Thursday, September 30, 2010

Great Falls


                      Sunset Report: Pitiful, pouring, precipitation

Yesterday Karen took me to Great Falls, Virginia.  At Great Falls, the Potomac River builds up speed and force as it falls over a series of steep, jagged rocks and flows through the narrow Mather Gorge. The Patowmack Canal offers a glimpse into the early history of this country. Great Falls Park has much history and nature, all in a beautiful park only 15 miles from Washington, D.C. A trading place. A place to fish. A canal and town. An amusement park and a place to discover nature. In the past, Great Falls of the Potomac has been the all of these. The park depictions at the Falls show traders navigating the rapids in their boats with goods being delivered to Washington in the 1800's. Imagine! Donny, James and I did a twelve-mile kayak paddle past a mountain castle in Belgium in fair rapids. Very impressive to get a boat of goods on the water conditions we saw tonite!!

I mentioned earlier that my daughter and I share a love of waterfalls, and whenever I can put myself in the same area as a water fall, I do. This time, though, Karen took me as I wouldn't have thought to drive there by myself. Thanks, Karen! When we left the house I thought we were going on a thirty-minute excursion to Ball's Bluff, but she faked me out. In Connecticut I love going to the water falls at Devil's Hopyard, and there's a long family history of our going there. It was often one of the day-rides I took in the Corvette, or on our motorcycles with good friends, like Beth!! Hey, you!

                                                     The Devil's Hopyard "Chapman Falls"


Legend has it that the Prince of Darkness himself has been seen sitting atop a huge boulder near the top of the falls, playing a fiddle while his minions stirred nefarious brews in the naturally formed cauldron-like potholes at the bottom of the falls. (The potholes have also been thought to be the marks burned in the rocks by the Devil’s hooves.) Native Americans are said to have used the area for rituals, further spooking the locals and adding to the mythos. Over the decades, dark shadows and phantoms have been purportedly seen moving around the woodland. In more recent times, people have allegedly experienced spirit orbs and mists, as well as strong feelings of foreboding. Others have heard demonic voices and inexplicable laughing. EVPs have also been supposedly recorded. And yes, there’s evidence that in the 18th century there was a malt house near one of the tributaries of the Eight Mile River, near which hops were grown. Hence, the “hopyard.”

When we got home, Karen broke out my old pressure cooker and made a pot roast to die for. Emma used to joke about me being married to the pressure cooker because I enjoyed it so much! I love that my family has all the stuff that was once mine. Small enough to fit in my camper/sailboat, right? YES!

Donny didn't send me flight info. Don't know what that means, but I didn't go to pick him up and we're still in Leesburg. We had tropical depression 16 open the skies over us today, so it's probably just as well that we didn't venture to Norfolk. Today is a crossword and scotch on the rocks day. I was only compelled to write this because I'm a water fall seeker and we had a great time. Thanks, Karen!!!




                                

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Editing and Revising, and Musings


                                                                   Sunset report: Wow!

In somewhat the same way my itinerary has been revamped, I have revised and edited some of my stream-of-conscious writing so that it's more what I meant to write in the first place. Nothing really major; just working out the typos and bugs. I've always taught my students that a good piece of writing is the result of evolutionary process - I didn't do any major revising today, only editing, but I expect that I will at some point in time when I'm sitting deep in the woods by myself. Right now I'm loving hanging out with Karen, Eric and Renee - Duppy is even enjoying Dexter and his puppy antics. He even got into Dex's toys and played with something other than a bisquit yesterday!!

Today is Karen and Mike's 25th wedding anniversary, and Duppy and I are taking her out for dinner to celebrate the momentous occasion. I think I can count marriages of people I know that lasted 25 years or longer on the fingers of one hand, and three of them are my band mates. Way to go guys! I tried three times with two different women over a time span of more than thirty years, but to no avail. Anymore, it's looking like it's just me and the Duppy. I've done some writing about that kind of stuff on this blog, but don't want to review here. Just celebrate. My brother-in-law added last weekend that he has been "Happily married" for 25 years; very sweet! Karen is a real catch!!! If ya don't believe me, ask Dexter!!

I'll be bouncing around Virginia for the next chunk of our road time. Hoping to catch up with the Virginia nephews, an old army buddy and, of course, my brother and whoever comes to party as he situates himself. Charlottesville to VA Beach for a week, or so, and then to North Carolina. I haven't been able to use the camper as my sis lives in a neighborhood that frowns on campers who live in front of houses, and take a dim view on campfires in the front yard. I ain't camping without a fire!

I spoke at some length to a friend who had a birthday yesterday. I'm not a big chatter on the phone, but it sure was nice to connect again after missing him throughout most of the summer and on my way out of town. Someone else said while at a party, mistakenly, they had seen Duppy and me in town, which resulted in a phone call from another friend. Thanks for calling, Mikey! Ya gotta know I wouldn't come to Connecticut and not give you, Don and Dave a jingle on the phone. No CT for us until Christmastime. See you then!

As we prepare to shift our traffic pattern from northern VA to the corridor between VA Beach and Charlottesville, I'm realizing how much I've enjoyed, and will miss, hangin' with Karen and family. We've really had a blast. My nephews are no longer kids, and the evolution of our relationships has been really enjoyable. I have seven grown nephews, one who's a youngster, and a niece with four girls of her own and one in the oven. Karen's son, Eric, and I share a love of music and guitars - he now has my prettiest one! It's been too long since I've spent time with Dave's boys - two sets of twins, sixteen months apart - and I'm looking forward to seeing you guys! Donny and I will be in touch ASAP!

The shift south will likely mean less, or little, computer writing time. See you later!!

Monday, September 27, 2010

I'm in a Very Punny Mood! Just for fun.

Some of these are retreads, but mostly very clever! If you didn't know what a cornball I am, now ya do!



 1. The fattest knight at King Arthur's round table was Sir Circumference.
He acquired his size from too much pi.

 2. I thought I saw an eye doctor on an Alaskan island, but it turned
 out to be an optical Aleutian.

 3.  She was only a whiskey
 maker, but he loved her still.

 4.  A rubber band pistol was
 confiscated from algebra class, because it was
a weapon of math disruption.

 5.  No matter how much you push the envelope,
 it'll still be stationery.

 6.  A dog gave birth to puppies
 near the road and was cited for littering.

 7.  A grenade
 thrown into a kitchen in France would result in
 Linoleum Blownapart.

 8.  Two silk worms had a race. They
 ended up in a tie.

 9.  A hole has been found in the nudist
 camp wall.  The police are looking
into it.

10.  Time flies like an arrow.  Fruit flies like a banana.

11.  Atheism is a non-prophet organization.

12.  Two hats were hanging on a hat
 rack in the hallway.  One hat said to
the other: 'You stay here; I'll
 go on a head.'

13.  I wondered why the baseball kept getting
 bigger. Then it hit me.

14.  A sign on the lawn at a drug rehab
 center said: 'Keep off the Grass.'

15.  The midget fortune-teller
 who escaped from prison was a small medium at
large.

16.  The soldier who survived mustard gas and pepper spray is now a
 seasoned veteran.

17.  A backward poet writes
 inverse.

18.  In a democracy it's your vote that counts.  In
 feudalism it's your count that votes.

19.  When cannibals ate a
 missionary, they got a taste of religion.

20.  If you jumped off
 the bridge in Paris, you'd be in Seine .

21.  A vulture boards an
 airplane, carrying two dead raccoons.  The
stewardess looks at him and
 says, 'I'm sorry, sir, only one carrion allowed
per passenger.'


23.  Two Eskimos sitting in a kayak were chilly, so
 they lit a fire in the
craft.  Unsurprisingly it sank, proving once
 again that you can't have your
kayak and heat it too.

