RIGHT NEXT TO THE COFFEE

My Newfs are very tolerant creatures.  They are understanding, or at least forgiving, of that implicit part of the morning, a time that is “just mine” where I enjoy a freshly brewed mug of specially prepared, heavy duty morning coffee.  It sets the day in motion, with peace and energy at the same time.

Right next to the coffee in importance is the coffee mug.  Yes, it seems I am one of “those”, people who are intrigued with art in coffee mugs.  This fascination, the breath-taking discovery of some beautiful form of art which could only enhance the experience of my introduction to the day must be credited to a mother-in-law who felt a similar joy.  She would return from a trip bearing the gift of a beautifully crafted mug.  She even had a display rack mounted in her kitchen to show-off her finds.  It wasn’t long before I began to find gift shops and art boutiques that carried art in the form of coffee mugs, for myself and those who shared my joy.  One gift shop in Salina KS carried especially intriguing mugs for many years.  This is part of the enjoyment, the discovery of a “source” were the prize can be found more often.

Since the practical side of my nature demands function as well, my mugs are for use rather than for display.  I have a “sunshine” mug, to experience the aura of a sunrise on a grey day.  I have a garden bounty mug that compels spring.  I have an antique wallpaper mug, not a simply produced soulless piece of ceramic, but one that enchants with nostalgia, using shades of colors that may have been part of my Mom’s experience.  I have “fun” mugs, like the one of Mickey’s britches and other nostalgic mugs, like the one with the Norman Rockwell image of Dad closing shop to take the kid fishing.  I have many, many National Specialty mugs, all showing signs of wear.  Some mugs have taken up residence in a cabinet, too beautiful to toss, awaiting an opportunity to be repurposed.  Still the cabinets are burgeoning with in-use mugs, which I suppose offers some justification when my husband groans each time I bring home a new find.

However, my present favorite mug is in need of a backup.  As a consequence of being dropped on a very hard surface, and suviving due to its construction quality, it has developed a crack on the interior, and as we well know, heavy metals can leach from exposed ceramic substrates.  This mug sat in the cabinet for a long time before I used it because I found it so fasciating.  It is an Otagiri mug, one with the perfect hue on the inside to invite the pouring of coffee, with interspersed dark specks of varying sizes.  The exterior of this mug is a thick shiny black glaze, and surrounding the mug, “cutting through” this glaze as a sort of underlay is an array of fall oak leaves and acorns in varying shades of brown and light tan with varying textures on the ceramic surface.

To my amazement, there is a dazzling array of Otagiri ceramic art available from many sources, but none in this style.  So, it seems I’ve acquired a new quest, and my coffee mug acquisitions may need to take on a new effort, like some clothing, where a backup is an initial investment.  I wonder how Greg would feel about adding more cabinet space in the kitchen.  I think I just heard a Newf lightly sigh, “psshhh” – humans!

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BATH DAY, ANYONE?

The weather forecasts and the local meteorologists have not always been right lately.  So trying to plan a bath day has required some flexibility, with postponement. Thursday was supposed to be a nice shiny day, but the appearances overhead didn’t agree.  The terrain appeared more convincing than the map.  True to the folly of human prediction, we had rain, from steady rainfall to intermittent torrents. This followed the winter thaw, after an accumulation of all kinds of precipitation over a three week period.

Perhaps I should have been quicker to understand when Greg made the sudden reference to Banner being just like her brother.  I turned just in time to realize what that sound was, as her feet splashed back and forth through the mud puddle, only to see her lie down before either of us could form a thought.  Yes, she had walked through this puddle before, but she went down so quickly and so happily this time that it was like her legs fell out from under her, and she chose the deepest part!

Fortunately, it looks like the forecast today will be on target, at least in the lower 70s, and the Newfs will be getting baths anyway.   So, in this case, a re-enactment was due:

Banner:  I love Spring!

Banner: I love Spring!

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IT TAKES A VILLAGE

It takes a village to raise a child.

