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Puppy on the Loose

What to do when your dog won't come.

This week my family and I packed our bags and moved from South Salem to Katonah. Regular readers of my column may be thinking, Wait--didn't she just write a column about moving? Well yes, I did. But those columns were about moving to South Salem from Katonah. It's a long story.

The good news is, moving twice in one year has taught me many important life lessons. My biggest takeaway? All family stress flows from the Mothership. During our first move, I made a few mistakes, not the least being this: Think ahead and be realistic.

I fell in love with a bucolic idyll: Sun Meadow Farm. But guess what. A farm is a lot of work, and the space it gives you comes at a cost of knowing and caring for your neighbors.

People who seek property with space generally also put a premium on their privacy, and my family really isn’t that private. Nor do we have the time to maintain two acres. I spent much of my time longing for the camaraderie I’d cherished in Katonah.

Another interesting thing? My kids really didn’t spend more time in the great outdoors—they spent less as there was no one around to play with.

So here we are back in a wonderful Katonah neighborhood on exactly one-quarter of an acre. While the woods surround us on three sides offering the sights and sounds of nature, they are preservation land, owned and maintained by the state. The neighbors are friendly and welcoming, and my kids are spending the better part of the summer not in camp but exploring their new surrounds.

During our last move, we stacked boxes all over the house. This sent , our German Shepherd Dog, into full gastric panic mode. The very last thing we packed were the paper towels, plastic bags and an industrial sized jug of vinegar.

This time around, I hid the boxes. Each carefully packed box went into an off-limits room and dear Balder was clueless (and diarrhea-free). The movers came, the boxes left, Balder jumped in the car and here we are. 

This time the challenge is . At 8 months she is a flaming adolescent--sometimes loving and sweet, and other times looking over her shoulder and racing off to play. On our two acre farm she gallivanted with her animal friends, scaled up the pirate ship with the kids, and had playdates with her dog pals.  

Now, there are boxes to be unpack, a comparatively small yard, and a road right out the front of the house. The squirrels that she used to chase out the front door just a week ago are now standing in the neighbor's yard. No more blasting off the wrap-around porch and zooming down the hill to clear the forest of intruders, no more playing hide and seek under Mom’s azalea bushes, no more lazy afternoons wallowing in the frog pond. She's a bit off kilter in the 'burbs.

The second day in our new house, I was in the playroom, bottoms-up in a very large moving box. The kids ran out the back door, leaving it wide open. All three pooches followed, a rollicking train of kids and dogs.

The two older dogs, Whoopsie and Balder, seem to know their boundaries instinctively, but the puppy, longing for the wide open spaces of her country home, ran right into the road thrilled to be free. My children, after all my patient instruction about road safety, followed in heedless hot pursuit. And me? Still bottoms up in the playroom, fishing out puzzle pieces. Balderdash, in true Shepherd form, alerted me to the chaos engulfing my flock.

Though there was no immediate danger, it is no less wrenching to be ignored by a dog whom you’ve spent hours training. Hootenanny, now a fluffy “big” dog, was hightailing happily around the neighborhood, ignoring us all. A well socialized gal, she’d meet more neighbors than I could introduce myself to in a week, made kissy-face with all their dogs, and given everyone something to talk about.

Meanwhile, after Balder had had enough of her shinagins he herded her back into the fold. So, what did we “the people” do? We hugged our wayward teenager, of course. There is nothing more steadying to a dog than being accepted back into their group, and more assuring if the goal is a steady recall. Reconnections must always bring a flush of reassurance. 

While I know there is training ahead, Hootenanny must acclimate to the new restrictions of lifestyle, I have no fear she’ll learn them. I remember back to my other dogs' adolescence and the scoffs I received from onlookers who judged my abilities by their reactions. An adolescent is an adolescent is an adolescent, no matter what the species. My dogs are just dogs, completely unimpressed with my credentials or sensitive to my image.

Hoots will receive the same treatment I offer to all dogs--I’ll handle her with the calm structure that is the foundation of my methodology. To earn and enjoy a mindful, trusting companion, you must walk for a while in the shadow of their adolescence.

