Hey there, Teddy fans! It is with great pleasure that my favorite naughty puppy has found her forever home with the E family. She has two dog brothers, 6 human kids to run around with, a big yard, and two parents who are so excited to have some crazy puppy energy in their lives. It has been a joy to have Teddy with us, even though she was frustrating the daylights out of us. After the death of our resident RAGOM dog in November, she brought some much-needed laughter and joy, even though it has reaffirmed my desire to never, ever, adopt a puppy. :)
Teddy 17-014
At a Glance #17-014
Mixed Breed | Born: June 2016 |
Female | 59 lbs |
Status: Adopted
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Updates
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Friday, March 17, 2017
Just a quick check-in to give everyone an update on naughty Teddy’s newest adventures. She’s gotten into the groove now of having me gone during the day and loves to delight the dog walker with her antics. I would say we’re now back to 97% potty trained. We struggle a little still with the poop eating, but she is getting better about that too. Teddy’s latest adventures include:
- Knocking over and eating two table lamps (she’s fine). :)
- Teaching herself to perch on the back of the couch like a bird to watch the squirrels through the picture window…
- …falling off said couch and getting stuck like a turtle on her back between the couch and the wall.
- Having her first great dog park adventure (on a long lead) and running five miles through the park. She LOVED that. She was completely still for almost 2 hours after we got home! That NEVER happens.
- Getting her head stuck in a rubber boot.
- Learning how to drop items on command (still very much a work in progress, though, I have to admit).
- Befriending and falling in love with a 4-lb teacup Pomeranian. She was so incredibly gentle with Olive it was adorable.
- Going for truck rides with her foster brother. She LOVES, LOVES truck rides. It becomes a game of how to get into the truck without Teddy. She is so sneaky and tries everything she can to go with you.
- Continuing to pick up everything in sight and carry it around.
Miss Teddy was spayed on Tuesday and she was pretty pitiful for around 24 hours. The only way she could calm down and stop crying was to crawl in my arms and lay on my chest. So we spent all night sleeping together on the floor. She has made a wonderful recovery since then, though, and she is now ready to go home!
Teddy is non-stop joy and activity. After losing our beloved RAGOM dog around Thanksgiving, it was a little devoid of joy around here, and with Teddy Anne Sketti around here there is never a shortage of laughter. She is so, so naughty, but it’s mainly out of curiosity rather than a desire to be bad. She is curious and cuddly, and I don’t know that I’ve ever met a dog with more personality than this one. If you choose Teddy to join your family, you will be in for fun, exasperation, joy, and perhaps a bit of good-natured frustration. You will never be at a shortage of love, though. She may play hard and be plenty naughty, but she will also shower you with love and bond with you like crazy.
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Teddy continues to show us what a delightfully naughty girl she is. Every time someone in the RAGOM family asks me how she is doing, the answer is always the same. She is so so adorable and joyful, but so, so naughty! Now that she has found a solid home and feels better now that she is off her steroids, I think her puppy side is coming out. My husband jokes that we are pretty sure she thinks her name is Teddy Drop It. Everything goes in her mouth, quite literally everything. Yesterday, my husband was working from home in our basement office, and he said somehow she must have gotten in the closet where we keep our seasonal decorations, because every 5 minutes, she kept bringing him a new Easter basket and stuffed bunnies. He said the parade went on for close to 30 minutes. :) She didn’t destroy anything, but just wanted to do show-and-tell, I guess.
Other Teddy adventures these past few weeks:
- She escaped our fenced-in yard twice. Luckily, she doesn’t go anywhere, but it still gives me a heart attack when my neighbor brings her back on a leash. Our yard backs up to our neighbor who also has a fenced-in yard, and one day, I let the dogs out, then went back in to work, and 20 minutes later, there is a knock on the door. My neighbor is standing there with Teddy on a leash who is happily wagging her tail, just pleased as punch. A trip to Home Depot later and the fence is now fortified.
- She spent 3 days with a fellow RAGOM foster and her four dogs while we were at a wedding. She did absolutely wonderfully, and it really solidifies my feeling that she needs to have another dog friend. We left her alone in our house in her crate for 1 hour without our resident dog, and she tore the kennel apart. So I feel very strongly that she needs another dog in her life. She also LOVES to play with other dogs.
- She spent time with 4 kids under the age of 6 and did just wonderfully. She probably gives a few too many kisses, but who can blame her for that?!
- She discovered the joy of bath toys, along with diving for said bath toys when her human foster sister is in the tub. She also has decided she really likes to lick the outside of the shower door while I’m inside the shower. Goober.
- We continue to have bouts of counter-sitting which is both simultaneously hilarious and frustrating.
- Last weekend, RAGOM was able to save 18 dogs from an auction, and Teddy decided she just had to come with me at 1 am to meet these lucky dogs. So she hopped in the truck with me, and off we went to act as a welcoming committee. For the first few hours, she stayed in the RAGOM office, but after everyone was settled down, I brought Teddy out, and she walked from kennel to kennel greeting everyone and just exuding joy everywhere. Some of the older dogs were shut down and having a very hard time walking to go outside, so Teddy volunteered to be the lead dog and happily showed everyone there was nothing to fear. I think it’s safe to say that she has no issues meeting dogs. :)
Overall, Teddy continues to do well here. After 3 months of unemployment, I very suddenly started a new job, so the full days without someone home has been an adjustment and has led to a bit of a regression in potty training, but we have started using a dog walker three days a week, which is helping.