24.  Two hydrogen atoms meet.  One says, 'I've lost my electron.' The
 other says 'Are you sure?' The first replies, 'Yes, I'm
 positive.'

25.  Did you hear about the Buddhist who refused
 Novocain during a root
canal? His goal: transcend dental
 medication.

26.  There was the person who sent ten puns to
 friends, with the hope that
at least one of the puns would make them laugh.
  No pun in ten did.

A Whole Other Schedule!



In an email from my brother Donny yesterday he invited all the guys in our brotherhood to Virginia Beach, writing that he had a hotel room on the beach and wants to party since he doesn't report in until October 16. Somehow or other, the impending dates didn't register as being just a couple days away. I also didn't know he had so much time to play until yesterday. Yahoo!

Nineteen years ago Donny and I did quite a bit of camping in Shenandoah Valley, the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Outer Banks and Virginia Beach. I don't know what is on his agenda, but hope we can find some time to re-visit some of those places. Maybe Steve and Lisa from Charlottesville can join us for a little bivouacking? Autumn on the Blue Ridge Parkway is spectacular, but I can't remember anymore if deer came into our campground on the BRP, or Yosemite National Park, or both. Like I wrote in an earlier post, I've had a really blessed life. Having deer visit my campsite is akin to a blessing. Kinda like an angel thing.

After partying in Las Vegas during the late nineteen-eighties with Donny we arrived back to our campsite very early in the morning, and dragged the blow up mattress out of the tent to sleep under the stars.  Donny peered through the darkness and thought he saw a bear next to our site! Really, there was no alternative but to go to sleep as neither one of us was in the condition to be running anywhere. I explained to him that the best thing to do would be to go to sleep so as not to make ourselves prey.

                                                 A Newfoundland in daylight

He didn't argue, so we did because there was little choice. In the morning, it turned out the next door campsite neighbors had a Newfoundland dog, which does, indeed, look like a bear. Especially at three o'clock in the morning.

Anyway, the schedule I saw us following a couple days ago is out the window as we'll be heading to pick Don up at the airport once I get his flight information. He needs to find a place to live, and deal with his household shipment from Europe, but no matter. The sad note here is that my doggie niece, Zoe, won't be accompanying us in our travels, and I'm very sad about that for Donny. For those of you who know me, I don't just accept "No!" for an answer, but I couldn't invent a solution to make Zoe's trip to Virginia  happen. And I'm really, really sorry and sad about that.

I'm looking forward to making more great memories before what will likely be Donny's last assignment as a chief in the U.S. Navy. I'm proud of you, brother!

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Harper's Ferry and Duppy's Very Fancy Pants


                                              
Sunset Report: Cloudy, gradually darkening horizon.

I recently mentioned Duppy's fancy pants, but I know that many people reading my blog won't be able to wrap your mind around how a Duppy has fancy pants. The above picture, taken by Karen yesterday, aptly depicts Duppy's fancy pants in a posterior shot replete with bull's eye. I know it's kinda too much info so maybe I'll go for a side shot next time, but I thought it was a terrific shot that shows Duppy at his foofiest. Way to go, Karen! Doggie porn.




Harper's Ferry is something that has resonated throughout my life, but with no tangible knowledge why. Karen, Mike, Duppy and I went there yesterday. It is the northern reach of the Shenandoah Valley where the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers occurs. It is more than one event, one date, or one individual. It is multi-layered – involving a diverse number of people and events that influenced the course of our nation's history. Harper's Ferry witnessed the first successful application of interchangeable firearms manufacture, the arrival of the first successful American railroad, John Brown's attack on slavery, the largest surrender of federal troops during the Civil War, and one of the earliest integrated schools in the United States. John Brown actually attacked the Federal armory to make off with rifles to arm a slave uprising he planned to lead. Not much of a strategy, and he was hanged for being stupid.


The Civil War had a profound and disastrous effect on Harpers Ferry, leaving a path of destruction that wrecked the town's economy and forced many residents to depart forever. Because of the town's strategic location on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad at the northern end of the Shenandoah Valley, Union and Confederate troops moved through Harpers Ferry frequently. The town changed hands eight times between 1861 and 1865.


I didn't know that George Washington established two federal armories - one in Springfield, Massachusetts, and the other at Harper's Ferry, West Virginia, in order to make the weapons that guarded American freedom. That the United States no longer has federal armories is telling, and I feel our American freedoms slipping away in a rush of political correctness, restrictive firearms laws and Obamamama socialist legislation. I'll stop there since I don't want to rant on my blog, except to say that the school system where I used to work in was planning on integrating autistic students to regular education classrooms and eliminating advanced classes. Maybe I'm just a dinosaur, but it seems wrong to me. Too much PC.


Karen and Mike are celebrating their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary this weekend, and I wanted to take them somewhere nice for dinner. They knew of a very nice restaurant overlooking the whole valley and Harper's Ferry, but it was closed! Rats! We went to Long John Silver's instead because Karen heard me say I'd never been after seeing a commercial that made it look good. My curiosity is satisfied, and I won't be looking for another Long John's. I had the Lobster Bites plate, which tasted more like plastic than lobster. Duppy, however, had no complaints and ate heartily and happily.

Duppy, who's never been a fan of other dogs, save Margo, has been getting along fine with both Monkey and now Dexter. Dex is a seven-month-old poodle, and while I'm not a poodle guy, I am a big Dexter fan. Ever at my feet, he does doggie things like dig in the yard, chew on sticks, fetch whatever anyone is willing to throw and looks forward to the ritual walks Karen takes him on. He slept with Duppy and me a few times throughout the past week when, during the course of the night, he ate my belt and two checks out of my checkbook without destroying the whole thing. How is it that a seven-month-old puppy removes two checks from a checkbook to munch on? I don't have an answer to that question, but I'm glad I don't have to order more checks!

Aside from peeing on stuff, Duppy doesn't really do much "doggie" stuff unless it involves bones. Well, he does have the German Shepherd "service animal" act down to a tee so that people comment on his excellent behavior. I love it when mothers struggling with rugrats ask me how I get him to behave so well.

It's all about the love.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Gettysburg

Epic Sunset at Gettysburg

Sunset report: Religious!

One hundred and forty-seven years ago Americans were facing off against each other in a four-year-long war.

625,000 people died.

Going to Gettysburg made me feel a lot like being in church.

The statements above are just what they are. My adding anything to them would just diminish them. Looking off Little Round Top into The Devil's Den, the Valley of Death, Big Round Top, and listening to the CD guide we bought at the Gettysburg National Military Park book store as Karen, Duppy and I took the driving tour was utterly moving. On our way home, Karen and I didn't say more than ten words as we listened to the incredible stories and background information on the guided tour disc, part two.

As someone who served as a soldier in the U.S. Army, I'm not certain I could convey my feelings with just words. That the war went on for four years is incomprehensible to me. Families on each side were split. Brothers fought brothers. For me, those facts are in opposition to the nexus that is me.

My Mom is a "Civil War" buff - no, more than that - "scholar" is much more appropriate, and when I spoke to her yesterday she reveled in the fact that being in Gettysburg was a lot like going to church. Yesterday's Gettysburg experience touched me in a primordial way that I'm not supposed to understand, I guess, and don't really even feel the need to. I just get it. As a soldier, I never had to go into combat but I was trained to be combat-ready, and led a platoon when I was a nineteen-year-old wearing buck sergeant's stripes in the 2nd Cavalry Regiment. I know about soldiering, so yesterday's experience was especially touching. I could tell that Karen "gets it," too. The experience that Gettysburg was about honor, valor and sacrifice brings a transgender understanding to all that is the Gettysburg battlefield. The courage, and the selflessness it takes to be a soldier in combat are only something I can imagine. And I'm grateful for that. I had army orders sending me to Vietnam, which were rescinded while I was a seventeen-year-old waiting to be out-processed for two weeks in Seattle, WA. Good thing God watches over fools.



