Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2024

8 Cats + 4 Dogs + 7 Humans = Gratitude!!! By Sarah Raplee

 ๐Ÿ˜ธ๐Ÿ˜บ๐Ÿ˜ป๐Ÿ˜ผ๐Ÿ˜พ๐Ÿ™€๐Ÿ˜น๐Ÿ˜ฝ๐Ÿ•๐Ÿถ๐Ÿฉ๐Ÿถ๐Ÿ‘ด๐Ÿ‘ต๐Ÿ‘ฑ๐Ÿ‘ฆ๐Ÿ‘ง๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿ‘ฉ

We recently sold our acreage in the Northern Cascade foothills of Oregon, our home of ten years, and moved to Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The acreage had become too much work for us to keep up with, and the cost of living and housing in Oregon had become too much for a couple facing retirement.

Our youngest son, Galen, and his family lived in Astoria, Oregon, a beautiful town on the coast. But we couldn’t afford to buy a house there, and their three-story Victorian with two dozen steps leading up to the front door was not workable for two seventy-somethings with arthritis.

Our eldest son, Micah, and his family urged us to come live with them in their big, modern house in the country outside Cedar Rapids. They had plenty of room, as their children were grown.

One of our oldest granddaughters and her family, including our only great-grandchildren, lived about forty-five minutes north in Waterloo. Micah’s oldest daughter and her fiancรฉe lived three hours away in Rochester, Minnesota, and they were expecting a baby. Micah’s oldest son and his girlfriend lived in Ankeny, two hours away. The younger son lived at home while working in the family business, and the younger daughter and her fiancรฉe were living temporarily in the walkout basement of Micah’s home while they remodeled the home they had bought nearby. They hoped to be moved by Christmas.

We could live in two upstairs rooms for a month or two, then move downstairs while looking for a new home, or permanently if we found we liked the arrangements. They even offered to put in a stairlift if we needed one.

We’d lived in Cedar Rapids previously for twenty-one years. Then my husband’s employer transferred him to Oregon. Six months later, our youngest son and his family moved to Astoria. We got to see their kids grow up over fourteen years, but now their youngest was thirteen.

With Micah’s help, we quickly found a buyer for our acreage .Within six weeks, with the help of both son’s families, we got the POD packed and drove to Iowa with two dogs and a cat in tow.

Lucky and Petey are Friends Now
We were a little apprehensive about how our pets would adjust to the drive, and then the new living arrangements. They’ve done really well. It’s taken a month, but the cat has found his place among the five other upstairs cats and the two downstairs cats. The two big Australian shepherd pups are very rambunctious, so we keep the dogs apart. Mac is getting better about not barking at and/or chasing the cats. Petey has made friends with two of them. Both dogs have come to realize this house is their new home and Micah’s family are part of our “pack”.

Although we miss Galen’s family, my husband and I are very thankful things have worked out so well. We can afford to make trips to Oregon, and Galen’s family makes trips to Iowa at least every other year. We are settling in and looking forward to Thanksgiving, when we will see all grandkids and the great-grands. 

Our hearts overflow with gratitude!!!

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Mutt's and Mistletoe Book Review



Review of Mutts and Mistletoe by Natalie Cox

From the first page of this laugh-out-loud Holiday Romance set in the English countryside, British Author Natalie Cox had me smiling at her heroine’s Ten Things I Hate About Christmas list. Told in the first person, the story gives the reader access to Charlie’s thoughts (gently snarky) as well as her words and actions. This adds an extra layer of humor to the hilarious fish-out-of-water mix.

Charlie’s seemingly stable urban life is overturned in a flash when she discovers her live-in boyfriend has been cheating on her with his personal trainer for over a year. Charlie struggles to make sense of what happened.

At the ripe old age of thirty-one, she’s lost (or had stolen) four years of her life, and she wants to make the most of what remains. But her self-confidence has been shaken. Her romantic heart is battered and bruised. She’d rather be alone than live with someone she can’t trust.

Charlie’s plans to hole up alone over Christmas with a bottle of Chardonnay and watch Audrey Hepburn movies is blown to smithereens when her apartment building blows up from a gas leak. Suffering from a concussion and temporarily homeless, she agrees to stay with her cousin Jez in the country while she recovers. Jez runs a high-end boarding kennel, Cozy Canine Cottages.

