Holy Crap. This is not the way to begin a long and brutal excursion to Alaska! I admit I was trying to keep the load light, but I underappreciated the dog’s need for his toys. Hey, I like toys just as much as the next cat, or dog. My favorite is my fuzzy orange carrot with the feathery foliage (I have at least a half a dozen of them), but you never saw me dragging them to the royal wedding. Okay, let me back up. I see some of you saying, “huh?
Since the last time I was in Chicago my good
friend Cheeto (of the @rosieandcheeto Twitter fame) has endured many huge changes
in his cat life. First the Lady got
married. Then there was a baby added to the mix. The family moved to a new
locale. And the stupid dog isn’t getting any mellower with age. All this has
been very stressful. So to help reduce some of the load my poor friend has to
endure, I agreed to take the dog for a long, long walk. To Nome.
The dog is a huskie named Rockford, but we know him as the Woofie Monster,
because he woofs and woofs are totally annoying to cats. He has a lifetime
dream of running the Iditarod. I am going to oblige him. I strolled into Chicago
this past weekend, thankful I missed the huge snow in the northeast, but
thinking all that snow would make an excellent base for a dog sled run. There
have been rumors that the Iditarod was cancelled because of lack of snow in Alaska, but that was
just rumor.
I have never before traveled with a companion, let alone a
dog. I’ve had to forewarn the Yard Cats
of his coming, so they don’t freak out when we show up in the railroad yards to
take the train to Seattle.
Except, well, I never got that far.
After a few cans of refreshing tuna juice and a little nip
to take Chicago’s gun free zone edge off I had a good night’s sleep at Cheeto’s
new digs, which are very nice. With the
Iditarod’s start date less than three weeks away, I was eager to head out to
the railroad yards the next morning. The
Woofie Monster and I haven’t even “practiced” this sled thing yet. He claims it is in his blood, but the dog has
been city living all his young life. We
need time to prepare for all day sled pulling, living in the dark, surviving
severe weather and sleeping outside in extreme temperatures for three weeks
during the race. He has never even slept
outside of his stupid little cage-thingy.
Apparently, the dog has attachment issues. It must be a pack
thing. While he had no problem with the idea of taking off for the wild blue
yonder in the Land of the Midnight Sun, but he whined like a stupid puppy when
I told him he had to leave his stupid stuffed toys in Chicago. You can’t carry a lot of accouterments when
jumping trains. They get in the way and they could very well get stolen. Not
all train jumpers live by The Code, especially the two legged kind.
We were headed to the yard when the dog whirled and took off
down the street. Running full tilt. Man he can run, but the commands “heel” and
“no” faze him just as much as it fazes me…nada. But then I’m a cat. What excuse does he have? Well, I never thought I’d see him again. I wasn’t sure how I would to break this news
to Cheeto. I should not have been
surprised when he said he didn’t mind as long as the dog didn’t come back to
his house. We had a good laugh over
that.
photo by Jeff Schultz iditarodphotos.com |
But the dog did go back to the house. Apparently,
to retrieve one of his chew toys…the hedgehog. He showed up this
morning, licking my face. UGH. He still wants to go to Alaska. So I guess I am off to run the
Iditarod with a huskie named Rockford
and his hedgehog. Better to have the dog chew on his toy than me, I guess.
1 comment:
The hedgehog, don't leave home without it. - meowmix
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