Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Walking the Doberman in the dark on cold nights

The sun sets about a half hour before I pull in the driveway from Monday through Friday. The air is cold with the smell of snow chilling my lungs when I throw the door shut and sprint from the Volvo into the house. A fire usually greats me with the smell of burning oak mixed with a warm dinner on the stove as the family has usually already finished eating by the time I arrive home.

My Doberman needs exercise. I know this. I knew this when I got a Doberman puppy, but I had forgotten about freezing January nights. The warm dinner beacons but the Doberman is desperate. Let one night slip without a walk and we all pay.

Today was my daughter's birthday. Last night she had a house full of friends spend the night for a sleepover. Last night I didn't walk the Doberman, being sidetracked by all the activity related to the early birthday celebration. We paid.

This morning we found a bra chewed into bits of shredded foam. It belonged to one of the girls sleeping over. I had to wake her with the bad news. Of course, it was her favorite bra.

"Don't worry," I volunteered. "We'll go to Victoria Secret and I'll pay for a new one."

The offer was accepted with no hard feelings, thank goodness. The cost of a replacement bra: $42.00.

I arrived home from work tonight to find my husband holding a handful of shredded plastic. The remains of the Sony TV remote control. Yes, we paid.

So what did I do when I entered the house and saw the handful of plastic? I put on the dog's sweater and coat and leach and backpack and took the dog for a walk. She was beside herself with joy. I was freezing but soon got into the training myself. Every day we seem to make a bit more progress on getting Alma to walk beside me rather than in front of me.

When we got home, Alma still had energy left. So we did some obedience training. Alma is learning to carry and drop newspapers in my lap. We then played for a while. Today being my daughter's birthday my husband, daughter and I went out to eat. We were all a bit fearful of what might greet us when we got home.

We peered in the door to see what new disasters might be found. There in the middle of her bed we found a tired, happy Doberman with one eye open who slowly rose, stretched, yawned and collapsed back down, her eyes closed as soon as her head hit the bed.

Exercise. You really can't skip it if you have a Doberman puppy. If you do you'll pay.

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