Unfortunately, Charlie has no experience with country living, and her only experience with dogs was with her mother’s third ex-husband’s over-indulged and under-disciplined pugs. At five years old, she experienced them chewing up her dolls, constantly trying to hump her leg and getting the attention she craved. Nothing to love there as far as she is concerned.

Charlie finds herself a fish out of water, but being an adventurous soul, she gamely tries to fit in with Jez and Slab (ancient Poodle), Hulk (spunky Pomeranian), Malcom (nervous, deaf Great Dane), Judd (three-time national champion Irish Setter), The Twins (two huge Alaskan Malamute sled dogs) and Peggy (very pregnant beagle).

When Jez’s long-term internet romantic partner gives her two weeks in the Arctic together for Christmas, and none of Jez’s friends can kennel-sit for her, Charlie gamely volunteers. After all, how hard can it be?

Plus, the pay is REALLY good.

When the boiler in the kennel building breaks down, Charlie must bring all the dogs into the house with her so they don’t freeze to death. Jez’s off-beat local friends rally round to help and before she knows it, Charlie begins to appreciate and enjoy the company of canines.

Unfortunately, every time Charlie runs into the handsome-but-prickly vet, he seems to get the impression she’s reckless and irresponsible. But he has such sexy forearms…and she’s learned he had his heart broken, too.

Natalie Cox has an amazing comic voice. Her characters are interesting and relatable, including the dogs. The plot has plenty of fun twists and turns with a heartwarming and happy ending.

I read Mutts and Mistletoe in bed the first time, and woke my husband multiple times laughing out loud. Two weeks later, I read the story again because it was soooo funny. I laughed just as much the second time around.

This book goes on my ‘keeper’ shelf! ~ Sarah McDermed


Available in Print, Audible, E-book. Can be found at all the large print and e-book retailers, and in many languages.

Monday, April 2, 2018

What Makes Me Smile by Paty Jager


Buttercups make me smile. They are the first wildflower to pop their heads up on the hills around us in the spring. When their shiny yellow petals dot the hillside it means Spring is around the corner.
Me glazing bowls I made for Empty Bowls program
Making things with my hands brings a smile to my face. I like to sew, made things with wood, and lately I've tried my hand at pottery to better understand my amateur sleuth and potter, in my Shandra Higheagle mysteries.

A youth horned owl hiding under our porch from ravens
Most days I take a walk on our 280 acres in SE Oregon. On these walks I follow animal paw prints, watch eagles, ravens, hawks, and smaller birds soar in the sky. Hear the calls and chirps of birds in the rock cliffs and under the sagebrush. Chase covey's of quail, play hide-n-seek with a cottontail, and watch the coyote in the field to make sure the dogs don't go near him. The wildlife I encounter every day puts a grin on my face. I love sitting in the nook and watching the deer slowly move out into the alfalfa fields to feed, play, and chase. The creatures of the animal kingdom are always entertaining.

Rockaway Beach, Oregon
As much as I love the high desert where I live, my soul needs replenished with the power of the surging ocean, the smooth palate of sand, the pounding of the waves. A trip to the ocean renews my spirit and can put a smile on my face even if it's pouring rain and sand is being pelted at me by the wind.

Weneha Canyon

Research. There are days I think I write just so I can research. ;) I love researching new things. As a student I brought my books home from school every night. Not because I had homework but because I wanted to read more, learn more. History and other cultures have always intrigued me. When I'm researching I'm happy. The new knowledge restores my  need to know more. Two weeks ago, I spent 8 hours on a ride-along with an Oregon Fish and Wildlife state trooper to learn all I could about being a game warden.  The main character in my next mystery series will be a game warden. The whole day I was smiling as I took notes and asked questions. And to top it off we saw elk and mountain sheep. So I was double smiling that day. LOL  There isn't a book or YouTube video that can give you the answers that actually seeing or participating in something can give you. In person research is the best!

Tink hiking
What also makes me smile are my dogs. Tink a min-pin chihuahua is our old lady. She's 13 and still acts like a youngster when we go on hikes. She loves getting out and sniffing the brush. Mikey, my husband's dog and our newest member, my dad's dog, Harlie are a comical duo. They play, body slam each other, and race through the house if we don't get them outside enough. Once outside they go different directions. Harlie, straight up the hill and Mikey after a ball for someone to throw. The rowdy dogs are hours of entertainment.


