• Widget after eye surgery

    Here's our darling little Widget, after I took her sutures out this morning.  She healed up just fine from her eye surgery last month.  We've thought about getting her an eye patch and having her look like a pirate, because sometimes she acts like a pirate around here!  ("Here, let me help myself to your dinner."  Or:  "Excuse me, I believe that chair is mine.  Now get out.")  But with only one eye instead of two, she's just as cute as ever.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please
    keep voting

    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on
    track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from
    third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can
    so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and
    friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and
    our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Luke Stoney and Baron

    I like to say that "Montana is a small town," because so often you run into situations where you think, what are the odds of that happening?  More often than you'd think in Montana!  For instance, a couple of weeks ago one of our wonderful longtime volunteers, Kate W. in Missoula, was looking for another place to live.  Kate had adopted Luke, a blind Lab, from us a few years ago, so she needed a pet-friendly house or apartment.  After scanning the listings of available housing for a while, she eventually responded to an ad for a room to rent in a house in Missoula … only to discover that the person who was renting out the room was Wendy M., who had adopted blind Stoney and blind-and-deaf Baron from us a couple of years ago! 

    What exactly are the chances of that?

    So Kate and Luke moved in with Wendy and her brood last week.  Wendy emailed me to say, "Obviously the first thing Kate and I did was try to get a group shot of Baron, Stoney (she's the one in the bandana), and Luke together.  Trying to get three blind dogs to look in the same direction is impossible!  They all get along great and are sharing toys and bones already."  Good roommates indeed!

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please
    keep voting

    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on
    track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from
    third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can
    so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and
    friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and
    our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!


  • Back in mid-February, I had dropped off our blind colt Cash at his new boarding school — oops, boarding stable — in Missoula.  We had arranged with a trainer, Will Balis, to work with Cash and train him for riding.  Well, Will was riding Cash at the end of his very first week — even out on pasture!  Barbara Howell, who runs the Flying H Stables where Will trains horses, shot some video the following week and emailed it to me.  (It's taken me this long to get around to editing it down and posting it on YouTube!)  The first time I saw this video of Cash being ridden, I'll admit, I got a lump in my throat.  So many people think a blind horse "isn't good for anything," and yet here is this youngster cantering around an arena like any sighted horse.  In fact, as you'll see when you watch it, you'd never know the horse being ridden was totally blind.

    Note:  If the fellow riding Cash looks different from the fellow holding Cash in the February blog post, it's because Will shaved his beard.  Barbara said it was a "winter thing" with Will.  I wonder if it had more to do with the number of comments and emails I received saying how much he and I looked alike.  I suspect that may be what got him to shave his beard.  

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please
    keep voting

    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on
    track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from
    third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can
    so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and
    friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and
    our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Timmy with cone

    On Friday morning I was letting the dogs out at Widget's House and had just reached Timmy's crate when I noticed drops of blood on the floor outside his crate door.  As I opened the crate, I could see the paw on his crippled leg was a bloody mess.  He had blood dripping down his mouth and chest, and as he sat there, waiting to spring out of the crate, blood dripped off the paw as he held his leg up in the air.

    Hmm.

    Once I got him cleaned up, I realized what had happened.  He had started chewing on his foot, a case of self-mutilation.  This development meant only one thing:  That leg was now starting to bother him.  Whether he has odd tingling from nerve sensations (our vets were pretty sure he has radial nerve damage), or it was turning painful, we don't know, but clearly — and quite suddenly — it got his attention, and not in a good way. 

    I called our vet clinic in Helena and spoke to Dr. Jennifer Rockwell, who had treated Timmy for his heartworms two weeks ago.  We had already planned to have his leg amputated, but because of the heartworm treatment the surgery was postponed for a month or two.  Now we were going to have to do the surgery sooner than expected.  Fortunately, Timmy has tolerated the heartworm treatment very well, and given his age, energy and overall physical condition, his risk profile is lower than it might otherwise be. 

    So Jennifer told me what to give him in the way of two different broad-spectrum antibiotics and pain medication, and I explained what I had done to address his wounds and how I bandaged his foot.  Basically, we were going to provide the same level of care for him this weekend that the clinic would have done anyway until they could get surgery scheduled for this coming week. 

    To keep him from pulling the bandage off and gnawing on his foot some more, Timmy also got to wear a cone all weekend long.  Now, every time I post a photo of a dog wearing one of these cones, someone always asks whether we know about the soft e-collars and the other assorted ones on the market.  Yes, we do.  And we have them all.  But each type has its purpose and some are more effective than others — and some don't work at all — depending on the location of the wound or surgery site.  And clever dogs, for instance, can figure out how to manipulate the soft e-collars and bend them back.  (Which is why Widget gets a hard plastic cone.)  For a highly energetic and intelligent dog like Timmy with a paw wound, the hard plastic e-collar is the best way to keep him from getting to the paw.

    The interesting question — and this is where it would be so helpful if they could talk to us! — is what changed to cause Timmy to do this?  Did it suddenly start feeling weird?  Did it start to hurt?  I wish we knew.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please
    keep voting

    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on
    track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from
    third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can
    so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and
    friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and
    our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Spinner in chair 1

    I got these photos a while back and forgot I had them on the computer … but here is blind-and-deaf Spinner working her way into her favorite chair.  Because she is blind and deaf, and because these chairs are also the favorite of some previously identified snapping Dachshunds (a.k.a. Daisy), she begins the process quite carefully.  By the time I grabbed the camera and started taking photos, I missed capturing phase 1 of the process:  she stands right in front of the chair, sniffing to see if anyone is in it. 

