YB, and Spring.

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Jan 30, 2002
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OK. So, it's Spring, right? Nature in all its fecundity and all that, right? Young Bert, the not-right dog, goes out on a 20ft lunge line, tethered in the center of the yard, with access to bushes, tree trunks, the wood pile, and a good view of the shed where feral cats occasionally take up residence, and beyond which groundhogs are inclined to hang out, over near the silo.

He'll take care of his business, inspect the air currents for potential prey, and occasionally, sit sentry to watch for the feral cats or ground hogs. When he is bored, he'll give a yelp and eventually I will go out and bring him in. When I take him off-leash, he'll charge out to the drive and up to the shed where the car is, then pivot and come racing down to catch up with me to go down the hill to the mailbox.

Actually, "catch up with me" is mis-leading. He will charge right past me to investigate all of the invisible (to me) clues of life that have transpired during the interval since his last charge. This time of year, most often he will end up leaping up on the stacks of corn stalks the neighbor stores along my drive, seeking out the terrorist field mice and corn snakes that will occasionally sun themselves up on the top of the 5 foot square stacks.

In another incarnation, he was a close relative of Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, and has this INSANE desire to rid the rural world of perfectly harmless corn snakes. I've interceded twice this Spring, and still mourn the passing of a beautiful, four foot long snake, sunning itself in the drive some years ago. The image of YB, t n-r d, grabbing the snake and doing a cartoon swivel of his head, slamming the opposite ends of the poor critter on the ground, still sticks in my mind. Nice snake. Uh, dead snake.

So. One day this Spring, I hear this frantic barking out in the yard. Out I go, expecting to see a groundhog running for cover. Instead, YB has created a rigid line of leash, barely restraining him from tearing into a pile of dead branches and brush that borders the yard under the old apple tree.

"OK," I figure, "some dumb cat, bunny, snake, groundhog, raccoon, mountain lion (ok, maybe not) has taken up hiding in the brush pile and stirred the atavistic drive for YB to feed the pack. This noise has to stop."

Around I go, and in the most dignified manner, jump up and down on the brush pile (a technique learned from rabbit hunting over the years, virtually guaranteed to produce no rabbits.) Huh, no rabbits, etc....

YB is still choking himself with intensity to get to the pile. I go back to him and attempt, in a most reasonable manner, to convince him that the barking is a futile activity, and frowned upon by the leader of his pack.

He remains unconvinced.

I take a branch and poke at the pile; no escapees, nor any surcease of the cacophony.

Fine. I pull him back a bit, and unsnap the lunge line.

He leaps...LEAPS...not to the brush pile, but to a privet bush I planted 20 years ago, expecting to make living sculpture, but ending only with a struggling privet bush year after year.

With my lightning-like reflexes (don't go there), I lunge over and grab his collar, and pull him to me, immediately trying to dislodge whatever it is he has gulped into his maw. Deep down his throat, and I mean DEEP, I pull out a baby rabbit, no bigger than my palm, and hold it in my right hand, while my left holds the mighty hunter. The ingestion has had fatal consequences for the bunny, and YB has not bothered to chew, bite, or masticate...the idiot was swallowing it whole!

I looked with sorrow at the baby bunny, so tiny and inert. Compassion filled my heart.

Compassion did NOT fill YB's heart. Rather, a second baby bunny filled his mouth. He'd pulled my left arm down so he could get a second helping.

I pitched the first fatality over into the brush pile and reached, yet again, down into the slimy cavern of my carnivore's mouth. Got a grip, tugged.

Nothing moved. Tugged again. Nothing.

Stuck? Tugged yet a third time...seconds were precious. I tried to identify by feel with my fingers the anatomy of the bunny in order to extricate it.

Oh.

Hmmm. Well, then.

I stopped trying to pull YB's tongue out of his mouth. Moved my hand and pulled out the second, and equally deceased, baby bunny.

Young Bert made another lunge at the bottom of the privet bush. I restrained him.

Yep, a THIRD baby bunny crouched there.

I nudged it over to the bushes, while holding on to the primitive beast in my left hand. It escaped, I believe.

OK, now. What in the name of all that is holy and evolutionary would prompt nature to motivate a rabbit to set up a nest within four feet of the end of a leash holding a 65 pound, slavering lunatic bunny-eater? No wonder the damned things are prolific, they are so bloody stupid they HAVE to be to survive as species.

