Since I met my husband he has wanted a Labrador retriever. As a single surgical resident it simply was not practical for my man to own a pet. He could barely find time to feed and water himself as he took in-house call every other night on many rotations. Frankly, at one point during a low point of our courtship I consoled myself that he would HAVE TO get married one day--if for no other reason than so someone could take care of his dog. (I am only kinda kidding! :-)We were married in his final year of residency in Atlanta. We knew we would be moving to Virginia for a year of advanced training, so the purchase of "the lab" was delayed. In Charlottesville we lived in an apartment that did not allow pets without a hefty rate increase, so the dog purchase was postponed again. But, we spent that year researching exactly which breeder, what color and what gender lab we would be adopting.
As soon as we made the decision to move to our current city, we placed the deposit down on our girl. We were in the throes of our infertility diagnosis--and feeling quite maternal and paternal. The day we picked Haley up we were giggling and elated. I have entire videos of us doting on her. The next month we discovered we were expecting! A month after that we discovered it was triplets. Poor Haley. Her time in the spotlight was so very short-lived.
Because my hubby's hours are quite extensive, I was the primary caregiver for our girl. As my belly grew bigger and my exhaustion became overwhelming her antics began to wear on me. As if housebreaking her wasn't enough of a challenge, she was a digger, a chewer and an escape artist. Her favorite trick was to run next door to our neighbor's garage. They always left their garage door open about 2 feet off the ground so their dogs could come and go to their kennels. I could see the glimmer of glee in Haley's sweet puppy eyes as I (and my big tummy) would climb under that garage door at 7am each morning to retrieve her. Did I mention I was generally dressed professionally in work clothes as I attempted this maneuver? My excitement about Haley started to turn to reluctance as the arrival of our children grew more imminent.
When I went on bedrest we decided to send her to be trained on a nearby farm for a while. It was a great decision! However, once she returned it became clear she needed lots of attention and wanted to be 'worked' as a bird dog. Her punishment for lack of attention is digging and destruction.
My hubby loves spending this time with her...and my children love watching them show off her tricks.The back edge of our property line collects a lot of runoff water after heavy rains. These are Haley's favorite afternoons.I took these several days ago as my man and his dog enjoyed some quality time.
Thankfully, at 4 1/2 she is finally mellowing out a great deal. She and I are buddies again. But my children have already been warned: There will never be another puppy around these parts again!
11 comments:
My little girl wants a dog so bad, and we actually have a chocolate lab that is living with inlaws right now...but I just can't do it. I really don't want him back..ever and I know that is so heartbreaking for my husband and Creighton, but for sure as long as my kids are in diapers I wont' be adding another thing that I have to clean up after (especially its poop) :)
We have 2 dogs. One we got when he was 8 weeks old. His name is Jake. He is like a human. He understand me, and looks at me with adoring eyes. He is laying here with me right now. The second one is Emma. We wanted to get Jake a friends/sibling. We adopted Emma when she was 2. She is more like a "dog". She was abused and suffered a lot for the first couple of years of her life. We have finally gotten her to realize that she now has the good life. They are good siblings to eachother and my children. However, you are absolutely correct, there will not be another puppy in our house anytime soon.
Lauren
Oh how I can relate! Our yellow lab, Knox, is 7 and a half and he still jumps, licks and is very easily excited. Poor guy, we had 3 kids since he was adopted and life has never been the same. I remember calling my man one night after being growled out, trying to get him out from under the bed. I was so over him at the moment!
We will be getting the smallest, female lab next time!
Thank you! Thank you for the reminders.
We are living in a townhouse right now (less than 2000 square feet) with a 6-year-old girl, a 4-year-old boy and a brand new baby. My daughter is so desperate to have a dog or a cat. We're considering getting her one this summer.
But man, this post and past experience tells me I should push it off just a little longer. Before kids, my husband and I had two dogs and one cat. It was a lot to handle then. I can't imagine doing it while dealing with children at the same time.
I love that last pic....where you can see the water spraying off of the dog. :-)
An a completely unrelated note...I thought you would be blessed by reading this:
http://stillhisgirl.blogspot.com/2008/04/great-romance.html
this post almost made me regret giving away our swissy last week. but with no fence, no time for her to get good exercise, a house full of boys, and many other things, it's just more than i could handle right now. so, i told the boys that when they turn 10, they could get a dog. now they think they all get one (which is not what i had in mind) and some are already talking about what kind they want...and we still have 4 years until the oldest turns 10.
This is one post I won't be sharing with my hubby! Oh how he'd love a dog...but I can see how I'd be the one "training" the pup most of the time. My two girls (human ones) are needy enough w/o having a puppy in the mix as well. It's funny how you say at 4 1/2 she is finally mellowing out...maybe that is the answer...we just need to get an adult dog. Or maybe not!
I applaud you for not doing what many folks in your situation would have done-take Haley to a shelter/humane society.
Thank you for sharing this.
Kit
Cleveland, GA
It's not fair to the animal when there are young children. They are just another child to care for and one that will never grow up, always dependent upon someone, which usually ends up being Mom. Loved the last photo of the dog shaking all the water off! Great photo!!!!
I agree, I have known so many people who are childless and run out and buy a great dog, then they get pregnant and the dog goes by the way side. It is so sad to me.
I love this post and how you perservered J and didnt just get rid of Haley. What a sweet post and way to go R for loving your dog! I already knew you were the most amazing dad and this is the topping!! Haley is beautiful.
Beautiful post and photos. Those need to be put in a collage frame for a spot that R sees often. Great photo essay material.
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