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Many Adults, 1 Boy & 1 Dog's Montessori Life in a Singapore flat

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Category: Dog & You Page 9 of 10

Dog walking after sunset

It is dark at 7.30pm over here. I generally do not like walks in the dark. The most we do is go down for a quick pee break on the roof garden on the second floor. But there  are the few rare occasions that we do go for a walk after nightfall. And this is one of them.

Pictured left, she is impatient to go after waiting the whole day, yet patiently waiting for me to tie my laces.

Pictured right, the fitness corner on the carpark roof garden is the penultimate stop for our walks. We usually circle the area, letting her go up two stepped raised platforms, where she practices her sit-stay. The picture looks like robo-dog!


In between, we walk to a park further away, ran one round for me and inspected the grass around the perimeter of the park for her. I don’t really appreciate picking poop in the dark, but has to be done. *pouts*

Do you walk your dog at night or before sunrise when it is still dark? Do you find it boring to walk in the dark?

Silly

Mr P: Oophf, oophf, it’s hard work chasing after a dog.

Me: It’s just lying there like a beached whale!

Mr P: You try reaching her on a stationary bike :D

A fat pigeon

Our main door lies adjacent to the stairs, which is accessible via a fire retardant door.

As you can imagine, the stairs are seldom used since they are mainly there to function as fire escape. Or in the unfortunate case of lift breakdown, then some people may indulge in forced vertical marathons, god bless the poor souls on the the 30th floor!

Donna and I use the stair several times a week. We typically start our morning walks going down the stairs, per recommendation of the doctor to exercise the strength and flexibility my nerve paralysed toes.

I can count on one hand the staircase landings that actually get frequent use, as evidence by cigarette butts, dirty track shoes and impromptu pot gardens. My own blighted wrightia religiosa was and is still banished here after I give up on the fight against the scale insect and its various cronies. Surprisingly, the plant survives to today despite my lack of TLC for it. It must thank the heavens for the constant rainwater it gets I suppose. I left it by the window opening of the staircase.

Anyway, back to the fire retardent door that lies adjacent to my front door. I’ve heard concerns from other people before, how this is potentially a safety hazard. Perhaps robbers can hide behind the door to ambush you when you return home and are busy opening the door, etc. But I seldom look through the glass panel to check really.

The other day, we came back from our evening walk and I saw a movement from a corner of my eye so I looked and found…

A fat pigeon.

It appeared somewhat disoriented as it kept turning in circles.

Perhaps it noticed me staring, I don’t know. But I stayed long enough to assure myself that it could walk in straight lines and it could flap its wings to go up one step before Donna and I stepped into our house.

It’s too bad Donna’s short so she can’t see the pigeon (haha!) because it was gone the next morning.

All the hair

Dog hair will always be a problem when you have a local mongrel in the house. They shed. Everyday.

For a while we got it under control, I brushed her outdoors every morning, and I sweep once or twice a day. Donna is not allowed on the sofa or the other rooms outside of the living room and common corridor.  So yes, it helps that the area of free hair fall is limited.

But in the last week, if Doggy Hair Fall was a game, Donna probably hit her new high score.

Witness.

The floor of hair she leaves behind after chilling out on that spot. And this is after I have brushed and bathed her and clotted the drainage with a thick mound of hair!

And the floor of hair after just a few brushes of her coat. And I didn’t even put any effort into the brushing.

When we do it outside, you can literally see whole hair balls blowing off her and rolling merrily in the breeze!!

Perhaps, it is due to the stress of being poisoned by the hydrangea. I’m not sure. But I do hope she goes back to normal shedding levels soon!

Chihuahuas, an off leash dog, school girls and families we pass by

Having been kept her quiet since her misadventure with a hydrangea leaf, we finally took a longer walk again once Donna has sufficiently recovered. My walks with her typically comprise me time, in which we run along the path to build strength and flexibility in my recovering foot and Donna time, where Donna gets to inspect all the grass, tree trunks and light posts, etc to her heart’s content.

Sometimes during Donna time, I play a game whereby I drop to walking a few steps behind her and see where she goes. The last two times we did this at the empty carpark behind our block, she invariably chose to drift further and further away from where we live, choosing to walk along the void deck of other blocks that we never walked before.

