Feeling our way along…

A few of my regular readers pricked up their virtual ears when I said “Competing.  With Aero” in my last post.  For those who are relatively new to Tails From Provence, or those of you who are unhorsey, I’ll explain why this is noteworthy!

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Aero and Flurry and both lovely horses, with good temperaments, but if they were cars, Flurry would be a Toyota Landcruiser – robust, steady, reliable and comfortable – while Aero would be a Ferrari Enzo – nippy, responsive and with a whole pile of gears I’ll never need.  Aero was a brilliant competition horse with my youngest daughter and spent several years competing almost every weekend during the summer months, but it’s been almost three years since he went out and competed anywhere and it’s exactly a year and a half since he left the horse farm at Nanse.  I had no idea how excited he would become, if and when I ever took him anywhere, and an excited Aero is not much fun for a Ould Wan like me to be riding around.  So, yeah, I’d be pretty nervous (or you might even say, a complete wimp) at the notion of riding him in competition.

I’ve been working away with both horses quite consistently for the past couple of months.  I have a lesson once a week with Alexandrine.  Some weeks we do Equitation Ethologique (Natural Horsemanship) groundwork and some weeks we do dressage.  Some weeks I use Flurry in my lessons, some weeks I use Aero.  It took Aero a little while to tune into the Equitation Ethologique.  Some of the things he’s expected to do go totally against what he’s been taught all his life.  For example, he was always expected to halt on the track while lunging and then stand there while his handler approached, coiling up the lunge line (very British Horse Society!)  Now, he is expected to turn in and approach me (if I ask him), with or without a halt on the track beforehand.  That seems like a small detail, but it’s taking a while… There’s a few other things like that but, overall, he’s learning well and seems to be enjoying our sessions.  Carrot Stuffing sessions, I call them, because he gets loads of treats when ever he’s good!

Anyway, I had an EE lesson with Aero a couple of weeks ago.  There were a few things set up in the round pen for Alexandrine and her other pupils to practise with, so we ended up asking Aero to do them.  He was great, attentive and calm, and we even tried a little bit of work with him off the lead.

“There’s an Equifeel competition in Mane (about 15km away) on the 13th April if you want to go,” said Alexandrine.  (You’ll know all about Equifeel by the time you reach the end of this post, I promise)

Hmm, ok… something to think about.  It would be a nice way of taking Aero out somewhere and seeing how he behaved, but I didn’t need to decide just yet.

I had one really good EE session on my own with Aero later that week, and I thought YEAH! I’ll definitely go.  Then on the Monday before the competition, I had a really bad session with him, where he just wasn’t paying attention to me at all.  No, I thought, I’ll make a complete fool out of myself if I go, we’re not ready to be seen in public yet.  I said as much to Alexandrine and she said ok.

Two days later, the main arena was set up with all sorts of things that you’d find in an Equifeel competition.  I happened to arrive at the farm just as MC was getting Quieto ready to practise.  The two young kids that Alex teaches arrived as well, with their ponies.  They were all entered for Sunday, as was Alexandrine and Max, her OTTB with whom she placed 6th at the Equifeel National Championships last year.

“Come along and play with us,” said MC.

Well, ok, I’ll bring Aero along and watch, I decided.  We can see exactly what they have to do to perform each task.  And maybe I’ll have a go at some of the things I know Aero is good at, like moving sideways and backing up.

To make a long story short, it turned out that me and Aero weren’t so bad.  We struggled with a couple of things, but so did everyone else.  After a lesson with Alex on Friday, I decided that if I could find someone to mind the dogs for the afternoon, I would go.  Cue a phone call to Sprocket, who readily offered to look after them.  Hopefully, I’d even be home before the LSH and Rosie arrived back from Ireland (I wasn’t.  Oops.  I’m a bad wife).

Early on Sunday afternoon, we all arrived at the Ecuries de Mane – Quieto and Néros the pony in the trailer; Spirit the pony (he’s the one who’s like a mini-Flurry), Valentine (Max was lame so Alex brought Valentine her dressage horse instead) and Aero in the truck.  Aero loaded and unloaded like a pro, and was relaxed and calm as we settled them in and tied them onto the truck and the trailer to munch on their hay nets.

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Then we went off to walk the course – my first time seeing what an Equifeel competition is all about!

