Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Princess Noodle of Short Bus

Noodle is the princess here.  David started that.  Funny thing is, Noodle wanted to eat his face at first.

Noodle is generally pretty weary of strangers, especially men.  She had only been home with me for a few hours when she met David.  He walked in the door and she backed up, tucked her tail, and barked and growled at him.  It took half a dozen Cheez-Its just so he could pet her.  By the end of the evening, she was coming up to him for pets and scratches, and begging for more Cheez-Its.

Before long, David was babying her.  He picked her up and cradled her like a baby, which she fought the first time.  He started talking baby talk to her, telling her what a pretty little blonde princess she is, which was hilarious because David appears to be a gruff kinda guy at first glance.


David talks often about how much he loves Noodle.  He also talks about how much Noodle has changed his life.  He was in a pretty dark and lonely place in his life when we met, and we hadn't been dating very long when I brought Noodle home.  I honestly think our relationship may have been a bit different without her.

Noodle is definitely a Daddy's girl.  She loves him, she loves to play with him, she loves to bite him.


He loves to wrestle with her, he loves to baby talk her, he loves to tell her how she's daddy's little blonde inbred princess.  He loves to sleep with her.


He just loves her. 

I love how much he loves her.  I love hearing how he talks about her and how much she means to him.

How a man treats a dog shows the true character of the man.

Friday, April 20, 2012

The Story of Noodle

As with any rescue, Noodle has some baggage.  We were fortunate that Noodle only came a carry-on.  It is also very fortunate that I know her entire history, unlike most rescues.

Noodle was purchased as a gift for an older couple.  ALWAYS a bad idea.  She was handed to these people without any discussion.  Surprise!  Here's a crazy-ass puppy!  Enjoy!

They never really wanted Noodle.  The staff at the vet clinic told me it was pretty obvious from the beginning.  Around 9 months of age, it was discovered that Noodle has severe hip dysplasia.  Severe enough to need a full hip replacement, probably around the age of 5-7 years.  If you hold her foot, you can feel the creaking from her hips travel all the way down her legs.  The surgery she needs requires a minimum of 6 weeks crate rest, probably some physical therapy and cost $7000 last time I looked into it.

The solution?  Euthanasia.  At least that's the solution these people chose.

Dr. McBroom, the vet treating her, told them, essentially, to bugger off and that they better never come back with a new dog.  And then Stella (her name at the time, which totally does NOT suit her) lived at the clinic.

Around the same time, my cousin Kate was doing some work with the vet on a pet resort they were building and, on Easter Sunday of 2010, Dr. Turner guilted Kate into taking Noodle home because, "It's Easter and she'll be here allllllll alone."  Kate agreed to take Noodle home on a foster basis and, a month later, I moved in.

Now, in Kate's house, Noodle was a bit of a monster.  Towards the end of her tenure there, Kate added up the dollar amount in damages caused by the little blonde doggy, and it totaled into the thousands.  Noodle's last big hurrah at Kate's house was to eat a pair of her glasses.  The lenses weren't too damaged, so she was able to get them repaired.  Within a couple days of the repaired glasses coming home, she ate them again.  Then Noodle went to live at Pet Resort in the Gardens, which had recently opened for business.

(And, for the record, Noodle's wasn't kicked out of Kate's house.  There was also a much bigger problem brewing of some disagreements between Noodle and Weezie, one of her dogs.)

Anyway, Noodle went to live at Pet Resort, where she got to play in daycare every day, made tons of friends, and had lots of fun.  She also went kennel crazy.  It's not unusual for a dog that spends lots of time in a kennel.  It was becoming more and more evident that she needed a HOME, but ho wants to adopt a dog that will need very expensive surgery a few years down the line?

Well, that would be me.

But there was this pesky pet deposit that I couldn't afford.  And finding out that that was the only thing keeping me from taking Noodle home, Dr. Turner paid it.  And on that day, October 16, Noodle was mine.  And she became Noodle.

So, here we are, a year and a half later, and Noodle is part of our little family.


Of course this family also includes Rommel, but we don't have any pictures of that yet.  : )

And, for the record, that man right there, Noodle's daddy (as he calls himself), is the one that insists that everything Noodle owns is PINK.  And he makes sure everyone knows that she's the princess.


Sunday, April 15, 2012

Noodle Rides the Short Bus

While I've had many different positions in a handful of different places over the last ten years, there is one thing I've always done, and that's train dogs.  Looking at Noodle, you'd never guess that I am a trainer of canines.  Noodle is, well... special.  Let's take her swimming habits, for example.


Anyway, I've had Noodle for about a year and a half and she still has a handful of bad habits at which she excels.  Thankfully my clients don't hold it against me.

My greatest training accomplishment was my previous pooch, Ash.  He was a hellion husky pup that grew to be an amazing dog, and had even managed to become a service dog for me for a bit.  Since I ran the apprenticeship program for new trainers, Ash was learning new useless things constantly as a part of their training.  His crowning glory, however, was this


This trick was done at a pet event in Redford, MI where there were several hundred people and several hundred dogs in attendance.  There are 100 treats in this picture.  This was repeated later in the day with 150 treats.  We could do this trick with anything.

 Ham.

 Duplo.  Whatever.

Anyway, Ash was a very well-trained dog and a shining example of my training prowess.  And then there was Noodle...

I suppose I have the excuse that bad habits are hard to break, and this girl had over a year of bad habits built up.  I can also attest to the fact that, in other homes, Noodle was MUCH worse than she is here, and a lot of those bad habits immediately went out the window.  But she still jumps up, though almost exclusively on me.  And she walks kind of badly on a leash.  And she's really impatient.  Then there's the window licking....

Noodle's a pretty good dog.  She listens fairly well for a dog that's been moved around as much as she has before she landed with me.  She has talents, like punching you in the face and smashing your balls if you have them.  But she's also a class A snuggler and she knows how to wait at the door.  And really, we wouldn't have it any other way.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Meet Noodle!




Noodle is an almost 3 year old lab.  She is a rescue, saved from a family that wanted to put her down at 10 months old due to severe hip dysplasia.  She is otherwise very healthy, very active, and very happy.  

However, she is not very smart.

But she is part of the family and we love her more than anything.

Noodle has a brother named Rommel.


Rommel is pretty new to the family, only been here 3 weeks.  He's a 4 year old Standard Poodle.  His previous family claimed allergies and had banished him to the backyard.  Turns out, he is a shredder of blinds.


And the internets.


But he has a high security crate, so his shredding days are over.

Noodle wasn't too keen on sharing much of anything with Rommel at first.  Class A bitchy, actually.  But now we are at a good point of reasonable tolerance.


 At least she's not jumping up whenever he lays down near her.

Both dogs are spoiled rotten.  Absolutely rotten.  They live a spoiled life that involves multiple trips per week to a high-end pet resort here in Dallas.  They get plenty of cookies.  They pretty much have their own bedroom.  They both sleep in bed with us every night.

The purpose of this blog is to share pictures and ridiculous Noodle stories.  I'll likely have plenty to share since Noodle is basically a short-bus kind of dog and gives us lots to laugh about.  I hope you enjoy!

Oh and if you could please check out Noodle's Facebook, that would be awesome.