When Karen and I got home, my family really spoiled me with a great steak dinner scorched on the grill, summer squash, sweet potatoes with lottsa butter and brown sugar, and birthday ice cream cake!! And presents!! Eric and Renee gave me sustenance for my trip, and Karen and Mike gave me an incredibly comfortable Coleman camp chair (with drink holders!) that feels more comfortable than the Ethan Allen chair I had in my former living room! My ice cream cake had "Happy Birthday" candles so that each candle was a letter! I guess when you're fifty-eight, you have to get your jollies when ya can, but I thought that was pretty cool. The sentiments on Eric and Renee's card were very sweet! Thanks for fussing on, and spoiling me you guys!!

Emma was the first to call me for my birthday at just after midnight - I know she was waiting until the bewitching hour! I wish you were twelve again, and I was home schooling you as we traveled the country! I miss you muchly, Em! Let's talk soon!!!

Duppy's blog: This was one of the most boring days ever but, thank God, we only spent two hours in the car. I learned that museums or book stores are too boring for me, and cycloramas are too loud. The best place we went today was Little Round Top, the site where some of the most ferocious fighting in all of the War of Northern Aggression against the South took place. There's something about ground that has been soaked in American blood that even one-hundred-and-forty-seven years can't erase. Doug and I could both "smell" it somehow. 


We spent quite a bit of time there, and I could tell Karen and Doug were touched by the courageous gallantry of the soldiers that once fought at this battleground. I enjoyed peeing on all the rocks and pretending to be a mountain goat. Not many doggies get to come here, but then, I AM something special!


I peeked at some of what Doug was writing, but it didn't make sense to me. The list read:


Shiloh, TN
Cold Creek
Kansas War
CSA Unbeaten for two years
McClain
Currency
Taxes
Follow the money
Union/States Rights
Freedom for All
Human Freedom


Doug is really thinking about all this and trying to make sense of it, but I think he's going to need more time. He's not sure what questions to ask and is a little perplexed by that. 


All I know is after we got back to Karen's we had steak for dinner, and everybody sang to Doug. I've never seen anything like it! Tomorrow we're going to Harper's Ferry, but I'm not sure what that is. I'll tell ya later! Time for chili, and BLT sandwiches. I'm outta here! See you later! 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Duppy's Blog: Part Cinco

Duppy in the River Bottoms Hunting Deer and Rabbits


The most exciting thing today so far has been a thunderstorm, though Doug, Dexter and I did get out for a walk where Dexter played ball. Personally, I think fetching a ball is ridiculous, but Dexter is a compliant doggie and loves the attention Doug gives him! For my part, I'm just a little jealous that Dex is too cute and really has a fix on Doug. Whenever Doug sits at the table Dexter is right on his feet, which I can understand because I don't let Doug out of my sight these days either, especially when there are thunderstorms like right now. I didn't used to be affected by them, but in the past two years for a reason I can't explain they scare me. I don't literally come apart at the seams like some dogs, er, service animals do, but I find thunder very upsetting these days.

I woke up two days in a row to find Dexter in bed with us. I'm not happy to be sharing Doug, but I guess I understand that Dex really likes us since he's not alone all day like before we arrived in Leesburg. Doug told Karen she's very lucky to have such a wonderful dog, and really, I have to agree that Dexter is something special. For a six-month-old puppy he's really smart and sweet, except when he invades my space by sniffing my lips and pawing at my face. He also likes to stick his nose up my butt, and THAT ticks me off but he's just a baby and doesn't know better than to respect my personal space. Doug is trying to teach Dex to walk on two legs for Karen. When I really want something, I can dance on my back feet for a long time while my front feet paw the air so that people know "I want!!!" Even if people have never seen that, they get it right away and feed me because I'm so cute.

We went to Cici's Pizza with Renee, Eric and Auntie Karen last night and absolutely feasted on all I could eat pizza. When we go to restaurants Doug usually hides the fact that he slips me food, but not last night and I CHOWED on cheese, pizza and pepperoni! I wasn't too interested in Doug's salad; he enjoyed it so much I thought I might want some, but in the end - no, thanks!


Doug's brother sent him a funny email showing doormats with clever things on them. These are my favorites:

1) THIS IS NOT A JOKE - If you ever want to see these people again, bring me a 5 lb. roast in a plain paper bag. [signed] The Dog
2) Our dog is not a biter, he's a humper. [we would need this one, I'm afraid... Doug says, "We don't have that kind of love, Duppy!!]
3) Well, butter my butt and call me a bisquit! Look who's here! (Emphasis added because we both  LOVED that one!)
4) I'm really glad to see you! But then I lie like a mat.
5) Go away. Come back with wine or whiskey!
6) We love our vacuum, we found God, and we gave at the office.
Note: When we get religious converts at the door we say "We're staunch Episcopalians!" Gets rid of them quickly every time, usually with a bewildered look on their faces. Either that, or Doug tells them we believe in King Kong if he feels like being a smart ass.

Well, the sun is coming out again, and it seems the thunderstorms have passed for now, thank goodness. I was actually scooped up and sat in Doug's lap for a while during all that mess. I'm a lucky dog, er, service animal! Wonder what's for dinner tonite? We had chili that Karen made two days ago, but I have to say I preferred the pizza of last night!!

"Butter my butt, and call me a bisquit! " Too funny!!! I shudder to think what Dexter would do if somebody buttered my butt. Doug says I have "Fancy pants," which you only "get" if you know me! Tomorrow marks the first full month of our blog. Doug was surprised that we've had over 2,400 visits from people in twelve different countries, and he says it's because I'm so cute and well-mannered. While that is true, I think people might be enjoying our freedom and travels. I don't know if we'll go to North Carolina, or Charlottesville next. We're waiting for Uncle Mike to come home from Rochester so we can visit before we head outta Leesburg. We were going to see him in NY, but he was in Virginia then, so we went to Niagara Falls instead.

Alrighty, all for today! Time for a little nap!

Your buddy,
Duppy

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

One of the beautiful farms I saw on my way to Virginia


It's Tuesday, which has always seemed like a funny day of the week. Now that I no longer have a schedule, work or otherwise, other peoples' schedules shadow what I remember as mine in the old days. I'm paling around with my sister, Karen, and after her workday today we're going to Ball's Bluff - the site of a battle in the war between the states. After that, I think we're going to Cici's just because we used to like to go there with her daughter and her four girls; not so much because the food is good, although it's not bad..

The link to Ball's Bluff is here: http://www.nvrpa.org/park/ball_s_bluff

I've had a couple people tell me that Duppy's posts were a high point of my blog, and they pointed me to a books entitled The Art of Racing in the Rain. I have also heard that Steinbeck wrote the novel Travels With Charley; both of these books were written from their dogs' point of view, which makes me want to read them. Last night Karen and I went to BooksAMillion in search of either one, or both of them to no avail. They were sold out of  The Art of Racing, and no longer stock Travels. Borders has at least one, if not both, so maybe after we go to Ball's Bluff we'll check Borders out.

In my blog, I've been including entries written from Duppy's perspective unaware that this seems to be a limited genre of literature. I'm willing to bet I can pick up some tips from a writer like Steinbeck, but don't know what to expect from The Art of Racing in the Rain, as the reviews were sketchy, but I'll risk buying it. Thanks, Diane!