I put YB back on the leash. He was going, "Nuawwahh, nuawwahh" a bit, and wiggling his tongue.

I felt a little guilty, but didn't apologise.

:eek:

IMG002.jpg





Kis
enjoy every sandwich
 
Jaysus. :) Sometimes appreciating nature means appreciating how it tastes.

Mike
 
Great story! I had a dog named Foxie as kid for 13 years. She's been gone for 28 years. I used to catch her eating the baby bunnies in our back yard every year. Thanks for reminding me of her. Good looking dog you have.
 
That's a great tale.

I think of all the movies and cartoons where some creature, be it two-legged or otherwise, manages to avoid a similar fate by outrunning the dog before the rope/chain restraining it snaps taut and ends the pursuit. Not sure if it's instinct or experience that teaches the would-be victim exactly how long that rope/chain is.

Eric
 
My dog's a natural born killer too. Fortunately for the local wildlife, she moves like a natural-born hippopotamus. I mentioned in the "toad houses"-thread that she likes flipping toads on their backs for no apparent reason. I think it's because they're the only things lumpier, squattier, and slower than she is.

Dogs are great. It's a shame they act like dogs sometimes!
 
Good God, how I've missed the Young Bert stories.

More. Please.

t
 
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Good God, how I've missed the Young Bert stories.

More. Pleae.

t

Second.+ :thumbup: :D

Kis's Young Bert stories remind me of the great and wonderful, "The Last Laugh" stories that used to be, maybe still are(?), on the very last page of Outdoor magazine by Patrick F. McManus.:thumbup: :cool: :D
 
Second.+ :thumbup: :D

Kis's Young Bert stories remind me of the great and wonderful, "The Last Laugh" stories that used to be, maybe still are(?), on the very last page of Outdoor magazine by Patrick F. McManus.:thumbup: :cool: :D

He does have that lovable pipe, slippers, dog and double thing going on. :D

We're fortunate to share his campfire.


Mike
 
Thank you, Gents...

but where were you when he tried to retrieve the fawn????



muttermuttermutter






Kis
enjoy every sandwich
 
I have a couple dogs have to be chained up or they will chase stuff.

But Pete and the BigDog are fine.

My favorite dog of all time Joshua the border collie was great. The only things he hated were groundhogs and turtles. It drove him crazy that turtles could hide in their shell. Frequently he would wait them out. We'd find headless rotting turtles.
 
Young Bert, the not-right dog, was put down today after suffering seizures. We'd just come back from a dawn walk along the crik, looking for wood ducks. He'd waded in and immediately started searching for a muskrat he was SURE was there. He tried to chase a barn cat he saw, but I called him off. When we got to the house, he collapsed and began what was to be a series of seizures. Vet had to be called.

He was eleven and one half years old.

I am a very lucky man.


Be gentle with yourselves
 
Sorry to hear that Kismet, as you say you were a lucky man though.

Hard to lose such good old friends, havent been through it for 20 years now. I spent a few years without mans best friend. lonely years in many ways..

we know have a mad but lovely 6 year old blue merle collie that loves to swim in heavy seas for its own amusment, & an even crazier 6 month old welsh collie/terrior cross, its only a puppy but sadly still kills evrything thats not in the pack. totaly fearless, It does it surprisingly effeciently so far at least, but means still theres a lot of places we cant take it & needs loads of work.

Its pure dog in heart, but flys & leaps like a kangaroo though, twists & turns like a Chinese acrobat.

Im trying hard with it, its alreay a 40lb puppy & it will run & chase for 8 hours on a walk & still want to play for hours, when it gets home. Cant imagine what it will be like in a years time. Hard work but a good dog though.

Strange how genetics work, it will dig a hole like an earth dog,{normaly on high ground.] but then lays in it & waits for its prey & watches the area like a collie. Attacks both in a direct assault like a terrior & also circles & ambushes like a collie. Funny realy though we were getting it as a companion dog for the older one, fascinating to see it develop though, very strong charchter, its trouble at times, but its a lovely dog. I think sound or reliable is probably the word. Maybe not for a Politicaly correct world though.

Take care of yourself.

spiral
 
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