Good Luck Mr. Snowman

Cubbie and I decorated the house for Christmas. He’s very good about leaving the presents under the tree alone, as long as it’s nothing for him. I learned almost four years ago not to put any of his presents under the tree because he can smell it or sense it or something, but somehow he always knows and the present gets ripped open!

But Cubbie did find a new decoration this year that he thinks belongs to him.

After decorating the tree I decided to hang a little snowman from the door handle. Well, Cubbie thinks anything stuffed is a new toy for him.

Cubs immediately tried to get the snowman down.

The scarf is almost ripped off and the hat is lopsided, but for now, the snowman is still hanging on the door! We will see how long that lasts.

Posted under Cubbie stories

This post was written by dwagner on November 29, 2010

Foster Homes Needed for Animals!

The Cedar Bend Humane Society in Waterloo really needs some foster parents.

In particular, they need a temporary home for a momma cat and her kittens.

If you can help keep some of the animals that can’t stay at the shelter… PLEASE call the CBHS at 319-232-6887.

Posted under Uncategorized

This post was written by dwagner on November 27, 2010

Potty Patch: Does it Really Work?

During certain months of the year, KWWL puts “as seen on tv” products to the test.

This time around I was assigned the Potty Patch. It’s basically a fake piece of grass with a tray underneath for your dog to use as a potty.  It works well for people who live in apartments or condos and don’t have a yard.

I want to give a HUGE thanks to Haylie and Josh from Waterloo who volunteered to be my test subjects with their dogs Lola and Graham.

Haylie and Josh were fantastic, and it doesn’t hurt they have two of the cutest dogs ever! :)

Here is a link to my script and video. Both of them really liked the Potty Patch because it looks nice and it’s easy to clean, you just rinse it off.

Take a look at the Potty Patch in action.

Posted under In the News

This post was written by dwagner on November 25, 2010

Stuffing Stuffed

With Thanksgiving this week, I guess it’s only fitting Cubbie made me feel a little bit like a turkey.

I recently wrote about a new bone shaped pillow I got him. I wasn’t sure if he would use it for it’s actual purpose (sleeping) because he was more concerned with ripping out the squeakers and stuffing.

The other night I thought we were making progress because he actually brought the pillow to bed with us!

However, Cubbie had other motives for bringing his new pillow to bed. I was extremely exhausted that night after getting up early for the weekend shows. So I actually fell asleep pretty quickly.

Well, when I woke up I felt like a turkey on Thanksgiving. I had stuffing everywhere! It was in my hair and between my toes. I looked at the bed to find it was covered with stuffing from Cubbie’s pillow. I guess he pulled out stuffing until he got tired enough to fall asleep.

Two days later I was still finding stuffing in my pillow case. Goodness gracious!

Posted under Cubbie stories

This post was written by dwagner on November 23, 2010

To Sleep Like Cubbie

Cubbie is very lucky and happy compared to some dogs. He’s never spent a night in a crate or kennel, he’s never been left outside on a chain in cold or hot weather, he always has food to eat and water to drink and he has complete run of my house.

To be quite honest, some days I wish I could trade places with him!

Last night I really wanted to be Cubbie, or at least have the same ability to fall asleep as he has.

I’m a light sleeper, and if I wake up, it’s often difficult for me to fall back asleep. Cubbie woke me up around 3:30 a.m. to go outside. I have no idea why he feels the need to get up at this hour. But anyway, I let him out and then tried to go back to sleep.

When we got back into bed, Cubbie was asleep in a matter of minutes. I know this because he started snoring.

I, on the other hand, was awake for an hour and a half before getting back to sleep. That’s right, after 5 a.m. If only I could turn my mind off and fall asleep as soon as I close my eyes.

And the more I thought about how quickly Cubbie fell asleep, the more frustrated I got with myself and the longer I stayed awake! It was a vicious cycle.

I’ve often envied Cubbie’s ability to simply shut his eyes and start snoring. It just doesn’t seem fair. I’m the one who needs my beauty rest!

Ahhh, to have his life with nothing to worry. Even one night without thoughts and thoughts running through my mind would be a huge accomplishment!

Posted under Cubbie stories

This post was written by dwagner on November 18, 2010

How long does it take…

Remember those Tootise Pop commercials? How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop?

Well, how long does it take Cubbie to get the squeaker out of a new toy? Approximately 2.5 seconds. :)

I found this adorable bone shaped pillow on sale for about $5. It comes with a squeaker, but I mostly got it for Cubbie to sleep with in his dog bed. Of course, I should have known he’d rather rip it up.

