BC Becky

Never thought I'd want to be a breast cancer survivor

Category: Cali

  • 2 of 75 – River Ridge Common

    2 of 75 – River Ridge Common

    The term “common” was new to me when I moved to Nova Scotia. Common is used to mean land that is owned by one of the governments – typically municipal – as the provincial lands are known as Crown Land. The common are often setup with hiking trails or other shared uses. There are two near us, River Ridge Common and Indian Path Common – both have trails that I love to hike on.

    River Ridge Common

    The low tides are too early and too late in the day at the moment, so hiking is a better option. The more established paths like River Ridge Common are less likely to have ticks, but at this time of year especially that is always a risk – so I put on long pants, long socks, and I spray my pants and ankles for a natural tick repellent spray. I don’t need to worry about Cali because she takes a tick medication, that if a tick bites her it kills the tick. Also, there is a Lyme disease vaccine for dogs, so she is vaccinated. If only they had one for humans!

    Want to join my challenge? Leave a comment with your hikes/walks below.

  • 1 of 75 – Beach Meadows

    1 of 75 – Beach Meadows

    Kicking off my summer challenge today, we went to Beach Meadows for a walk on the beach. The beach isn’t quite 1.5km long, so we needed to do a little more than one lap of the beach. It wasn’t the warmest of days, but it was still a beautiful day at the beach. Tourist seasons is fast approaching – so I’m not sure how much longer we will have these beaches mostly to ourselves. The one other person with a dog on the beach was visiting from Ontario, en route to spend her summer in Cape Breton.

    In the feature image, you can see Scott teaching Cali how to fetch a ball. You’d think it was a bit of a theme – who else can I convince to fetch the ball for Cali?

  • A summer challenge

    A summer challenge

    My semester is about to end. With the end of this semester, I am off until the Fall. I don’t feel like I’ve had a summer off in years, although I don’t think I taught last summer! Anyways, this summer I have wanted to set myself a challenge – something that I could achieve but also something that would help me get out more.

    I have decided that between May 1 – Aug 30, I am going to try to do 75 hikes / beach walks. These need to be at least 3 km (2 miles) in order to count. The distance may not seem like much but when you add in the bending over to pick up and throw the ball (for my dog) into the mix that equates to about an hours walk on the beach or through a forest trail.

    Now that I have my darling puppy dog – she is so darn cute – had to share a photo.

    Anyways, now that I have a dog, I walk regardless of the weather. I try to take her out 3 or 4 times per week to the beach or for a hike. She also gets at least 4 walks per day, at about 1km each. When my hubby is home and healthy, he helps, so I don’t do all the walking. We also send her to puppy daycare twice a week on average, where she gets to play with other small dogs and walks a lot and comes home exhausted. As the weather improves, I hope to get out more this summer.

    With this summer challenge, I will plan to also write a quick blog update and share a photo or two of each walk/hike – as long as I remember to take a photo! The trails and beaches here feed me emotionally as well as physically. It will be interesting to see how they are transformed over the summer now that we are likely to have tourists again.

    Sunday is May 1st, so I better start planning!

    75 hikes/beach walks in 4 months. Anyone want to join me?

    Feature image: My friend Sue and Cali running after the ball (or Sue trying to coax Cali into running).

  • Where is my time going?

    Where is my time going?

    I’m not working over the summer, although I am thinking about my fall and spring courses. I have things that I want to do, but I can never find the time to get to them. Just like writing in this blog. I’ve been thinking about writing for weeks, but just haven’t been able to get to it.

    I decided to look at my day yesterday to see why I don’t have time. Or maybe, let’s look at both Thursday and Friday.

    Thursday – I started the morning with a Treehouse Village Meeting (2 hours), then took the dog to the groomer, went grocery shopping, then picked the dog up from the groomer. Then I went for a massage, as my back has been bothering me. Then home to make dinner before another 2 hour Treehouse Village meeting. That way my day.

    Friday – I started off with a morning of uPick Haskap berries. I had done this last weekend as well, so we have a bunch of frozen haskap berries now. I’m hoping to make some jam with this batch.