This applies to puppies too.  I’ve watched as the cats provided some education to our newest youngster, as our cats have done with other puppies.  This morning I realized that the pool of educators was a bit larger.

Banner is similar to the boys when they were growing up.  This means a number of things, but one of these is that she loves to run.  The boys weren’t bad when it came to encouraging excitement, but Banner has taken that up a notch, or two. She will antagonize a cat to cause it to react or run, with a preference for the latter.  This may sound like prey drive, except that she seems much more interested in the chase than a catch.  She just wants an excuse to run. It is her favorite activity.

She has discovered that the “dorm mom” cow and the set of replacement heifers can provide some excitement, but they have become accustomed to her and are surprisingly less troubled about her then they would be about a “real” dog.  When she thrusts her face through the fence to lick, they may jump back, startled, but they will also come forward again.  Cows, like Newfoundlands, experience much of their interpretation of the world around them by their tongue.  Horses do this very little; they aren’t typically lickers. However, horses, especially the (now 34 year old) Arabian mare, can be very reactive to a Newfoundland head thrust through a fence, particularly when there is a licker associated with it.  So Harmony will spin around and go for a sprint at times, providing some good satisfaction.  Brandy (Quarter Horse) and Whippoorwill (1/2 Arabian) react with a little less satisfaction.  Brandy is suffering the pains of arthritis in an aging horse.  He is now 27, and he is getting a bit cranky.  When bad weather stays too long, this escalates his agitation level.  So, he can be reactive, but not in the way that Banner seeks.

This morning, Banner was outside with Greg while he was feeding.  She enjoyed running around in the snow, and she ate her fill.  When this interest began to expire, she looked for something else to do.  She thrust her head through the fence to instigate excitement in Brandy, who was eating breakfast.  Brandy had a lifetime experience of being a picked-on younger brother, so he responded quickly.  He reached right back through the rails and nipped Banner.  He nipped just the right amount for a correction, with no intention to harm.  Banner, true to form, had a “you can’t get away with that” reaction, so she waited a moment, then did her head thrust maneuver again, but clearly with more reservation.  Then she decided that she should go elsewhere and look for something else to do, perhaps someone else would give her what she desired, with a little alteration in her cache of expectations.

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LIBRARY NIGHT, SNOW & GROWING UP BABY

Greg and I decided to start a routine:  LIBRARY NIGHT.  As we both fill our schedules well, we made it a recurring appointment in Outlook, only quarterly, but a nice break from the usual routine.  We set our first appointment for our engagement anniversary (a day that we celebrate), but the next wave of snow storm was arriving, so we postponed our very first Library Date Night.  There is plenty of snow, which began as freezing rain on Valentine’s Day, and the lows have been flirting with single digits – and will be for the foreseeable forecast.

We cruised the area where the library sets up books of interest, sometimes according to a theme, and I found a book on old Irish poetry.  In this book, I found what became the Molly Malone song.  One thing leading to another, I sent a note about this to my sister, remembering that she used to sing that when I was a kid.  It’s nice how the internet lets you easily communicate with people next door or anywhere else in the world.  (She’s still on her Peace Corps assignment.)  She didn’t seem to recognize the poem, so I found the song on Youtube and sent that link.  She said that when she was a kid (1940s), she heard and sang a lot of Scottish-Irish songs.  I was smitten and a bit jealous.  When I was a kid, a couple of decades later, I didn’t hear those.  She was familiar with more of our ancestral influence than I was.  (Our grandmother was Irish; she passed before I was born.)  I found another of my (newer) favorite Irish songs on Youtube, along with some traditional songs by the same band, so in advance of St. Pat’s Day, will share that here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fzRZuGEr04

