Showing posts with label Man's Best Friend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Man's Best Friend. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2024

A Perfectly Miserable Day

It’s Spring Break at our school this week.  So far it’s miserable weather.  It was a perfect time, however, for our dog Kora and I to head to the woods along moving water.  We hiked during an outright downpour through the woods until we met the river’s edge.  While doing so, we spooked out a barred owl from a low hanging tree limb just a mere 10 feet in front of us.  I hadn’t noticed him until he flew, as he must have held off for as long as possible to avoid flying in the rain.

I had thought of hiking into a different area, but the last time that I took Kora out she could hardly move for the next two days.  So this time I chose a shorter route that was still worth the effort.  We shared the food that I cooked over the small camp stove.  Typically I like to use a small open fire, but I wanted to go stealthy this time, plus everything in the woods is absolutely soaked right now.  Sledging in dry firewood seemed unnecessary, so I pulled out the little stove instead and it worked perfectly.

Kora’s tucked in beside me now on the quilted blanket I put down over the damp ground.  I pulled a corner of it around and on top of her because she was shaking after getting soaked.  She’s warming up now though, and actively watching and sniffing everything around us.  She’s my eyes while I journal.
CLICK BELOW FOR A VIDEO OF
ME JOURNALING AT THE RIVER'S EDGE:

Perhaps the soreness she had felt after last week’s hike was due to the terrain, and the fact that we haven’t been out for a while, although that’s never stopped her before - ever.  Perhaps it was because she’s getting a little older (she’s almost 10 years old), but she’s the picture of consistency when it comes to “getting out of Dodge” and going on an adventure.  Maybe it was due to the Lyme Disease she had as a puppy; now affecting her joints all of these years later.  I’m secretly hoping that this is not the cause, because otherwise, it could be like looking in a mirror.

I myself was just diagnosed last week with Lyme Disease.  Who knows when or where I got it.  The “how” comes from the deer tick, but I don’t really recall when I’ve had one on me; apparently I have though.  Kora had to have a series of treatments to deal with the effects of the disease.  I’m not sure what the ramifications of the disease will be for me.  It was only a week and a half ago when my wrist, ankles, knees, and shoulders began to ache and swell.  I went to the doctor a few days later for some blood work and now it’s a waiting game to see when I can get into a rheumatologist to figure it out.  No wonder it felt like I was slogging through mud when I had tried running two days in a row last weekend.  All I know at this point is that I, “didn’t get it recently”; which I’m taking to mean that I’ve apparently had it for a while.  These are some of the things I’m mulling around in my brain and thinking about while out in the woods today.

In the meantime, a mallard duck flew low along the river’s surface a while back and an eagle flew with the currents of air out over the opposite bank.  Two woods ducks cruised in squawking their “oo-week” call on the bend of the river just down from me.  I’m not sure where they went, but if they swam upstream next to Kora and me, they had no idea we were here hidden up on this bank.  The air is starting to get cooler as they predicted, and the breeze is picking up now that the rain has stopped.  It’s gearing up to reach 20+ miles per hour by this afternoon.  I rather liked the sound of the drops on the tarp I had strung up to protect us, but the wind traveling through the treetops is just as comforting.  Cardinals are calling from the large oaks around me while flickers and kingfishers announce their presence nearby.  Sandhill cranes rattle their sound as gray clouds race away to the east-northeast.  It’s what I guess Winnie The Pooh would call a “blustery day.”

I probably had some other chores to do this morning and I know I had some paperwork.  But I’ll vacuum, sweep, and get a couple loads of laundry in once I get home and dry; so that will at least be something.  I’ll need to get after those other things soon, but after the schedule I’ve had the last few months, I needed to get outside to reset.  Smelling damp, decaying leaves, seeing high moving water after almost 24 hours of heavy rain, and listening to the train engine roar of the wind through the rattling branches is well worth the cold beginning to sink into my hands and creep down through the layers into my inner core.

This outing will be the fuel to spur me forward as I finish out this school year.  A host of things have already been accomplished since last fall, but I still have some other things to rock out between now and this spring.

Virginia Bluebells Beginning To Emerge

A few weeks ago I had thought of canoeing and camping as I’ve done the last couple of years over Spring Break, but the weather this year would have been “tough sledding” - quite literally those first couple of days when we were covered with a layer of snow.  As it turned out, this outing is just what Kora and I needed.  Hiking in and setting up a base camp was doable and necessary for a day like today, and yet not so much work that when the time comes to pack it up that I can easily get it all down, onto my back, and trudge it in my pack to the old Silver Jeep.

To anyone else, today is a terrible day.  The skies are dark, the woods are drab of color, and the weather is gloomy.  It’s the kind of day that guarantees that you’ll have the forest and riverside all to yourself.  It’s what makes it a perfectly miserable day.

See you along The Way…

Kora - My Partner For Adventures!

Friday, September 30, 2022

Twinsies

Kora and Me - October 2022

We’re both 56, Kora and me.  I remember like yesterday when we got her.  It was the fall of 2014, and after checking various agencies, we settled on an organization out of Mukwonago, Wisconsin; across the Stateline and just a little to the Northeast of us.  They apparently rescued dogs from the state of Mississippi and brought them North to a no-kill shelter.  Once a month the dogs that they had were brought to the Tractor Supply Co. in Mukwonago where you could look at the dogs available.

