Hey, neighbor, wanna play? |
I knew three of my interviewee’s dogs, from the seventh and eighth
generations of the ongoing line, back in my ski town days, when I was living in
a basement-level apartment across the street. Chipeta, Moki, and Dillon – a mother
and two siblings – would often amble across the traffic-less road and sit at
the top of my front steps, dropping a tennis ball down the stairs until I
either came out to play or let them in to hang out.
They were mellow and sweet and – most importantly – provided
a doggy fix to a dog-loving girl who was without a dog.
After I made the connection last week, I pulled out an old
photo album to look for pictures of the golden trio. Stuck amid images of a
20-years-younger me, I found a few shots of the neighborhood dogs – including
one of the three of them lined up at the top of my stairs, an old tennis ball
at their feet – along with other pups who filled the void during my dogless
years, that time between when I left my childhood home and the dogs I grew up
with and when I got my own first dog.
Otis and Boone – a golden retriever and a black lab/golden
mix – accompanied me on countless hikes and backpacking outings. They belonged
to friends, and I sometimes dog-sat for them when their people were away. Ike,
an age-hobbled, perpetually smiling yellow lab, was another of my dog-sitting
charges. Chelsea was the next-door-neighbors’ mutt, who ran alongside her
people on long mountain bike rides well into her old age.
The ski shop where I worked in Crested Butte had a host of
shop dogs. Bella was a slightly gawky Bernese Mountain dog who belonged to one
of the shop owners. Ruby, a yellow lab who went with the other owner, was Bella’s
older, more distinguished counterpart. Rounding out the mix was Honey, a sweet
golden who tagged along to work with the office manager.
Around the corner from the house where I lived for four
years, there was a huge malamute named Ullr, after the Norse god of winter.
Ullr howled daily with the noontime whistle and was always up for a belly rub.
I was happy to oblige as I passed the inn where Ullr kept watch, finding contentment
in his general doggy happiness and the feel of fur on fingers.
Then there was Ben, a smiling, slightly shaggy, black dog
who lived with the family I worked for when I left Colorado and overshot New
England by a few thousand miles to land, briefly, in the west of Ireland. Ben loved
to play soccer and would join me and the family’s two boys in our evening games
in the barnyard. That combination of a dog to pat and a soccer ball at my feet
lent a sense of the familiar in a place far from home.
I haven’t thought about this cast of dogs for a long while,
but that random blast from the past brought them all back to me. Like good dogs
everywhere, this canine crew offered unconditional friendship at times when I
was without my own doggy sidekick, easy company during skiing and hiking explorations,
and simple stress relief through belly rubs and ear scratches.
It’s been more than 15 years since I moved back East, which
means all those dogs are now long gone. But I still can picture them in the
old, familiar places, can still see in my mind’s eye their dog-smiling faces
and happy anticipation about everything from hikes to biscuits to the noontime
whistle.
They weren’t my dogs, but they’re all locked into my heart’s
memory just the same, friends from other times and other places.
Original content by Meghan McCarthy McPhaul, posted to her Blog: Writings From a Full Life. This essay also appears as Meghan's Close to Home column in the January 13, 2016 edition of the Littleton Record.
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