The last thing that makes me smile is when someone tells me they loved one of my books. I try to put out the best story I can and love to hear when someone else enjoys what I had fun writing.

What makes you smile?


Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 32 novels, 6 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it.

blog / websiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest   / Bookbub

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Living the Dream

by Madelle Morgan


This month’s topic is “If I were a millionaire.”  Well, I’m not. Far from it. But it’s fun to speculate about how I’d spend bags of money.

First, I’d buy a lake house. After my grandparents’ place was sold in my twenties, I’ve coveted my own piece of heaven. This luxurious property on Millionaire’s Row would do.



Each novel in my Hollywood in Muskoka series features a resort or lake house in Muskoka cottage country—the beautiful recreational area north of Toronto, Canada. I draw my writing inspiration from those summers at my grandparents’ lake house and subsequent vacation weeks at rented cottages.

My first summer job as a chambermaid at a Muskoka resort inspired Caught on Camera.


Delawana Inn, Honey Harbour, District of Muskoka

A Muskoka shop inspired Brigit’s SereniTea Shoppe in Seduced by the Screenwriter.

Abbey's Bake House, Port Carling, District of Muskoka

What draws us to waterfront property? The beach? Water sports? A place for extended family to gather and bond? All this and more.


My parents, sisters and I rented this old cottage with bunkie (sleeping cabin) that together slept 16. One bathroom + outhouse, an outdoor shower, and no TV. 

We spent our precious days together mostly in or beside the water. Below my sister teaches our niece how to windsurf on a sailboard.



At night our kids had to play games that didn't require a screen.


Furry family members love being off-leash. Rudy inspired Caught on Camera's Mopette.


Yeah, it’s nice to dream of living in a palatial property, but I didn’t need to own one in order to create memories worth a million bucks.

Madelle in a giant Muskoka chair.
What would you do with a couple of million dollars?

Madelle


*******************************************
Madelle Morgan  writes romance set in Canada. 

Caught on Camera is a Hollywood wedding romantic comedy set in Muskoka, Canada—summer playground of the rich and famous. It's Book 1 of the Hollywood in Muskoka series.
 Amazon | iTunes | Kobo

Seduced by the Screenwriter is Book 2 in the series. For a limited time this hot contemporary romance is available on Amazon for $0.99 and is a free read for Kindle Unlimited subscribers.

The romantic thriller Diamond Hunter is available on Amazon in Kindle Unlimited.


Saturday, April 15, 2017

True Life of an Amputee by Kathleen Delaney


A few years ago I read a mystery about a man who’d recently had his leg amputated. Recently as in a couple of weeks. He was released from the hospital with a prosthesis, got involved with killers at a race horse barn, lost his prosthesis and saved himself by climbing over the wall of a horse stall and dropping down in the stall next door.

The only part the author got right was that horse barn walls never go to the ceiling for the purposes of air circulation so squeezing through might be a problem, but theoretically it’s possible. The rest was, well, it was plain bunk. 

I know. I’m an amputee.

It never occurred to me that one day I would lose a leg. I’ve never been in the army, I don’t ride wild bulls, race cars or go rock climbing. I don’t do much of anything dangerous or even slightly adventurous. I have tried to live a healthy life, eating oatmeal instead of Lucky Charms, grilled chicken instead of deep fried, lots of leafy greens, you get the picture. But in spite all my efforts, I got vascular disease, needed an arterial by–pass which failed, and ended up with the amputation of my left leg.

Overnight, I was a disabled person. At first I was in too much pain, and shock, to take in the implications of what that would mean, how much my life had just changed. The reality of just how much sunk in gradually. Well, not gradually, more a series of jolts.

The first one came when someone, I forget who, asked me if I planned on getting a prosthesis. I think I was in rehab, learning how to hop behind a walker, get in and out of bed from a wheel chair without ending up on the floor, and how to maneuver it close enough to a toilet so I could make a safe transfer. Amazing how tricky that can be, especially while traveling. All handicapped stalls in public bathrooms are supposed to be wide enough so you can get a wheelchair in, but not all are spacious enough to turn one around. That can present a problem. I  think it was after one of those episodes I decided I was definitely getting a fake leg. Never during this period which covered the first couple of months after surgery did I feel as if I could scale a wall, with or without the leg. Learning to stand on one leg was challenge enough.
PUREBRED DEAD

It turned out managing the prosthesis wasn’t so easy, either. The man who made my new leg was also an amputee. He knew what you had to go through to make it all work, he knew about the swelling, about the pain, and how blasted hard the whole thing was going to be. First he came to my house where he made a plaster cast of the stump. This would change a lot as the swelling went down. That took a while. But the time came when he said I was ready and so was he. I was going to get my leg.