That my Duppy seems to know more about me than I do myself isn't exactly a surprise. I took a master's level course in animal communication that was very eye-opening about the cues animals pick up on and translate for themselves. He knows by the way I get up where I'm going and what I'm going to do, and I get that he reads breathing patterns, body language and other cues I don't know I offer him, but still it's amazing to me. Apparently I'm a pretty easy read. I learned dog training techniques from Bob Burgeron back when I had Gaza, and have built on them since then. The heartbreak of Gaza's death kept me from being owned by another dog until my ex-wife insisted my daughter needed a dog ten and a half years ago. After our divorce, I ended up with the girl, the dog and the cat. She got the house.

I shared the blog info with with my Timebomb2000 friends today. Google that if you wanna know more.

Monday, September 20, 2010

The Battle of Bull Run at Manassas

Stonewall Jackson

Yesterday Karen, Duppy and I took the walking tour of the Manassas battlefield where the first Battle of Bull Run was fought, and the driving tour of the sites that encompass the second Battle of Bull Run. It was a very powerful experience, and that it affected me as profoundly as it did was a surprise. I was taught about the "Civil War" in school, but I know more about it as someone who lived in Virginia and was befriended - taken in by fellow staff members at Varina High School even though I'm a Yankee.

At first it was difficult for them to reconcile that I am a likable Yankee. In the South, the "Civil War" is called "The War of Northern Aggression," and on July fourth in Richmond before the firing of fireworks The Battle Hymn of the Republic, not The Star Spangled Banner is sung.

The story about the Civil War and abolitionists freeing slaves is hogwash. It was all about money and federalizing government power. The industrial Northern mills needed agrarian Southern cotton, but if the southern states sold their cotton directly to England they could cut the hold the North had over the South. Additionally, proponents of states' rights vs. a strong central federal government were at odds - again, largely over money vis a vis, taxes and creation of a currency that could be controlled by a central bank. Before Lincoln was even elected seven states had already seceded signaling their resistance to an overpowering federal presence. Something I agree with - we are now seeing Arizona, Montana, Utah and thirteen other states resisting the federalization of state laws regarding firearms and immigration laws which are being either ignored, or shoved down their throats - finally, they are resisting and suing the feds. You won't see these stories on the six o'clock news, but they're out there if you want to look.


I don't want to rant on my blog, but unconstitutional federal departments include:
*Department of Transportation
* Department of Justice
* Department of Agriculture
* Department of Commerce
* Department of Interior
* Department of Labor
* Department of Health and Human Services
* Department of Education
* Department of Housing and Urban Development
* Department of Energy
* Department of Veteran’s Affairs
* Department of Homeland Security

Eliminating them, and balancing the budget of America should be accomplished before America as we knew it ceases to exist. The America I grew up in is no longer recognizable. Is it time for war against federalization?

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Duppy's Blog - Part Quattro. Shots, Spa Treatment and Doings!

Auntie Karen came and woke us up very early this morning. I didn't really understand what was going on until we got to the veterinarian's office and I got a SHOT! Ouchie! A rabies shot, and the vet updated my bordetella vaccine that they spray in my nose. I hate that!! During my wellness exam the doctor said that I have a "significant" heart murmur and Doug didn't outright cry, but he did need a couple of tissues and I could tell he was very upset by that. I'm not sure what a heart murmur is, but I'm sure glad I have Doug looking out for me!

I heard Doug tell Auntie Karen just last night how he notices all the little noises I make now that I'm older - ya know, grunting and wheezing noises, like that. It was kind of embarrassing. To tell you the truth, I've been around long enough to see that Doug is getting kinda long in the tooth, too. I'm not the only one! He chuckles at me when I first wake up, but frankly, he's pretty funny, too, before he's awake enough to make his coffee. I try not to laugh at him, but it's hard not to until after I get my morning treats and greenies. Then I laugh my doggie ass off while he sucks down a cuppa java and wakes up!

                                                       I'm a woofer!!

After the vet's office Dexter and I went to the groomer's and had the spa treatment, which really made us feel good! Dexter's groomer, Miss Betsy, was very, very, nice to me so she still has all her fingers. I'm SO glad to be freshly bathed again! Doug put two new tags on my collar after our visit to Betsy - an "emergency tag" shaped like a bisquit with Uncle Dave's phone number, and a rabies tag that other people seem to think is necessary. Doug makes sure I don't get silly shots for stuff doctors try to get everyone to take. I've never once known anyone to get parvo virus, heart worms, distemper or anything like that. Doug is a little concerned about me getting Lyme disease from ticks, but he checks me over every day to make sure I don't have any bugs on me. I love that!

Right now I'm going to take a nap because later on Karen, Doug and I are going to go to Manassas where the Battles of Bull Run took place during the Civil War. Doug will probably write about that later.

Peace, out!

The Duppy

Friday, September 17, 2010

Sunset


         One of the beautiful sunsets from Wolcott, New York! Hi and thanks again Vicki and Monkey!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Wow! Statistics!!

First off, I have to explain that I'm not computer savvy and if it weren't for Dave looking after me, I'd be up a creek. Putzing on the dashboard of my blog home I discovered that in three weeks' time I've had almost 1,600 visitors from ten countries reading my blog! Holy cow! Duppy's fan base! I'm sure it's his impeccable manners and good looks!

I still don't know how to customize the page, or even if I can set the background, but I keep trying!

Pictures coming soon!

Duppy's Blog - Off to Virginia!!

                                                            Hi, Dexter!

I knew something was up Tuesday when Doug closed the camper in the afternoon before it rained again, and we crashed on Vicki's couch instead of sleeping in our camper. Sure enough, Doug and I said good-bye to Vicki and Monkey after breakfast yesterday, and Doug told me we were striking out for dinner in Leesburg, Virginia, where Auntie Karen, Eric and his long-time girlfriend, Renee, live! I was SO excited, but it was a long five hundred mile ride and took all day. It's tough being me when I have to spend the whole day riding in the truck, but as long as Doug and I are together I'm happy. Doug wasn't kidding and we had rotisserie chicken for dinner, hand-fed to Dexter and me by Auntie Karen! Yum!! Food always tastes better when I get hand fed and I can nibble it, which really makes it taste good! Doug gets exasperated when I swallow food whole, but sometimes it just tastes so good I forget to chew!

On our ride south we stopped two times to look at farms that had been deserted - the people just left them, and now nobody lives there! A big white barn, two matching white twin silos, lots of acreage and a beautiful white two-story farm house - just left behind by the people that owned them. We only stopped twice, but we saw lots of houses and dilapidated farms that people had just given up on and left during our ride to Karen's. The second time we stopped, it was because Doug couldn't believe such a beautiful farm was really vacant, but it was. There were still barn cats that lived there, but that was all. Doug was glad to see everything was still in good shape - the windows weren't broken, and there was no vandalism. It just had an empty feeling, like the ghost town we went to with Uncle Dave. Doug was puzzled by the abandonment of this lovely farm because it was only one-half of a mile from the York Street exit off of US route 15 to the Gettysburg battleground and I saw him keep shaking his head in disbelief. I sniffed out that a dog had lived there before, and I peed on all his favorite spots because that's what I do. I hope his people took him with them. I felt sorry for the cats, but they didn't like me the way Dolly does.

It's a lot warmer in Virginia than it was in New York. The low temperature here is warmer than the high temperature there, and I can tell Doug is happy about that. There were a couple of nights Doug had to cuddle me in the camper because it was so chilly in New York. Last night we slept in Auntie Karen's house because Doug said the neighbors would be creeped out if we used the camper, which I just don't understand because I just love our camper!