But this time we were at the park behind our block and so she chose to meander from one plot of grass to another, turning circles as she tracked this scent and that.

Eventually we returned to the footpath that we were accustomed to follow when we run. As we strolled leisurely along, she was in her own world and ignored the runners running past us.

By and by, an old man came up from behind and as he drew up, he asked if Donna was a local dog. I replied that yes, she was. The old man shared that his friend recently found a local dog at the nearby train station and it followed him home. I asked what colour was the dog, remembering that there was a missing tan-coloured dog by the name of Chilli in the neighbourhood. The old man replied that it was white.

The old man then told me that he used to have a chihuahua. It was given to him when the chihuahua’s family had to move. He chuckled as he recalled how the small little chihuahua would know when he or his wife were coming home to their tenth floor flat , even if they were still downstairs! He said the chihuahua would rollover in excitement. He went on to talk about how cheap it was to feed the chihuahua, only 30 cents a day. He fed it bits of chicken and papaya. (Inwardly, I reminded myself chihuahuas are small and probably ate like birds :P) But oh boy was the vet fees expensive when the chihuahua was diagnosed with cancer. And after 3-4 years together, the chihuahua passed away and cremation cost him $350.

Before we parted, the old man reminded me to not let Donna in the grassy areas since there are ticks about. I grinned sheepishly thinking that the grassy areas are exactly where Donna gets Donna time. Luckily, so far we have not encountered mites. We regularly spray her with this insect-repelling DIY spray and we do have Frontline Plus in the cupboard, even if we use it more sparingly.

We continued to meander since Donna still seemed pretty active and also because I was waiting for her to poop. By this time, we had left the park to walk along the train line before we circle back on a parallel path. It was here that I noticed an old lady with an off leash white dog in front of us. It was a small white dog with floppy ears and a fluffy white bobbing tail and amazingly, it kept to within a 1 metre radius of the old lady, who for the most part looked disinterested and just slumped along. We crossed to the other side of the road so that Donna would not disturb the old lady and the small white dog. Eventually we were strolling exactly opposite of the old lady and the white dog. The white dog saw us and for about perhaps 10 metres of the walk, it trotted on its side of the road looking at us and smiling joyfully in the cutest manner.  The old lady turned a corner and for the first time, the white dog left its 1 metre radius as it trotted along still smiling at us. But the old lady soon turned and made a noise and the dog obediently ran back about two metres to her and they continued on.

We eventually came to the corner where we made our turn, just as a man was crossing the road to our side with a tiny chihuahua, only slightly bigger than a fat rat! The chihuahua all but ignored us, while I was the one staring at it. I always did find them funny with their little chicken legs and rodent size.

We continue down the path we turned into and soon encountered four schoolgirls. Two of them saw Donna and decided they desperately needed to take an alternate route to avoid us, while the other two continued towards us as they chatted. It was only when they went past us that they suddenly made a loud whoop and skipped excitedly away to join their other two friends. And all that time, my fear-inspiring dog was too distracted inspecting the grass to even cast them a glance.

A last turn took us back to the path that leads to our block. A family cycled past us and I could hear their conversation. The mother warning her child, “that dog will bite”. Meanwhile an Indian family and their toddlers strolled casually close to Inspector Grass, my grass sniffing dog and I, as they passed us. The mother on the bicycle continued as they cycled across the dog, “some dogs will bite even if you don’t touch them.”

Maybe one day, I should put a T-shirt on Donna before we start out on our walk. It could say, “The ant bit me, it hurts!” or something equally random. :D

Rainy days and red ants

Everyday is a rainy day over here, and suddenly there are insects everywhere.

The random dragonfly that landed one day on the unwashed towels in the yard.

Snails.
Small black ones.
Small neutral coloured ones.
And big cone-shell snails that could take up the entire space of my palm.
And of course the unfortunate ones that got smashed underfoot.

Ants.
Small black ones.
Small red ones.
And big red ones with long clingy limbs.
And of course the unfortunate dog that gets them all over her paws and muzzle.

Ah yes, my silly dog will persist in inspecting all the grass patches and tree trunks swarming with big red ants. Heedless, she continues on. Until you make her sit. Then she seems to finally feel their stinging bites (probably), and still she sits there as if expecting them to depart from her paws on their own. Is it just my dog that is silly?