He came to a therapy session for my first attempt at walking. With much fanfare, the stump was inserted into the leg, I was lifted to my feet and, with a therapist on each side, I was instructed to take my first step. I couldn’t. My brain went into revolt. There was a strange thing on my leg and the only way to stay safe was to not move. Try as I might, I couldn’t pick it up. It didn’t stay rooted on the ground, of course. Eventually I took a couple of steps, then more, then one day I was walking again. I learned to climb steps, step off curbs (a good way to trip) walk on grass or over stony paths, sort of, but I was getting around.

I started to drive again. That was a huge breakthrough. Depending on someone else to drive you, take you, or your grocery list, to the store, to the doctor, to the library, is hard to accept if you’ve been on your own for a long time. I chafed badly at being so dependent on others but it was a huge motivator. If I could drive, I could still live alone, a way of life my two dogs and I liked and were determined to continue. It also meant I could join the Silver Sneakers classes at our local Y. My first class was pretty much a disaster, I spent a lot of it trying to do the exercises seated in the chair, but I did persist. Eventually I could do them all and on my feet. Not especially well or fast but I could do them. The next step, swimming.

When you only have one leg, swimming isn’t easy. You don’t go straight. You don’t go much of anywhere. But, you can hang onto the side of the pool and kick; you can do jumping jacks, and all kinds of other things impossible to do on the gym floor. All you need is a noodle and a little bit of reckless courage. The tricky part is getting in and out. Especially out. I found a municipal pool in a neighboring town that had a handicapped lift. Perfect. I got in and out with ease, only needing a little help getting into the wheel chair. I was pretty proud of myself. 

Then, one day, I saw a man, about my age which is not young, hopping around the side of the pool on his one remaining leg. He disdained the lift and got himself in and out of the pool with ease. Stung, I resolved to learn how. Not the hopping part, but getting in and out of the pool without the lift. It took some time and the help of several white knuckled life guards but I learned. Getting in is easy, getting out still requires someone to hold the wheel chair and to sometimes give me a little extra help getting over that top step and into it, but…I can go into any pool anywhere I want. And I do. Hotel pools, our community pool, friends or relatives pools, I’ve been in and out of them all. That, my dear friends, is freedom.

I’ve learned, these last seven years, being handicapped is as much a matter of mind as it is physical. Of course, I have only lost a leg. There are people out there who have much harder physical obstacles to overcome than that, but somehow we adapt. We find ways. Not all the same way, but if you look hard enough, you’ll figure out something. I can make a mean omelet even when I’m confined to the wheel chair and can even make the bed. A challenge but it can be done.

BLOOD RED, WHITE AND BLUE
Things will never be the way they were, walking is still difficult for me, and now I’ll never learn to tap dance, but I did ride a horse again. Dismounting was pretty funny, but I did it. I’ve traveled a lot these last years, some by myself, some with family but I’ve done it. Alaska, Spain and Portugal, 
California several times, driven all over the east coast, done appearances at libraries and bookstores, in vineyards and parks. I’ve visited national parks and while kicking the trails isn’t on my agenda it’s amazing how much I can still see, and do. My first solo trip was to Colonial Williamsburg. I drove by myself, got on and off buses with the chair, in and out of all the venues, found wonderful people who helped when I got stuck, and had a wonderful time.

I’ve also written six books since I lost my leg, a couple of short stories and I have no idea how many blogs. I don’t write because I can do it without having to put on the prosthesis, but that is a perk. I’ve also moved twice, this last time into a much smaller house and yard. Less vacuuming and dusting, which, as I get older, I appreciate. A couple of small wayS I cope. And I keep in mind what Robert Frost said, I’ve “…miles to go before I sleep.”  I plan to make good use of them.