    Then she inches closer, sniffs some more, and then puts her front feet in the chair.  At that point she waits a little longer, sniffing left and right:

    Spinner in chair 2

    Finally satisfied that the chair is hers to claim, she starts climbing up:

    Spinner in chair 3

    It takes a moment of circling and smoothing things out to get it just right:

    Spinner in chair 4

    And then it's time for a nap:

    Spinner in chair 5

    Notice that the entire time, the sleeping Dachshund in the other chair, blind Callie, didn't stir.

    To answer Kathleen's question in her blog comment, our spring/summer print newsletter went on the press today in Missoula.  It will be mailed out to our donors in a couple of weeks.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please keep voting
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on
    track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from
    third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can
    so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and
    friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and
    our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Gabe close-up for blog

    When Alayne and I were taking photos for the spring newsletter recently, I had to chuckle when I saw this shot after my camera finished uploading the images to my computer.  Blind-and-deaf Gabe is going to be the "cover model" for this next newsletter, though this is not the photo that will be on the cover!  He continues to do great, and other than the hair growth on his face, you'd never know what he had gone through last year.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please keep voting
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in fourth place and still on track to
    win $3,000 for the animals, but every vote counts!  We just slipped from third place to fourth, so please help round up as many votes as you can so we can stay in the running for the $3,000.  Ask your family and friends to vote for the ranch, too!

    Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Dexter for blog post

    As soon as I opened the mail yesterday and saw the cover of my March issue of DVM Newsmagazine ("The voice of veterinary news"), I knew there was going to be trouble.  A small headline said, "page 8:  AKC unveils top breeds."  Now, everyone around here knows that Labs always come in No. 1 in these rankings, year after year (19 in a row, but who's counting?), and no one cares.  "Labs, Schmabs," they say.  What the gang wanted to know, of course, is where the Beagles and Dachshunds ranked.  That's the real competition at the ranch.  So I gathered them round the kitchen table and read off the top 10 list, and when I got to No. 5 — Beagles! — there was a lot of celebratory woo-woo-wooing.  And then, mercifully, came the Dachshunds at No. 8.  There was a chorus of little barks from way down there near the floor, but it was pretty subdued compared to the Beagle cheering squad.  They were more than a bit worried that they just barely made it into the top 10.  "How can that be?" they fretted.  "We're so cute and have so much personality, and besides, we're easy to pick up and carry!  Just try lugging a Beagle around."

    The Dachshunds don't know what people see in Beagles, and vice versa, but at least they can both agree that they should be more popular than the Labs/Schmabs.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please vote
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in third place — oops, just slipped to
    fourth! — putting us on track to
    win $3,000 for the animals.  Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Widget with cone up in air

    I saw blind Widget sleeping in the chair this weekend with her cone pointed up.  I wondered for a minute if she was using it for tanning purposes, like some people do with mirrors to direct the sunlight in a particular direction.  Then I thought maybe she was hoping that if dog cookies started miraculously falling from the sky, they'd drop right into the cone and funnel straight into her mouth.  That way there's no need to have to get up and sniff around looking for them.

    Widget is doing great, by the way.  Her eye is healing up just fine from the surgery, and she's her usual bossy self.

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please vote
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in third place — oops, just slipped to
    fourth! — putting us on track to
    win $3,000 for the animals.  Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Moose with sky

    I got this shot of blind Moose the other day when I was taking photos for our spring newsletter.  Because he always hangs his big head down low — must weigh a lot, eh? — it's tough to get a photo of him with his head up.  So I got down low and put the camera down even lower.  I wasn't sure what I was going to get … but with the kind of digital SLR camera I have, you can just hold the camera out away from you and click-click-click and then see what you get.  Sometimes it's … well, not too great!  Other times you can have a little bit of photographic serendipity happen and get an interesting shot like this.

    Now, if only I had the graphic skills to add in a little cartoon bubble over his head and a line about what he was thinking as I was doing this…. (As in, "Could you please put the stupid camera away and take us inside for dinner?")

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please vote
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in third place — oops, just slipped to fourth! — putting us on track to
    win $3,000 for the animals.  Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote
    in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and
    make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!

  • Spencer and Katie

    Well, it took us a while, and we had lots of great names to choose from, but we finally decided what to call these two adorable little dogs: Spencer and Katie, for Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. 

    They have settled into a routine here, and have figured out where everything is.  In fact, when we put them outside to go potty, they're back at the door almost before we are (no, really!).  We have to pick them up and put them even farther out, to make sure they do their business before they head back inside.  They are a very smart pair, and though the genetic damage cost them their vision and hearing, their brains are 110%.  And their intelligence is matched by their self-confidence.

    So there you have it … Spencer and Katie.

    This will be the last blog post for this week.  But please keep voting in the Shelter Challenge!

    468x120_ShelterChallenge_Jan2010

    Please vote
    for the ranch in the Shelter Challenge — and you can
    vote every day!  We're currently in third place, putting us on track to
    win $3,000 for the animals.  Enter "Rolling Dog Ranch" and our state
    postal code,
    MT, for Montana, and it will bring up our listing.

    Vote in the Shelter Challenge here.

    Last
    year we won $3,000 in the first round and then won the $20,000 Grand
    Prize in the second round, so your votes really do add up and make for
    a wonderful gift for the animals here.

    Thank you!