    Let me pause here for a second. A haskap is a berry that looks like a long blueberry and tastes like a tangy blackberry. They are quite delicate and squish easily. Unlike blueberries, they all ripen at the same time so the season is short – about 2 weeks. The berries grow in clusters, so if you have a good plant, you can get quite a few. The larger clusters were lower to the ground which made it a little more challenging. Once the berries are exposed, the birds will eat them pretty quickly. The farm where we pick do not use any chemicals on them – so you can eat them right off the tree – so picking involves a bit of test tasting to ensure they are perfectly ripe 🙂

    Haskap berries

    After planting Haskaps, I had brunch and then took Cali out for a walk while also bringing the car over for a quick charge. There is a great place at the Best Western in Cooksville that has a Flo fast charger – meaning my car will go from empty to 80% in just over an hour. What is great is that there is both shopping (Canadian Tire, pet store, etc) and a great trail for a short hike available while charging. I brought Cali along so that we could go for a nice hike while the car got juiced up. I notices along the trail a lot of unripe blackberries (they don’t ripen until late August, early September) and wild raspberries, which are just now starting to ripen. That meant that I got a little snack of fresh raspberries while I walked.

    Trail behind the Best Western Bridgewater

    Then home for a snack and a cooldown – it was rather warm outside. In the late afternoon we went out to the nearby lake for some stand up paddleboard (SUP) training. That is, I’m training Cali to go paddleboarding with me. I really like paddling and I’m looking forward to a time when we are able to go circumnavigate the various lakes around here. The water is warm, so it is just a delight to go for a swim. I took this picture while I was in the water and she was on the board.

    Cali learning to paddle board

    Then it was home to make dinner and a social visit via Zoom. And when that was finished, I took Cali out for her evening walk, which turned into what we call “Tucker time”, that is, time when she gets to play offleach with the neighbours dog Tucker. They play so well together and are so incredibly cute!

    Somewhere in the day, I managed to do a few smaller tasks of organization, but I just couldn’t get to things that require longer periods of concentration – like writing a blog post or making jam. These are my typical days at the moment. They are filled with outdoor time, which is awesome, but it is also difficult to try and fit in time for work, especially when Cali wants to play when we are at home.

    Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining. I live a privileged live and I am very happy to be here and to be able to get out and do as much as I do. I just ask for patience if you want me to do anything that looks like concentrated work, because I’m struggling to find the time to make that happen.

    I love that I get to call Nova Scotia home!

  • Under construction, hug me, spoil me

    Under construction, hug me, spoil me

    Under Construction, that is what the cone on poor Cali’s head said when we picked her up from the vet yesterday. We are hugely relieved to have her home and know that she is on the mend.

    On Monday I awoke to Scott informing me that Cali had been puking all morning. At first I dismissed it, because she had her shots on Thursday but also because she eats everything, as puppies tent to do, and that has meant she sometimes pukes. But then she puked again – after eating soft foods.

    Scott suggested I call the vet, so I did. I’m kicking myself that this was his instinct and not my instinct. He seems to have better puppy care instincts than I. Anyways, I called and the vet wanted to see her, concerned that she might have something blocking her intestines. I packed her up and brought her to the vet in Petite Riviere (about a 25 minute drive). She puked again just after the first corner, before we even got out of town 🙁 This was not normal.

    It is frustrating that during covid times we are not permitted to go into the clinic with our pets. The vet assistant comes out and fetches her in order to do some exams. An agonizing 40 minutes later, the vet comes out and tells me she is concerned. She sees something that looks like an obstruction, and wants to do a barium swallow, which may actually resolve the issue and if it doesn’t it will identify where in the intestines things are blocked up. I sign the consent paperwork and am sent home waiting for a phone call. On the drive home, I hit myself for not leaving the stuffy that was in the car with her. She has nothing with her that smells like us 🙁

    At 5pm, I call the vet, knowing that they try to close at 6pm. I’m informed that she can go home and that we should come get her. This time both Scott and I get in the car and drive to the vet. The vet tells us that Cali is looking better, that she is hopeful that the barium did its job, but there is still concern. Please call in the morning to give the vet an update. If Cali is still puking there is reason for concern.

    We get her home and take her out for a short walk, which usually leads to her pooping, which is what we are waiting for. Sure enough. I notice, not only the white of barium, but a full cluster/bud of pine needles about an inch and a half long. Not sure how she managed to swallow that.

