Thanks for your wonderful messages about our dog. Here's what happened on Saturday morning. Jake, Pearl, and I were out in the front yard, walking around and visiting with our neighbors. Lots of people were chatting. One neighbor had a small yard sale going on. Several had not seen Pearl walk before. Excitement.
Then Pearl draped herself across Jake's back, or perhaps she actually fell onto him. It surprised him. He wheeled around and snapped. The bite did not break the skin, but she was extremely upset. I was extremely upset. Jake did not seem to think he had done anything wrong. In his doggy way, he may have actually been playing with her. It did not seem malicious or vicious in nature, but he was startled, and he did bite her. There were dots on her face from the teeth marks.
Jake is a foundling. One June summer day seven years ago, we discovered him limping along the White Oak Bayou. To be more accurate, he really discovered us.
We were enjoying a Sunday morning walk. He followed us for miles. He was just a puppy and one back leg was injured. Because the park is so public, we were concerned that he had an owner who would come looking for him so we left him there. That day we returned to the park to see if he'd been claimed. On our third trip, it was late afternoon. He was underneath the bleachers of the baseball field, hoping for edible trash to fall through. It was hot, over 100 degrees. Marcia asked all the baseball fans in Spanish, Is this your dog? Does this puppy have an owner? Everyone said, no. So Jake came home with us. Our friend Mary Zimmer brought us a leash, dog food, a bowl. He's been a part of our family ever since.
We named him Jacob from the Bible story, in part because of his injury. When Jacob wrestled with the angel, he eventually received G-d's blessing, but in the process in was smote on the hip. The story seemed to match. After an unsuccessful surgery, the bad leg was amputated. Based on the X-rays, the doctors believe that he was hit by a car. So Jake is a three-legged dog. Off leash, he runs remarkably fast. His nature is absurdly cheerful. Marcia's father, a minister, has actually delivered sermons about him.
Jake is a mutt, part chow and part German Shepherd. The shepherd part of him is very determined to keep our "flock" together. He has a strong desire to integrate, to be a part of our pack. Separation, to his mind, is punishment. The chow part of him makes him occasionally high-strung and anxious; the fact that he was abandoned as a pup may add to that. He loves routines, and change unsettles him.
Before Pearl arrived, his anxiety became an issue only when we went on vacation. Adding Pearl to the pack meant that the rules changed for Jake, and they continue to change as she has become more mobile and able to interact with him.
We sent an email seeking a new family for Jake on Saturday. No one has expressed an interest. In the meantime, we have created some new structures to keep everyone safe. Our friends Lynda Grindrod and Trish Herrera have helped us rethink our strategies, and the new plan is keeping everyone safe. Jake is separated from Pearl by see-through gates. Before this bite, we didn't use the safety gates consistently, and every time we did use them, Jake yelped and complained at a high volume. Now he seems to have adjusted to this change. Maybe it's even a relief to him because he has not understood how to interact with a baby.
At night Pearl goes to bed at 6. Then the gates go down and Jake lounges with us as we talk or read or write. Who knows. Maybe it will work out that we can keep him after all. That's what I am not-so-secretly hoping.
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