house for pet
adoption. It’s not just dogs from around here – it’s dogs from everywhere
in the northwest and Canada, literally hundreds of dogs of all breeds. As the morning wore on, we were on all kinds
of sites looking at pictures of little Doxies in need of rescue. Again, just looking, really - just
playing (like a pyromaniac plays with fire). We were firmly resolved not to
get another dog for a while – for any reason.
We had made this decision for a number of good reasons.
Well…so much for reason…Suddenly there
was Rocco. He had just been put up on the Spokane Dachshund Rescue site.
This was the description we read: This tiny cutie is Rocco and he is in rescue because the kids were too much at his last home. He is doing great here and likes us and company so we know he will make someone a nice boy in his new home. I will be confirming his age (2 years) and posting here. But I had to share his cute photos. Rocco is about 9 or 10 pounds at most so a true mini. Minis do not stay long so if you have a play buddy and a fenced yard then we want to hear from you.
To make a long story - even longer - we talked about it and both said no (we were firm, you know), and went about our day. I cleaned the house and Laurel went out with a friend. When they came back, we were all sitting around and looking at his picture, again. Well, I don’t care how firmly resolved a person is – one can only resist absolute beauty so long – so Laurel said (wait for it…) "well, go ahead and email them".
So I sent an email, describing our
experience with Cecil and Lily and our dachshund friendly home. I imagined that
there would be many many people in front of us waiting to adopt such a
beautiful little dog and didn’t think we really had a chance. They emailed us back within an hour, however, and
described more about the dog's past and his issues. It was not a simple
situation, because Rocco had been mistreated in his former home and had come to
the rescue nipping and snapping when frightened. The woman who runs the rescue assumed that
this would cancel our interest in Rocco and she offered to show us some other
dogs she had ready for adoption who had “no issues”.
Well…she didn’t know us, yet.
We emailed her back and ask some more
questions. She emailed us back and ask
us questions, about our home, our yard, and about lily. It is quite a process to adopt a dog - I had
no idea.
At this point, we were tired (this has
taken all day) so, not knowing what else to do, we decided to pray. I prayed for the decision to become clear to
us - Laurel, (being spiritually superior) prayed for “whatever was best for the
doggie” to happen. We said Amen and
agreed that we would simply wait. I
expected that we would not hear back from the woman until morning at the
earliest.
Well…I didn't know her, yet.
Maybe 90 seconds after amen, the woman
emailed us back and said she thought we would be the family for Rocco.
But wait, there’s more!
There was one additional problem to
solve. We were headed to San Mateo to
see Jesse and Julia, the next week. It
would be nearly two weeks until we would be able to pick up the doggie, far
longer than the rescue was used to waiting.
I really thought timing might be the deal breaker on the situation, but
the woman was very gracious. She agreed
to keep him until we could drive to Spokane and would continue her “boot camp”
working to help him learn to trust again.
We agreed to pay up front (non-refundable) – not yet having met him.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Dragin' The Fox
Rocco loves Fox. Fox is longer then Rocco - but is no match for Rocco's tenacity and courage. Fox is dragged from he deck to the yard - the process is repeated over and over.
Fox thinks Rocco is a drag.
Fox thinks Rocco is a drag.
Morning Pictures
Rocco seems to be letting me know he would rather be sleeping then posing. Note: he has pulled all of his toys into to bed with him.
Monday, April 9, 2012
A Word About Lily
Lily is our twelve-year-old dachshund. We use to say that Cecil was our dog and Lily was his dog. Where Cecil was noble, Lily was comical and they were perfect companions for one another. Often it felt like they were leading some kind of parallel life with us - letting us in on occasion. As Cecil became more and more ill he slept a great deal of the time and Lily matched him. As he slowed down so did she and her feisty comical nature was significantly blunted.
Since Cecil has been gone, Lily has slowly recovered some of her silly nature. It has been good to watch her want to play. It is going to be interesting to see how she reacts to HER new dog, Rocco. Today I saw some of that as they were hanging out in the yard together. The pictures below are lily playing in the yard.
Since Cecil has been gone, Lily has slowly recovered some of her silly nature. It has been good to watch her want to play. It is going to be interesting to see how she reacts to HER new dog, Rocco. Today I saw some of that as they were hanging out in the yard together. The pictures below are lily playing in the yard.
Pictures From Today
This was Rocco and Lily's first full day together. They are doing well and starting to get to know each other. The old girl does have to let him know who is boss from time to time.
When The End Is The Beginning
Rocco’s story began, as stories
sometimes do, when another story ended. His
entrance into our lives was facilitated by seemingly random and unexpected
events, but the initial event was one that we expected and dreaded. We lost our beloved Dachshund - Cecil. He was our first Dachshund. Cecil was a kind, loving soul and his arrival
heralded the birth of our love affair with doxies. He was also the genesis of a great deal of
healing for our family, for which we will always be grateful to him. Our years with Cecil and then Lily, who came
two years later, were filled with joy.
During these last couple of years Cecil
started to decline, the ravages of old age simply taking their toll on his body. He made a couple of remarkable comebacks and
we were grateful for each one, but by late 2012 he had started his final
descent. It was difficult for all of us.
He passed away in early March and while
we were relieved that he was at peace, we were heartbroken (link to the full tribute of Cecil's life http://freepdfhosting.com/ 94b2228158.pdf)
It was a trauma to help him pass and
not easy to deal with the loss of a friend who had been with us for Fifteen
years. After he died, we decided not to get
another dog for a while. We were firm in
that decision. Really firm, but the universe had other
plans, as you will see – and the story continues.
Here We Go!
Hello and welcome to The Rocco
Dairies. Discover here pictures,
updates and excerpts from the life and times of Rocco McGraw. It is possible that other ravings and ruminations may be presented, but the main intention of this page is simply to document the experiences of one or two little Dachshunds.
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