The Infrequent Tales of a Dysfunctional Family

Saturday, December 8, 2007

The Dog that almost was

Our grandson has been asking for a dog for a long, long time. This, despite the fact that he is slightly afraid of dogs. Although our house could accurately be described as a disaster zone, I decided that the time had come for us to fulfill his dream. Therefore, last Monday (on his 11th birthday) we headed for the Humane Society to get a dog.

I have to admit that it wasn't exactly what I expected. It was much more commercial at the front end, and less modern at the back end. There were also a lot more people there than I expected. Actually, from the amount of people wandering around checking the dogs out, I'm surprised they had any animals left at all.

Tim wanted a black dog. Bill wanted a female. I wanted something housebroken. The dog we settled on was all three - a labrador/retriever mix with a white chest and paws and a very gentle disposition. They had picked her up as a stray and had already spayed her and put in a microchip. They had named her Melanie and she seemed close to perfect for us.

We completed all the paperwork, paid the adoption fee (rather higher than I had expected), and headed for home. Hmmm - hurdle number one - getting dog into car. Most dogs just jump into cars with great enthusiasm, but we literally had to pick her up and shove her into the van. Either she wasn't used to riding in cars, or she had had a bad experience with one.

The ride home was actually rather funny. Tim was in the back seat with her, and she was very nervous and moving all over, causing Tim to howl that he was being squished. She tried several times to move up into the front seat with us (such a friendly dog!), but Bill managed to push her back.

We had originally planned to go out to dinner for Tim's birthday, but decided we didn't want to leave the dog alone right off the bat. Therefore, as Bill and Tim followed her around the house, I went off to Burger King to get his birthday dinner. Rather tasty, actually. When I got home I found chair barricades up all over the house to keep Melanie confined to the kitchen area!

Most of the rest of the evening went fairly smoothly. Our oldest daughter, Miranda, had come over to help celebrate, and after the Burger King feast we all settled down to play some Apples to Apples. (If you've never tried this you should - it's a great game!). Melanie lay on the carpet next to Bill and went to sleep. The ideal picture of a house dog.

After Miranda left and Melanie had been taken out to 'do her thing' (and she was very good at it), we started thinking about going to bed. Melanie kept going to the door as if she wanted out - whining actually - but subsequent trips into the great outdoors didn't alleviate her desire. In fact, we discovered that she could easily jump over our chain link fence. I will treasure the picture of Tim hanging on to her leash with him on one side of the fence and her on the other, and Tim hollering for help. I had to walk around to the outside of the fence to take the leash and rescue him.

We had originally planned for her to sleep in the upstairs laundry room, but she was NOT going to go up the stairs. Therefore we put her into the downstairs bathroom with a chew toy and a blanket. Needless to say, within a short period of time, she wanted out. When barking didn't accomplish this, she tried to tear the door down. We could hear all of this upstairs and it absolutely terrified Tim. We couldn't hear it very well in our bedroom, as it's farther away - but in Tim's bedroom (which is almost directly above the downstairs bathroom) it was fairly loud. So Tim ended up sleeping on the floor of our room!

By now Tim was quite vocal in his opinion that the dog would have to go. Bill and I waffled back and forth, but the deciding point was the fact that both Bill and Tim were showing signs of breathing problems - consistent with allergies. The next morning Tim himself was going back and forth between "When I get home from school I don't want any trace of IT around", and "Can't we keep her another day or two to see if it works out?" He went off to school sobbing his little heart out, and yet almost too scared to pet her goodbye. I think the fact that she had managed to tear a strip of molding off of the bathroom door had something to do with it.

While Bill was driving Tim to school, I had to contend with a very restless dog who obviously wanted OUT. She almost climbed over me and my computer to get to the window. In the living room she was up on the couch trying to get out the window there. She spent a great deal of time whining and barking at the door. We have concluded that she was probably an outdoor door - maybe even a kennel dog. Perhaps if we had had a chance to work with her more, we could have made her more content with being inside, but we were worried about the allergy problems.

When Bill got back, we had the struggle to get her back into the van. Then off to the humane society to return the dog that we had had less than 24 hours. While we were waiting to be helped, she suddenly started bleeding out of her rear - big clots of blood. They whisked her off to the vet, but we haven't been able to find out what the verdict is. I'm afraid that she swallowed a splinter or a nail when she was tearing down the door molding. Our other concern was that she might have cancer or a tumor. She was very thin, and wasn't very interested in eating - although she seemed to like dog treats.

We took Tim out to dinner that night and are very careful not to mention the word 'dog' around him. We have said that perhaps next time we should get a puppy and let it grow up with us - but none of us are really anxious to do this in the near future. In fact, I rather have the opinion that we are not really 'pet' people. Although I would love to have a cat. Nix on that, though, as both Tim and Bill are very allergic to cats.

So that is the saga of the Dog that almost was - and we fervently hope that she will find a good home (with a well-fenced in yard).

2 comments:

Maleen said...

I was very sorry to hear how short lived Melanie was. The older I get the more I appreciate that you let us have so many pets. I don't think I have the patience. Although Betsy was a really good dog.

Deanne said...

Dogs are so much work! We house-sat my sisters 2 dogs for 6 months (it was more of a foster dog situation), and that convinced my kids that dogs were more than we could handle...especially when a week before they were to go back with my sister one of them escaped out the back fence and got hit by a train and died. So sad. Anyway, I'm sorry that Melanie didn't work out.