• Firefox Challenge

    Alright, everyone, here's one for you. We are one of 12 charities picked by various celebrities to participate in the $25,000 Firefox Challenge that just started yesterday on the Crowdrise site. The actor Paul Rudd selected us because we were his late father's favorite charity.

    This is what the folks at Crowdrise emailed me about the contest:

    Paul Rudd is launching a fundraiser to help win $25k for the Rolling Dog Farm and I wanted to shoot you a quick email to let you know about everything.

    Here's a mess of notes that explains how everything will work…

    – Paul will be competing against eleven other celebrities, as well as anyone else who wants to participate, to try to raise as much money as possible for the Rolling Dog Farm.

    – Paul will have his own fundraising page on CrowdRise.

    – The goal is for Paul and the Rolling Dog Farm to direct people to Paul's page to donate and to join his team and help him fundraise.

    – Mozilla is starting each celebrity out with a $5,000 donation.

    – The celebrity, or non-celebrity campaign, that raises the most money for their charity gets a $25,000 prize donated by Mozilla.

    – Paul is going live with the following prize…Donate $18 to the The Rolling Dog Farm for a chance to win an “I Love You Man” poster signed by Paul Rudd.

    – The campaign ends January 11, 2012.

    Paul mentions on his page an additional prize:

    "Or, donate $29 and you could win a voicemail greeting recorded by me for your phone."

    We will get all the donations made through Paul's page, plus the $5,000 that Mozilla (the organization that created and maintains the Firefox web browser) has already donated to Paul and each of the other celebrities participating in this contest. The $25,000 is in addition to all those funds!

    Paul is up against some big names, like Barbara Streisand, Sean Penn, and Will Farrell, but as of this morning, Paul was already in the No. 4 spot, just ahead of Streisand!

    Please go to Paul's page here so you can donate to the farm and help him win the big prize for us.

    This is the main Firefox Challenge page.

    Paul, thank you so much for helping the animals here!

  • Irene with Alayne 1

    Yes, just in time for Christmas, little one-eyed Irene has been adopted. I took the photo of Irene with Alayne last week, a few moments before she left in a TLC Pet Transport van for her new home in Washington, D.C. Ironically, the same TLC Pet Transport driver who brought her out to us from Kentucky, Doug, was the same one who drove Irene to her new family.

    Lois H., a longtime friend and supporter of the sanctuary, had asked a few weeks ago if she could adopt Irene. Of course, we were delighted at the prospect! At that point it was just an issue of arranging transportation to D.C. and scheduling the trip with TLC. Lois emailed the morning Irene showed up in our nation's captial to say, "Our Christmas angel arrived a while ago, in the good hands of Doug! Irene is just adorable, came in with tail wagging full speed and has been having a grand time checking out her new surroundings. So far, she thinks this will be an OK place to be! We are thrilled to have her here at last!"

    We hadn't said anything yet on the blog because we wanted to have a photo showing Irene with her new family when we posted the news, and on Sunday night Lois sent this wonderful photo of Irene with Lois' grandchildren, Lela and Finn, and her husband Ed:

    Irene with grandchildren and Ed

    In a subsequent email, Lois wrote, "She stays very close to me, wherever I go in the house, and loses no opportunity to give kisses – I don't think there is a doggie kiss left in the whole state of NH as Irene brought them all with her!"

    And in another note this morning, Lois emailed to say, "Irene is a pure delight, in every way! She has now made friends with the dog next door and the two of them race back and forth along the fence with tails wagging and friendly little nips and paws under the fence."

    Speaking of kisses, here she is kissing Alayne last week while we were taking photos:

    Irene with Alayne 2

    Followed by:

    Irene with Alayne 3

    Hard to believe that just barely two months ago, Irene was going to be euthanized — and now here she is, loved and adored by a new family all her own.

    Lois, thank you for adopting this little girl!