Yep, as soon as he got it he went straight for the kill — a.k.a. the squeaker. I swear, it has some type of weird skill at finding those squeakers!

Here is the result less than a few minutes after I gave the pillow to Cubbie. I better see him sleeping with it later! :)

Posted under Cubbie stories

This post was written by dwagner on November 15, 2010

In Honor of Veterans’ Day — Thank You

My dad was in the Army and Iowa National Guard. He was enlisted for more than 20 years before he retired.

I know it’s not much, but THANK YOU to all who serve.

——————-

They told me the big black Lab’s name was Reggie,
as I looked at him lying in his pen..  The shelter was
clean, no-kill, and the people really friendly.
I’d only been in the area for six months, but everywhere
I went in the small college town, people were welcoming and open.  
Everyone waves when you pass them on the street.

But something was still missing as I attempted to
settle in to my new life here, and I thought a dog
couldn’t hurt.  Give me someone to talk to.
And I had just seen Reggie’s advertisement on the local
news.  The shelter said they had received numerous
calls right after, but they said the people who had come
down to see him just didn’t look like “Lab
people,” whatever that meant.  They must’ve thought I did.

But at first, I thought the shelter had misjudged me in giving me Reggie and his things,
which consisted of a dog pad, bag of toys almost all of which were brand new tennis
balls, his dishes, and a sealed letter from his previous owner.  See, Reggie and I didn’t really hit it off
when we got home.  We struggled for two weeks (which is how long the shelter told me to give him to adjust to his new home).  Maybe it was the fact that I was trying to adjust, too.  
Maybe we were too much alike.

For some reason, his stuff (except for the tennis balls — he wouldn’t go anywhere without two stuffed in
his mouth) got tossed in with all of my other unpacked boxes.  
I guess I didn’t really think he’d need all his old stuff, that I’d get him new things once he
settled in.  But it became pretty clear pretty soon that he wasn’t going to.

I tried the normal commands the shelter told me he knew, ones like “sit” and “stay” and
“come” and “heel,” and he’d follow them – when he felt like it.
He never really seemed to listen when I called his name — sure, he’d look in my
direction after the fourth or fifth time I said it, but then he’d just go back to doing whatever.  
When I’d ask again, you could almost see him sigh and then grudgingly obey.

This just wasn’t going to work.  He chewed a couple shoes and some unpacked boxes.  
I was a little too stern with him and he resented it, I could tell.
The friction got so bad that I couldn’t wait for th e two
weeks to be up, and when it was, I was in full-on search
mode for my cell phone amid all of my unpacked stuff.  I
remembered leaving it on the stack of boxes for the guest
room, but I also mumbled, rather cynically, that the
“damn dog probably hid it on me.”

Finally I found it, but before I could punch up the
shelter’s number, I also found his pad and other toys
from the shelter…I tossed the pad in Reggie’s
direction and he snuffed it and wagged, some of the most
enthusiasm I’d seen since bringing him home.  But
then I called, “Hey, Reggie, you like that?  Come
here and I’ll give you a treat.”  Instead, he sort of glanced in my direction — maybe “glared”
is more accurate — and then gave a discontented sigh and flopped down …. with his back to me.

Well, that’s not going to do it either, I thought.  And I punched the shelter phone number.

But I hung up when I saw the sealed envelope.
I had completely forgotten about that, too.
“Okay, Reggie,”  I said out loud,
“let’s see if your previous owner has any advice.”

____________ _________ _________ _________

To
Whoever Gets My Dog:

Well, I can’t say that I’m happy you’re reading this, a letter I told the shelter
could only be opened by Reggie’s new owner.
I’m not even happy writing it.  If you’re reading this,

it means I just got back from my last car ride with my Lab

after dropping him off at the shelter.

He knew something was different.

I have packed up his pad and toys before and set them by the back door before a trip,
but this time… it’s like he knew something was wrong.

And something is wrong…which is why I have
to go to try to make it right.

So let me tell you about my Lab in the hopes that it
will help you bond with him and he with you.

First, he loves tennis balls.
The more the merrier.  Sometimes I think he’s part
squirrel, the way he hordes them.  He usually always
has two in his mouth, and he tries to get a third in
there.  Hasn’t done it yet.  Doesn’t
matter where you throw them, he’ll bound after it, so be
careful – really don’t do it by any roads.  I made
that mistake once, and it almost cost him dearly.

