Heart Like a Dog

The Good, the Bad, and the Oh My God of living with dogs!

  • Home
  • About
  • Sampson
  • Delilah
  • Contact
  • Community Page

West Virginia Backwoods Hood-rat

May 14, 2014 By Jodi

Warning: Rant ahead.

Oh yes I will.

Oh yes I will.

Last week I came as close as I’ve ever come to going West Virginia backwoods hood-rat on someone because of their off-leash dogs.

Here’s the scene.  Delilah and I are casing walking the neighborhood.  As I approach a house, I see a small brown head peeping out at me.  Just like little Ernie from FRANKly and ERNESTly speaking. 

Frankie and Ernie - FRANKly and ERNESTly Speaking

Frankie and Ernie – FRANKly and ERNESTly Speaking

Except this isn’t Ernie (and he wasn’t wearing bunny glasses.) Then I see another dog.  I pull Delilah in just a tiny bit closer, she’s paying no mind whatsoever to these dogs.  I hear the woman call one of the dogs, “Eli, Eli come here!”  I turn.  The little dog that looks like Ernie, is steadily, stealthily, coming at us.  Not barking or growling, just a dog on a mission.

The woman says, “Oh my God!  He’s going after her.”

At which point I turned around and snarled, “She will go after him!”  As if on cue, Delilah turns around, hair up and says, “RAR, RAR, RAR” which is dogspeak for “Get the woof away from my Mama.” Because I’m pretty sure she’s reacting to me reacting.

I spin my head forward urging Delilah to move away from the dog, but when I look ahead, here comes the other dog!  We’re trapped, being stalked by two weiner dogs, one from the front and one from the rear.  My heart is racing, I’m not sure what to do.  I reach around to my back pocket fumbling for my pepper spray when I realize those few seconds might  very well mean the difference between us getting away and a horrible altercation.  I urge Delilah to move faster and I yell over my shoulder, “GET YOUR DOGS!”

Delilah and I turn the corner and I hear the woman yell, “Sorry!”

The. Very. NEXT. Night. 

The next night Delilah and I head up the hill.  From about two houses away I see a small black bundle in the road, barking it’s fool head off.

Are you freaking kidding me? I say to myself as I turn around.  I look back and the small dog has run off.  Delilah and I turn back around and as I approach the area where we saw the dog, I see a woman working in her yard.  I call to her, “Is it okay to walk past?   Your dog won’t come after me?”

She indicates a pug sitting on the front steps and says, “Her? No.”

I say, “Well I saw a black dog just a moment ago.”

“That’s their dog,” she said pointing towards the house next door, ‘They just open the door and let it out, (don’t even get me started on this) he comes over and poops in my yard.  It’s not friendly,” she adds almost as an after thought.  

Great.  Just fucking great.  There’s a mean little dog with a Napoleon complex on my street.

I’ve worked super hard with Delilah to help her not react to other dogs.  Just the other day as we walked past a house, the garage door opened and out came a dog, who as soon as she saw Delilah started barking and running around like a nut.  Delilah gave her the dog equivalent of a raised eyebrow and turned to me for her cookie.  **Random useless thought…I call this look “the Legolas”   Legolas is an Elf in The Lord of the Rings and he rarely shows emotion, but sometimes he gets this quizzical look on his face and sort of raises his eyebrow. **End Random useless thought that is not relevant to this post.

I am the peeper, a sweet chocolate seeker.

I am the peeper, a sweet chocolate seeker.

I’ve also worked her hard on the dog in the e-fence who likes to peep at her.  There used to be two dogs there, the peeper and the posturer, but I haven’t seen the posturer in a while.  Still you can tell she’s watching for it as we approach the house and I usually just pull out a cookie and hold it in my hand as a redirect and we sail past it.  Except for the times she tries to get in front of me (but that’s a rant for another day.)

Back to the subject at hand.  I called the dog warden because my concern is one day I will not be able to prevent an altercation and I’m concerned that Delilah is going to be labeled as an aggressive dog and she is not.  I’m almost 100% sure she is reacting to me, who is freaking out that she will react.  I can change this.  It will take some work on my part, but I can do it.

Animal control did assure me in that situation, if Delilah (who would outweigh the dog by 60 pounds) were to hurt the dog, as long as she was on leash, licensed and up to date on shots, she would not be in trouble.  But that little dog very well could be.  

This is serious business people and one we’ve been writing about for what seems like forever, how do we get this message across?  It’s not just the dog that is being approached that is at risk, but the approaching dog could be injured or worse!

My next question is, what makes Delilah a target for these off-leash dogs?  But that my friends is a question (and quite possibly a ran) for another day.

Rant over.

 

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Dogs, Uncategorized Tagged With: Delilah, Humor, Life With Sampson And Delilah, Off-leash encounters

Sampson’s Saga Continues

May 12, 2014 By Jodi

As I mentioned in Friday’s post, Sampson’s X-rays looked good.  The surgeon felt his Psoas muscle and Sampson turned around quickly, which indicated the muscle was tender.  The surgeon placed Sampson on some Gabapentin and wants to recheck him in two weeks.  He’s not ruling out a meniscus injury, but he wants to try the Gaba and see if it works.  I dropped Sampson’s walks down to about 15 minutes twice a day and am going to try and fit some cavaletti’s in when I can.   