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Bill and Bob on wagon with Steve

    Last Wednesday on a rainy afternoon, Kate and I hitched up Billy Bob to the wagon for the first time and took them up the road and back a few times. The wagon had come with Pete and Paint, but was in pretty rough shape, so a friend and neighbor of ours in Montana had rebuilt it for us. Thus this was actually the first time any of us had used the wagon. (Billy Bob:  "Oh, brother. They're practicing just about everything on us!") This was obviously a lot heavier than the forecart we were using in that original blog post, but it's tough and sturdy and if all goes well, this will be what we use to haul hay and water out to pasture until serious snow arrives.

    Since Kate took that photo on Wednesday, we've had some snow, but not enough to try out the boys' work sled (on runners, like a sleigh). It will be the mainstay for the winter. So while part of me — the one who has to shovel ramps and gates and snow-rake the roof) wants the serious snow to hold off as long as possible, the other part of me wants to get a foot or more so we can hitch them up to the sled.

    Billy Bob, meanwhile, just wanted to get back to the hay they were eating before we hitched them to the wagon.

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Widget waiting for lunch

    In the past couple of weeks, Widget has implemented a new service standard that we are apparently expected to fulfill. It seems she is no longer interested in leaving her comfy chair to come over and sit behind the doggie gate with the other dogs while we eat lunch. No. Now she simply sits up on the chair, front feet on the step-ramp in front of her, and bobs her head back and forth with a definite air of expectation. And waits.

    It occurred to me that we may have inadvertently encouraged her to do this by responding to this same "signal" when she wants to come down the ramp but is blocked by another dog like Madison. She learned that this particular maneuver gets our prompt attention, so she probably figured, "Hey, why not see if I can train the staff to bring me lunch in the same way?"

    So now, just before we finish lunch, she stirs in the chair, rises … and then sits and waits, head bobbing. Food magically appears. Widget consumes it. Then she happily retires for an afternoon nap, never having left her perch.

    It's a nice life, if you can find it.

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Billy Bob with S and A 2

    Yes, that's Alayne and me driving our two Belgian draft horses, Bill and Bob.

    As many long-time blog readers know, one of the main reasons we moved to this new location in New Hampshire was because of rising fuel prices, which made the remote ranch in Montana an increasingly expensive place to operate from (taking an animal to a vet clinic was a 140-mile round trip). We said at the time of our move that we expected oil prices to continue rising in the years ahead — the long-term trend would be up, up and up.

    This view on energy prices had also led us to start thinking about how we could use less fossil fuels in general, not only for transportation but also for general ranch work. We'd been interested in using draft horses for quite a while, and in 2009 back in Montana we had acquired two "Spotted Drafts" — a cross between a Belgian and a Paint horse — named Pete and Paint, who had been used for pulling wagons. We wanted to use Pete and Paint for hauling water and feed out to pastures … in addition to not using fossil fuels, horse-drawn equipment is a lot easier and lighter on the ground than driving tractors or other vehicles. But before we even got started, we made the move to New Hampshire.

    Once here, we realized we wanted to do even more with draft horses than simply haul wagons around — we could use them for farm work, like plowing, cultivating, and spreading manure. And we get so much rain here that the ground is often too wet to use a tractor to spread manure during many months of the year, something I've learned to my consternation. (Welcome to lush and green New England!) But while a tractor might be too heavy to use in certain conditions, a horse-drawn manure spreader would be light enough that you can still get out and get the manure spread on the fields without tearing them up.

    Alayne, Kate and I attended some local draft horse workshops this year to learn how to do this kind of work. (Kate was already an experienced "teamster," having driven wagons and sleighs for a local hotel, but hadn't done farm work.) One of the key things we learned, though, was just how important it was to have the right temperament in your horse team. Pulling a quiet wagon is very different from pulling noisy machinery clanging and banging behind you, and requires a team of horses who are suited to that kind of agricultural work.

