Un Chien Bleu

Am I bleu? You'd be, too, if you were life's bitch.
Browsing Dogs

10 reasons why I’m lovin’ living with my aging parents

June1
Mom's apple pie!
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Your mileage may vary

  1. Bathroom safety bars are already installed
  2. Your share of the rent is negligible because the mortgage is paid off
  3. They admire you for knowing how to work all the remote controls
  4. Dad does all of your laundry. “Hey, I ain’t doin’ anything else. I might as well do my share.”
  5. Mombo is in bed by 6:30. Dad stays up ’til eight thirty
  6. You can use their car mostly anytime, as long as you drive them to the doctors, WallMart, or Pik N Save
  7. Somebody’s always home to answer the door.
  8. When you fall off your knee walker in the garden, there’s someone to root you on as you struggle to your feet.
  9. The freezer’s always full
  10. There’s always pie!

HOBO’s—my new favorite store

April18
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I just discovered HOBO’s. Great discount high end home improvement and decorating stuff.

Reminds me of Tuesday Morning Store http://www.tuesdaymorning.com/

Bought some planters and put Pansies in them.

Here’s their online store: HOBOonline.com.

posted under Blue Dog, Dogs, Milwaukee, The Bier of Beer | Comments Off

Is advertising a bad business model?

April3
This little dog is confused, too.
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Well, I think so . . . but not everybody agrees with that.

I offered a webpreneur my considered advice about the nature of his business model last week. No, actually what I did was send a pissy email to a large reality show composite site:

Subject: Too many pop-ups + audio ads. I won’t be back.

Bad business model. You’re driving away people like me.

Not touchy-feely constructive criticism, but this web site creeped me out. It threw two full page pop-under ads plus a disembodied voice (asking  me if  wanted a free iPod) before I even got to the main page.

Honestly, I was just killing time Googling American Idol’s Adam Lambert, so my expectations weren’t high.  Realitytvworld.com? Reality-tv-online.com? Realitynewslive.com? Realitynewsonline.com? Ok. Pick one. <click> OMG! Popups!

So, I e-mailed my thoughts, and Mr. Let’s-keep-him-anonymous-so-I-don’t-get-sued told me what he thought:

What would you prefer as a business model? Providing content for free without having ads for any income? Just curious…

A valid enough point in today’s ad-based content provider environment. I decided to continue offering my unsolicited, but oh, so wise and valuable opinion to Mr. LKHASIDGS. To wit:

Well, since you asked—You allow audio ads (mine offered me a free ipod). Horribly intrusive and a little bit scary. Bad idea. it makes you look like you just don’t care. Then I had two pop-under screens try to open, for a total of three intrusions before I even got to your site. The pop-unders were especially worrysome, since I use Adblock Plus Firefox Add-on. Only one actually loaded (from Tribalfusion), the other showed a blank screen. I then spent time rechecking my security settings, thinking maybe some adware or browser hijacker was involved.

By the time I actually viewed your site, I was over it. I’m a big reality show fan, and your site looked interesting, and I may have clicked around a bit more IF I wasn’t nervous about what other surprises you may pop my way.

I get trying to make money through advertisers, but you don’t pay your writers (and believe me it shows), and you’ve got ads on every other inch of your site. That gives the impression that you aren’t about content—you’re about a low overhead, low maintenance site designed to make money by pushing ads. I don’t see it as a long-term business model—or at least I hope it’s not. I’m so tired of web entrepreneurs playing chicken with the dark side.

Good luck.
Annie Alpert

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The very bad story about Pansy

March12
Pansy, the last day
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Pansy was a Cane Corso Mastiff used for breeding—then starved and abandoned in Newark, New Jersey.

Here’s how she and I ended up as best friends—and the bad thing that happened later.

Pansy, 2005
I met Pansy on April Fool’s Day, 2005, at the Associated Humane Society pound in Newark, New Jersey. I was dog-shopping after losing my old pal Oscar from a brain tumor. I’m not usually a Mastiff kind of girl, but Pansy and I had a conversation in the stinky cacophany of the pound. She told me that she wanted to go back home and she wanted to be a good dog.

She was absolutely filthy—encrusted with dirt and fly-bitten. She was so thin her ribs and backbone stood out, in weird contrast to her loose, sagging milk glands. She watched me patiently, with a stoic aloofness unlike the rest of the crazy, hysterical pack in the pound.

