New Years 2009

Happy New Year, 2009 –
New Years, 2009

Of the cats, only Kacey wanted to pose …

Kacey - new years, 2009

“I’m on the kitchen windowsill.
No I’m not really supposed to be here.
Do I look like I care?”

2008 was a rough one – whether 2009 will be an improvement remains to be seen but, like our new President elect, it sure has inherited a lot of s*** from the one that preceded it!

Poor little Jasi made it through the holidays but I don’t know how much longer the dear girl is going to be around. She’s terribly thin – she wants to eat and she tries to eat, but that horrid growth in her mouth is making it increasingly difficult for her to do so :(.

My heating system has been out of whack since around Christmas – I’m on my 3rd call to try to get it resolved. The bedroom and bathroom are nice and toasty, but the huge radiator in my living room isn’t getting as hot as it should so the rest of my house is freezing!

Bryce is doing well – after procrastinating through the holidays I’m planning to take a deep breath and start his chemo tomorrow. It’s scary but the longer I wait the more it’s possible that the Prednisone he’s on will make the disease drug resistant, in which case the chemo won’t even work. First sign of trouble he’s going off it – fingers crossed that won’t happen. I will be on edge and watching him like a hawk the entire first 2 weeks – please send good thoughts our way!

Brycey update

Bryce - December, 08
After being diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma last April, Bryce is still with us and still looking/acting very much like himself.

The disease was fairly stable through the summer, so I didn’t start him on treatment. Then his protein/glubulins started climbing and I made plans to finally start treatment. As luck would have it, the bloodwork before he was initially to start showed his white cells lower than normal, so his oncologist recommended starting him on Prednisone (half of the protocol) for a couple of weeks to see if they came back up before adding in the Melphalan (which can itself drop white cell counts). After a couple weeks on the Pred his globulins were stable, his albumin was the best it’s been since before we discovered this, and his white cells were well within normal range.

Side note: If you ever want to make yourself really crazy, check your dog’s bloodwork every month.

With the go-ahead to start on the chemo, next thing was trying to find a pharmacy that could make it up in that small a dose! Finally found one and picked it up yesterday – I haven’t given it to him yet, fingers crossed it will go well when I do. It would be tempting to just leave him on the Pred (which is in itself a treatment protocol for myeloma) but the average remission/life expectancy times are dramatically different – 560 days with the Melphalan/Prednisone vs 270 with Prednisone alone.

Bryce has been participating in all his normal activity all this time. He hasn’t been completely on top of his game in agility, but he had a few good trials, some really amazing runs and collected quite a few Q’s. I notice he’s REALLY tired at the end of a day/weekend – most pronounced at indoor trials because he doesn’t SLEEP! When he’s outside in the car, he’ll nap between runs and was ending the days with a fair amount of energy.

At home he’s been going for walks, playing with his sisters, making “amorous gestures” at Jayda and generally being his bouncy happy self. I’m hoping the chemo doesn’t change that, but he’s in no hurry to leave us and if I want him to stay around for a while yet I think that’s the road I need to take. Although he’s acting fine now, it’s almost certain this disease will eventually do bad things to him – the longer I can put that off the better.

Catching up part 2 – Agility

So since the middle of September we’ve had a short but fairly-busy agility season – 2 CPE trials, 2 NADAC trials and 1 AKC trial. I ran both Bryce and Jayda all season, Raven isn’t ready for prime time yet. I’ll report on all 3:

Raven

Raven snowstorm
Raven’s in class and HAD been her crazy, fearless self until one week when she left me for the umpteenth time to run BACK up the A-frame … got near the top and for some reason that apparently seemed like a good idea to HER at the time, bailed off the edge, landing in a scary face-plant on our mats! My heart was in my stomach and I immediately ran over to her – she limped for a second but fortunately there was no major PHYSICAL harm done. Thinking about all the things that COULD have happened, that was VERY fortunate!! However, she now has avoidance issues and contact phobias contacts to work through :( .

There’s a method of teaching contacts some instructors are using where the dog is initially encouraged to turn around on them, reverse direction and go back over them, even jump off the ramps early-on, treating the contacts like a jungle gym. The theory being that the dog builds strength and gets confident on the obstacles. Raven’s first classes used this method – I was skeptical, but I was in the class, I tried it…

Verdict: I HATE it. I’m convinced that this early conditioning was responsible for the accident. It’s definitely responsible for her thinking it’s OK to turn around and go BACK over contacts! Sorry, I don’t care who’s promoting this or how many Machs/Adchs/Nationals/World Team placements they have. Contacts are a one-way street and IMO should be taught that way from day #1. Never again.

Jayda

Jayda smiling

What can I say? Jayda continues to surprise me and be the Big Black Q Machine. I take some good-natured teasing from people about her leisurely take on “running a course” – I laugh about it all the way to the ribbon tent.

And she’s not just qualifying – she’s occasionally WINNING her classes! I’m not quite sure how we pull THAT off except that she makes very few mistakes and usually runs a nice, efficient line. And occasionally she has a burst of speed – there were a couple of NADAC trials where she was feeling good and I realized mid run that I was working pretty hard to keep up with her!

I do wish she wasn’t so nervous at outdoor trails though – she’s OK in the ring and in the car but in between she gets SO stressed :(. I feel bad for her – at home she always has a non-stop smile on her face (see photo), I would trade all the ribbons in the world to see her smile like that at a trial.

Anyway, this Fall she earned a shoebox full of ribbons and finished another fistful of titles (5 of them) – I’m too lazy to try to list them all here, but the girl’s doing alright for herself :)!

Back to school!

Jayda and Raven (“Jayven”?) went back to class last night. Jayda, after her initial and customary apprehension, was happy to be back and looking good (though her tunnel/contact discriminations need a little refresher).

Raven … was Raven excited? Can you say “screaming lunatic”?!!! She took one look at all the kewl “toys” she hadn’t seen since June (Aframe, Dogwalk …) and was absolutely beside her little self! She doesn’t seem to have forgotten much over the summer and was working really well … and FAST! She does have an annoying tendency to run in towards me, but teaching her “out” this summer has proven to be a big help. I keep reminding myself that Bryce did the same thing at that age. She also still needs work with the chute – I HAVE one, pure laziness on my part I didn’t address that in the last couple of months.

Bryce is an orphan :(

I just got word this morning that Bryce’s birth mother passed away.

I didn’t know Cassidy well – I only met her when I went to see Bryce and bring him home – but she impressed me as a sweet, intelligent girl – sociable, but her world definitely revolved around “her” special human. Like Bryce’s father, she was a fun-loving Sheltie but a bit more of a gentle soul – personality traits she passed on to Bryce.

Here’s a picture of Bryce (as a young adult) with his mother – I have a larger version of this somewhere, but for now this will have to do.

Bryce and Cassidy

My thoughts are with Cassidy’s human family – it’s never easy to say goodbye.