I’ll tell you all about the course and how we coped in a moment, but first I need to explain the scoring system.  There are three ways of performing each task :

10 points – horse is wearing rope halter, with lead rope attached
15 points – horse is wearing rope halter, with lead rope attached via a light elastic which will break very easily
20 points – horse is at liberty

Before you commence each exercise, you specify which option you’re going for – they call it a contract.  In some cases, the exercise becomes more difficult depending on the contract you choose – you’ll understand as I go through the course.  I definitely was not going to try anything fancy – we were going to stick to the 10 point option each time.

We started off with the Embûche (literally, ‘Pitfall’ or ‘Trap’, but this word is also used to refer to an exam paper full of trick questions).  This was set up in a round pen (see diag 1).  We had 2 minutes to perform everything.
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I was all thumbs – not nervous, just unsure of what I was doing – but once we started, Aero did everything perfectly.  The hardest part was getting him to stop and stay immobile for 5 seconds when he had finished.  I think he was enjoying himself and wanted to go around and around and around.  Once we get the immobility sorted out, I reckon he could easily do this at liberty, for the 20 point contract.

 

Then we went into the indoor arena.  The first thing was a tarpaulin on the ground.  There was a pole on the ground on one side, about 2 metres away and I had to stay behind that pole and direct Aero onto the tarp.  This was one of the cases where the task changes, depending on which contract you went for :

 

10 points – simply walk over it
15 points – walk onto it, stop for 5 seconds, walk off.
20 points – same as for 15 points, but with horse loose & handler may not touch the horse in any way.

 

We had 90 seconds to do this.  He approached, hesitated for maybe three seconds and then strolled over the tarp.  No biggie.  Lots of ‘Good Boy’ and carrots!

 

Then there was basically turn on the forehand.  See diag 2 below.
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Again the task changed depending on the contract :

 

10 points – do a 1/4 turn
15 points – do a 1/2 turn
20 points – full 360 degrees turn

 

That was our worst thing because the circle that was marked out was too big and his hind feet kept entering the circle. We definitely got a few -2 penalties here.  blah.

 

Next was slalom, or bending.  I didn’t draw a diagram because I’m sure you all know what a slalom is!  Again I had to stay about 1.5 or 2 metres away from him while asking him to weave in and out of 5 blocks, going through a start & a finish at each end.  This was our worst thing at home but he did it perfectly this time!

 

Then there was the jump :
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The first time I tried this at home he was all “YYYYYAAAAAYYYYY!!!!! JUMPING! WHEEEEE” but now he knows what he’s meant to do and he was PERFECT!  Go over the jump, stop, turn around and go back over the jump again, stop and finish facing me.

 

After that we moved into a different arena for the final three tasks.  The first thing we had to do here was the head collar test (see diag 4). The time allowed is two minutes.
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You start by leading the horse from Zone A to Zone B.

 

For 10 points, you take off the head collar and pass it all over the horse (fait un tour de cheval avec le licol) while he stands still, then you put the head collar on again and return to A.
For 15 points, take off the head collar, pass it all over the horse, leave the horse loose and return to A with horse following, then put head collar back on WHILE KEEPING ONE KNEE ON THE GROUND!  (We have done this perfectly at home but I wasn’t prepared to risk having Aero go “Hooray! I’m free!” in a strange place.)
For 20 points, horse must stay at B while you move 4 metres away.  Then you call the horse, he comes to you and follows you back to A where you put head collar on with one knee on the ground.  Difficult…. sometimes Aero comes when I call, sometimes he doesn’t.

 

Next thing was going sideways over 3 poles placed in a line.  Again, no diagram – it’s just three 4 metre poles placed end to end and isn’t worth drawing out.  You park the horse with the front feet on one side of the poles and the back feet on the other and then ask him to go sideways.  Aero is brilliant at this, in either direction.  There’s a -2 penalty every time a foot crosses the poles but we had no worries.

 

Then there was reversing. See diag 5.
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10 points – horse must back up 4 metres, handler is allowed to follow the horse
15 points – horse must back up 4 metres, handler must stay put
20 points – horse must back up 12 metres, over a pole on the ground as well, then wait and come forward again when asked

 

Mostly Aero is really good at this and can do it the 20 point way, but occasionally his brain gets fried and he thinks I’m trying to send him off on a circle.  Well, either his brain gets fried or I give mixed signals!  As with everything else, we kept it simple and, after an unusually sticky start, he did it perfectly.

