Saturday, May 23, 2015

Dog on a Chain 2001

Currently, we are in possession of three dogs:  Cash, a large, 8 year old brindle mastiff on loan for the summer from our youngest daughter Teal; Sophie, our 11 month old Dachshund, Min-pin cross added to the family last December after Junior, our autistic Dalmatian crossed over on the Rainbow Bridge; and Niko, our 5 year old Rat Terrier.

I'd never owned a terrier before we got Niko.  He was one or two years old (the go-to vet age when no one really knows for sure except that they aren't puppies and they aren't old)when I found him on Craig's list and added him to the family.  He's a very handsome guy, and incredibly athletic.  He is sweet, even tempered, and, for the most part, pretty easy going.  He weighs in at 16 pounds. However, he is a killer.  The breed was bred to go after vermin(hence the moniker), so that anything that moves means that his entire focus is on that thing.  That also means that he is constantly alert to movement and noise, and, with incredible speed, will take off after anything moving.  He's so fast, and so intense, that in a moment he can be out of my sight, headed straight for some kind of big trouble.

When I really think about it, I feel terrible for the constraints I place on him.  He has to put up with the indignity of a leash, a fenced yard, and when he is free and running I'm always calling him back, pulling him away from the incredibly wonderful sights, sounds and smells of his Rat Terrier world.  Not only did I have him castrated, but, to add insult to injury, I bath him after each time he finds the most wonderful things to roll in--usually shit or a dead carp--completely nullifying the magic of the back deep in the ground, digging deep roll. He gets scolded for just being himself, for discovering and eating great great things(I don't even want to know). I watch him, I admire him, I love him and even with all the care I take, I  worry that one day, that Rat Terrier nature will take him too far away for him to come back.

3 comments:

  1. A wonderful post Holly, so true to heart. ;o)

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  2. Good post. We, too, have a half terrier (and half min pin) and she's completely unreliable off-lead. I read somewhere that terriers simply should never be let loose cause they'll get fixated on something and be gone. Gone usually means dead if you live around any kind of traffic, so my dog lives in a fenced yard and gets walked daily on a (long) leash. Those constraints are what keep them alive, so don't feel too bad. At least your dog gets walks. Many never leave their yard. That's the real shame.

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  3. The spirit of the animal captured beautifully!

    As a person who owed two terriers, a Westie and a Scottie- Barnum and Bailey. I can say, They are a strange and wonderful breed and I loved our two "terrorists" (as much husband referred to them) so very much.

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