HAPPY CHRISTMAS 2019!

Awww – how cute!  Maybe she thinks Alice is Santa’s helper.  Maybe she’s looking for treats in her hand.

Look closer!  Alice is carrying a CAT!

Naughty or nice is still one of her biggest decisions in town, inspired by whether that crazy black cat may appear from nowhere in an instant!  This is why she likes to walk down a certain street.  And now, instead of one crazy black cat, there are two!  Until a couple of weeks ago – there are two more who run through the park, and one who thinks he can sneak-attack a squirrel!  We’re still watching our backs.  Banner has earned her good girl points.  That poor cat hasn’t made it to the nice list yet!

At home, there is one cat to chase, and he will start the race, and there is one who is her buddy, step-by-step, especially when winter arrives.

Wishing all our four-footed friends extra snuggles and a bag full of treats!

Happy Holidays from The Bigfoot Club!  Best wishes for 2020!

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Fall Camping 2019

We arrived in the fall rain, cool and soaking. Usually, this occurs toward the end of a camping trip, as we pack wet gear. The rain had begun early on the route, and when we checked the weather radar, the storm was moving along northeast with most of it covering our drive and the outer edges reaching our camping spot. However, it rained all night and for a while early the next morning.

We had stopped for gas and a chance to pick up any forgotten necessities about 2/3 of the way along our route. As we pulled away, with the forecast showing 32 that night, I said that we had better go back and get a small electric heater. Greg said, “OK, but I’m not hooking up the electricity if it is still raining.” We carry what we refer to as a power panel with us for trips, one that must be connected to the power service to provide electricity to the RV (our Bigfoot Club Promaster conversion).

This may be the first time the temperature drop had approached freezing for the fall. Later, we learned from a neighbor that the thermostat on his porch reached 27. Our favorite camping area is in a valley in the Ozarks, where colder air drops in and reduces the expected low.

Par for our camping trips, we arrived late, this time early at dark. The rain had stopped so Greg connected our service. The heat on the newish RV air unit wasn’t working, so we were thankful for a backup. We settled in and adjusted the thermostat so the air was chilled but not cold. This is a usual compromise of living with Newfs, but we also prefer this for camping weather.

The next morning, Greg began assembling the fire pit. He took greater interest in the architecture, building a shape like an igloo with a front porch. The “porch” was actually a pit on the same level as the fire, and the entire pit was lined with two rows of large rocks. He was planning to use the extension for dragging coals from the fire to make an area where the skillet could be placed. While he worked on this, I made breakfast using the microwave, and the next few days, he made breakfast on the fire pit.

Banner loves camping, and she woke up with full enthusiasm. A camping trip AND cold weather – how much better could it get? She couldn’t wait to go to the swimming hole, but seemed confused about where the water went. It was a dry creek bed. While we camp in this area, she gets more “free rein” than in other areas, with no close neighbors. So while she was running back and forth, she discovered a small pool of remaining water and dived in, then she began drinking. I heard Greg shouting and the two of us ran toward her. Non-flowing water used by wildlife can be a source of fatal illness for a dog, even with vaccination. I spent the next few days watching her carefully, but not carefully enough. One time while she was out and I was in the RV, she found a ripe, nasty pile of cow manure. Our neighbors had repaired their fence, but we had already run one cow back home, then a sow.

From Banner’s perspective, this was an enticing aroma, one to wear proudly, and the riper, the better. Fresh piles aren’t nearly as interesting. She wriggles and writhes and shoves her head and neck into the pile. It’s nearly impossible to teach a Newf to leave nasty stuff alone, about as difficult as it is for someone who chews tobacco to give up that habit – more difficult than giving up smoking. It is in her nature, and all you can do is try to prevent an encounter with supervision, or fencing. But camping in this area is a place of special freedom, with no fences. So we were left with bathing a Newf using limited water. Fortunately I’ve had a lot of practice with bottle baths, at dog shows and for previous Newfs. One compelling part of this aroma is that it lingers, like skunk odor, and it is as difficult to remove.

It was too early and too cold when she found her prize, so her bath had to wait. Meanwhile, I had a cup of coffee. Banner came up joyfully to be hugged and petted more than once, to each of us. This was a joy that we couldn’t share, so her affections were refused, to her disappointment.

After the bath, she was much more huggable, and we went for a walk down the road to the spring. There she found a larger pool of water that flowed to an underground stream, and she had fun getting wet all over again. Along the walk, which follows a creek bed, we found some interesting rocks. As with the plant and animal diversity, there is a great diversity of types of rocks in this area, and the flowing water of flooding creeks erodes the rocks into interesting artwork.