So, back to our man who had just left the hospital with a new leg. He might have been discharged but not with a leg. Too much swelling and even under the best of circumstances, getting fitted for a prosthesis and learning how to deal with one is a long and painful process. Learning how to hop or just balance on one leg is as well. As for scaling the walls of a horse stall after several weeks in the hospital….maybe not.


So, dear friends, if you are ever faced with this challenge, take heart and give yourself time. There is life after amputation and it’s a good one. Things get better and you’ll find you can pretty much, with a few adjustments, live the same life you had before. It just might not include scaling horse stall walls.

The first in Kathleen Delaney's new Mary McGill canine mysteries, Purebred Dead, is available in both hard cover and ebook form, and has recently been released in soft cover, just in time to greet the release of the second in the series, Curtains for Miss Plym. The 3rd in this series, Blood Red White a Blue is scheduled for release in the US July 1. Perfect timing for a 4th of July book!

KATHLEEN DELANEY
Kathleen Delaney came to the writing life a little late. Instead, she raised five children, heaven alone knows how many cats and dogs, more than a few horses, and assorted 4 H animals. She also enjoyed a career as a real estate broker in the small California town of Paso Robles. Somewhere in there she found she wanted to write as well as read, and her first book, Dying for a Change, was a finalist in St. Martin’s Malice Domestic contest. Since then she has written six more books that have received praise from Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and Booklist. 

Kathleen resides in Woodstock, Ga with an exuberant dog and a grouchy cat. She recently moved from a fairly large 4 bed home into a small 2 bed home and loves it. As she brought along  her sofa which has been taken over by the dog, and her reading chair which has been claimed by the cat, they are content as well.


Facebook: Kathleen Delaney Mystery Writer

Thursday, December 22, 2016

Christmas Down Under

Hello everyone,

I’m thrilled to join Romancing the Genres and such a fabulous, diverse group of authors. Thanks to everyone who has made me feel so welcome. I look forward to getting to know you all better.

I’ll be blogging from Melbourne, Australia where I live with my rescue greyhound, Daisy—AKA ‘the goofball’. This fabulous bundle of fur has brightened my world for eighteen months and I can’t imagine life without her crazy ears, constant snoozing and ‘roaching’ on her sofa, or the adorable way her teeth chatter while getting a doggy massage or a delicious treat. Do I spoil her? Guilty as charged. After years of cages and racetracks, she deserves pampered pet status.


Writing is a fairly recent adventure and became a true passion approximately four years ago. Since I decided to embark on this bumpy, beautiful journey, I’ve read countless craft books, attended writing courses and received support and encouragement from the fabulous women of the Melbourne Romance Writers Guild. My first novel, Animal Instincts, is almost complete and ready for submission—exciting but scary.

The idea for this story grew from my love of animals and an obsession with the US TV show 'Animal Cops'—a  focus on animal cruelty investigators in various US cities. These men and women are my heroes, so how could I not bring one to life on the page? My hero cruelty investigator is also my ideal man—kind, tough and a champion for abused, exploited and neglected animals. Oh, and did I mention he’s hot as Hades?

And just in case I haven’t intrigued you enough, here’s the blurb for Animal Instincts:

For animal shelter owner, Charlie McQueen, family comes first. Always. With her adoptive parent’s money invested in her struggling business, and her father’s medical bills piling up, their family home is at risk of foreclosure. Funding from the pilot program for an animal cruelty investigation unit will save her business and her family. Failure is not an option.

When divorced animal cruelty investigator, Brad Phillips, arrives on assignment in Oregon’s Shadow Bay, he’s all about the job. Having given up on the dream of love and family, his philosophy on relationships is no mess, no drama, definitely no strings. To secure a coveted promotion back in Portland, his pilot program must run without a hitch or else he’ll be taking orders from the man who destroyed his marriage.

Sparks fly from the moment Brad and Charlie meet. But danger heats up when dogs are stolen from the shelter and the two must team up to investigate an illegal dog fighting ring. Charlie tempts Brad to want more than 'no-strings' with her big heart and selfless nature. But can Brad open up his battered heart to love again? And when Charlie's brother becomes the main suspect, will she choose to protect her family or follow her heart?