The weather, with all of its recent persistence, has been much to Jade’s liking.  I’ve never met a Newf so enamored with the cold and snow!  But, it poses a problem for her.  As we are all capable of being children at heart, Jade gets pulled into her “childhood”.  She wants to play like a ruffian, only like her version of a ruffian, which is impressive but gentle.  Banner gets a little too serious and competitive about play.  Her idea of one-upmanship, as jealousy is often the case with the new kid on the block, was to spot Jade from across the yard and run like a bullet train, hitting her broadside.  (I think I heard you say “Ouch!”)  So, during the months, which seemed more like years at times, when Banner was growing into herself, and was a little too impressed with her increasing size, Jade would look around nervously for Banner every time she was outside.  She would hide behind the van door as soon as they got out of the van.  Eventually, with constant supervision when they were out together, which was sometimes not fast enough, Banner began to adjust and treat Jade with more respect.  Then came the cold weather season again.  Banner hasn’t been as driven to collision this winter, but has occasionally “spun out of control on the ice” (abandoned self-control).  Enough so that when Banner is loose outside, Jade starts to exit the cabin door, stops with the first half of her body on the middle step and her back feet still inside the cabin, looking for Banner, while we would like to close the door to that wonderful outside world.  When you’ve endured that kind of impact, it has a lasting effect, not only on your memory, but on your body.  This was like Banker when Parker was growing up, all over again.  Banker was a softie, like Jade, and Parker was determined to find a higher spot on the totem pole, however he could.  Parker grew up into a softie, too, and no one would have guessed what his early years were like.  Banner is a lot like Parker in personality.  She takes it up a notch in some ways, but is in other ways more judicious about her choices.  Parker ran straight into a tree one time in cat-chase-play; Banner ran into the Equalizer hitch on the back of the van.  Something about running at high speed sends horses and Newfs into a dream state, and dreaming with your eyes open is still a dangerous proposition when you are running as fast as you can.

Banner is still acclimating to the idea that the cats here have total freedom.  She loves to chase the cats, but doesn’t really want to catch one.  The teenager in her, though, wants to defy the corrections given by the cats, especially that fat black cat who thinks that she is Boss!  Jade is having her own struggles.  Since she doesn’t trust playing with Banner, Sylvia is her cat of choice for play.  Sylvia knows better than to respond to a play bow.  I think it will take a long time for Jade to rebuild trust with her favorite cat once the cold weather diminishes and she returns to a more mature state of mind.  (not that there is anything wrong with being young in mind or heart!)

The root of the competition issue is finding a place in the new “pack” (or pod) where you feel as important and comfortable as everybody else.  So, part of the steps required for adjustment are giving the newcomer ways to increase their self-confidence and self-esteem, without inadvertently encouraging the jealousy.  Walking them together is one good step, as is teaching them important words for communication and training.

Even though Banner has been with us for 16 months, her anxiety can still escalate when she is left inside by herself.  When we leave the house, Jade views it as a nice opportunity to enjoy a nap on the sofa. ; )  Banner, like most young Newfs, has some anxiety about this, and there are scratches through the finish on the new door trim at our front door to attest.  After we moved from the house to the cabin, I took steps to let her adjust to being left on her own in a new environment, leaving Jade in the cabin with her at first.  Despite any competition, the adult Newf often becomes the one the newcomer leans on to “learn the ropes” and settle into the new arrangment.  Limiting their free area can help, but even though the cabin is small, I learned this was still necessary.  They can increase their own state of anxiety when they have too much area, where they can run back and forth.  I found that keeping Banner in the bedroom when she was left inside by herself, with the curtain lowered and the baby gate across the bedroom door, worked better to keep her calm.  This is where she usually sleeps, and she is accustomed to the gate being up during the night, as a normal part of bedtime.

Part of the adjustment is the guided learning that comes with time and experience, although their antics can lead you wonder at times whether they have scrambled eggs for brains at this age.  <g>  Each Newf, as it is new to the home, has to find his or her place in well-developed existing relationships.  The incremental steps of learning will eventually help.  They are all different, and those active, creative minds will come up with “solutions” that you don’t always anticipate.

Now I have a picture puzzle.  Tell me, do you see a hellion in these images, or just a little angel?

Banner_2014

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