 

That was everything we had to do for our level, Club.  The Elite Level had to go under a bar with dangly flappy things, they had dangly, flappy, jingly things hanging off poles beside the reversing bit in Diag 5 and they had to go in and out of a horse box as well.

 

Because we were a late entry (because I dithered over whether we’d go or not!), we were HC and I have no idea where we would have been placed.  No matter, I was still thrilled to be there with a calm, attentive Aero, and I’m sure we’ll do a few more of these before the year is out!  Aero even coped with meeting his first ever mules – remember his donkey aversion?  I saw the mules when I arrived and I wondered would he take any notice of them – they were huge (one of them was bigger than Aero) and basically they looked like slightly misshapen horses with long ears.  I think he did indeed think they were horses as I led him past… but then, while I was warming him up, one of them started braying in the distance.   This was his reaction…
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…followed by a few minutes of charging around ignoring me.  He settled eventually, and the next time we were close to the mules, he was a funny mixture of curiosity and abject terror!

 

There’s dressage coming up at the start of May and I’m going to bring Flurry.  There’s still no way I can sit to Aero’s trot and all trot work must be done sitting, at all levels here.  Ugh.  Not nice for baby horses or old, stiff people with dodgy backs on super-bouncy horses!  I’m being quite philosophical about whether I ever compete on Aero or not.  I’ve learned so much from him, just riding him at home, and I’ve been able to improve Flurry asa result, so much so that he’s now doing leg yield, shoulder in and lengthened strides reasonably well.  We are going to do level 2 at our next outing.  For British and Irish readers, that’s somewhere between novice and elementary.  Gulp.

 

 

 

 

Rosie’s Home!

The big news this week has been Rosie the new dog – but there’s been more happening, too!

The LSH was in Ireland for most of last week.  Wednesday was D-Day : Dog-Day.  He was due to visit the CDAWG (Cork Dog Action Welfare Group) shelter at 10.30am to meet Rosie and to officially adopt her.  I was anxiously waiting to hear from him and, finally, just before lunchtime, my phone pinged with a text message.

“Have her, Lovely dog”

Phew!  He was happy with my choice!  Although he told me afterwards that he had met the gorgeous Saffi as well and was just as taken with her as I was.  But no, she is just too big for our little Cinnamon.

I got to Skype with Rosie (and a few humans) while they ate their lunch in Tansy’s house.  She had settled down on the rug and was sleeping peacefully (after being politely told that she wasn’t allowed to steal food off peoples’ plates).

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Zzzzleepy Rozzzzie

For the next three days, she barely left the LSH’s side.  She travelled with him to see our house in Cork and visit our neighbours.  She visited the nursing home where his elderly mother lives.  She popped in to see his sister and have a cup of tea.  She even sat in on a business meeting one morning.  The more time he spent with her, the more glowing reports I received.

“She understands Go To Bed”

“She seems to be house-trained”

“She jumps straight into the car as soon as I open it”

“She sleeps all night, no fuss no whimpering”

“She walks perfectly on the lead and just waits any time I stop”

“She’s like my shadow”

They had clearly fallen for each other!  But would a certain little brown and white nose be out of joint when she found out that HER human had a new canine girlfriend?

On Friday afternoon, the trek home began.

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Let’s hit the road!

We know nothing of Rosie’s past, but we now think that she may have lived beside the sea – the only time she moved in the car was when they approached the sea and she became quite excited.  Other than that, she remained comatose the whole time.

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Waiting at the ferry port

Check-in on the ferry was plain sailing, as was the voyage itself.  Dogs have to be kennelled on board, but there are visiting hours and the LSH visited her as often as he could.  She was not keen to eat, but she seemed to be drinking ok.  Nor did she poo or pee any time he took her out to the sandbox provided as a toilet area – but that’s not unusual, Cinny and Cookie were never too keen on it, either.  The kennels were full, and Rosie made friends with everyone, human and canine.  Even the staff-member who looked after the kennels was an admirer by the time they docked in Cherbourg!