Brad and Charlie take up a lot of energy and focus, but a writer must have other passions to help refill the creative well. When I’m not sitting at a computer, you’ll find me chilling with my dog, knitting (or attempting to!), playing board games with friends, listening to true crime podcasts and reading books. Growing up on a very small property with no friends close by, I had to occupy myself. Life was filled with animals, movies and books. Over time my taste in books changed from Enid Blyton’s Famous Five and the Babysitters Club series, to Sweet Valley High and then Stephen King novels—they scared me silly, but the adrenalin rush was addictive. In my twenties I discovered romance, consuming anything I could get my hands on ranging from historical, paranormal and contemporary romance to chick lit and women’s fiction. Romance is still my go-to for a satisfying read.

Another passion is Christmas—the best time of year! The magic of the ‘silly season’ stayed with me long after my belief in Santa disappeared (oh, man that was heartbreaking). I love the time spent with family, decorating the tree, wrapping gifts, the way people rally to help with donations for charity and the way a simple, thoughtful gift can light up a face. It’s also a time to take a holiday break, unwind and recharge my batteries for the new year ahead. In the lead up to the big day, Christmas tunes tinkle throughout my home and it’s not Christmas without my favorite holiday movies—Home Alone, Elf, Love Actually, Santa Clause - The Movie (1985), The Holiday and an assortment of Hallmark Christmas movies. The sappier, the better!  

Many people love Christmas for its universal themes of family and giving. Santa probably gets a look-in, and of course the famous, well romanticized white Christmas with blankets of fresh snow.

Christmas ’Down Under’ falls in the middle of summer. Instead of snow, we have blistering heat. Some swelter in the kitchen, cooking a traditional roast dinner, while others sit down to refreshingly cool salads and seafood. Rather than gathering around a fire with eggnog or hot chocolate, we’ll relax by the pool, or for those on our vast coastlines, it’s a cool dip at the beach.

Wherever you are this Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa or other holiday, I hope you’re able to share the special day with family and friends. Before I go, here’s a clip that tickled my funny-bone. Our neighbors in New Zealand have very similar weather over Christmas and I adore this Air New Zealand ad with the gorgeous Ronan Keating trying to create a summer version of Winter Wonderland.



And just so you can make sense of how we Aussies and Kiwis do things, here’s a quick glossary of terms for those who may not be familiar with some of the lyrics used in the song:

Jandals = flip flops
Togs = swimsuit
Barbies = BBQ/grill
Mozzies = mosquitos    
Rellies = relatives
Arvo = afternoon

What comes to mind when you think of Christmas?  I’d love to know what makes the holidays magical for you :)


Lauren James is a country girl at heart. Raised on a small property surrounded by animals, it's no surprise she writes small town romance with lots of love for creatures great and small.

Having failed fabulously at painting, sewing and playing guitar, she finally found her creative outlet in writing strong, quirky heroines, and tough, handsome heroes with gooey animal-loving centers.

Her first short story will be released as part of a romance anthology in February 2017.

You can contact Lauren via her website, Facebook or Twitter.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

HERO DOGS by Sarah Raplee

Hi, I'm Sarah Raplee, Paranormal Romantic Suspense author and lifelong animal lover! Animals, mostly dogs, show up as characters in nearly all of my stories. I decided to honor 3 Canine Heroes by sharing their amazing tales with you. At the end of my post, find out how YOU CAN VOTE for the winner of the 
2016 American Humane Association Hero Dog Awards!

ASPCA 2015 Dog of the Year
A golden retriever Guide Dog named Figo was honored for his courage and loyalty in the face of danger. He literally threw himself in front of a bus to protect his mistress. They don't teach that in Guide Dog Training! Check out his You Tube Video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cj3u9Pzic4c 

‘Bad Dog’ Destined to Spend Life in Shelter Catches 150 African Wildlife Poachers in Two Years  Ruger  wasn't 'bad to the bone' after all! He's Zambia's first anti-poaching dog. Learn more by clicking on the Good News Network link below!

http://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/bad-dog-good-anti-poaching-canine-takes-bite-illegal-hunting/

War Dog: British Army's Canine Hero
Brin, a stray (and an Afghan breed called Koochee Tiger), saved the lives of two British soldiers and later survived being captured by the Taliban. Click on the Telegraph link below to find out how he contributes to the common good in his new life in the UK!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/9885303/War-dog-British-armys-canine-hero.html
Want a chance to vote for the 2016 winner of The American Humane Association HERO DOG AWARDS???  
Voting opens at 12pm Pacific Time on March 23rd!!!
Go to http://herodogawards.org/ to learn more
and to cast your vote!