On Saturday Sampson had his Physical Therapy and I shared all of this with the therapist.  What I took from that visit is she feels because of the way Sampson is ‘loading his knee’ that it very well could be a meniscus injury and this tosses me right over the freaking edge.

The biggest issue is I don’t want him to have surgery again.  First off, the meniscus surgery means he will have bone touching bone, which I think must be very painful.  I mean, they replace people’s knees when that happens, right?

Also, we are seven weeks into a twelve week strict limitations recovery.  In two weeks we will be three weeks away from (hopefully) having some restrictions lifted and Sampson getting back to enjoying more of his life.  If surgery is suggested it will probably be scheduled within a week or two, which puts us right on the verge of finished.

The therapist says that some dogs have the meniscus surgery and turn the corner and recover quickly, but how do I know that will be Sampson?  How do you know it’s the right thing to do?

But the bigger question is How.  HOW can I put him through this again?  How can I ask him to start over?

Oh Mama, you worry so much.  I thought you were trying to be more like me?

Oh Mama, you are such a worry wart.  Don’t cross the worry bridge until you have to.

I’ve been struggling with this since Saturday and Saturday night I decided I’m putting my faith in a higher power.  I know some people do not believe in God, and I’m not here to sell you differently, if you believe awesome and if you don’t, we’re still cool.  But I believe.   And I believe in the power of prayer and the power of positive thinking.  So every night when Sampson and I lay down to sleep, I lay my hand across his leg and I pray for healing.   If you believe in the power of prayer, I sure would appreciate you keeping Sampson in yours.

Do any of you have any experience with a dog having ACL surgery and then needing meniscus surgery?  Or have any of your dogs had meniscus surgery?  If any of you can share your experiences, I’d certainly appreciate it.

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Health Related Tagged With: ACL Surgery, Health, Life With Sampson And Delilah, Sampson

I Always Feel Better After I Talk to MY Vet

May 8, 2014 By Jodi

Yesterday was a rough day.  Tuesday Sampson started keeping his leg up when he was inside.  When he’s outside he walks, but inside, he’s been a three-legged dog again.

He had physical therapy yesterday and the therapist said he’s not progressing, she also said she felt something ‘clicking’ in his knee and his hip is tight. I tried to get her to tell me what she thought, but she just kept saying “let’s wait until he sees Dr. Leshem again.”  He’s slated to see him tomorrow for his six week X-rays.

She also said, it’s not fair, you get some owners who do everything right and the dog still has problems, while there are other owners who don’t do anything and the dog recovers in a snap.

It’s emotionally, physically, psychologically and financially draining.  I’m totally exhausted.

To top it off,  Sampson’s been at it again.  By this I mean, he’s back to licking himself to the point where he’s worn the fur off.  And it’s not just one spot this time, in fact he has a couple of spots on each front paw.

This is his paw.  This is his paw with lick granulomas.  Any questions?

This is his paw. This is his paw with lick granulomas. Any questions?

I had a call in to my vet to talk about adding some Glucosamine to his diet so naturally I ran all of this by her.  All I have to say, is I always feel better after talking with my vet.  She’s just so awesome.

First she reassured me the surgery that Sampson had, has a very low rate of failure.  She’s seen some screw back out sometimes, but it’s a quick and easy fix.

She said there’s a muscle that runs under the spine called a Psoas muscle, it is a very deep muscle that runs from the spine to the chest and she’s seen dogs who have had the ACL surgery end up straining the Psoas muscle, so if the X-rays show no issues with the surgery sight, have the Dr. check the Psoas muscle.

She is less concerned about the lick granulomas, as he’s more than likely very stressed at this point, with all his restrictions and the changes in his life and routine.  She said let’s get him feeling better, and then we’ll worry about the granulomas.

Oh and yes, let’s add 1500 Mg of Glucosamine and 1,000 Mgs of MSM to his diet. 🙂

See what I mean?  I always feel better after I talk to my vet.

All I want is to have my life back to normal.  Is that too much to ask?

All I want is to have my life back to normal. Is that too much to ask?

This is Barks and Bytes Blog hop hosted by 2 Brown Dawgs and Heart Like a Dog, the blog hop for everyone. Grab the badge and join the fun!

Heart Like a Dog

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Blog Hops Tagged With: ACL Surgery, Health, Life With Sampson And Delilah, Sampson

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 107
  • 108
  • 109
  • 110
  • 111
  • …
  • 277
  • Next Page »

About Jodi

jodiHi, my name is Jodi. Thanks for stopping by and checking out my blog! I have all kinds of fun writing about my two crazy pups, Sampson and Delilah. Find out more!

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Let’s Stay Connected!

  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Heart Like A Dog

Heart Like A Dog

Products We Love

Heart Like a Dog reader's receive a one time 25% discount when purchasing. If you do purchase, we thank you as we receive a small commission. Use code HeartOff

Creative Commons

Creative Commons License
Heart Like A Dog by Jodi E. Stone is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.heartlikeadog.com.

Recent Posts

  • Dearest Delilah
  • Happy 17th Birthday in Heaven, Sampson
  • My Darling Delilah
  • A Year Without You
  • Six Months of Missing You

Recent Comments

  • Madison on Dearest Delilah
  • Ducky & Bogie's Mom on Dearest Delilah
  • Sue on Dearest Delilah
  • Brian Frum on Dearest Delilah
  • Cat and DOG Chat With Caren on Dearest Delilah

Copyright © 2025 · Dynamik Website Builder on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in