We already had a dog at the time.  Her name was Kati, which was short for Mukaday; the Ojibwe word for black, as she looked like a black German Shepherd.  She was 10 years old when our family of four hopped into our van to go look for a second dog.  My aunt and uncle had always said it was good to get a new dog when your present dog was older and could help pass along some of the desired traits and expectations.  It made sense and so we decided it was the appropriate time to expand our pack.

The dogs on display came in all shapes, sizes, breeds, and ages.  I specifically remember a scrappy little dog that looked like it was 100 years old, cuddling up beside an older couple.  The man had a little difficulty bending down to pick the scraggly thing up, and his wife had to steady herself as she was pulling along an oxygen tank that allowed her to breathe freely.  It seemed to be a match made in heaven though, as the couple laughed and giggled to themselves, while the ancient little dog licked their hands and wagged its tail.  Neither side seemed to believe the good fortune that they had found themselves in.

Our family was looking for a puppy, and the first one that we looked at was as cute as a button.  It was a tiny, black lab, but as I got it out and set it in between the kids, it never interacted with us.  We knew that was not a good sign, and so we moved on.

The next puppy was also black and tiny, but with a splotch of white on the side of her nose, on her chest, and on the tip of each foot.  The interaction was great as she weaved in and out between our legs.  She was all wiggles, and very excited with the attention.

On our way home, we came up with the idea of keeping with the theme of our dog’s name being four letters and starting with the letter K.”  When I was growing up, my dog was named King.  Our current dog was Kati, of course, and now we were adding Kora into the fold; a name that our son Todd, then a senior in high school, came up with.  It seemed to fit the pup perfectly.

Kati And Kora - November 2014
Kora & Kati - December 2014

January 2015
Last Adventure With Both Dogs Together
Fall 2016
Our two dogs were together for almost three years before the late spring of 2017.  Kati’s passing came simultaneously with our daughter Jodi going on to college, so our “at home” family was down to 3; my wife Cindy, Kora, and me.

I’d love to say that early on I trained Kora perfectly.  Unfortunately I can’t say that.  My Dad often quotes, “Patience, before you become one!”  It of course is a play on words, but it makes sense.  When Kora was young, I tried to teach her commands alongside Kati, who knew them well (by my voice, hand signals, and a whistle).  I wanted to be able to have both dogs, side by side, and saying their respected name first, have each of them follow their specifically given command.  It was a bit more than what any of us could handle.  I’m sure I wasn’t patient.

Fortunately my dogs and family were forgiving and despite the rough start, anyone who knows Kora, recognizes her qualities, demeanor, and ability to follow my commands on cue.  Soon after she reached adult size, I worried that she would be too small, but she really has become what I would deem as the perfect size, as I can pick her up if it’s necessary to carry her through a raging creek, and yet she can hold her own and swim across just as easily.

And so with an understanding relationship, and the desire to both please and get out into the great outdoors on another adventure, we’ve grown together as only a couple of fraternal twins can.  We take our usual neighborhood walks, but we’ve also hit the woods, prairies, backwaters, and rivers of Northern Illinois and Southern Wisconsin.  We hike, explore, camp, and hang out.  It’s nice to have a friend and companion that has similar interests.

Winter 2018

When our kids come home she becomes very excitable.  “Glued to the hip” is the best way to describe the way that she follows my wife Cindy around; probably bordering on being “underfoot.”  She loves to see my parents and friend Kris. Both have watched her when we go on vacations (although she does throw us a worried glance when she realizes that she’s about to be left behind for a few days).  At Kris’, she becomes a farm dog, and at my parents’ house she typically is situated in a place where she can oversee everything going on.  My Dad walks her with his headlamp attached to her collar just to keep track of her at night with her dark fur.
Kora With Cindy - February 2015
Jodi & Todd With Kora
At Turtle Creek In Shopiere - 2016
One of the most special traits of Kora is her knowledge and awareness of boundaries.  All of my past dogs have had this mannerism, and so it is with Kora.  I don’t ever have to worry about her running away, or getting into a situation that she shouldn’t.  Observers have often thought that we had underground fencing, but this has never been the case.  She simply knows property lines and to stay close to me from the times I spend out in the yard with her.  I love nothing more than being able to work out in the yard with my dog laying in the grass; watching whatever life comes her way.
The only thing that tops the feeling of seeing her breath easy, with tongue lolling, while surveying the neighborhood, is having her join me on an adventure.  Like twins that tend to share a common bond, I think that we do as well.  Whether walking through the farmer’s field and down to the creek, perching on the front of my kayak like a hood ornament, shaking with excitement while sitting in the front of my Jeep, splashing and swimming within local rivers, running in the bottomlands through freshly fallen snow, or wolfing down warm food cooked in my iron skillet over an open, crackling fire, you could say that we share common interests in the great outdoors.   It’s hard not to smile knowing that our close knit relationship binds us together as twinsies.
See you along The Way…

Both Dogs With The Gulo Adventure Clan
Negative Temps - February 2015
A Winter Cookout With Dad - 2015
Winter Hike To Dry Run Creek - 2016
Shadows At Lake Geneva - 2017
At A Frozen Oxbow - 2017
Bath Time In The Bucket - 2018
Adventure - 2019
Soaking Up Sun - 2020
Visiting School - Fall 2020
Winter Camping - December 2020
Snowshoe Adventure With Friends - 2021
Twinsies