They finally drove off the ship at about 5pm and began the long drive through France, stopping in a hotel at Vierzon, five hundred kilometres away.  After eighteen and a half hours of sleeping on the ferry and five and a half hours of sleeping in the car, poor Rosie was exhausted and took to her bed straight away.  If sleeping was an Olympic sport, this dog would be a gold medallist for sure.

The next day, Sunday, they had seven hours of driving ahead of them and hoped to arrive around 5pm.  I should be there waiting to meet them – except I wouldn’t be.  No, I was eh… I was… well I was out for the whole day.  I was at a competition.  With Aero.

(Competing Aero??? Me???  Yes!  All will be revealed next post, I promise)

Cookie and Cinnamon, meanwhile, were being looked after by our friends, Sprocket and Doodles.  Cookie and their dog, Gari, are the best of friends since he stayed with us.  They’ve recently had to make sure that the garden around their new house is well fenced, as Gari has proved to be a wanderer, if given the chance.  They decided to let Cookie off-leash in the garden so that she and Gari could play, and the two dogs romped happily around the large garden for ages – until Cookie got bored.  Once she had tired of Gari, she set about to systematically explore the perimeter, looking for a weak spot in the fencing.  First she tried to dig her way out under the big metal gate.  They dissuaded her, with some difficulty, and she continued to bound around the garden.  There’s a tiny, rabbit-sized gap under the fence at one point –

“We’d better block off that rabbit hole,” Sprocket remarked to Doodles.

A pair of brown and white ears pricked up.  Rabbit Hole?  There’s a Rabbit Hole?

The words were barely past his lips when Cookie literally made a beeline for the rabbit hole, which is in a remote corner of the garden.  Like a flash, she squeezed through it and bolted across the open fields behind their house towards the ancient abbey that lies there, Salagon.

There ensued a merry dance, involving one small terrier, two not-terribly-young gentlemen and a handful of hamburger, all around the grounds of the old abbey.  Finally, they caught the little monster.  And now they know why we affectionately refer to her as the HellHound.

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A happy HellHound

I learned all this when I collected the dogs at 6pm.  Cinnamon had been a perfect lady, they assured me.  Well, apart from shredding Gari’s favourite fluffy toy.  Oh dear, I don’t think my dogs will be welcome in that household again!

We made our way back to Céreste, arriving just as the LSH stepped out of the gate, Rosie at his side.  Cookie went ballistic when she saw him and threw herself at him in a ecstasy of wriggling brown and white fur.  Then she snapped and snarled at Rosie, who was just standing there, looking a bit bewildered.  That’s how Cookie normally greets strange dogs – she gets her retaliation in first, as my friend Denis used to say!

We went for a short walk, and the three dogs settled down, trotting along beside us.  They’ve been getting on fine ever since.  Rosie has been a little wary of Cookie, since their first meeting and one or two other minor ‘incidents’, but Cookie has now decided that she wants to play with her and she tries hard to encourage her.  There have been a few bouts of wrestling on the couch and one session of scampering around the house, with ended up with Cookie zooming out the front door while Rosie was left with a puzzled expression on her face – “Where’s she gone?  Why did she go?”

In the first five days since leaving the refuge, Rosie passed the night in four different places – Tansy’s house, the ferry, a hotel and finally here in Céreste.  She has met loads of new people and new dogs and is now adjusting to a new, and very different, environment.  She’s taking it all in her stride, keeping her elegant composure all the time.  From what I’ve been told, she’s the very epitome of the Lurcher race – laid back, calm, friendly, keen to please.  Oh yes, and good at sleeping.

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Journey’zzzz end zzzzz

Pick Me! Pick Me!

Did I mention I was going to Ireland in March?  No?  Oops!

The main reason for my trip was to attend the final show of my Youngest Daughter’s class.  The YD has now been formally introduced to you as Tansy Greenlee but she’s more than a singer/songwriter, she’ll play pretty much any sort of music she’s asked to play and she does backing vocals, too.  She had a really exciting week for a couple of reasons, but I’ll tell you all about that in my next post.  This post is all about the secondary reason for my trip back to Cork.

Way back in February, I wrote about my intention to adopt an Irish dog.  After much sifting through the list of dogs available with Cork Dog Action Welfare Group (CDAWG), we finally settled on a black lurcher bitch called Scarlet.  Now we just had to organise transporting her to the South of France… should be easy, I thought.