Next, commands.  Maybe the shelter staff already told you, but I’ll go over them
again:  Reggie knows the obvious ones —
“sit,”  ”stay,”  ”come,” “heel.”  
He knows hand signals:
“back” to turn around and go back when you put
your hand straight up; and “over” if you put your
hand out right or left.  ”Shake” for shaking
water off, and “paw” for a high-five.  He
does “down” when he feels like lying down — I bet
you could work on that with him some more.  He knows
“ball” and “food” and “bone”
and “treat” like  nobody’s business.

I trained Reggie with small food treats.  
Nothing opens his ears like little pieces of hot dog.

Feeding schedule:  twice a day, once about seven in the morning, and again at six in
the evening.   Regular store-bought stuff; the shelter
has the brand.

He’s up on his shots.
Call the clinic on 9th Street and update his info with
yours; they’ll make sure to send you reminders for when
he’s due.  Be forewarned:  Reggie hates the vet.
 
Good luck getting him in the car.

I don’t know how he knows when it’s time to go to the vet, but he knows.

Finally, give him some time.
I’ve never been married, so it’s only been Reggie
and me for his whole life.  He’s gone everywhere
with me, so please include him on your daily car rides if
you can.  He sits well in the backseat, and he
doesn’t bark or complain.  He just loves to be
around people, and me most especially.

Which means that this transition is
going to be hard, with him going to live with someone new.

And that’s why I need to share
one more bit of info with you….

His name’s not Reggie.

I don’t know what made me do it, but
when I dropped him off at the shelter, I told them
his name was Reggie.
He’s a smart dog, he’ll get used to it

and will respond to it, of that I have no
doubt.  But I just couldn’t bear to give them his
real name.  For me to do that, it seemed so final, that
handing him over to the shelter was as good as me admitting
that I’d never see him again.  And if I end up
coming back, getting him, and tearing up this letter, it
means everything’s fine.  But if someone else is
reading it, well … well it means that his new owner should
know his real name.  It’ll help you bond with
him.  Who knows, maybe you’ll even notice a change
in his demeanor if he’s been giving you problems.

His real name is “Tank”.

Because that is what  I drive.

Again, if you’re reading this
and you’re from the area, maybe my name has been on the
news.  I told the shelter that they couldn’t make
“Reggie” available for adoption until they
received word from my company commander.  See, my
parents are gone, I have no siblings, no one I could’ve
left Tank with … and it was my only real request of the
Army upon my deployment to Iraq , that they make one phone..
call the shelter … in the “event” … to tell
them that Tank could be put up for adoption.  Luckily,
my colonel is a dog guy, too, and he knew where my platoon
was headed.  He said he’d do it
personally.  And if you’re reading this, then
he made good on his word.

Well, this letter is getting downright depressing,
even though, frankly, I’m just
writing it for my dog.  I couldn’t imagine if I was
writing it for a wife and kids and family … but still,
Tank has been my family for the last six years, almost as
long as the Army has been my family.

And now I hope and pray that you
make him part of your family and that he will adjust and
come to love you the same way he loved me.

That unconditional love from a dog
is what I take with me to Iraq as an inspiration to do
something selfless, to protect innocent people from those
who would do terrible things … and to keep those terrible
people from coming over here.  If I have to give up Tank
in order to do it, I am glad to have done so.  He is
my example of service and of love.  I hope I honored
him by my service to my country and comrades.

All right, that’s enough.
I deploy this evening and have to drop this letter off at
the shelter.  I don’t think I’ll say another
good-bye to Tank, though.  I cried too much the first
time.  Maybe I’ll peek in on him and see if he
finally got that third tennis ball in his mouth.

Good luck with Tank.  Give him a good home,
and give him an extra kiss goodnight – every night – from me.

Thank you,  
Paul Mallory

____________ _________ _________ _______

I folded the letter and slipped it back in the envelope.
Sure I had heard of Paul Mallory, everyone in town knew him, even
new people like me.  Local kid, killed in Iraq a few months ago and posthumously earning the Silver Star
when he gave his life to save three buddies.  
Flags had been at half-mast all summer.

I leaned forward in my chair and rested my elbows on my knees, staring at the dog.

“Hey, Tank,” I said quietly.

The dog’s head whipped up, his ears cocked and his eyes bright.

“C’mere boy.”

He was instantly on his feet, his nails clicking on
the hardwood floor.  He sat in front of me, his head
tilted, searching for the name he hadn’t heard in months.

“Tank,” I whispered.

His tail swished.

I kept whispering his name, over and over, and each
time, his ears lowered, his eyes softened, and his posture
relaxed as a wave of contentment just seemed to flood
him.  I stroked his ears, rubbed his shoulders, buried
my face into his scruff and hugged him.

