Learning new tricks with the new puppy
Jul 30, 2024 03:32PM ● By Marti BensonOn his last morning, Chip savored the spring smells around our backyard. After lunch, he and his best friend Thor napped on adjoining beds. That afternoon, they drove squirrels off our deck.
Before sunset, however, he had a seizure—and was gone. With Thor, my husband Kyle and I beside him, he departed our lives the same way he’d entered it: swiftly and unexpectedly. He was 17 years, 2 months and 12 days old.
Chip was the last of 12 dogs that overlapped throughout our 24-year marriage. His mother, Yvette, was rescued from a snowbank and brought to the animal clinic where I worked. She needed a foster during the holidays, so I brought her home.
Little did we know this waif with the soft eyes and visible ribs had a big secret. Three big secrets, in fact—all born on a Sunday morning in January 2007. Yvette and her sons, Robby, Chip and Ernie, found a home with us, with Robby eventually moving to Beulah with family.
Chip relished routine. He woke with the sun, enjoyed three meals a day, watched movies with us, went outside before bedtime and slept soundly through the night. Two weeks before his passing, a neighbor saw Chip and Kyle walking and asked me if we’d gotten a new pup. I laughed.
“No puppies for us. We’re too old for that.”
The mornings after Chip passed, we overslept. Lunch and supper times passed quietly. And after the 10 p.m. news, Kyle stopped going outside for “one last trip.”
A week after he died, I sobbed as I tipped the nearly empty vacuum canister into the dumpster. I didn’t miss dog hair. I just missed the four-legged senior citizen with the motion-activated tail and pointy ears who generated all that fur.
Seventeen years of “undoings” was excruciating. Heck, counting all the dogs that preceded Chip, it was more like 24 years of doggie undoings.
We’d never sought out a dog before. They always found us. But Oakley is the exception.
Online searches for a pooch were overwhelming, with so many dogs in need.
Family and friends who’d adopted from shelters or rescue groups informed us the vetting process was sometimes lengthy. I applied to the first rescue organization on my list and prepared to wait. My heart raced when I read the text from them the next morning.
“We have a boy who may be good for you, since you know dogs.”
Oakley had gotten himself into a bit of trouble, as puppies sometimes do. He needed a home immediately.
Hmmm…was our experience with dogs a good thing or not? We’d soon find out.
He is the first dog in our family to go to school. Obedience school, that is. As he acquires new social skills, my husband and I, as dog parents, are learning, too.
Raising a puppy is a lot of work. Especially one with issues. But we’re slowly discovering that you can teach old humans new tricks.