Last night Eric shuffled the cars so Doug could park the camper directly in front of the house, but we had to drive about a half of a mile to turn the camper around. Now, normally Doug doesn't have any trouble, but he forgot how badly he can't see at night - it took him a couple of tries before we found our way back to Karen's house pointed in the right direction. I thought it was funny seeing him squinting to read the street signs in the dark to try and find our way back. I never mind a little ride in the truck, especially when it's punctuated with comedy.

Now for some real news! Auntie Karen has an apricot-colored poodle puppy named Dexter, and NOBODY said a word about him before I got here. He's six months old, barks a LOT and even though he's kind of a spastic, he's okay. He's too happy about me being here and won't leave me alone, but he's being better today than yesterday. I had to get snarly to get him to back him off. We're both going to the groomer's on Saturday, I think. Even though I had a bath a few weeks ago I get dirty faster now that we're on the road. Like Doug says, "Ya can't be cute when you have poop on your butt!" He tries hard to keep me clean, but I make it difficult. Vicki had great woods, and I had a terrific time exploring the woods and pond at her house.

I guess that's all for now. We're going to have some nice family time, especially since Eric and his girlfriend, Renee, coo at me, are so nice to me and scratch under my collar and everything! She said to Eric that she wants to get a papillion of her own. Doug says,"Everyone ought to have a Duppy!" I think so, too.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Wet, Wet, Wet! And the Luckiest Guy in the World! Really!!!



When I woke up to the sound of pouring rain at 3:30 A.M. I knew we wouldn't be able to pull out of Wolcott today. I pulled everything out of the camper to air and dry it out as I spilled my water on the foot of bed last night. Yes, a double-barreled wetting. Fortunately, I was able to move to the other bed so I didn't have to sleep in wet. The camper is remarkably dry in the rain. It's already dry from last night's soaking so I think I'll close it up this afternoon just in case it rains tonite, and Duppy and I will crash on the couch; we can take Vicki to breakfast one more time before we take off tomorrow. Ha! Before I could even finish this blog entry the skies opened up to more thunder, lightening and torrential rain, but I closed the camper and got everything inside beforehand!!

Today after breakfast Vicki grabbed her fishing pole, baited a hook and tossed it in the pond. In a few minutes she had a fish on her line, which answered the question whether, or not, there were fish in her two-year-old man-made (Vicki-made) pond. Awesome! She has her own fish market!! Monkey loved trying to "get" the fish, whose fins managed to make Doug say "Ouch!" a couple times before we got him back in the water. Monkey escaped without being poked by fins!

Note From Em on Duppy's Blog:  "Hahahaha oh boy, Duppy, I never knew you were so articulate! That's seriously impressive! Dolly has a smaller vocabulary, but her grammar is better than yours. haha just kidding. I miss you Dad and I'll never stop laughing at Duppy's service animal costume. He does play the part well. I'm counting the days until you're back in CT... but really its never soon enough! As excited as I am for you to come back, I'm already sad for when you leave after the holidays. Its weird things are never gonna be the way they used to be. I cant believe how much things changed, and I never would have guessed we would be separated by hundreds of miles for longer than a week. Or that I wouldn't be able to take your glasses off when you fell asleep with them on, or greet you to the world each morning. I miss my dad, but you've become one of my best friends as well. Thanks Dad for dropping everything in your life and moving 8 states north just to take a chance at being my father. I'll never forget it for a second of my life. Not just any man would do that, especially when the mother wanted to raise the child independently. You never had to do anything, but you did because you loved me before you knew me or saw my face. That kind of love will fuel me through my entire life. I'm so fortunate to have you as a dad. I love you so much always. <3 Love, emelie."


Your words are so very touching they made me cry. The memories of you greeting me to the world each morning, and taking my glasses off when I'd fallen asleep with them on are wonderful ones. I had many wonderful years as a teacher, but they only served to help me be your dad, and a good provider. My life has always been all about you, and still is. I love you with all my heart, Sweetie!! You realize so much more than I ever knew you did. You are my everything.


Em, I'm never farther than a phone call or an email away. Even though I'm not in Middletown, I'm with you always and ever. If anything happens and you don't know what to do, I've set up Uncle Dave to take care of whatever it is that is plaguing you. If your troubles are more immediate than the few minutes it takes to get a hold of me, or thirty minutes for Dave to get to you, call Michael at 860-301-9721 - that's his cell, and he'll know what to do. Dave and Mike know each others' phone numbers and, in addition to me, are your knights in shining armor. You are not alone.


I am truly blessed.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Duppy's Blog: Part Deux

                                                See ya later, Monkey!

Being a Duppy is kinda like being Yoda, ya know? We just know "stuff." I can look at people and know we're close to where we're going, when Doug  stands up I can tell where he's going and what he's gonna do, I know when to keep my head down in a restaurant, when to be extra-friendly or snarly, but the funny thing, to me, is that Doug knows when I have to pee. And I'm so glad! It rained last night, so I didn't pee on my way to bed and at five o'clock this morning I was *dying!* Thank goodness Doug heard me tossing and turning to help me outside. I really can't jump that far anymore without hurting  myself. On some days I need a boost into the truck, too. Doug says it's because I'm seventy-five and that's the way it goes, but I still feel like I always did. Life's great these days - me and Doug, 24/7, and things have never been better!

We've really had a nice time hanging out with Vicki and Monkey. She has a great big yard and lots of woods with deer in them! I loved to chase the deer and rabbits in the river bottoms off Catherine Street!! The deer here only come when I'm not available to pursue them, and disappear during the daytime. Darn!

When we first got here I was standoffish with Vicki, but I think she has REALLY fallen hard for me. I love the way she talks to me and pets me. She even rubbed my tummy for me, which was kind of embarrassing as I had to roll over on my back into a rather compromising position that I'm not used to. She feeds me soft doggie food that I've only had when my Aunt Karen spoon-fed me. I'm SO spoiled, but that's okay because I spoil my people back by being the very best boy I can!!! Everybody tells Doug how good they think I am, so I have a grip on that! Yoda, remember? Vicki really enjoys that I get to go EVERYWHERE, and I'm teaching Monkey the ropes so he can be a "service dog," too! He's a fast learner, and did very well at Pet Co. last week, and Niagara Falls yesterday. He had a chicken panini, and I had a steak sandwich for lunch! Delicious!!

I don't know exactly when, but I'm sure we're taking off from here soon. Yoda, remember? I went in to a room I don't usually go in and read that Vicki is also a Naturopath in addition to being an Herbologist! No wonder she knows so much!! I don't really like herbs all that much because I'm a dog, er, I mean service animal, but she's got all that stuff down!  We have had a great time here, and Vicki has been great fun to visit. We had lots of terrific outings, rides, went fishing (I love to try to get the fish, but I let Monkey in on the fun today!), touring and sightseeing, and sunsets that Doug loves so much.  We've had a really, really, nice visit here in Wolcott, and I'm grateful for a wonderful stay and such great company, but I still really miss Uncle Dave, Colin and Emma in Middletown. Doug keeps saying Karen's name, "Gettysburg," and "Steve," and I'm not sure exactly what's going on, but I hope I get to see Auntie Karen soon. I really love her, too!!

Thanks for looking out for me, Vicki and Monkey! It was really great to meet you, and thanks for everything!!

Niagara Falls and the Beginning


It has been almost a month since I turned over the keys to our apartment on Catherine Street, and about two months since I started making my life small enough to fit in a camper/sailboat. Going to Niagara Falls yesterday put some perspective on that - winning the camper on Ebay by accident was when the light went off in my head that we were going to hit the road. Early in July, when Donny first came for his summer vacation to Connecticut, we went and picked the camper up together. That we were able to share that experience is a nice memory. Beforehand, it never occurred to me that I needed to get tags and register the camper - it wasn't until the previous owner handed me an envelope with CT paperwork that I thought, "Uh oh!" 