    Throughout the night, she starts puking again. She won’t eat or drink. Every 1-2 hours, she wakes up, pukes, and then goes back to sleep. Poor thing. We call the vet to leave a message and get in the car so we are there when they open in the morning. They are dealing with another emergency (a C-section), but will get to Cali as soon as they can. After an hour, the vet comes out with some not good news. They aren’t sure but it looks like an obstruction and they need to do exploratory surgery :-(. If they find something in her intestine, they will need to open it up and remove it. Doing this sooner rather than later avoids the possibility of intestine death and maybe even puppy death 🙁

    We head home scared and hopeful that they figure out what is wrong. The night was so terrible, it is horrible seeing her in so much pain and not knowing what to do about it.

    Just after my first meeting, at about 1pm, the vet calls to tell us that they did not find any obstructions but she has what they call “acute appendicitis”. They treat this with medicine rather than surgery. They want to know if we want to get her spayed while she is already under and already has an abdominal incision. I’m glad they thought about that, as I had the same thought when I was driving home from the vet earlier that day. She was due for her spay surgery in a month, so it would mean another bout of anesthesia and incisions and two more weeks of a cone and wound healing. It was an easy decision.

    While waiting for the call about her surgery, I look up appendicitis in dogs. I’m confused as I learn that dogs don’t actually have an appendix. I make a mental note to ask the vet about this.

    Having not hear from them by 5:15, knowing they try to close at 6pm and that it is 30 minute drive for us (well, 25 minutes but we need a few minutes to get organized). They inform us that she is doing well and can come home tonight. We pack up and head out to get her.

    She is now home, and not impressed with the cone, but otherwise mostly sleeping. She slept most of last night and mostly through the night. This morning I gave her head a sponge bath (she stank from the barium and puking). She also has a special diet, some food that is easy to digest, and several medications which are mostly the same as she would have been given for the spaying anyways. We are grateful for the vet and all the care that Cali received there. We are also happy to have her home.

  • Meet Cali

    Meet Cali

    Yesterday I picked her up. Fortunately, the breeder uses a vet that is only 25 minutes from my place, so we arranged for me to pick her up after her shots. I was anxious and clearly so was she. She went into the crate in the car while I settled up the finances, and after less than 10 minutes in the car with the window open (and it being cold and windy) she managed to poop on the edge of the crate near the gate, so I had a hard time getting her out without making a mess. In hindsight, I could have undone the top and lifted her, I didn’t think about it.

    I ended up taking her and putting her in one of the carry bags that I made. I’m super thankful for them. They have a short leash build in, so she cannot jump out or move too much when she is in the bag. I ended up putting her in a bag on my lap and driving home petting her when I could and leaving the windows open cause the car stank! By the time we got home she was calm and napping. Fortunately, we were able to get her home and get her cleaned up pretty easily. She doesn’t yet like being away from us. Also, she is still pretty scared of the outside – since yesterday was the first time she experienced it.

    One thing I found especially weird was buying dog food at the grocery store. I found weird being a person who needs to buy dog food. That hasn’t been something that has been my responsibility before. What makes this funny is that I don’t at all feel weird about baking dog treats. That didn’t feel at all out of my comfort zone. Perhaps that is because I love to bake for people, and I always get positive feedback on my baking. So, I don’t know that I’m selecting the right store bought food, but I know that whatever I make will be well received (at least for people, Cali hasn’t shown a lot of interest in any food except what she was eating at the breeders – so not even treats!). I suspect that will change as she gets more comfortable with us.

    I’m making my own dog treats, but for now I’m buying food. Why? I don’t trust myself to make food that is appropriately well balanced for a puppy – at least not yet. I don’t know what puppies dietary requirements are (other than calcium). I’ve made some peanut butter based treats and some frozen pumpkin & yogurt bones, that help with teething and are also healthy snacks.

    It is both lovely and frightening taking on this responsibility. I love that I get to be a caregiver for something (someone). I love the snuggles and unconditional love that a puppy brings. I’m just frightened that I will do something wrong.

    After reading about the separation anxiety of leaving the litter, I’m super worried about the first 48 hours. There will be a lot of snuggle time. That won’t be a hardship on my part.

css.php