“It’s me now, Tank, just you and me.
Your old pal gave you to me.”  Tank reached up and
licked my cheek.  ”So whatdaya say we play some ball?”  
His ears perked again.
“Yeah?  Ball?  You like that?  Ball?”  
Tank tore from my hands and disappeared in the next room.

And when he came back, he had three tennis balls in his mouth.

Posted under Uncategorized

This post was written by dwagner on November 11, 2010

November is Adopt a Senior Pet Month

I know puppies are so cute and hard to resist, but all dogs grow up. Plus, puppies are a TON of work. If you want a dog, but don’t want to potty train or other things, a senior dog could be just the right fit!

November is “Adopt a Senior Pet” month and the Animal Rescue League in Des Moines shared a story about Scrappy, 10 -year-old dog that was in adoption for quite sometime at ARL West. 

————————-

 Shelly wrote, “I sponsor pets on the website quite often.  I go out there almost every day to see if the pet I sponsor has been adopted.  I noticed that Scrappy had been out there for a long time.”

So Shelly finally decided to send her daughter out to visit with him.  “She just loved him and said ‘we need to adopt him’ so I jumped in my car with my two other dogs,” said Shelly….And she left the ARL soon after with three. 

Whenever you add a 3rd dog into a car dynamic that was used to just 2 dogs, it can make for an interesting ride.  Shelly recalls, ”They all jumped in and took their places like they had been doing it for a long time.”

 ”Adopt a Senior Pet Month” is intended to draw extra attention to the senior pets that are all too often overlooked due to their age, but Shelly didn’t need this month to remind her, she already knew the importance. 

 ”I feel it is very important to adopt the older dogs,” she said, ”It not only is good for them but it has taught my kids to appreciate the fact that ALL animals (and people) young and old are important.  Older dogs are already trained and still can be trained,” she said.

Even at 10 years old, Scrappy hadn’t yet learned what “treat time” meant, but this old dog quickly learned this new trick! 

“When we got home the two other dogs knew it was treat time and Scrappy didn’t know what that meant…yet.  Within three hours Scrappy was right alongside the others asking for a treat.  He also learned to use our dog door in less than 24 hours.  Now he has the ability to go in and out as he pleases and he feels like a king,” said Shelly.

Kudos to Scrappy at getting a second chance at a great life and thank you to Shelly and her family for opening their home and their hearts to this sweet senior.

Posted under In the News

This post was written by dwagner on November 10, 2010

Draws for Paws

The Cedar Valley Humane Society is having its “Draws for Paws” event on Saturday, November 13th at Parlor City Pub, 1125 3rd Street SE, Cedar Rapids.  The event begins an hour before kick-off of the Iowa vs. Northwestern football game and will last until the game is over. 

Registration fee is $10 and all proceeds will benefit the Cedar Valley Humane Society.  All participants will receive one entry into a raffle prize drawing and drink specials during the game.

7G Distributing will be at Parlor City Pub during the event to provide beer samples to participants.  There will also be a raffle prize drawing of great prizes including Iowa basketball tickets, local restaurant gift certificates and various other prizes.  Tickets will be for sale at the event – one ticket for $5 and six tickets for $20.  All proceeds will benefit the Cedar Valley Humane Society.

 Register at the event beginning at 10 am.  Must be 21 or over.  No pets allowed at the event.

Posted under Pet Events

This post was written by dwagner on November 10, 2010

Wind in His Fur

I can’t complain about the weather we’ve had this fall. Generally, I enjoy fall because it’s not so hot and the leaves change. But I also dread fall because I know what’s inevitably next – cold weather and snow.

Overall, October and the beginning of November have been fantastic. So great in fact, I’ve continued to roll the windows down in the car for Cubbie. He just loves sticking his head out into the wind.

He likes the window down all the way, and he really prefers the front passenger side window. Also, he likes use my side mirror as a rest for one of his paws.

He really likes to lean out, so when I go around a corner I say, “Hold on Cubbie.” He literally grips the window a little tighter with his paws and kind of crouches down with his head so he’s not leaning out quite so far.

If I’m not fast enough at putting the window down, he usually steps on the automatic button himself.

One of my favorite things is watching Cubbie’s big ears flapping in the wind with his head out the window. It just makes me smile because it reminds me of when he was a puppy and his ears were about twice the size of his head.

Unfortunately, I think our time of driving around with the windows down is coming to an end for this year.

Posted under Cubbie stories

This post was written by dwagner on November 9, 2010