We hooked the camper up to the truck hoping to make it to safety without incident, and were driving down the street about thirty seconds before there was a cop directly behind me with no tags on the camper. Before I made it to DMV the following week it happened twice more - all times without being pulled over!! I didn't actually get it registered until the Friday after camping with Donny, Ty and Mark in East Killingly. That, combined with the fact the registration process took about ten minutes, seems to have been a positive omen. I was able to work the camper's operational bugs out with Donny, and have been sailing smoothly since then. There is only one thing. I haven't needed or wanted to deploy the door from its storage position, but that is the last remaining question about our little camper. I have seen it done once, and don't believe it will be too difficult. With any luck, I won't have to use the door for some time to come as our quest for the Endless Summer continues!


Me making my best pirate face!
                                            


The Rainbow Bridge


Our encore visit to Niagara Falls with Monkey and Vicki was exactly what I had in mind. We had lunch al fresco in perfect weather, then walked through the park to Prospect Point for the majestic Falls view. The last time I was there was thirty years ago to celebrate my divorce in a kind of twist, as many people go there for their honeymoons. Some people in my life have recently lost their pets to old age and illness, and yesterday I said a prayer for their peace and comfort on the Rainbow Bridge above the Falls. The story tells of a green meadow located "this side of Heaven." Rainbow Bridge is both the name of the meadow and an adjoining bridge connecting it to Heaven.






According to the story, when a pet dies it goes to the meadow, having its body cured of any illnesses, frailties and/or injuries. The pet runs around and plays with other pets, missing only one thing – the love and companionship of its owner, who is still alive on Earth. Upon the pet owner's death, on their journey toward Heaven they cross the meadow. While doing so, the pet (along with any other pets the owner had while on Earth) spots their owner and runs to greet them. Reunited, the pets and owner cross the Rainbow Bridge together into Heaven, never again to be parted. In my family we love our fur babies, and they are part of the family. Dad is watching all our babies for now. Thanks, Pop! 

Starting with our family travels and adventures in July and August makes our trip to upstate New York seem more like a continuation than a beginning. I can hardly believe that we will have been camping at Vicki's for two weeks as of tomorrow! We are commemorating the good times we've had with a lamb dinner on the grill tonite. Marsha gave us whatever the filet mignon cut of lamb is called and a jar of mint jelly, which should be just delicious! On our way home yesterday we were going to stop by the liquor store, but it was closed. Vicki said she had "some stuff," and I replied that "Girls don't have scotch or bourbon!" She quickly proved me wrong, and produced a bottle of Jim Beam within minutes of arriving home! We didn't drink it, but I love being wrong! She's a great prepper!!

It will be a couple of days before I'm able to write again as Duppy and I make our way from here heading south. Very special thanks to Vicki, Scott, and their friends, especially Marsha and Norm, who will have to go to Vicki's to read my blog as they don't "do" computers. 


Vicki and I went to their log cabin home with a large lake, too many acres to guesstimate and a thousand foot driveway for a "so long" visit. Norm designed the house and had to logs cut to build it twenty-seven years ago. Wow! 


Going to the Mennonite store, seeing the vastness of the area, the huge farms, almost endless orchards, the beautiful bays and inlets and many little shoreline communities has helped me to understand why people are willing to brave the cold to live here. Their gracious hospitality and resourcefulness have really impressed me!  So long for now!




Friday, September 10, 2010

"He's Not a Dog, He's a Service Animal!"

Ever since I posted a couple days ago that Duppy is 75 people years old, the thought has been haunting me. The last time I equated his dog years into translated human years we were the same age - kind of a funny realization at the time. My body aches and stupor prefer aspirin and caffine in the morning before functioning. Duppy gets greenies and treats to start his day, but we both start a little more slowly these days. Duppy has always been close to me, but since we started driving on some rather long trips to help him gear up for gypsyhood he doesn't let me out of his sight. We took a few day trips to Massachusetts, to Newport, R.I. for a sailing trip, two weekend camping trips and finally to Florida for almost two weeks - That's when he learned the word "shade" as a kind of a command!!

Since we've been on the road he sleeps in bed almost every night, and I can only remember once I found him konked out under the truck in the morning - blinking at me, stretching and yawning before scrambling with all four feet to an upright position with a flip of his flying tail feathers. It's really cute when they drape over his face. He used to just stand up, but now that he needs more working parts to get going I see all his feet moving. Thinking about it, I don't exactly jump to my feet the way I used to, either, and sometimes even groan when I do. Come to think of it, so does he.

Duppy and I are very good at accommodating each other, and because of that, even before hitting the road I'd been able to make his world almost as large as mine, and mine not at all smaller.When my plans to turn gypsy were formulating, I also had to make plans for Dup. I really don't like it when he has to wait in the car, and since an Endless Summer is a goal, it's gonna be too hot to leave him anywhere. He has to be able to go everywhere I do, or my world is going to be very small. What to do??

I searched on the web and found a company that makes service vests for animals. I bought red one that has "Medical Alert" prominently embroidered in white thread across the center of the vest, a patch that reads "Service Dog," and a Department of Justice photo identification card complete with a website address and phone number that fits into a clear ID window on the side. It's all very official-looking. I memorized his service ID number so that if I have to, I can head off confrontation by handing his ID over and reciting the nine digit number. I've only had to hand over the ID once. It works like a charm, and he gets in everywhere with little ado.

People don't comment on his purported extraordinary ability as a service animal, but they do comment about how very well-behaved and cute he is. Like brother Dave says, "Asking me why I have a service animal is like asking me why I'm black. You're not allowed to do that!" I actually used that line during dealings with a defiant restaurant manager that was intent on giving me a go. Shut him right down. The world is so stupidly politically correct these days, and Duppy's behavior is so impeccably proper, that the service animal bit works immediately almost without question. And so, Duppy will be able to live his years out in splendor with a lifestyle very few dogs experience. Attached below is one of the best doggie stories I've heard. Enjoy!

I have had the below piece for years, but never knew the exact origin of it until recently. It is attributed to Senator George Graham Vest during the 1870 Burden v. Hornsby court case in Warrensburg, Missouri. Sen. Vest's oratory (Below is only a portion of Sen. Vest's speech; the latter half of it has been lost to history.) won the case of Charles Burden, whose favorite dog, Old Drum, had wandered onto the property of Burden's neighbor, Leonidas Hornsby. Hornsby made good his promise to shoot the first dog that wandered onto his property; that dog being Old Drum. He did this even though he had previously hunted with the dog and acknowledged him as one of the best hunters he'd ever seen.







Burden sued Hornsby for damages. Following several appeals, the case reached the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri. Burden received an award of $50.00 in damages for the loss of his canine. The Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce and dog-lovers around the country had erected a statue of Old Drum on the lawn of the Johnson County Courthouse lawn in Warrensburg on September 23, 1958. It is said that this speech provided the origin of the phrase, "A man's best friend is his dog."





