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Note: This story chronicles the three times that Amy and I battled canine distemper from February 1996 to February 1997. After
I published this story here on the Internet in May 2000, Dr.
Alson Sears felt compelled to publish the details of his canine distemper
treatment. Admittedly, my story here is only lightly edited.
Copyright© Ed Bond 2000
Originally written in June 1997
By ED BOND
Let me tell you how we named our dogs.
Tug was a throwaway dog, an eight-week old shepherd-mix
pup with fur ravaged by mange. As Amy and I walked her around the block,
I would spin the leash in front of her. She would catch it and, well, tug
back.
We got her a year ago in February. She left us that March.
Selkie was a black lab, with some shepherd, a messy eater
with a nose perpetually coated with her previous meal. She was named out
of hope, from an ancient Gaelic mythical creature of the sea with an insecure
relationship with man. The hope was that she would not leave us.
We had rescued her in mid-May. She left in mid-June.
By the time we found Shadow, in October, we were mentally
exhausted, too drained for a creative name. But she shadowed us around
the house, so we applied that verb to her. An Australian Cattle Dog - again
with some shepherd - she is muscular and high strung, taken to barking
at 1 a.m. Either Amy or I drag ourselves out of bed, and if we have the
patience, close our hands to her head, make eye contact and as calmly as
possible say, ``No barking.''
Galen's first act with us - this
February - was to put his chin on Amy's thigh, followed by one front paw,
then another. His name means calm in Gaelic, but later we would learn his
demeanor was part fraud, he was already weary from battling an old enemy
of ours.
In a year, we fought that enemy four times, and became
too familiar with his attack, the silence, deception and betrayal.
Thirty years ago, this enemy was as common as fleas. Today,
vets tell us how unlucky we were to have faced it so often. Most vets never
even see it.
The tally, so far: two dead, one survived and one never
attacked.
Now let
me tell you how we fought canine distemper. |