Saturday, September 26, 2015

CozyMysteries, Then and Now by Kathleen Delaney


 When I was growing up I read everything I could get my hands on. They knew me on a first name basis at the Glendale, Ca library, and didn’t blink an eye when I graduated from the children’s section to the adult section way too early.


Most of the books I chose were mysteries, as it turns out, cozy mysteries. Only, back then, I had no idea that’s what they were called and if someone had told me, I wouldn’t have cared. I only knew I loved the puzzles, the rich story lines, the well-drawn characters, the lack of graphic gore and anything faintly resembling sex went on behind closed bedroom doors.

The very definition of a cozy mystery.

My particular favorites turned out to be those who featured an older protagonist, usually a spinster, who through her keen perception and logical turn of mind, figured out the mystery and set the police on the right track time after time. Miss Marple of course leaps to mind, but she wasn’t alone. Patricia Highsmith gave us Miss Silver, Mary Roberts Rinehart Hilda Adams, nurse extraordinaire. There were a number of them, and I loved them all. However, as I got older, my taste changed. So did the elderly ladies. I guess they went out of style, but the cozy mystery didn’t.

KATHLEEN DELANEY
Gradually, this type of mystery settled into another pattern entirely. Now the protagonist was much younger, had a profession of some type but not a bloody one. Something like running a bakery or being a caterer, or keeping a shop that featured knitting, second hand clothes or herbs, or perhaps she ran a small hotel or bed and breakfast, or…you get the picture. She was usually unmarried but she wasn’t about to stay that way, so a little romance enlivened the pages along with a couple of murders.  While many of these stories were excellent, some of them didn’t seem as sharp, the puzzle as puzzling, the characters as interesting and I branched out into other types of books.  Maybe I was getting older. Police procedurals seemed challenging and thrillers were…thrilling.


However, when I finally gathered up enough courage to try my own hand at crafting a novel, I chose as my genre cozy mysteries and I wanted to return to the older protagonists.

In the first series I wrote, Ellen McKenzie, a recently divorced woman in her forties returns to her home town to start a new life and a new career as a real estate agent. Only in Hollywood does forty seemed old any more, but starting over is never easy and Ellen has her challenges. When there is the body of a man in the closet in the very first house you try to show, it gets your career off to a rocky start and things go downhill from there.


But in my new series, the Mary McGill Canine Mysteries, I have brought back a true senior citizen. It seems most of the books written with older people as protagonists today feature them in care facilities of some type and center on their walkers and wheelchairs. Mary McGill is in her seventies but she still organizes most of the town’s activities. If Mary is your chairperson, your event will run flawlessly. Or did until the Christmas Extravaganza. There is a dead man in the manger, a  black and white puppy beside him and two children witness a shadowy figure run out of the creche’. In the grand old tradition of the original cozy mystery Mary needs to keep the children safe, figure out why a black and white puppy was doing there  and solve the murder. A tall order. Is Mary up to the job? 
Read Purebred Dead and find out.

Mary McGill Canine Mysteries:
Purebred Dead
Curtains for Miss Plym

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Puppies. Do I have your attention?

Our subject this month is animal stories, but I have already posted one of the two animal scenes in any of my books. Since one of the biggest changes in our lives over the last three months involves a dog, I thought I would write about that.

Cat people, bear with me. Dog people ~ you will relate.

For twenty-one years, from 1990 until 2011, we had at least one and up to three dogs in our home at all times. The first was a purebred cocker, and the rest were various rescues of uncertain lineage. These precious companions kept watch over our home of four human children, four exchange students, and the occasional friend needing a place to stay.

While these sweethearts were with us, no one never came home to an empty house, and everyone was suitably greeted and appreciated. No one had to watch television alone, read a book alone, or in my son's case, sleep alone.

Over the years, we buried a few of our darlings in the back yard. When our son bought his own home, he took his two adorable babies with him. My husband and I were left at home with an empty nest. And Pepper.
Pepper was a rescue pup we adopted in 1995 when the cocker died. She was never a cuddler, preferring to lie on the floor by our feet. Sold as a "Dalmatian/Springer spaniel mix" (a wrong guess, as became obvious later) our white short-hair with black dots had an interesting personality.