The best friend a man has in this world may turn against him and become his enemy.  His son or daughter that he has reared with loving care may prove ungrateful.  Those who are nearest and dearest to us, those whom we trust with our happiness and our good name, may become traitors to their faith.  The money that a man has, he may lose.  It flies away from him, perhaps when he needs it most.  A man's reputation may be sacrificed in a moment of ill-considered action.  The people who are prone to fall on their knees to do us honor when success is with us may be the first to throw the stone of malice when failure settles its' clouds upon our heads.
The one absolutely unselfish friend that man can have in this world, the one that never deserts him, the one that never proves ungrateful or treacherous, is his dog.  A man's dog stands by him in prosperity and Dogzpoverty, in health and sickness.  He will sleep on the cold ground, when the wintry winds blow and the snow drives fiercely, if only he may be near his master's side.  He will kiss the hand that has no food to offer; he will lick the wounds and sores that come in encounter with the roughness of the world.  He guards the sleep of his pauper master, as if he were a prince.When all other friends desert, he remains.  When riches take wings and reputation falls to pieces, he is as constant in his love as the sun in its journey through the heavens.
If fortune drives the master forth an outcast in the world, friendless and homeless, the faithful dog asks no higher privilege than that of accompanying him to guard against danger to fight his enemies; and when the last scene of all comes, and death takes the master in its embrace, and his body is laid away in the cold ground, no matter if all other friends pursue their way, there by the graveside will the noble dog be found, his head between his paws, his eyes sad, but open in watchfulness, faithful and true even in death.





Big Camp Fires Are An Extravagance



I mentioned earlier that I wanted to revisit the idea that big camp fires are an extravagance, and a regular camp fire is a luxury. Two of the times I've been in chilly weather this past summer, I was camping with my brothers but at different times.

When Donny, Tyler, Mark and I went camping in East Killingly, CT, it was rainy and a little raw at night. There was a campground rule that you HAD to buy firewood from the office because there is an invasive insect species that was wiping out trees in the area... Well, it turns out this policy is in effect in many places, which serves to generate lots of income for the camp ground owners. It also limits big camp fires to people willing to pay for the wood at the store - at $5 a bundle that means an extravagant fire can cost $20 - $30 a night for the two nights we were there. When Dave and I camped around Athol, MA, we were able to buy wood on the local economy for a good price because there weren't insect laws. The first night there found us scrounging wood around the campsite, but we still had enough for a big fire until we bought some the next day..

I've checked the USDA, National Forestry Service and Bureau of Land Management websites and was surprised how many areas are "endangered" by various insects, which serves nicely to limit camp fires by requiring the use of wood that must be purchased there - the end result is that anyone NOT buying wood commits a criminal offense, and is subject to prosecution and fines. I have contended for quite a while that the object of having so many rules, regulations and laws is so that the powers that be can make everyone a law/rule breaking criminal.

The groundsmen at the campsites regularly drove around in golf carts checking on fires - of course any bright light at a camp ground is a beacon, and leads them directly to you. In a state or national forest there are state or federal agents who are eager to issue citations, which justifies their existence. BLM requires a thirty foot clearance around the fire pit, and some state forests limit the size of the fire pit to eighteen inches in diameter! I've also learned that it is my responsibility to check and see if a fire danger warning has been posted, which can mean NO campfire!! How did I ever live to be 58 tears old without burning a forest to the ground? Oh, yeah. I used common sense.

Last evening was a bit damp and chilly - 57 degrees, so Vicki lit a fire in the fireplace, and we watched Joe Dirt. For as silly as the movie was, it was very entertaining, and had a few memorable lines. "Life is a garden, dig it?" And "Ya can't have "No" in your heart!" David Spade played an abandoned child who raised himself, and ended up telling his story to a DJ in LA. All of LA was intrigued by his story, and he became famous. Anyway, it was nice to have a fire at my feet and enjoy the movie after having a shrimp scampy dinner that we shared with Monkey and Duppy. Mesmerized by the fire, I fell asleep in front of the fire place before pouring myself and Duppy into the camper for another great night's sleep at about one o'clock.

General ramblings - Emma wrote me a wonderful message on "Duppy's Blog!" I've missed being in computer touch with her as she's been struggling with AT&T to get her internet hooked up. Thanks for a beautiful message, Sweetie! Marsha called this morning to say that she was having Norm bring us lamb chops and mint jelly! What a sweetheart she is. Errands for today: get glasses fixed, buy extra glasses, get pictures onto a disc and get yet another atlas. For some reason the two I had seem to have vanished, and the one Dave gave me isn't practical for the kind of traveling we do. Tomorrow has been reserved for going to Niagara Falls, and when I leave NY I'll head down I-81. I'll have to be in touch with Karen and Steve to see what they have on their plates before I finalize our next destination. I'm also wondering what Cyndi's travel plans are for the end of the month - I meant to call her last night. Her kitty, Buddy, had to be put to sleep last week, but I just found that out in a comment she made on my blog. So sorry for you, Cyn!

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

One Sunset I'm Not Looking Forward To

                                                                              2004

Yesterday I had to pick Duppy up and put him in the truck - it just wasn't the kind of day he could make the fairly monumental leap to the front seat of the truck. Sometimes he can still jump in on his own power, but lately that's only about half the time. Gene Weingarten wrote wonderfully about his experience with old dogs and their glories as we wind our ways through life together, and I wanted to share that with you below.

Duppy is ten-and-a-half now and the thought that he's 75 people years old, and that our time together is in the beginning stages of coming to its inevitable close kinda sticks in the front of my mind and aches. Our walks in the woods, experiences on the road in our travels together and his adoring companionship are all such incredible treasures. One of the funny things about Duppy is that HE thinks he's a German shepherd, but the fact of the matter is that he is thirteen pounds of foofiness - but that's only because he's full of bisquits! I've been trying to trim him back by a pound without success. It's funny having a dog that people just look at and either smile, or out-right laugh. Yes, he IS that cute!

For a papillion, bred as a lap dog, he is remarkably like my German shepherd, Gaza, who was a statue of an animal. People would just stop and gawk at his size and charm. His head was about four feet off the floor, and his 125 - 130 lb. body was about four feet long, excluding a very robust coffee-table-clearing tail the size of my forearm. He went to school and work with me a lot, but didn't have the unlimited free range Duppy enjoys, which is kind of ironic. To have once had a real companion guard dog as well-trained as Gaza who had to note all the "Dogs Not Allowed" signs that I just blow off with Duppy makes me laugh! A papillion "service animal." I just can't get over it, but he is a very convincing actor. Duppy is a bit more mischievous than Gaza, but he always just knows how to behave in any situation, is totally handsome/cute/endearing, a vigilant guard when camping, strong-willed, playful and he LOVES our family.

Uncle Donny, wanna get my bisquit? C'mon with your bad self!











Not long before his death, Harry and I headed out for a walk that proved eventful. He was nearly 13, old for a big dog. Walks were no longer the slap-happy Iditarods of his youth, frenzies of purposeless pulling in which we would cast madly off in all directions, fighting for command. Nor were they the exuberant archaeological expeditions of his middle years, when every other tree or hydrant or blade of grass held tantalizing secrets about his neighbors. In his old age, Harry had transformed his walk into a simple process of elimination—a dutiful, utilitarian, head-down trudge. When finished, he would shuffle home to his ratty old bed, which graced our living room because Harry could no longer ascend the stairs. On these walks, Harry seemed oblivious to his surroundings, absorbed in the arduous responsibility of placing foot before foot before foot before foot. But this time, on the edge of a small urban park, he stopped to watch something. A man was throwing a Frisbee to his dog. The dog, about Harry’s size, was tracking the flight expertly, as Harry had once done, anticipating hooks and slices by watching the pitch and roll and yaw of the disc, as Harry had done, then catching it with a joyful, punctuating leap, as Harry had once done, too.

Harry sat. For 10 minutes, he watched the fling and catch, fling and catch, his face contented, his eyes alight, his tail a-twitch. Our walk
home was almost … jaunty.

Some years ago, The Washington Post invited readers to come up with a midlife list of goals for an underachiever. The first-runner-up prize went to: “Win the admiration of my dog.”

It’s no big deal to love a dog; they make it so easy for you. They find you brilliant, even if you are a witling. You fascinate them, even if you are as dull as a butter knife. They are fond of you, even if you are a genocidal maniac. Hitler loved his dogs, and they loved him.