The story I got was that Newark police seized a group of dogs from an abandoned house. An English Mastiff, Rottweilers, Pit Bulls, and Pansy were used in an amature puppy mill. Her litter of four Rottweiler-cross pups were nearby, relatively well-fed, although she was obviously not. Her name was “Isis”, and she was supposedly three-years old. I admired her dignified demeanor, but her reserved nature told me she would be a challenge.

Could I handle her? Had her past experiences made her impossible to live with?

Pansy, 2005

Photograph of Pansy by Annie Alpert ©2009

Standing out at the pound

It was hard to evaluate her in the Newark pound. There was no quiet place to get aquainted. It was loud, dirty, smelly and scary. If I was a dog, I would have gone out of my mind. Most of the inmates were Pit Bulls, Chow Chows, Rottweilers or any conceivable mixture of the three.

My 16-year-old daughter was not impressed with Pansy. She was not a cute or flashy dog. She was not demonstrative or friendly. “Keep looking” was her seasoned advice. Nevertheless, I took her out and visited for a while.

I was perplexed to find out that she didn’t know even the basic rudiments of obedience (even with the aid of cinnamon graham crackers). She didn’t even know how to sit! What kind of a dog doesn’t know how to sit??

She was distracted by her pups, so it was hard to tell if she was my dog. I had a feeling about her, so I called Mr. Maiasaura (my future ex-husband) and asked him if he would come by and check her out, too. Mr. Maiasaura was also not impressed. Turns out she didn’t like him much, either. My gut said go ahead and get her.

annie and pansy

I’ve trained many dogs, so I knew Pansy would be challenging. She is physically strong, and needed basic training with direction as to who is the alpha personality (yes, me!). She had been abused, and was skittish in unexpected situations. She was wary of men (hello <i>Mr. Maiasaura</i>) and I wasn’t 100% sure how she would react around children, cats or small dogs. She would be a handful, but I was willing to take on a challenge.</p> <p>I tested her for food aggression and small dog aggression, spayed her, microchipped her, renamed her (absolutely), bathed her (a two-woman job), taught her how get in a car and walk on a leash. I taught her “>

From foundling to service dog

Pansy was my buddy for four years. Where ever I was, she was. She was unfailingly gentle, although she fooled many with her ferocious-looking outside. She went everywhere with me. My car was outfitted with a memory foam mattress for her, and she had a big fan club. We lived in bad neighborhoods and went to bad places, but I always felt safe. When Pansy and I walked down the street, certain people would cross the street to avoid her. We commanded respect in the ‘Hood!

Her Mollossus stability enabled me to train her as a mobility service dog when my arthritis became so bad I had trouble maintaining my balance. I would say, “Pansy, help me.” She would plant her giant feet and I could use her for support. When I fell down, she stood by me and let me climb up her with my full weight.

An unexpected ending

Pansy died unexpectedly in 2009. I had moved us to my home town of Milwaukee to improve our lives, but she wasn’t doing well. When she stopped eating, we went to the emergency vet late at night where x-rays showed a fist-sized mass in her abdomen. She was in pain, so I had to make The Terrible Decision. That night I held her head in my lap and told her it wasn’t going to hurt anymore—I would make sure. She trusted me to take care of this problem, the way I’d always taken care of any problem. That was my job.

pansyWhen we were comfortable, I asked the vet to give her the shot that would make it so. Before that, I used my cellphone to take one last picture—this one—the best and worst I ever took of her.

Where they have to take you in — unless you have a dog.

March10
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“Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.” — Robert Frost (American poet, 1874-1963)

Perhaps Robert Frost didn’t have a dog. In that case, his 78 year old dad never said, “You’re welcome to come here, but not with a dog!”

penske truck in the rainMy mom and dad don’t want to be burdened with a dog. I get that. But I have a dog, and I’m emotionally attached to her. My dad, who mostly is content if you stay out of line of his remote, decided, passive-aggressive-style, to “make a stand” about my dog. I’m already racked with guilt about showing up on their doorstep, Prodigal daughter-style, with a 17-foot truckload of all my possessions. Now I have to be guilty about showing up with a big giant smelly dog, too? WTF?

What I did, was mostly nothing. I groveled appropriately, expressed my gratitude, and showed up with the dog anyway. I did this knowing the most likely outcome, based on my 50-some plus years as Walter Aisbet’s daughter.

Five minutes in the door, my dad said, “Heyna, that’s a pretty good dog you got dere.” Pansy did her normal polite thing, I had her do her three tricks, and that was that. They love her, and she’s part of the family.

Whew.