    As we worked with other draft horses at the workshops, we began to worry that Pete and Paint might be a bit too "hot" for farm tasks. At one of the draft horse workshops we attended we met a wonderful horse trainer named Neal Perry, who lives just about an hour away in Vermont and has been farming with horses most of his life. We asked Neal to assess Pete and Paint for us to see if they were suited to farm work. (We figured we should know before having a wreck.) After a week at his farm, trying them out with various implements, Neal concluded that they were really not well-suited to the kind of work we wanted to do. For hay rides and wagon rides, they were great … but for pulling a manure spreader or chain harrow or other implements, they were too excitable and not the right kind of team. Neal told me, "You guys need a quiet, solid, experienced farm team that's already done it all."

    As luck would have it, a few weeks later Neal was able to arrange the perfect match — he found someone looking exactly for a team like Pete and Paint, and located a semi-retired Amish team of Belgians named Bill and Bob. I say "semi-retired" because the Amish work their horses pretty hard and tend to retire them from heavy farm work at about the age of 12. But that's still young for a horse, and the amount of work we'd be doing would be a lot less than any Amish farmer. Bill and Bob had been in semi-retirement for the past few years, pulling wagons on occasion, but they had indeed "done it all."

    The day I went up to Neal's to take Bill and Bob for a test drive, we hitched them up to a chain harrow to drag a field. The harrow was spread across a pile of rocks, and so it made an enormous clanging sound as Bill and Bob started pulling it. Pete and Paint would have jumped out of their skins, but Bill and Bob just leaned into their harnesses and started going. We went around and around the fields; I'd say "whoa," and the two boys instantly came to a stop. Neal and I would get off the cart, leaving them unattended, and they just stood there, going nowhere. This ability to stand still is important in farm work, because often you will be by yourself, and you need to get off and check something or hitch something up … so you want your horses to stand right there and not move.

    It was clear that these two boys were what we needed, especially given our limited skills with draft horses. We wanted horses who were so experienced that they could — and would! — ignore our rookie mistakes. Years ago we had become comfortable being around, and handling, horses this size because of the two enormous Belgians, Beaver and Rooster, who had come to us from the National Park Service in Montana. Though we had since lost them both to medical issues, our comfort zone with big horses is still there. But actually using draft horses for real work was new to us, which is why a pair like Bill and Bob were ideal.

    So a couple of weeks ago I brought Bill and Bob back to the farm, and then yesterday we hitched them up here for the first time. We had been waiting for the forecart, which is the equipment you attach various implements to. That arrived a few days ago in a box, and Kate and I assembled it yesterday morning. After lunch, we groomed the boys, put their harnesses on, walked them over to the cart, and hitched them up.

    Then, Kate and I set off for our first trip with the boys, who are now known collectively as "Billy Bob."  Alayne took this photo when Kate and I had just come back down the road — Kate was driving:

    Billy Bob with Kate

    That's Bob with the red halter and Bill with the green halter. (Click on photos for a larger image.)

    Then it was my turn to drive as Alayne and I headed out:

    Billy Bob with S and A 1

    And up on to some pasture ground:

    Billy Bob with S and A 3

    Here's the smiling couple:

    Billy Bob with S and A 4

    Bill looks a little suspicious — Alayne said Bill and Bob were probably whispering to each other the whole time, "Say, do you think they know what they're doing back there?"

    Then it was Alayne's turn to drive:

    Billy Bob with Alayne driving

    We'll keep you posted on our progress with The Billy Bob Boyz, but yesterday was an exciting first day. This is something we've wanted to do for a long time, and it felt really good to start doing it.

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Owen Irene 1

    Alayne got these photos the other evening when we were bringing the dogs in for the last time at night. Blind Owen the Beagle and Miss Irene suddenly started playing together, chasing each other across the floor and around the room. Alayne went to get the camera and started clicking away. It had been hard to photograph them because they were in such constant motion, skittering back and forth in the room, but then they ended up roughhousing on one of the beds, and that's when she took these shots.