Back at camp, we sat beside the fire, listening to the crackle and watching the grey color of the ash migrate up the burning piece of wood, showing crevices of glowing red through cracks as the smoke moved toward the horizon, then circled back to our chairs. It is a mesmerizing way to relax.  While at camp, all clothing smells roasted.

We had brought a book to read, as we do on some travel, with each of us taking turns reading chapters aloud. One of our favorite authors has now dropped two stinkers, so we probably won’t be taking another of his along.

Neighbors stopped to visit. This is the comfortable draw of the fire pit with camping chairs sitting around the fire. The chairs need a person to be seated. We watched several four-wheelers pass, usually one to three at a time, then a set of nine passed. An occasional vehicle would pass, maybe two or three in a day, more on the weekend. The most astonishing thing was that a FedEx truck passed on Friday! FedEx had finally made it to our seclusive camping spot! It feels as though we have been discovered by the rest of the world now.

On Sunday night, my nephew and his wife came for a campfire visit. Their cabin is about an hour away. While we were waiting for them, another neighbor, and a friend of my nephew’s, stopped for a visit. We spent the evening talking, catching up on all of the local news. He smiled at my surprise of seeing the FedEx truck. “Yes, they’ve been coming by here for a while, I think on Wednesdays and Fridays.” Some old stories were re-told and re-remembered. The neighbor had to go back home where his wife, probably like my mom had many times, was wondering what was taking so long. Visiting is very important.

It was late, but we decided to roast some hot dogs on the fire, a break from the sausages Greg and I had been eating for dinner each evening. We had brought more food for cooking, but roasting a sausage was so easy and tasty, with no dishes to clean. Banner is a fan, too, for treats.

On Monday, as we began to pack, a very depressed Newfoundland went to the horse trailer (that we used to bring the four-wheeler) and sat beside it and watched us. She knew that the party would soon be over, and it was heart-breaking, for her and for us to see her. So when we were nearly finished re-packing, we took a last walk down the road, and on the way out, we stopped at the spring to let her get wet again. I collected water to take back for making coffee. This spring water makes wonderful coffee. And on Tuesday, I had two cups instead of the usual one.

Once we were on the road again, she was too busy to think about the trip being over. She was on the next new adventure, with moving windows, where she walks back and forth from one side to the other, watching all of the exciting things passing the van, like a kid with two movies running at the same time on different sets. Life is wonderful, and it is always more wonderful shared from the perspective of a Newf.

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B IS FOR BANNER

B has been a delightful companion. She enjoys our outings, which have been exclusively walks in town or walks on the trail this summer. Too hot for Newf travel.

She has been learning about communicating and developing confidence about making requests when we take walks. Confidence has not been in short supply for her, in general, but there has been two-way negotiation in the past year on the direction we take for walks. She is like a puppy upon exiting the vehicle, bouncing and spinning, darting from one of us to the other – so much zest for life and enthusiasm for experiences.

Once in the past year or so, we passed an apartment where a crazy black cat with white points threatened to attack and even stalked us in Halloween-cat posture. What nerve! And what excitement! I could barely regain her attention to continue the walk, looking over my shoulder occasionally, hoping to avoid a surprise. So that became one of her favorite turns on a walk, to see if Crazy Cat was still there. After several months of not seeing this cat, I expected that he had made a bad choice and was no longer at the apartment.

 The price to be paid for complacency:

One day early this summer, we passed Crazy-cat-ville. While I no longer anticipated a potentially challenging situation, Banner still found cause for optimism. At home, she doesn’t get a rise out of our cats. S’kerit has learned to not show any reaction, and Linus only yowls at her for being rude, but JJ will race away if she appears. He has learned how to use shelter such as a truck to stand at the interface for an exchange where Banner can’t get overly excited but he can get close. Should she find him in a more compromising location, the heat is on for a chase. And as he has matured, JJ is the one who will sometimes instigates chase. That rascal! I caught him doing just that recently. It’s harder to train a chase-inspired Newf to respect cats when the cat is complicit.

As we passed Crazy cat’s apartment, I spotted him, with a bandaged forearm, just out of reach and fortunately, out of Banner’s notice. The complacency? At the next-door apartment, there was a cat inside the window who wasn’t very exciting, but someone had been leaving out cat food for a stray (another reason this street held Banner’s interest). As we passed, in a nuclear reaction, a little tabby kitten in the planter box suddenly EXPLODED! Just when I thought I may be losing my puppy reflex training, those reflexes were put to the test, and with great relief, successfully kept us in check.

A couple of weeks ago, there was a partially filled U-haul trailer at the Crazy Cat apartment, so it appears that he will have an opportunity to torment other passers-by at a new home. Banner now has another cat reason to want to go down that street though, and it is a regular request. Over the weeks, the kitten has grown, and instead of fully disappearing into the storm drain, it sticks its head up as she passes. There have been a couple of close calls, when the human on one end of the leash wasn’t adequately prepared, but that fault can only be assigned to the human given the repetitive nature of these encounters.

Some days we allow for an encounter, and some days we redirect to a different path. Control is an important exercise, but an excitement habit should not be formed. And some two-way negotiation allows the kind of freedom that all creatures should enjoy, as well as an opportunity to learn about your Newf and an opportunity for your Newf to develop confidence in you. Sometimes B chooses a path just to explore something new, sometimes in hopes of a positive re-experience (from her perspective) and sometimes because there is an order to things that she thinks needs to be followed.

She certainly adds sparkle to life!

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SATURDAY SPRING WALK 2019

For the past couple of weekends, Banner has been relatively downshifted. Usually pre-Friday, Friday and Saturday are cause for a spike in enthusiasm. So when she lies down by the sofa without enthusiasm, I begin wondering what is wrong. Is she becoming ill? Is the arthritis becoming more limiting for her? Did she injure herself? Did she find something to eat that she shouldn’t have? Is she getting older!??

Sometimes all it takes to put her back into a higher energy state is to open the door. Or the refrigerator door. Reaching for a leash will do the trick too.

So yesterday I took her to work with me for the afternoon. And this morning, while Greg went into work very early, we stayed home and cooked breakfast. Food never cools fast enough for a Newfoundland! Her interest level is up, but her wild-and-crazy is still in the closet. However, this morning she sidled up to me on the sofa and pulled a maneuver that Banker would have done, or Jade. She did it will full coyness, sure that she could get what she wanted if she presented herself in that soft and bold way that I haven’t seen for a long time. I had a cup of coffee in hand as she put one paw on my lap, clearly with the intention of crawling up fully. I read her intention fast enough as she timed her moves with precision. There was enough time that I could have said “No”, but who wants to refuse such a polite request to share affection?

The weather wasn’t in our favor for a walk this morning, but luck was holding out. As soon as Greg got back, we took her out for a short road trip to the Webb City Farmers’ Market. We intended to shop, then take her for a short walk. As soon as we arrived, her excitement level had peaked. She was actually shivering, much too excited to walk through a crowd, so she had to wait outside. After making sure that I had her attention, I told her that we were going inside to get some things and that I would be back out very shortly. I pointed my index finger up in the “1 minute” gesture that I use to teach them to wait. With that I crossed fingers and went inside.

The Webb City Farmer’s Market is a very nice destination or side trip on Friday or Saturday mornings. This early in the year, there are flexible panels covering the exterior. It was early enough in the season that the shops were segregated to the front section, but there were some nice shopping options. One trailer was set up outside with organic chicken, so I got some leg quarters. Inside there were fresh greens for salads, a few early vegetable options, including some mammoth carrots, and there was a booth where a lady from Hawaii was selling some produce, including some fresh turmeric. She said that she brought the starts with her from Hawaii, and that she also usually had fresh ginger. She had a recipe for Golden Tea that we forgot to pick up, so now we’re searching the recipes online.

After collecting our items, we took Banner out on the path along the Farmers’ Market. She was vibrating with excitement. With every effort to contain herself and walk beside us came a spike of enthusiasm which led her to speed ahead, almost like she was passing through a space-time continuum. And as much as she smiled and looked up at me, two steps later she was complaining in a moan/plea about how humans are s-o-o-o-o slow! Or she was letting out that forced sigh of exasperation, like a deer snorting except with exasperation or chastisement instead of fear and alarm. Most of those were in the form of quick commentary rather than the long drawn out version that conveys a bit of drama.

We continued along the path, crossing a small ditch at one point and turning toward a pond with an aerator that looked like a fountain. Two small children were out with Mom carrying child-size umbrellas. Banner was getting a bit damp from the sprinkling, but we were still fortunate that the main storm had not yet arrived. As we turned around, I passed the leash to Greg. We want to encourage her to be an equal-opportunity walker.

He walked back with her faster but she still made some complaint. I watched her gait from behind, which lets me keep tabs on the arthritic progress on her knees. She is stiff in one leg, and occasionally drags a toenail.

Then we left for home, with Greg taking a “scenic route” along smaller roads. The road curved back and forth, followed a tiny creek that fed a large creek, then curved onward around brushy Ozark landscape, with trees and brush loaded with buds or small leaves.

To our neighbors in the northern hemisphere, welcome to Spring!

(Sorry Arthur!)

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