I got a couple of quotes to fly her from Dublin to Nice, based on an estimate of her size and weight.  The best one was for €680, with Aer Lingus.  Ok, I thought, that’s a bit steep but manageable.  The cargo company need her exact vital statistics, so the people at CDAWG measured and weighed her and I reported back with the correct figures.  Oh dear, said the very nice lady with whom I was dealing.  It turns out that Scarlet needed a large crate – bigger than the maximum container size that Aer Lingus will carry.  She offered to quote me for a different route, with an alternative airline – Dublin to Frankfurt, overnight in Frankfurt and then Frankfurt to Nice.  We hummed and hawed.  Two days of travel and two flights, all by herself?  What a gruelling journey for the dog.  I wasn’t keen on the idea but I asked for a quote anyway.

I nearly fell off my chair when I received the email with the second quote.  €1500!!  Madness!  Even the offer of a cut-price wooden crate for Scarlet only brought the price down to €1300 – still total insanity!  We thought long and hard.  It was Scarlet’s size that caused the price to skyrocket.  What about choosing a smaller dog?  I looked through the adoption page again.  We didn’t want another Jack Russell Terrorist.  Two part-bred JRTs is quite enough, thank you.  I wasn’t keen on the idea of a bull-terrier type, either.  With Cookie’s previous dog-aggression issues, I didn’t think it was wise to take on a breed with an aggressive reputation.  No, I was really sold on the idea of a lurcher.  Everything I read about them sounded right for us – playful, easygoing couch-potatoes.  We decided to stick with Scarlet and looked into transporting her by ferry.  We quickly discovered that she would not only need someone travelling with her, but she would need to be brought on board in a car.

The LSH was due to take a trip home in early April.  What if he drove and took the ferry instead of flying?  I could meet Scarlet on my trip home in March and if CDAWG would hold on to her for us for an extra two weeks, he could bring her home that way.  CDAWG were happy enough with this and, finally, we had a plan.

Or so we thought.  Shortly after making our final decision, I received a message from N, our contact person in CDAWG :

I know the dogs in the shelter very well & do most of their write-ups online. Scarlet has been for the most part a super happy girl despite her bad condition coming in, however I have noticed a change in her over the last two weeks.  She’s getting a bit down in herself, which happens in the shelter if they are there too long – this is relative to each dog, a week is too long for one while another will still be having a ball after three weeks.

We may have a possibility of getting her out of there this week but it means going to a home in the UK, and I cannot stress it is very tentative. I believe you are due to come over in two weeks to see her, is it only Scarlet you are interested in, or would you be open to another lurcher closer the time. We are trying to get her into foster but unfortunately it’s proving difficult as always.

I suppose what I’m trying to say exactly is, I’m wondering is that you would like to give any dog a home, or does it have to be Scarlet only. 

Well, there was no discussion necessary.  If the best thing for Scarlet was to be re-homed asap in the UK, then that was the only thing to do and that’s what happened.  N assured me that there are always plenty of lurchers available (they’re much more difficult to re-home in Ireland than they are in the UK) and, as the time drew near for my trip, I browsed through the adoption page once again to make a shortlist.  N was hard at work on my behalf too, and when I arrived in Cork on a wet Wednesday morning, I was due to see five dogs.

But first, I had to take a trip to our house in Cork to check that it had survived the stormiest winter in years.  Duly reassured, I popped into our neighbours, Frank and Margo, for a cuppa.  While we chatted, Frank reminded me that Rosie, the very first pony I bought for our children, was lodging with them for a while.  We all strolled out to see her.

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Did she remember me?  I think so!  She was with us for almost ten years, before we sold her to her current home twelve years ago.  She is 34 years old – I remember her date of birth because it’s the same birthday as mine, 5th June, but in 1980, not in 1962!  She’s looking great.  She has a good coat and she’s in reasonably good condition underneath it, although she’s a little doddery on her legs but, all in all, she’s looking amazing for her age.

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Feeling very happy to have seen our old friends (two-legged and four-legged) I made my way to the address I’d been given to meet the first dog on my list, Síofra, a young lurcher bitch.  She’s in a lovely foster home with four resident dogs and one other foster.  I went into the kitchen to meet the pack and was immediately overwhelmed by a sea of white fluff – the four permanent residents are Spitzes; gorgeous, friendly bundles of white energy.  The two foster-dogs, Síofra and Piper, hovered in the background, with Piper taking to her bed soon after – she’s a beautiful dog, but still unsure of herself with strangers.

