Wilson's outside, and we're washing all his stinky stuff.
Don't get me wrong, we adopted him a year ago this week, and
he is an excellent little hound, but he picks up nasty smells like a dockside
prostitute picks up sailors. Who knows where. He don't roll in poo, he doesn't
go to the gym, and he's not obviously sweaty like a security guard.
If you don't put dog, stinky blanky and bed through the wash
weekly, then the whole flat smells, the car smells, and you smell. Smelly dog,
but we love him.
He may be a stinker, but my memory might be playing tricks
on me, because I'm clearly blocking out what Snowy - our previous Jack Russell
- was like. Memory's like that - only the sweet smell of flowers and the ugly
beauty of freshly-laid tarmac makes it through the nasal censor in your head.
Dog smells - as a rule - do not.
Snowy had what was known as 'Stinky Blanky', but that was a
French mademoiselle's perfumed handkerchief in comparison to that owned by
Wilson. Snowy's breath was like death, as was his bottom gas. And in his final
months he often didn't make it to the toilet in time, and you would sometimes
find him crouched in the hallway, nipping out a log, fixing you with that
gimlet stare that said "Yeah? And what are you going to do about it?"
Nothing, that's what.
But we loved him, like we now love Wilson. For the first few
weeks, I actually missed cleaning up the poop and disinfecting the wooden floor
in the hallway.
Wilson's first act in this house when we brought him home
last April was to scour the place and thoroughly destroy anything owned by
previous dogs. Toys were shredded with the ruthlessness of a city banker caught
with his hand in the till. Then he claimed the sofa as his own, and hobbled his
servants by lying across out-stretched legs until the knees were bent backwards
so firmly we couldn't run away. We have no resistance to him, at all.
Fortunately, he is possibly the easiest dog to bath I've
ever owned, accepting his fate with reasonably good grace, standing head bowed
in the bath like a man condemned.
Now, my first dog Snoopy was a real terror to bath. He was
the only dog I ever owned that would resort to actual violence to avoid the
tub, and we had to resort to the human traits of guile and trickery if we
wanted him clean.
Which was often.
We had fields behind our house, and Snoopy liked nothing
better than to vault the back fence and not return until he had experienced a
thoroughly good roll in freshly-laid horse manure. Like many of the unpleasant
jobs around that time, it fell to me to clean the cur, and battle between
teenager and beagle was joined.
I was a pretty naive sort at that age and managed to talk
myself into anything that involved effort. Mowing the lawn became my job,
essentially because I once asked my dad if I could have a push one summer
afternoon when he was struggling with the mower, and - as far as I know - the
old man has never pushed another lawnmower to this day.
The same went for bathing the dog. Seemed like fun, how hard
it could be?
As hard as wrestling with a large, wet, writhing mass with
spiky teeth at one end, that's what. Snoopy soon learned that the bathroom
meant bad news, and he wouldn't even be bribed in with food or treats after a
while. So you would have to pounce on him, wrap him in a blanket, race to the
bath and throw him in before he realised what was happening, and woe betide if
you left him a fraction of an inch to escape, because he'd find that gap and
would be away, like some sort of simile I can't think of at the moment.
In the end, the battle of wits between hapless teen and
snarling crap-covered canine resolved itself, like all conflicts do, into a
morale-sapping battle where nobody emerges with pride intact, and the victor
feels a little ashamed at the lengths he has gone to secure the humiliation of
his foe.
Yes, I cornered Snoopy in the greenhouse, in which I had
already placed the lawn sprinkler attached to the hose.
The nuclear option. I'm not proud.
Wilson be warned - I note your docile yet resigned attitude
toward the dog bath, but I still have my collection of Cold War era books on
weapons and tactics. I'm not afraid to use them.
3 comments:
Use to have a dog called Harold. They could make a perfect pair...
Yeh, yeh. Blame it on the dog.
".....Memory's like that - only the sweet smell of flowers and the ugly beauty of freshly-laid tarmac makes it through the nasal censor in your head. Dog smells - as a rule - do not......"
Selective memory? The smart folk call that Hedonic Editing. It keeps us all sane, apparently.
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