A quick review for what Teddy needs:
- Another dog in the home.
- A fenced-in yard or regular a tie-out. She does like to wander and go to visit people otherwise.
- Preferably someone who isn’t gone 8-10 hours regularly. She can probably go that long, but I don’t think she would love the loneliness. She just loves her people too much.
- Someone with a sense of humor and a high tolerance for shenanigans. This girl will keep you laughing, but you do have to have patience and a sense of humor when she brings you an Easter basket or a Christmas wreath or your entire backpack. Or when your husband steps out of the shower to find Teddy gleefully throwing his cell phone up in the air and catching it and doing it over and over and over again. Or she finds a bowl and kicks it up and down the hallway like a soccer ball until she trips and does a somersault.
Teddy is available after her spay on March 16th
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Wednesday, February 22, 2017
We have learned even more about Princess Teddy these last few days. Or Teddy Spaghetti as my 5-year-old calls her. This little girl is silly, sassy, joyful, and a little bit naughty. The other day, my daughter and I were outside playing in the nice weather when all of a sudden, a flash of black tail caught my eye through the window. Which is weird because the only way to see a dog through the window at that distance would be if they were up high… Oh no! I don’t know that I have ever run so fast into the house, ever. I burst through the door to see Miss Teddy sitting happy as a clam in my kitchen sink, munching on the grapes that were sitting in there. I thought I was so clever putting them in the sink to keep them safe from the dogs. Apparently, I underestimated her! Then she showed me how she jumped on the kitchen chair, walked across the kitchen table, jumped to the kitchen counter, and walked over the stove to the sink. If I wasn’t so horrified, I would have been impressed! Because grapes are toxic to dogs, she scared us a little bit, but we watched her for the next 48 hours, and thankfully, she was none the worse for the wear.
We have been working hard at exposing Teddy to different experiences and noises and things, and so far, she has passed everything with flying colors. She has met loud dogs, pushy dogs, submissive dogs - both on a leash and off - and she does great with every one of them. Sometimes she will bark at other dogs when we walk by, but I’ve been working with her using treats and the command "leave it," and she has already done really well at getting over that. We walked by 2 very loud, small dogs today for almost a full block, and she didn’t even give them a second glance, so I think this is something that she will easily get over. Speaking of walking, we go about a mile or two every day, and so far, she has done wonderfully on a flat collar. I always like using Gentle Leader collars, but so far, I haven’t even had to try it with her. I have no doubt, though, that if you wanted to train her to it, she would do great. I’m also pretty sure she would make a good running buddy once we know she is past all of the pain of her HOD. I haven’t wanted to push it quite yet. Another one of Teddy’s favorite experiences has been taking rides to fun places in my truck. Once she figured out how to use the dog stairs to get into the truck, now whenever she hears me grab my keys, she races to the door to make sure she gets to come with me. You should see how happy her tail is when we head to school to drop off and pick up my daughter. Just the sight of all of those kids makes her so happy you would swear she has a hinge in the center of her body.
I know I keep talking about how sweet she is, but just as another example, during the day, I take care of a family member who has early onset Alzheimer's. I bring Teddy with me every day, and she just lights up his day. She immediately seems to sense when he is agitated and needs a snuggle, or when to be silly to make him laugh. She loves to throw herself in his lap, and overall, she just makes him calmer and less agitated. I honestly think she would make an amazing therapy dog.
Now, as much as I would love to extol her virtues all day long, nobody is perfect, so here are the things Little Miss Teddy needs to work on and that you might want to take into consideration.
- She is a poop eater. It’s gross, but unfortunately, other than being vigilant about yard pickup, there really isn’t much to be done about that. Our last dog was a poop eater, so we’re used to it, but it’s still gross. :)
- She picks up EVERYTHING. My house is currently a graveyard of weird single socks because Teddy has taken to trolling the laundry bin and finding random socks in my daughter’s room to carry around. She hasn’t chewed on a single item, though; she just likes to carry them around. This morning as we were trying to get ready for school, I was running around trying to find my daughter’s left shoe and I couldn’t find it anywhere. I happened to look out the window to check on the dogs, and lo and behold, what do I see back by the fence? The missing left shoe. Teddy must have taken it outside with her, the big goof. My husband and I keep joking that we’re pretty sure Teddy thinks her real name is Teddy Drop It. She has a very soft mouth, though, and will gladly give you whatever is in her mouth without issue.
- Right now, her potty training is about 90% there. We still have the occasional accident if I don’t catch her right away. This is mostly due to the prednisone, we believe, because before she started it, she was 100% potty trained. I have no doubt she will get it and be fine, but in the interest of being honest, just know she might have an accident or two in your house for the first week or two.
- She follows you around everywhere! Most of the time, this is awesome rather than a negative, but when I mean everywhere, I mean it. When you sit on the floor to help your kid tie her shoe, Teddy will crawl in your lap and want cuddles. Or if you are trying to lay on the floor to read stories or even to put your shoes on, Teddy will always be there to help. So if you have an issue with constantly sharing your personal space, then she is probably not the dog for you. :)
Miss Teddy is available for adoption now, but won’t be able to go home with you until March 16th when she will be spayed. The vet wants her off her prednisone first before we do that.
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Happy Belated Valentines Day! You are a beautiful little girl - we hope to meet you soon!
Love Gary and Debby Demee and our RAGOM girl Kassie