She was shy with people, barking at our friends and strangers alike. She was very intelligent, and figured out how to open the interior doors of our house. First she leaned on the lever-style door knobs and pushed. Later, she stood up, pushed down on the lever with one paw, and pulled the knob toward her with the other.

We had to warn houseguests about that trick, in case she overcame her shyness and decided to visit their room during their stay.

And then, there was the shedding. Pepper was an over-achiever when it came to manufacturing loose hair. Sweeping the house twice a week would net a pile the equivalent of a rabbit. No amount of brushing ever found an end to her supply.

Pepper was always in the room I was in. I was her person, and she was not going to leave her post. Even after she went deaf. And cataracts were stealing her sight. And the arthritis in her hips made it hard for her to get up and follow me around the house.

That's when we knew: It Was Time. Our sixteen-and-a-half year-old girl ~ still fully continent, aware, and with a good appetite ~ just couldn't make her body move any more. We found a vet that came to the house and gave her the shot on her bed while we petted her. Interestingly enough, she didn't bark when he walked up to the door. I think she knew.

Two years passed, and our house remained dog-less. Hubby and I were admittedly enjoying the freedom to travel. And the freedom from dog hair. And, let's be honest, the lack of poop in the yard.

But he wanted a companion when he walked. I wanted something fuzzy to nurture. We talked about it, looked at the plans on our calendar, and made the decision: we would adopt a Standard Poodle puppy in November of 2013.

I set about contacting breeders, and on October 31st we drove three-and-a-half hours each way to pick up Guinness, our eight-week-old chocolate-colored poodle puppy. I was so happy, I cried.

Already ten pounds when we adopted her, she has grown to thirty-six pounds at five months. She adjusted well to a leash and loves to take long walks with my husband. She still loves to climb into my lap to snuggle. And she doesn't shed.

Having a dog in the house again has transformed our lives. Hubby picks up poop without complaining. I cleaned up pee until housebreaking was accomplished. We cut outings short so she wouldn't be crated for longer than her puppy bladder could stand ~ and we were happy to return to her.

In return, we are loved, licked, cuddled, and played with. Adored and obeyed. Encouraged and accompanied. Our home is complete again.

I wonder… does she need a sibling?

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Cool Pet Gift Ideas for You Christmas Eve Shoppers

DOGGLES,
A PERENNIAL FAVORITE
 I admit to being gifted (or cursed) with insatiable curiosity and a love of pets, fun and creativity. This post is the result of the sum total of all these things.

I think these products are cool, but I don't get anything for telling you about them other than the satisfaction of sharing my enthusiasm.

What ingenious and/or useful pet gifts did I discover while cruising the internet this year?

The first item is a cheat, because it's not new - at least to me. I fell in love with Doggles years ago when our Bassett hound, Annie, lost her sight. She loved to follow scent trails on walks, but couldn't see twigs and briars that might poke her eyes. Doggles to the rescue! For sighted dogs, they offer protection from UV rays as well as blowing sand at the beach. Plus they look cool! Find a variety of Doggles and a slew of other awesome pet items at www.doggles.com
 
KUMFY TAILZ
WARMING WINTER COAT
A new favorite is the Kumfy Tailz Warming Winter Coat.What an amazing idea for thin-coated pups that live in cold climates - and so fashionable, too!

Gel packs keep your best friend toasty when it's cold outside, baby. Find these, as well as warming/cooling vests, at  www.kumfytailz.com 

AIRPLANE CAT HOUSE

My cat, Freckles, would never forgive me if I didn't mention a couple of unique kitty gifts available this year.

The Airplane Cat House is a whimsical delight for both you and your feline friend. This cardboard playhouse is modeled after a WWII fighter. You can find it at www.uncommongoods.com

CATS ATTACK CAT SCRATCHING POST

My second choice for feline companions is the Cats Attack Cat Scratching Post. What cat could resist the chance to be as big as King King or Godzilla? Think of the YouTube videos you could make! You'll find this item, appropriately enough, at www.perpetualkid.com 

For you pet owners, what cool pet gifts have you found this year?

HAPPY HOLIDAYS, EVERYONE!!! 
I hope you have someone warm and furry to curl up with, along with a good book.
~Sarah Raplee