Out comes the wet tissue. Wipe them off, wipe them off!

If you see a crazy woman jumping up and down on a pile of wet tissues trying to kill those red ants while her silly dog sits there and pants, you know who it is!

Donna’s celebrity look-a-like!

I had always thought of Donna’s themesong as “Jokerface” (re: Lady Gaga). But some time ago, my friend’s husband thought Donna looked like Batman too. But oops, Donna no Doberman ears. Bummer.

Don’t cry Donna. When I was a teenager, it was trendy to define anything cute as “ugly but adorable”.

Reference celebrity images from digitalspy.co.uk and sideshowcollectors.com. Pictures copyrighted to photographer unless otherwise stated on these websites I guess.  

Donna’s littermate and mother

Quite some time back I had the awesome idea to put this t-shirt on my dog. And no, the t-shirt in question is not made for dogs. In fact, it was too big for Donna and she couldn’t walk in it without stepping on the hem. But no big deal, because I did not have it on her for long anyway. Just a couple of minutes, long enough to find out it was too big and to snap a few pictures before taking it it off again. No animals were harmed in any way.

The dog on the t-shirt in question was not Donna but her sister Dyana. The t-shirt was one of the shelter sales items, made in memory of the dog. We first learnt of the dog’s death on the day we first met Donna. In the midst of interacting with Donna, Florence received the bad news when her phone rang.

We later learnt that Dyana died when she jumped down the building from a window, presumably because she was anxious during a thunderstorm. The dog was home alone and the window was opened to provide some ventilation. There was some speculation that perhaps the curtains flapped from the wind and drew the dog to the window.

I later sent the picture to Florence and she replied that it made her emotional. But I guess, emotional in a good way since she did not get mad at me. :P

Today is Donna’s birthday, and also Dyana’s. A good day to remember a dog who died and to remind us to always to make sure the house is secure when leaving the dog home alone. And also to remember the mother Dior, who is happily adopted, and coincidentally enough to a nearby family.

Do you believe in karma?

When I was a young school going kid still, I was like the typically child with a fascination for small animals. I would pet all the street cats, only to turn my hand up to see it all covered in dirt. I would buy small cans of cat food with my pocket money and feed it the to stray cat that gave birth to kittens under one of the teacher’s table in the classroom.

And there was once, only once, we found a small kitten, my friend and I.

The kitten seem to be sick. So my resourceful friend found out where we could take it to the vet. We went there and then we took it to the SPCA. But by the time we got there, I had gotten it into my not-so-brilliant head that I would adopt the kitten. And so the SPCA staff said I should not bring the kitten in and sent me home.

But I was a young child with no real knowledge of how to go about taking care of a poor young kitten. The kitten did a wonderful job of being cute, taking small steps across our great desert of a floor and mewing piteously. But it didn’t know that it shouldn’t pee or poop on the floor and plonking it on the newspaper, like the book I had borrowed from the library had advised, didn’t work. I was a small child, I had no patience and no real understanding or empathy for the kitten.

At last, after a full day of putting up with everything, my mother lost it when the kitten made a mess on the floor yet again. She took the kitten and returned it probably to some void deck similar to where I had found it originally and that was that. I never saw it again. I was a young child, any resentment was quickly forgotten, although the memory remained.

But why am I talking about a poor abandoned kitten?

We are not Donna’s first family. She was adopted by a schoolgirl when she was a puppy. It seems like a very similar story, it seemed like the schoolgirl never really got her parents’ consent in the first place. And probably like my mother, they tried to put up with it. Eventually, Donna was returned to the shelter. Donna was lucky, she had folks at the shelter who took her in and cared for her unlike that tiny kitten from so many years ago.

We bumped into our neighbour today when we returned from Donna’s pee break. I joked that I was Donna’s servant having to take her down to do her toileting. My neighbour’s answer was that Donna must have done a lot of good deeds in her previous life to find a good home now.

Or maybe, its just my karma and what goes around comes around.

One thing for sure, the decision for making an adoption should not be left in the hands of a schoolchild. Their un-informed parents are most likely not ready for it.

Oh, and my neighbour’s primary school-going son was quick to add, if he had done a lot of good deeds in his previous life, he’d rather be a human than a dog in the next life. Tell that to Donna.

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