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Piper and Síofra.

When the Spitzes had thoroughly investigated me, Síofra approached, shyly and gently.  She’s such a sweet little dog, keen to make friends despite her bad start in life but polite and submissive around the other dogs.  Her fosterer showed me a video of her playing with a puppy and I was struck by how gently she played with him.

(The puppy, Winter, is now booked for a permanent home – hooray!)

Síofra seemed to tick all the boxes and I went away completely charmed…. BUT.  There had to be a BUT.  You can probably see from the picture and the video that she has mange – demodectic mange.  I’d been forewarned and I had done some research, so I was confident that it wasn’t contagious and that, ultimately, it could be cured.  No, my concerns were a little more complex.  Large sections of Siofra’s body were hairless.  How would she cope in the hot Provençal sunshine?  She was also very thin, despite the fact that she has been gaining weight steadily.  The journey from Cork to Céreste takes almost three days, with eighteen hours of that in a cage on the ferry.  How would she cope with the stress of the journey in her weakened state?  Would it make her mange deteriorate again?  Even worse, what if some inspector at one of the ports looked at her and decided that she wasn’t fit to travel?

The LSH and I discussed it that evening and we came to the conclusion that Síofra was not the dog for us.  We scanned over the adoption list one more time and two more caught our eye – Snoop, who reminded us both of dear old Scamp, our friend and chief trouble-maker for eighteen years; and Jack, a cute lurcher pup.  You can see why Snoop reminded us of Scamp…

Both of them were in foster care.  I was due to visit the shelter the next day, but I could arrange to visit them afterwards if I wanted.

The next day, I made my way into the middle of nowhere, where the CDAWG shelter is located.

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The shelter is located somewhere under the rainbow. Really and truly.

N met me when I arrived and was keen to introduce me to her favourites.

First there was Joey, a sturdy, brindled lurcher.  We took Joey and his kennel mates out to the run.  I have to say, I just didn’t connect with him, nor he with me.  I could see a lot of Cookie’s behaviours in him – the selectively deaf ear, the sudden intentness and fixation when he found a scent.  I had entertained notions of taking in a dog with ‘issues’ but Joey made me see quite clearly that I did not want two dogs with the same set of issues.  One overly-independent dog is enough!  No, Joey needs a home with balanced dogs and with an owner who can devote plenty of time to making a strong bond with him.  I suspect that, ultimately, he will be easier and more biddable than Cookie – he definitely doesn’t have her manic streak!

The next kennel of dogs (they keep them in compatible groups where possible) had an older lurcher, a collie type dog and quite a large lurcher type.  None of them caught my eye.  We moved on to the next kennel.

“This is Flash,” said N.  Flash was famous for a while – he was straying in Cork for ages, but he was so scared it took months to catch him.  Flash is nice-looking, a big black and white lurcher, and he’s come on in leaps and bounds.  He greeted me politely, but Joey had already shown me that I didn’t want another dog with the same issues as Cookie.

“Who’s that one?” I asked, pointing at a petite little lurcher, standing at the back of the cage.  She was thin but had a lovely shiny coat.

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“That’s Rosie.”

What a coincidence!  I told her about seeing old Rosie the pony the previous day.  We both laughed, but Rosie held my attention.

We took the three dogs out to the run and they all took off, with N throwing a ball or a frisbee for them from time to time.  Rosie hung back a little, though, and then she approached me, shyly and gently, just like Síofra. I caressed her head and scratched behind her ears.  I looked into her eyes and she held my gaze for a few seconds.  I think that, at that moment, she chose ME.   Then she turned  her elegant head away to watch Flash play.

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We took them back to their kennel after a while, me walking Rosie.  She walked steadily beside me, no pulling or drama.  I really liked her, but there were still a few more to see.

There was Seamus, another lurcher who had been scared and mistrustful and who is just beginning to come round.  Like Joey, he and I did not connect in any way.  Then there was Saffi, a big BIG lurcher bitch.  I could see the play in her body as she and Seamus were let loose in the run.  Seamus wanted to investigate things; Saffi wanted to play.  She gave up trying to entice Seamus after a few attempts and she fixed her eyes on me.  I went down on my hunkers and she charged at full speed.

