Friday, December 28, 2012

The Ups and Downs of the Holidays

So, Fathead and I are back home (Southern Illinois, where we both grew up) for the holidays. This has been, for the most part, a very good trip. Lots of excitement and fun for doggy.

First, his cousin-dog Molly came to visit for the holidays too, and she and Zim are bestest buds. They love playing with each other and really wear each other out. The basically didn't stop playing the entire time they were together.













Second, Zim got to play with a 3-year-old for Christmas and he definitely really loved her. Unlike some dogs, who think that kids who scream and run and move funny are scary, Zim thinks they're great playmates. He's definitely a great little dog with kids. He's not perfect (he did start guarding a bit when she kept giving him and taking away a little toy car and he growled after she kept putting her hand over his eyes, but he was mostly a doll and he definitely was more patient with that behavior from the little one than he would be from most people) but it's definitely great to see him being a good little family dog. I was pretty sure before that he would be great with the kids we eventually plan to have but I'm now very confident that with the right ground rules in place, he will be nothing short of fabulous. He's really a super patient little dog and he just generally likes kids.




Finally, Zim got his first snow and oh, how he loved it. He was half-bounding through it and half stalking it and he's just had a grand old time with her. I've been desperately hoping for snow because I knew he would love it and he did! Watching him run around in the snow was definitely all that I hoped it would be. More, in fact.




That said, the trip has not been all perfect. Today Zim had a little escape and it was absolutely harrowing.

So, my mother in law was getting rid of some milkbones that had gotten wet (with icky sewage water) when the bathroom had flooded due to some pipes being destroyed under the house (so, you know, trying to make sure the dogs didn't get sick from eating gross sewage food) and she left the back door open while she did. Zim walked right out. This was, possibly, I think, because he was wearing his harness, as he is not normally prone to door bolting (although perhaps saying he doorbolted is inaccurate since he just walked calmly outside instead of running through like he'd never seen the sky before). I was near him, so I followed him and called to Fathead and my father-in-law to help me. Unfortunately, however, despite walking calmly and slowly toward him, Zim evaded capture and kept hopping along happily through the snow. Eager to explore, and perhaps confident due to the fact that Mommy and Daddy were nearby, he started away from the house and through the street. My father-in-law asked me about food, so I ran in to grab the pork we'd been heating up for my lunch. By the time I got back out, I could no longer see Zim and my father-in-law was calling to Fathead to stop chasing Zim (at a walking pace), but since Zim wasn't stopping when Fathead did, he kept forging (again, at a walking pace) after him, unwilling to let him get out of sight.

The next time I saw Zim, Fathead had him clutched safely in his arms, safe and sound. He had captured  the Great Explorer when he'd stopped to pee on a tree. However, this was only after Zim had wandered into the road, which is a highly traveled one with fast traffic. Honestly, even thinking about my baby on that road and what might have happened just makes me sick to my stomach. The worst part, of course, is that it was hard to know what to do. We were unwilling to try walking away or stop following him, because we didn't want to lost sight of him and that's usually when he decides he wants to go find you. He wouldn't come when called or stop as he didn't want to be caught and have his fun (and, in his mind, perfectly safe and probably almost normal, with Mom and Dad nearby) little adventure cut short. What this really means, I think, is that I need to implement the recall-training program I've been thinking of putting him through for the past couple of weeks. We need to come up with a new "come" command and practice with him on a long line and then jackpot him something fierce upon complying (either forcibly via the line or freely) with the command. Hopefully this will give us a better option should a situation like the escape today ever come up again.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Check Out These Photos of Zim!

So, the wonderful Angel Sallade, who did the professional photos of Zim that we had done just after Thanksgiving, has made a post about Zim on her blog. It has a number of lovely photos of Zim. Check it out!

I am Zim!!!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Stuck Puppy

Guess who got his head stuck in Fathead's backpack loop and had to be cut out of it? Zim did!



Sunday, December 2, 2012

Zim's Birthday Party

So, Zim had his birthday party today. It wasn't actually his birthday, but his birthday is this coming Tuesday and Saturdays work much better for parties so we had it today. Anyway, it was wildly successful. There was a cake for the people (of whom there were about 11) with his picture on it as well as some "cake" for Zim (his hypoalergenic food mixed together with fish oil and wrapped in bacon). Then he got his presents (all wrapped in the same box), which he unwrapped himself and really adored. He got a new Kong Wobbler (since his old one is kind of torn up), an IQ Ball and an Invinciblez Snake. I think he might get a bit frustrated with the Treat Ball, but he was totally taken with the snake. He squeaked that thing just forever. Good decision on my part to get that for him, I think.

So, now, pictures and video from the big event!!

The cake that the humans got (Zim wanted some too, but unfortunately for Birthday Boy, he is on an allergy trial).


The video of Zim opening his presents. It's actually 3 videos put together, because I took it with a normal digital camera instead of a video camer, but you get most of it.

Birthday Boy was so pooped after his party that he just could not bother to care when we draped his new squeaky snake over him.