In our 28 years of marriage, Marlene and I have owned two dogs. The first, Pilgrim, a mixed breed mutt, showed up on our door step as a wee puppy one chilly autumn morning. I devoted a chapter titled “The Life & Death of a Good Dog” to Pilgrim in my book, Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian. Those who have read the book will surely not forget that story and how it ends.
Our next dog was (and currently is) Annie, a mongrel we acquired from the pound. Annie has been a wonderful dog but she is now old and getting more feeble all the time. That said, it has been on our mind to get another dog to replace Annie when she is no longer with us.
People who live in the country should not be without a good dog. To my way of thinking, a good dog is a dog that lets you know when something is not right on your property. If a vehicle pulls in the driveway, a good dog will announce the visitor. If a rabid raccoon wanders into the backyard, the dog will let you know. If someone is prowling outside your home in the night, a good dog will give you time to load your gun(s). A good dog will also help to defend you and your family against wild animals. It will also deter such critters from foraging in your garden, or the henhouse.
A good dog will not normally wander beyond the boundaries of your property without you. A good dog will do what you tell it to do, or not to do. A good dog will be tolerant of children and protective of them. A good dog will not bark endlessly for no reason and jump up on cars or people.
As we have considered these things, I decided that our next dog should be a red Blackmouth Cur hog dog. We have no wild hogs to hunt here in central New York state but there are woodchucks (a type of groundhog and raccoons, which can be formidable opponents. The hog-hunting cur looks to me like a dog’s dog through and through. But Marlene had other ideas.
She wanted a beagle. And she didn’t just want one beagle. She wanted two beagles—so they could keep each other company. Beagles were a hard thing for me to feature because they are a far cry from a husky cur. Never in my dog-owning dreams would I have ever considered owning a beagle, let alone two.
That, my friends, is a picture of Marlene with her two beagles. The one on the left is Lucy and the one on the right is Susan. They are six-month-old purebred beagle sisters. Their names come from the two sisters in C.S. Lewis’s Narnia books.
We have had these dogs for a week. I do not know yet if they will be good dogs, but they are showing promise. For example, they have learned the single-word command, ”Git!” I taught it to them after they nonchalantly wandered into my garden, stepping on fragile seedlings. I taught them by saying ”Git!” in my dog-commanding voice and immediately throwing some clods of soil in their direction.
Marlene read in a book about beagles that they were developed as hunting dogs for Royalty. I like that. They do have the nose of a hound, and appear to have little fear (except when I yell, ”Git!”).
[NOTE: This paragraph has been removed to avoid problems with overzealous DEC officials (see comments)]
The beagle book says that if you work a full-time job and keep your beagles penned up all day, they will not be good pets. Beagles need action and attention and space to run. They are country dogs, which means they don’t usually do as well in the cloistered environs of suburbia (neither do I) . So our location should be idea for Lucy and Susan.
The biggest concern with getting puppies was how well Annie would accept them. Well, Annie is not pleased with the little additions to our family. The first time we put the three dogs together Lucy and Susan ran right up to Annie. She barred her teeth and barked viciously. The puppies backed off. We scolded Annie. Lucy & Susan returned to mill around the Big Bad Dog, all playful like. Annie stood, towering over them, her teeth showing like an attack dog, growling low, with saliva literally streaming out of her mouth onto the puppies.
It occurred to me that six-month-old beagle pups are about the size of a big woodchuck (Lucy is 16 pounds and Susan is 14 pounds). Annie has killed a lit of woodchucks in her day.
But after a week, Annie is getting more accustomed to the beagles when they run up to her (which they continue to do). She still bares her teeth, growls, and occasionally snaps at them, but she no longer salivates uncontrollably. We’re making progress.
It turns out that I like these beagles (so far). Like everyone else in the family, I give the new puppies a lot of love and attention (when I’m not in my garden). I can see that beagles have a lot of good points. And I’m thankful this whole dog thing turned out the way it did. It could have turned out a lot worse... For example, Marlene could have decided that she wanted a couple of poodles, or chihuahuas.
Masonry Stove: Tests and Tweaks
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After stove construction was complete, it was time for a breaking-in fire
to test for leaks. And this is where the adventure began. We knew from
Permies ...
8 hours ago
8 comments:
Or Pomeranians, or Pugs, or French bull dogs!
Yeah, there are a lot of dogs out there that are worse (a lot worse) than beagles. At least beagles are good for something (hunting) and aren't just bred to sit on your lap and look pretty. Or to carry around in your purse, as is all the rage these days!
Thanks for the chuckle,
Matthew
Now, Herrick, I have enjoyed your writings and even this one, as I am a dog lover too! I do need to disavow you of a serious misperception. Granted in the 20th century poodles have been emphasised for their clownishness and fru-fru atributes; they were originally hunting and herding dogs. If you wanted a dog who is keenly aware of your needs and property take a look at this website. http://www.vipoodle.org/docs/VIP_performance.html
This is a true poodle!
We were not aware it was rabbit season in NY in late May
Those are beautiful beagles! How do you choose a good dog, or do you make it good by training?
I have a mixed breed dog who lets me know when something is wrong. But, she also looks like she wants to eat the chickens if she could get to them.
Can I train her to not bother the chickens, but still go after other predators?
Thats the DEC, always thinking the worst of us poor country folks.It is most probable that the lad shot the rabbit during season and froze it. Right? That would be my story anyhow. :)
Matthew-
Those really little dogs are amazingly little but not very practical in the country.
Hi Patricia-
Wow. Now I've seen everything.
NYS DEC-
Hi. Thanks for stopping by. You folks are amazingly efficient at tracking down suspected criminal rabbit hunters. Here I was worried from previous postings that the Department of Labor was going to get me and instead the DEC hones in on my little ol' blog. Good thing that wasn't a wild rabbit my son shot. :-)
Please check out my numerous other hunting related stories:
The Charging Woodchuck
My Deer Boy
The Fun, Fast Way to Skin a Deer
Trapping Class
Nancy m-
I think a good dog is part blesing and part training. I think it's hard to teach an old dog new tricks.
Scott-
I have a high regard for the DEC. I think it is a legitimate function of the government to protect the environment. But I think it is pretty low down that they are monitoring blog stories for mention of a rural teenager shooting a rabbit in his back yard. There is a 7,800 herd corporate dairy farm a couple towns over from me that is destroying the environment and ruining people's lives with their wicked BigAg farming practices and the DEC doesn't do a thing about that.
Those are some beautiful beagles ... in a few short years you'll wonder at the fact that, once upon a time, you actually considered a different breed.
What is that looming over Marlene's right shoulder? It looks like a charging giant mutant woodchuck... get those dogs trained
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