It takes a bit of nerve to hold your ground when there’s a very large greyhound-type dog hurtling towards you as fast as it can, but I trusted her and at the last minute she jinked to the side and then came back to check me out.  She was lovely.  Friendly, more forward than Síofra or Rosie but still very gentle.  I really liked her, too.  Would she suit?  No, the rational side of my brain said.  She’s too big.  Cookie would just-about-cope with playing with her, but Cinnamon is so small, she could be bowled over and injured so easily…

No.  I went back to the kennels and had one more look at Rosie.  Flash stood at the front of the cage and Rosie stayed at the back, tail wagging gently at me.

“Do you want to come to France?”

The tail continued to wave slowly from side to side.  My choice was made.  I didn’t need to see Snoop or Joey.

The next morning, I returned to the shelter to take Rosie to the vet.  She was to be spayed, microchipped and vaccinated for rabies.  We were cutting it very close, as the rabies vaccine must be done three weeks before the dogs travels and the ferry was booked for exactly three weeks later!

I walked across the yard towards the kennels and Saffi spotted me.  She ran up and down the length of her run, barking and jumping at the wire, tail wagging wildly all the time.  I felt rotten.  Saffi wanted to choose me too, and I couldn’t take her.

“I’m so sorry Saffi, I can only take one,” was all I could say through the lump in my throat.  Even now, two weeks later, I still feel lousy about it.

Rosie greeted me a little more reservedly and I took her to my waiting rental car.

“I hope she’s a good traveller,” I remarked to the volunteer who had met me.

I opened the boot and in she hopped, without even being asked.  She curled up in the corner and there wasn’t a peep out of her for the whole trip.  Good traveller?  TICK!

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When we got to the vets, I spent a few moments outside with her, hoping she’ll remember me next time we meet.IMG_2856

Then we sat in the waiting room, met with the vet, I signed the paperwork and we parted company.  Rosie thought she was leaving with me and made to follow me out the door, but as soon as she felt the leash pull, she obediently followed the vet into the kennel area and that was the last that I will see of her until Sunday April 13th.

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Loads of people in France think I’m nuts taking a dog from Ireland when the shelters here are full.  I probably am – it would have been much cheaper and easier to adopt a dog from the local refuge.  The thing is, what gets me most about the situation in Ireland is the outright cruelty and abuse as opposed to abandonment and general neglect.  Only this week, we’ve had the heartbreaking tale of Thor, a little Jack Russell who seems to have been used to bait fighting dogs.  This had gone on for a number of weeks, judging by the amount of old bite marks on his body.  He has a massive, badly infected bite wound to the back of his head.  His hind legs bear the marks of having been tied up with wire while he was dangled into the cage of the fighting dog, with one of them so badly injured it will have to be amputated.  When his abusers had finished with him, they dumped him at the side of the road like a piece of rubbish.  THAT is cruelty at the highest level and that’s the sort of thing that made me decide to take an Irish dog.  (NB Video is not for the faint-hearted)

I’m a great believer in fate.  The fact that three people I knew well were all independently involved in the rescue of Fionn prompted me to do something concrete for the neglected and abused dogs in Ireland.  Some people thought I should offer to adopt Fionn, and it certainly would have been a story-book ending, but I really felt he wouldn’t fit in with our two.  We need a dog that’s not too big and is playful but gentle.  Rosie ticks those boxes and the coincidence with her name and our old pony copper fastened my decision.

The LSH is en route to Ireland via Paris right now in his little Fiat 500.  He’ll be making the return journey on  the 11th.  I can’t wait to get him and this girl home!

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Meanwhile, Cookie is practising her social skills and is becoming more and more dog-friendly.  I’m dog-sitting Gari, the luckiest dog in France (adopted from the Manosque shelter by our friends Sprocket and Doodles on March 8th).  He and Cookie are having a lot of fun.  I like to think he’s warming her up for Rosie.

Do you like the look of any of the dogs in this post?  If so, contact CDAWG and ask about him or her (Saffi is still hoping for the chance to choose someone else!)  And yes, some of their dogs do go abroad, and not just to the UK and France!

Many thanks to CDAWG and supporters for permission to use photographs and videos.