Puppies are incomparably cute and incomparably entertaining, and, best of all, they smell exactly like puppies. At middle age, a dog has settled into the knuckleheaded matrix of behavior we find so appealing—his unquestioning loyalty, his irrepressible willingness to please, his infectious happiness. But it is not until a dog gets old that his most important virtues ripen and coalesce. Old dogs can be cloudy-eyed and grouchy, gray of muzzle, graceless of gait, odd of habit, hard of hearing, pimply, wheezy, lazy, and lumpy. But to anyone who has ever known an old dog, these flaws are of little consequence. Old dogs are vulnerable. They show exorbitant gratitude and limitless trust. They are without artifice. They are funny in new and unexpected ways. But, above all, they seem at peace.

Kafka wrote that the meaning of life is that it ends. He meant that our lives are shaped and shaded by the existential terror of knowing that all is finite. This anxiety informs poetry, literature, the monuments we build, the wars we wage—all of it. Kafka was talking, of course, about people. Among animals, only humans are said to be self-aware enough to comprehend the passage of time and the grim truth of mortality. How, then, to explain old Harry at the edge of that park, gray and lame, just days from the end, experiencing what can only be called wistfulness and nostalgia? I have lived with eight dogs, watched six of them grow old and infirm with grace and dignity, and die with what seemed to be acceptance. I have seen old dogs grieve at the loss of their friends. I have come to believe that as they age, dogs comprehend the passage of time, and, if not the inevitability of death, certainly the relentlessness of the onset of their frailties. They understand that what’s gone is gone.

What dogs do not have is an abstract sense of fear, or a feeling of injustice or entitlement. They do not see themselves, as we do, as tragic heroes, battling ceaselessly against the merciless onslaught of time. Unlike us, old dogs lack the audacity to mythologize their lives. You’ve got to love them for that.

The product of a Kansas puppy mill, Harry was sold to us as a yellow Labrador retriever. I suppose it was technically true, but only in the sense that Tic Tacs are technically “food.” Harry’s lineage was suspect. He wasn’t the square-headed, elegant type of Labrador you can envision in the wilds of Canada hunting for ducks. He was the shape of a baked potato, with the color and luster of an interoffice envelope. You could envision him in the wilds of suburban Toledo, hunting for nuggets of dried food in a carpet.

His full name was Harry S Truman, and once he’d reached middle age, he had indeed developed the unassuming soul of a haberdasher. We sometimes called him Tru, which fit his loyalty but was in other ways a misnomer: Harry was a bit of an eccentric, a few bubbles off plumb. Though he had never experienced an electrical shock, whenever he encountered a wire on the floor—say, a power cord leading from a laptop to a wall socket—Harry would stop and refuse to proceed. To him, this barrier was as impassable as the Himalayas. He’d stand there, waiting for someone to move it. Also, he was afraid of wind.

While Harry lacked the wiliness and cunning of some dogs, I did watch one day as he figured out a basic principle of physics. He was playing with a water bottle in our backyard—it was one of those 5-gallon cylindrical plastic jugs from the top of a water cooler. At one point, it rolled down a hill, which surprised and delighted him. He retrieved it, brought it back up and tried to make it go down again. It wouldn’t. I watched him nudge it around until he discovered that for the bottle to roll, its long axis had to be perpendicular to the slope of the hill. You could see the understanding dawn on his face; it was Archimedes in his bath, Helen Keller at the water spigot.

That was probably the intellectual achievement of Harry’s life, tarnished only slightly by the fact that he spent the next two hours insipidly entranced, rolling the bottle down and hauling it back up. He did not come inside until it grew too dark for him to see.

I believe I know exactly when Harry became an old dog. He was about 9 years old. It happened at 10:15 on the evening of June 21, 2001, the day my family moved from the suburbs to the city. The move took longer than we’d anticipated. Inexcusably, Harry had been left alone in the vacated house—eerie, echoing, empty of furniture and of all belongings except Harry and his bed—for eight hours. When I arrived to pick him up, he was beyond frantic.

He met me at the door and embraced me around the waist in a way that is not immediately reconcilable with the musculature and skeleton of a dog’s front legs. I could not extricate myself from his grasp. We walked out of that house like a slow-dancing couple, and Harry did not let go until I opened the car door.

He wasn’t barking at me in reprimand, as he once might have done. He hadn’t fouled the house in spite. That night, Harry was simply scared and vulnerable, impossibly sweet and needy and grateful. He had lost something of himself, but he had gained something more touching and more valuable. He had entered old age.

In the year after our move, Harry began to age visibly, and he did it the way most dogs do. First his muzzle began to whiten, and then the white slowly crept backward to swallow his entire head. As he became more sedentary, he thickened a bit, too.

On walks, he would no longer bother to scout and circle for a place to relieve himself. He would simply do it in mid-plod, like a horse, leaving the difficult logistics of drive-by cleanup to me. Sometimes, while crossing a busy street, with cars whizzing by, he would plop down to scratch his ear. Sometimes, he would forget where he was and why he was there. To the amusement of passersby, I would have to hunker down beside him and say, “Harry, we’re on a walk, and we’re going home now. Home is this way, okay?” On these dutiful walks, Harry ignored almost everything he passed. The most notable exception was an old, barrel-chested female pit bull named Honey, whom he loved. This was surprising, both because other dogs had long ago ceased to interest Harry at all, and because even back when they did, Harry’s tastes were for the guys.

Still, when we met Honey on walks, Harry perked up. Honey was younger by five years and heartier by a mile, but she liked Harry and slowed her gait when he was around. They waddled together for blocks, eyes forward, hardly interacting but content in each other’s company. I will forever be grateful to Honey for sweetening Harry’s last days.

Some people who seem unmoved by the deaths of tens of thousands through war or natural disaster will nonetheless grieve inconsolably over the loss of the family dog. People who find this behavior distasteful are often the ones without pets. It is hard to understand, in the abstract, the degree to which a companion animal, particularly after a long life, becomes a part of you. I believe I’ve figured out what this is all about. It is not as noble as I’d like it to be, but it is not anything of which to be ashamed, either.

In our dogs, we see ourselves. Dogs exhibit almost all of our emotions; if you think a dog cannot register envy or pity or pride or melancholia, you have never lived with one for any length of time. What dogs lack is our ability to dissimulate. They wear their emotions nakedly, and so, in watching them, we see ourselves as we would be if we were stripped of posture and pretense. Their innocence is enormously appealing. When we watch a dog progress from puppy*hood to old age, we are watching our own lives in microcosm. Our dogs become old, frail, crotchety, and vulnerable, just as Grandma did, just as we surely will, come the day. When we grieve for them, we grieve for ourselves.

From the book Old Dogs, text by Gene Weingarten and Michael S. Williamson, based on a longer excerpt that originally appeared in The Washington Post. ©2008 by Gene Weingarten and Michael S. Williamson. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster Inc.











If you can... (anonymous)
... start each day without caffeine, ready to greet the world,
... get going without pep pills,
... always be cheerful, ignoring aches & pains,
... resist complaining & boring people with your troubles,
... eat the same food everyday & be grateful for it,
... understand when your loved ones are too busy to give you any time,
... overlook it when those you love take it out on you when through no fault of yours, something is wrong,
... take criticism & blame without resentment,
... ignore a friend's limited education & never correct him,
... resist treating a rich friend better than a poor friend,
... face the world without lies & deceit,
... conquer tension without medical help,
... relax without liquor,
... sleep without the aid of drugs,
... say that, deep in your heart, you have no prejudice of any kind,
                        Then, my friend, you are almost as good as your dog!
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