    Bear in mind Irene doesn't know or realize Owen is blind, and he doesn't know she can see … and yet none of that keeps these two from having the time of their lives. One thing I love in watching Irene trying to get other dogs to play with her is her body language, which she displays plenty of in these photos:

    Owen Irene 2

    Owen Irene 3

    Owen Irene 4

    Owen Irene 5

    Click on this next one for a larger and better view of her wild-eyed expression:

    Owen Irene 6

    Owen Irene 7

    Owen Irene 8

    And finally …

    Owen Irene 9

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Cedar wearing dish

    Alayne and I walked into the dog room first thing the other morning to let the dogs out and saw blind Cedar still sound asleep in his crate … but wearing his food dish on his head. Must have been one heck of a party in his crate that night.

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Widget blocked on ramp

    This is what happens when Widget wants to stretch her legs occasionally during her 24-hour nap-fest and finds her exit down the ramp blocked … in this case, by blind Madison. Even though Widget is blind, she knows Madison is there and lying across the bottom step of the ramp. She doesn't want to step on Grandma, who can get a wee bit cranky about such things.

    So Widget will sit with her front feet on the top step, her rear end on the chair, and weave back and forth with her head until one of the household staff finally notices her predicament. Then we'll come over to lift her off and set her on the floor. Sometimes she'll just want to wander down the hall to the dog room to see if anything edible is left in the crates, other times she'll want to go outside for a stroll and a pee. But it's not long before she's back in the chair and sleeping again. It's amazing how fast 24 hours can go when you sleep through most of it.

    600x120_ShelterChallenge_2011_Jan

    $1,000 Weekly Winner Again — Thank You!

    Because of all of your votes, we were the weekly winner for week 3 again in the Shelter Challenge — and that brought in another $1,000 gift for the animals here!  Thank you so much!

    The new Shelter Challenge started October 3rd and ends at midnight on December 18th. Grand prize in this round is $5,000, plus $1,000 for weekly winners and $1,000 for state winners. There are also other categories … please see the Shelter Challenge website for details.

    And remember, you can vote every day, so consider bookmarking the voting page to make it easy.

    You can vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Please note:  Use Rolling Dog Ranch for our name and NH for the state and our listing will come up.  [Yes, we are still listed as Rolling Dog Ranch for the purposes of the contest, not Rolling Dog Farm.]

    Please help us win more money for the animals here by voting every day, and by encouraging your family, friends and colleagues to vote every day, too. Thank you!

  • Travels with Ace

    John Woestendiek, a Pulitzer Prize-winning former journalist at the Baltimore Sun who now blogs on all-things-dog at Ohmidog!, has been on an extended trip across the United States with his dog Ace, inspired by (and retracing part of) John Steinbeck's journey in "Travels with Charley." John had first met us back in Ovando when he was a visiting professor at the University of Montana's School of Journalism several years ago. He and Ace came by last fall not long after we moved to New Hampshire. John is writing about his adventures with Ace on his site Travels With Ace.

    Well, John has produced a calendar for 2012 featuring some of the highlights of the journey, and one month focuses on his visit to us here in New Hampshire. He has graciously dedicated 50% of the profits from the calendar sales to benefit the animals here. (Thank you, John!)

    You can see more about the calendar here — and on that page you'll see a photo of me with blind Patti that almost made me cry. When John sent me the link, I clicked on it, the page opened … and there was the photo.

    We're grateful to John for making such a generous offer to the farm!

  • First, I'd like to thank each and every one of you for your heartfelt comments and kind words about losing Patti. Alayne and I appreciated it a lot. Patti had been with us so long, and was such a part of us and our identity, that her loss was especially hard. But it meant so much to know how many lives she touched. Thank you.

    I'll be taking a blog break for the rest of this week in light of the Thanksgiving holiday, and will resume posting for Monday, November 28th. We hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving!