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http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

 

A four-legged gardener finds a job

 

A dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.

 

By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

/ June 20, 2008 edition

 

 

 

Contributor Nancy Taylor Robson

 

"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp

daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from

Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back

porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in.

Again."

 

Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this.

It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you

in the garden without trashing the tulips.

 

Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can

lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally

exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"

 

Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't

give them a job, they'll find one on their own.

 

I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German

shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff

with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as

though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.

 

Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into

the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view

hanging out as dereliction of duty.

 

She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the

fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato

patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.

 

Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy

grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like

furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank

goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave

it."

 

She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look

plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to

help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No,

Else. Leave it!" I insisted.

 

She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German

shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it

was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things

that offered opportunities to serve.

 

A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed

discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across

the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"

 

Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep

farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be

told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular

excavations.

 

She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it

assiduously.

 

But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains

convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at

heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.

 

So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry

patch last fall, we recruited Else.

 

The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable

tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white

mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over

the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now

part of a response team, was in her element.

 

Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the

minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in

anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while

we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.

 

In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed,

taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits

while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.

 

But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white

mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding,

and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to

play.

 

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long

yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears

erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned

there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it,

Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went

at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that

resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing

out of its lair.

 

After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her

feet, clearly pleased.

 

Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.

 

Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will

never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even

though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden

dog.

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That's amusing.

 

Jo

 

 

-

yarrow

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 5:31 AM

four-legged gardener

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

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i found where one of our furkids shiva was hanging out in the garden this morning as i was picking stuff for a salad

alas, i didn't find her "gift" until a bit later.

after i left it all over the house at it were...

yarrow Jul 1, 2008 8:31 PM four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

 

 

 

 

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

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Oh dear :-( All the more reason to wash the veggies! (sorry - couldn't resist it).

 

She obviously thinks it's a special place as you work there.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 4:53 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

i found where one of our furkids shiva was hanging out in the garden this morning as i was picking stuff for a salad

alas, i didn't find her "gift" until a bit later.

after i left it all over the house at it were...

yarrow Jul 1, 2008 8:31 PM four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

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Guest guest

wash the veggies....?

wash them?

IN WATER???!!!!!

do you realize what fish do in water????!!!!!!!!!

 

right back at ya!

:)

jo Jul 2, 2008 9:18 AM Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 Oh dear :-( All the more reason to wash the veggies! (sorry - couldn't resist it).

 

She obviously thinks it's a special place as you work there.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 4:53 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

i found where one of our furkids shiva was hanging out in the garden this morning as i was picking stuff for a salad

alas, i didn't find her "gift" until a bit later.

after i left it all over the house at it were...

yarrow Jul 1, 2008 8:31 PM four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

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Not your tap water, I hope.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 6:46 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

wash the veggies....?

wash them?

IN WATER???!!!!!

do you realize what fish do in water????!!!!!!!!!

 

right back at ya!

:)

jo Jul 2, 2008 9:18 AM Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 Oh dear :-( All the more reason to wash the veggies! (sorry - couldn't resist it).

 

She obviously thinks it's a special place as you work there.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 4:53 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

i found where one of our furkids shiva was hanging out in the garden this morning as i was picking stuff for a salad

alas, i didn't find her "gift" until a bit later.

after i left it all over the house at it were...

yarrow Jul 1, 2008 8:31 PM four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

 

 

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

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yeah, but the fishes did it at some point./..now its just chlorinated fish poo and naughtiness!!

hahahahahahaha

actually..sorry, not worried about the dogs

1. most of the stuff is in raised beds.

2. and, furkids are fed vegan

3. heck, dogs eat what we eat half the time, and rebecca makes them full meals all the time as well..lil buggers eat better then i do

4. i'm much more worried what gets tossed onto "conventional" fields and crops, then what could fall on my veggies...

jo Jul 2, 2008 3:47 PM Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 Not your tap water, I hope.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 6:46 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

wash the veggies....?

wash them?

IN WATER???!!!!!

do you realize what fish do in water????!!!!!!!!!

 

right back at ya!

:)

jo Jul 2, 2008 9:18 AM Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 Oh dear :-( All the more reason to wash the veggies! (sorry - couldn't resist it).

 

She obviously thinks it's a special place as you work there.