Perhaps it would be easier to recognize this lesson if you looked at it from the human perspective. Talk to a teenager, or to any young adult for that matter, and you will often witness an enviable freedom from responsibility or concern. Bold and adventurous, they speak episodically, without yet linking the results of each occurrence to their life as a whole. A young dog’s impulses are no different; be grateful they cannot drive your car.

As youths mature, they often return from their life experiences with new wisdom and realization: For all the faults of family and friends, familiar love and unconditional support is more powerful than the lure of detached independence and the rush of the unfamiliar. Sticking close, whether emotionally or physically, is no longer restrictive, it is restorative.

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Kathleen May 21, 2013 at 08:55 am
CANDLE Night at the Rockland Boulders Game Join CANDLE for a fun(d)raising game on May 23rd as theRead More Rockland Boulders take on the Trois-Rivieres Aigles. Proceeds from tickets purchased through CANDLE* will support programs that educate & empower youth and reduce substance abuse and violence in Rockland County and beyond.
Heywood Jablohme May 21, 2013 at 02:48 pm
I agree with most of your points, but surely you are not implying that teachers are expected toRead More produce funding to correct school roofs, right? I think you got a bit off topic here, but I agree that our educational infrastructure is in disrepair and is in desperate need of rehabilitation. Maybe if our teacher's unions allowed a little more leeway we could allocate funding a little more appropriately and fund the important things instead of overpaying paying dinosaur teachers who lost interest a long time ago and fight any and all forms of teacher benchmarking.
WGMom May 20, 2013 at 09:10 am
It's entirely true that every professional has out-of-pocket expenses. But as someone who worked asRead More a corporate trainer, I can guarantee you I NEVER had to pay out of pocket expenses for supplies to teach classes. Every piece of paper, supply, and even snacks for the participants were fully covered expenses. If I had to spend out of pocket money to procure supplies, I could submit for a reimbursement, and receive it, no questions asked. I am now in school to become a high school teacher and I can see the stark difference in how the education of folks in a corporate environment is incredibly different, and privileged, than the public school environment. I've sat through numerous classes in the Clarkstown and Ramapo districts, doing observations required for my education certification, and while Clarkstown certainly benefits from certain advantages, the shabbiness of being a public school is still there. Furniture, such as teacher desks, that looks like it was purchased in a garage sale 30 years ago... faculty bathrooms that are dark and dingy, nearly crumbling, and sorely in need of updating. Etc. The public expects teachers to have professional training, act professionally, but they lack sometimes basic resources and are expected to function in an environment that feels more like a dungeon than an institution of learning. The citizens of Clarkstown, if they could get a tour of some of the facilities they are expecting children to learn in, and teachers to teach in, would be very surprised. We do supply some great technology, but then we put it in classrooms with windows that won't stay closed when it's windy, as one example. I spent most of my time in South, which is the best of the bunch, facilities-wise. Clarkstown North is a mess, Woodglen's woods are littered with fallen trees no one's cleaned up after Sandy, Laurel Plains had to be shuttered thanks to that whole foul stench... the district is in a situation where there are major capital improvements that are going to be needed. Buildings are aging, and it seems it's only the most basic of upkeep that happens. The district can't even fix the roofs of the buildings without applying for a state grant.
Heywood Jablohme May 18, 2013 at 07:17 am
What professional doesn't spend $500 per year on out of pocket expenses related to their jobs?Read More Staples offering 10% (or 5 in some cases) is hardly an example of the community getting involved. Thankfully, there are other examples of the community and PTA's getting involved and providing needed services. Clarkstown and surrounding areas hardly have substantial unmet needs in their classroom, thankfully.
Truth4all May 16, 2013 at 11:37 am
I guess better late than never. LaCorte is serving his 4th year as Mayor and was Trustee for I thinkRead More 4 years before that. This year is the only time he has brought the idea to the village about participating in this program. He is motivated by the opportunity of getting positive press for his County Executive campaign. The village should have been involved in this program ( as well as the Americorps program) long before this. On a positive note, hopefully the Village will continue this worthwhile partnership for many years to come.