30 October

Frieda’s Acupuncture: Disappointment And Hubris.

by Jon Katz
My Mistake
My Mistake

Dogs always pay for the hubris, emotionalizing and projecting that humans visit up on them. I took Frieda to the Cambridge Valley Veterinary Clinic to try and see if acupuncture could help with her arthritis and benefit her cranky older joints, but I think it was a mistake. Frieda spent years in the wild, I think her legs paid for it, I have thought for a long time that she is in pain much of the time, but she is stoic, she does her guard work, she eats well and gets around.

At the vet, she began to deteriorate as I answered a bunch of questions and Frieda underwent a physical exam. Frieda got restless, began painting, shedding a lot of her coat.

Dr. Colleen Flaherty asked me about her, finished filling out her questionnaire and then began to examine Frieda, as she does with all dogs who are new to acupuncture. At one point, Dr. Flaherty looked up at me and said “Frieda is not Red.” No, I said, she is not. Frieda kept turning to me, leaning on me.

I held Frieda’s head but she began growling and then turned and nipped at Dr. Flaherty’s hands as they probed her arthritic and very sensitive front legs. I couldn’t really tell if it was the pain in her legs or her growing anxiety at being handled by a stranger that sent Frieda almost to the edge.

As always with Frieda when she is threatened, she didn’t bite, she did not make any contact,  but she barked and growled, it was a menacing thing to see.  Frieda can be an intimidating dog, I remember that clearly in the months after we first met. Dr. Flaherty said she would be okay with muzzling Frieda and continuing with the acupuncture but I wasn’t okay with it, I said we should stop before Frieda got more anxious and somebody got hurt. It is my job to keep her out of dangerous situations, not push them on her.  After Orson, I promised that no dog of mine would ever harm a human being again, and that is a record I intend to keep.

Frieda and I have worked miracles together and I am proud of her and of me, but I felt badly about the experiment.   I’m not really even sure of my own motives – who is? I think there was plenty of good intention – I really thought acupuncture could help her, but hubris too, cockiness, I am invested in the idea that Frieda is pretty much normal and perhaps I pushed her over her limits. It is very difficult for people to accept the true nature of the animals they live with, we always think we can change them, or we deny what they are. I brought my camera and I was sure somewhere in my mind that I could take a beautiful photo of Frieda under acupuncture, as I do with Red, and share it with the world. That seems a bit self-serving. See what good work I had done, see how far Frieda has come.

But there were no photos during that session, I was too busy holding Frieda’s head while she growled. When she lunged, Dr. Flaherty jumped back and went out to get a muzzle. When I put it on Frieda’s mouth and looked at her panicked eyes, I knew it was time to stop, this wasn’t going to work. I felt badly for her, she was so anxious, like a wild animal trapped in a cage.

Frieda was a wreck by the time that we left the vet’s office, and I apologized to her for putting her in such a difficult situation, one for which she is clearly not yet ready, if she ever will be. Frieda is doing beautifully, she lives happily and safely with us, our dogs and animals, even with a barn cat sleeping on her bed.

She works hard at keeping strangers away and making sure trucks don’t come roaring into the driveway. She sits by me when I write, we are very tight. I told Maria about the experience and she said I was sweet to take her there, I really thought it might do her good. That is also true, I am disappointed it didn’t work. I did have this feeling it would have been good for her.

Talking to Dr. Flaherty, I also decided we take to take a deeper look at those legs and Frieda’s sensitivity to being touched. If we can’t help her one way, we may be able to help her in another.

 

 

 

30 October

Selling Some Hay To Jenna Woginrich. Winter.

by Jon Katz
Selling Hay To Jenna
Selling Hay To Jenna

Jenna Woginrich came by today to buy 15 bales of hay, we had some extra and Jenna doesn’t have a big barn for storage so she gets hay one truckload at a time, everybody is scrambling to get set for the winter. We have changed our water system, when we dug out the culvert for Lulu’s Crossing, we opened up a fresh water pond near the rear pasture, and we stopped filling the plastic tubs with water. The sheep and donkeys get their water from the pond now, they go into Lulu’s Crossing several times a day.

I imagine in the heavy winter we will have to put some heated water tubs out – the animals may not be able to get to the water easily, and they may need the warmed water to help keep warm in sub-zero weather. Otherwise we are ready for winter, we have started using the wood stoves and rarely need to turn the oil heater on.

Jenna has a venerable farm truck with lots of miles on it and Maria went up into the hayloft to toss the hay bales down, and Jenna stacked them in the truck. Neat to see two strong women tossing hay around. Maria was yelling at me that we didn’t need to make a bigger path to the animals for the water, but I asked Jack Macmillian to bring his tractor over and do the work, and he said he would.

Get back into your hay loft woman, I said, don’t second guess the farmer. That didn’t work out well.

 

30 October

Red’s World. Red’s Focus

by Jon Katz
Red's Focus
Red’s Focus

Donkeys and dogs do not generally get on that well, donkeys are guard animals – that’s why I got Lulu and Fanny – and they generally see dogs as coyotes threatening the sheep. They aren’t easy with dogs around their legs, and Rose battled Lulu and Fanny every day, they kicked her more than once, and she would often begin her herding work by nipping Lulu (who kicked her once and bounced her off the barn) in the butt before proceeding to gather the sheep.

Red has worked things out with the donkeys, he is aware of everything but he doesn’t seem to notice them, and he certainly does not allow any donkey to deter him from his work for a nano-second. Today he was holding the sheep and Fanny walked almost right over  him, as if she wanted to block his view. Any other dog I know would have moved, and quickly, but Red just lowered his head a few inches and held his gaze and focus on the sheep. I love that boy more every day.

30 October

Meditation Chair, Pompanuck: Tai Chi, Writing.

by Jon Katz
Meditation Chair
Meditation Chair

On Tuesdays, I go to the Pompanuck Farm Institute to see my friend Scott Carrino. We sit by the pond there, in the meditation chairs, we talk about writing (I teach that) and then work on Tai Chi together (Scott teaches that). It is an important time for both of us, a friendship in balance, each trying to teach the other man to open up, to come up. Spiritual practice.

30 October

The Acupuncture Challenge: Frieda Gets Needled Today

by Jon Katz
Frieda Gets Needled
Frieda Gets Needled

Today promises to be exciting for me, Frieda and the vet, Dr. Colleen Flaherty. At 4:30 p.m., Frieda goes to undergo her first acupuncture treatment, I am  hoping it will help her with her arthritis and joint issues. Frieda has had a rough life, from junkyard dog to abandonment in the Adirondacks to chief protector of Bedlam and its farms. Frieda does not take much to veterinary care or being handled, we’ll see what happens.

She is usually very good with me at the vets, I think she will handle it okay, she’s never done anything like it before, I’m not sure how she will take to getting a bunch of needles stuck in her, I hope it will be calming and give her some relief. I’ll bring a camera, and hope I get a chance to use it. Dr. Flaherty has never met Frieda, the first encounter is usually memorable.

Frieda and I have been through a lot together, I am very confident about my ability to handle her, and her own desire to respond. She does the best she can. I’m going to take Frieda for a few weeks instead of Red.

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