Month 2012-09
Activity Walk
Count 52
Total Distance 78.29 miles
Total Walk Time 24:23:02
Total Calories 8350
Average Distance 1.51 miles
Average Walk Time 28:08
Average Calories 161
Average Pace 18:41 per mile
Total miles per dog: Ondine - 46.12; Pan - 29.05; Fergus - 5.7; Alone - 3.62.
September 30, 2012
September 29, 2012
September 28, 2012
snippets, 9-28-12
Animals are conscious and should be treated as such (h/t dangerousmeta!).
Yay to the scientists for saying this plainly. And from here, case in point: Pan has learned to pretend he's asleep.
When Bren leaves for work in the morning, she asks Pan to get in his crate. A couple mornings ago, as she was preparing to leave, she found Pan sleeping on her bed. She said, "Go get in your bed," which is his cue to get in his crate, but he didn't react. She turned to do something else, but out of the corner of her eye saw him lift his head to watch her from behind. When she turned back to him, he flopped his head down and closed his eyes, feigning sleep.
He repeated the performance the next morning. Pan is typically underfoot, but Bren noticed that he dissappeared when she was getting ready to leave. She found him on the couch, curled up, eyes closed - just way, way too tuckered out, you know, to get up again and get in his own bed.
It's not that he doesn't like his crate. He usually responds quickly and enthusiastically when we ask him to get in. He eats in it and sleeps in it every night.
It's no surprise at all to see that he knows Bren's "leaving for work" routine. The dogs know exactly when it's time to go for a walk, when it's time for dinner, etc. But reacting to a cue by pretending to be asleep? This guy isn't just conscious - he's thinking strategically.
Another clue to Pan's self-awareness: Sometimes when the dogs are playing and Ondine gets a little rough, Pan will yelp or hide behind a chair or something. Ondine dials down the intensity and then they carry on, but if a person is around and Pan sees that the person has noticed his distress, he'll start screaming bloody murder and run to the person for sympathy, just like a child who cries only when he sees that his caregiver is watching. (And just as with a child, the best way to get him to knock off the drama is to ignore it.)
I could go on all day. (One of my favorite things in life is Ondine's, "Ha, I'm just messin' with you" routine. But I'll save that for some other time.)
I'm a fan of the theory of epigenetics as far as I understand it, and I wouldn't be surprised if border collies are sneaking up on their singularity more quickly than we're approaching ours. When that happens, we're gonna have some serious 'splainin to do...
Yay to the scientists for saying this plainly. And from here, case in point: Pan has learned to pretend he's asleep.
When Bren leaves for work in the morning, she asks Pan to get in his crate. A couple mornings ago, as she was preparing to leave, she found Pan sleeping on her bed. She said, "Go get in your bed," which is his cue to get in his crate, but he didn't react. She turned to do something else, but out of the corner of her eye saw him lift his head to watch her from behind. When she turned back to him, he flopped his head down and closed his eyes, feigning sleep.
He repeated the performance the next morning. Pan is typically underfoot, but Bren noticed that he dissappeared when she was getting ready to leave. She found him on the couch, curled up, eyes closed - just way, way too tuckered out, you know, to get up again and get in his own bed.
It's not that he doesn't like his crate. He usually responds quickly and enthusiastically when we ask him to get in. He eats in it and sleeps in it every night.
It's no surprise at all to see that he knows Bren's "leaving for work" routine. The dogs know exactly when it's time to go for a walk, when it's time for dinner, etc. But reacting to a cue by pretending to be asleep? This guy isn't just conscious - he's thinking strategically.
Another clue to Pan's self-awareness: Sometimes when the dogs are playing and Ondine gets a little rough, Pan will yelp or hide behind a chair or something. Ondine dials down the intensity and then they carry on, but if a person is around and Pan sees that the person has noticed his distress, he'll start screaming bloody murder and run to the person for sympathy, just like a child who cries only when he sees that his caregiver is watching. (And just as with a child, the best way to get him to knock off the drama is to ignore it.)
I could go on all day. (One of my favorite things in life is Ondine's, "Ha, I'm just messin' with you" routine. But I'll save that for some other time.)
I'm a fan of the theory of epigenetics as far as I understand it, and I wouldn't be surprised if border collies are sneaking up on their singularity more quickly than we're approaching ours. When that happens, we're gonna have some serious 'splainin to do...
September 24, 2012
can't...resist...
Flipper does this to everybody, no matter what you're eating. Even dental chews. (Bren filmed this clip.)
September 23, 2012
September 22, 2012
north fork san gabriel, ix-xxii-xii
A very nice morning. We were able to put Ondine in a covered crate in the back of the new vehicle; Pan rode alongside it. They did all right, mostly.
September 21, 2012
September 20, 2012
September 17, 2012
September 16, 2012
September 15, 2012
September 11, 2012
September 9, 2012
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