 

Jo

 

 

-

fraggle

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 4:53 PM

Re: four-legged gardener

 

 

 

i found where one of our furkids shiva was hanging out in the garden this morning as i was picking stuff for a salad

alas, i didn't find her "gift" until a bit later.

after i left it all over the house at it were...

yarrow Jul 1, 2008 8:31 PM four-legged gardener

 

 

 

 

http://features.csmonitor.com/gardening/2008/06/20/a-four-legged-gardener-finds-a-job/

A four-legged gardener finds a jobA dog's knack for weeding makes gardening lively.By Nancy Taylor Robson | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor / June 20, 2008 editionContributor Nancy Taylor Robson"Here," Jeanette said, shoving a plastic grocery bag at me. Limp daffodil foliage flopped out of the top. "They're a gift from Pepper. She dug them up - again - in the flower bed by the back porch, and I didn't have the energy to plug them back in. Again."Those of us who love gardening and love dogs have days like this. It's tough to find a good garden dog, one who will hang out with you in the garden without trashing the tulips.Cats, spectators to the core, are better suited to the job. They can lie there for hours utterly content to simply be, occasionally exchanging a look with you that says: "Isn't this the life?"Not dogs. Dogs are participants. Idleness is anathema. If you don't give them a job, they'll find one on their own.I didn't really understand this when I got Else, our German shepherd. At 6 weeks old, she was little more than a ball of fluff with two big eyes and two big ears, one of which flopped sideways as though its crinoline stiffener had gotten wet.Since I had started with her so young, I thought I could mold her into the garden dog of my dreams. Little did I suspect that she would view hanging out as dereliction of duty.She was 4 months old when spring came and I took her out into the fenced-in vegetable garden with me. I stood by last year's tomato patch, trying to decide what to do first. So did she.Still considering, I reached down to grab a clump of errant timothy grass, self-seeded from the surrounding fields. So did she. Like furred lightning, she clamped down firmly on my hand (gloved, thank goodness) and began to pull. I corrected her. "No, Else. Leave it."She looked puzzled, slightly hurt. "But I was helping," her look plainly said. "You needed that weed pulled, and I'm here to help."I reached for another weed; she chomped down on me again. "No, Else. Leave it!" I insisted.She sat down, mystified. She was a team player. It's what German shepherds do. They protect and serve - even in the garden. And it was obvious that as she looked around, she could see a lot of things that offered opportunities to serve.A vermin population needed keeping in check. Barn swallows needed discipline, accomplished through regular chasing back and forth across the lawn accompanied by her deep-chested "Woof!"Gray buzzards, an invasive species that plagues our local sheep farmers, squatted on the ridgepole of the barn. They would need to be told off, too. And the compost pile clearly needed regular excavations.She saw her duty then and, over the next eight years, she did it assiduously.But while she has had plenty of jobs to occupy her, she remains convinced that she was born to weed. That's probably because at heart, she's a team player; she likes to work in tandem.So when my daughter, Abby, and I revamped the weed-filled raspberry patch last fall, we recruited Else.The patch was a mess. In addition to monster pokeweed and a miserable tangle of bindweed, we were dealing with deep-rooted, invasive white mulberry - fair-size saplings that had sprung up in the patch over the course of a year's neglect.We were frustrated, but Else, now part of a response team, was in her element.Fortunately, she has matured. She has learned not to grab my hand the minute I go for a weed. She also knows to stand by - quivering in anticipation, but not doing anything until given the order - while we dig the deeply entrenched weeds.In the course of the morning, she helped yank out wads of bindweed, taught the pokeweed who was boss, and patrolled the fence for rabbits while we carefully dug out the surviving raspberry canes.But her favorite piece of the project was getting rid of the white mulberry trees that had taken stubborn root. This was major weeding, and she was delighted to discover that she had a crucial part to play.

At each tree, Abby and I dug down to loosen the dirt around the long yellow taproots, exposing a big chunk of root while Else waited, ears erect and twitching, eyes riveted on our spades. When we reckoned there was enough root to grip, Abby deployed her. "OK, get it, Else!"Legs splayed out like the platform on a drill rig, Else went at the root with gusto, growling (no doubt to let the root know that resistance was futile) as she yanked and yanked and yanked that thing out of its lair.After wresting it free, she brought it to Abby and spit it out at her feet, clearly pleased.Score one for the team. We did everything but high-five her.Else will probably never be the garden dog of my dreams. She will never just hang out. She's too committed to participation. But even though she's not perfect, it turns out that she is a good garden dog.

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

 

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

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