Husband and I have been talking about getting a dog for
quite a while, but if you recall my stories of Big Mike the Cat, you’ll
recognize why bringing a dog into the house of a neurotic feline might not have
been a good idea. After Mike went to sleep this past January, I started
thinking a dog might be OK. Husband wasn’t so sure, but in recent weeks, he
rethought the idea.
He has allergies, so I started looking for the kind of dog
that is good for someone with allergies. Poodles fit that description, but we
aren’t fond of poodles. They seem too prissy for us. And that’s when I thought
of a goldendoodle, a cross between a golden retriever and a poodle. They have
the temperament of a retriever and something like the coat of a poodle. They
have the bulky body type of a retriever and the graceful stride of a poodle as
well. All in all, they’re good mutts.
I found a breeder about an hour from home, a family whose
retriever was ready to give up her first litter of puppies, and we snagged the
last one. We call him Baxter. I’m pretty sure Tiger calls him Dumb Ass, but
he’s tolerant and only hisses when the floppy puppy goes for the cat’s tail. At
the moment, Baxter is a cute little guy who fits nicely in our arms, but he’s
expected to grow into a whopping 75-pound dog. Given his disposition, I’m
afraid he’s still going to want to fit nicely in our arms when he’s full grown.
It’s going to take the two of us to hold him.
At the moment, adding a puppy to the house has turned my
previously leisurely existence into one of full-time zookeeper. Husband is
doing plenty to take care of Baxter and his early training, but already I am
going from mess to mess and using wads of paper towels at a time to clean up
cat puke and then puppy pee and then cat puke and puppy poo. You take the puppy
out, and the cat tries to squeeze through the door. You put the cat back in,
and the puppy follows him, and then you have to start over.
Baxter has a crate he seems to feel comfortable in, and it
serves as a playpen when the baby animal needs a break—or when the parents of
the baby animal need a break—but he is not yet house trained. We’re working on
it, although we’re having trouble reading the signs. I’ve read that if a puppy
sniffs the floor and wanders the room, you can assume he’s looking for just the
right spot, but this little guy doesn’t give us more than a 30-second lead
time. He sniffs and pees before we can get him to the door. Apparently, there
is a large learning curve, and it’s not just the puppy that has lots of lessons
to learn.
We’re learning about which chew toys are good and which are
bad—rawhide is not so good—and how often a goldendoodle needs to be
brushed—every day—and what to do when he whines in his crate—let him whine.
I’ll keep you posted about who learns what fastest. Right
now, it feels like nap time.
Comments
Well, this is exciting news! It's good that you are home so much to get his potty habits under control. I'm sure he'll catch right on.
My foster pooch tried marking different things when he first got here and I had to get on that RIGHT AWAY! Fortunately he cooled it quickly and now just bugs the snot out of Tulip the chi boss. I have got to get him to the vet for snipping ASAP! ;)
Have fun with Baxter!
I'm sure he'll have the two of you trained before you know it.
That's all.