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Coffee and chocolate. Ah, sweet addictions.
Posted by doggonedmysteries
I’m addicted to both. My coffee must be strong and rich and my favorite chocolate is dark, intense, and bittersweet.
I’m certain that my chocolate addiction comes from my grandmother on my mother’s side. My Grandmother, my younger sister, and I would walk eight blocks from our house to an old-fashioned ice cream parlor. The owners, Paul and Polly were near my grandmother’s age and they’d become friends.
When you walked into the shop the rich aroma of chocolate luxuriously wrapped around you like a soft fur coat. Paul and Polly made and sold the most extraordinary chocolates and served the best hot fudge sundaes we’d ever had. Oftentimes one of them would bring a sample of chocolate to our table for us to try.
After my family moved to another state, Dear Hubby and I continued the tradition of going to the ice cream parlor that was only four blocks from our new home.
DH and I would go once a week. When we’d stroll through the door, Paul would never ask what I wanted, he knew. Before we sat down in our favorite booth, Paul would already be dishing up my coffee ice cream. Then he’d pour on a heaping ladle full of his dark, intense, bittersweet hot fudge, sprinkle pecans over the top, and serve it to me with a huge smile.
He and Polly would ask me how my grandmother was doing and they’d give us samples of chocolate candy to try.
For ten more years, we continued to stop in regularly, and then Polly died. Paul retired and sold the shop. I have Paul’s recipe for his hot fudge, though I seldom make it these days.
Malcolm’s Mayhem 9
Posted by doggonedmysteries
Never take a Bull Terrier for a walk and buy them ice cream. I’m not kidding they love it. Malcolm learned where the ice cream store was on his first trip. We stopped there often after that. The store is only six blocks from our house.
On the occasional escape from our fenced yard he’d set off in that direction. Did he ever make it there on his own? No, there were too many exciting things along the way to distract him. However, knowing what direction he’d go was a great help in finding him.
Dear Hubby has a favorite story about one time. It seems that DH and his friend forgot to close the inside basement door, the outside basement door, and the gate to the yard. It was only a matter of a few minutes before they were in a panic. Malcolm had managed to wander down into the basement, up into the yard, and out of the gate. DH and his friend knew that if they didn’t find my dog before I got home they were both dead meat.
They spotted a kid at the end of the block and asked him if he’d seen a white dog. Yes, he had and he pointed them west. Immediately DH realized Malcolm was going in the direction of the ice cream store. They began to walk in that direction, one on each side of the street. Four blocks along the street, DH saw a man staring down an alley to the one side. He had one of those ‘aha’ moments and asked the man if he’d seen a white dog. The man pointed out a back porch. DH looked over the fence and there was Malcolm on a porch swing, having his belly tickled by an older woman. DH called his name. Malcolm looked over at him and wagged his tail faster. The dog didn’t have the grace to look ashamed he was enjoying the attention too much.
The woman said to DH, “I knew he was too sweet to not have someone looking for him.”
Once DH had leashed Malcolm and led him out of the nice woman’s yard, you guessed it, the dog turned towards the ice cream store…
Posted in Dog related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Love, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing
Good days and bad, we muddle through.
Posted by doggonedmysteries
When Dear Hubby is having a bad day, it means his balance is off, he’s feeling weak, or he’s having serious trouble walking. He’s not a person to sit back, rest, and relax. He will push himself to his limits, which at times gets him into a bit of trouble. Those are the days where I keep an eye on him and when, if I feel he’s pushed himself too far, I tell him so.
The dogs seem to sense a bad day early on and have the wisdom to spend the morning lazing on the couch making no demands of him. This is not the case once I get up, but I don’t mind. The dogs and I go out into the yard and have several good romps.
On his good days, which unfortunately are becoming fewer and fewer, DH will climb onto his mobility cart and run the dogs around the yard. I get a kick out of watching from the kitchen window. They play a form of tag and the dogs love it. This is their game, no Mom allowed. On some exceptional days, he’ll take the cart outside of the yard and one at a time, they go for a walk. It benefits all three of them. DH gets some fresh air and the two dogs get some excellent exercise.
Now with fall here and winter approaching DH is becoming gloomy about the idea of having to remain indoors more. He can no longer run the snow blower or shovel snow. I don’t mind doing it though I’m hoping for another mild winter. There’s a lot of shoveling needed out there when it snows.
DH hates that he isn’t able to do things he used to do around the house. We have two wonderful young men that live next door who never hesitate when we need their help. I tell their mother daily that they are a blessing. I can’t praise them enough. On more than one occasion, they’ve run to help DH when he’s fallen. They’ve even jumped over a fence to get to him quickly.
Posted in Dog related, MS related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Love, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing
Malcolm’s Mayhem 8
Posted by doggonedmysteries
In an earlier post, I mentioned that Joey had opened the door for Malcolm’s local stage career. Several years after we’d lost Joey, I received a call from the director who asked me if I still had Joey. He wanted to use him in ‘Oliver!’ again. I replied that I didn’t have Joey, but I did have a dog I thought would do quite well in the production, and did he want to see him? He said yes.
Unlike Joey, by this time Malcolm had three years worth of dog shows and obedience classes behind him. He was 10 pounds heavier, more impressive, and one heck of a ham. There was no hesitation on the director’s part in hiring us. This was the first of five productions and four local stage companies where he’d play the role of Bill Sykes dog, Bullseye during his life.
Malcolm was truly in his element. Since he was an all white dog, he did have to wear make up in the form of an eye patch and he’d wait patiently while I applied it. He learned every musical cue and was pulling me to the door of the ‘green room’ as soon as he heard the song before his entrance onstage. Most of his stage work he did off lead with me hidden behind the sets ready to reward him with a treat.
In his first play, the first scene off lead, every performance, Malcolm would lean way over the edge of the upper stage to peer at the actors below. I stood, hidden behind a black curtain on steep steps and holding my breath praying he wouldn’t fall off the edge before Bill Sykes told him, “Bullseye, go home.” At which point I’d whisper, “Malcolm, cookie! Come!” He never did fall but I always had my heart in my throat when he did that lean. I’m certain he thought it was fun to panic me at least once during every performance.
He loved doing the bar scene and would wag his tail like crazy when the music for ‘Oom Pah Pah’ began. He made a quick appearance in Fagin’s den and then again during Oliver’s capture. Then after the murder of Nancy, he enjoyed his dash across the stage. I would leave him with a stagehand, run behind the sets to the far side of the stage, wait for his cue, and then I’d blow on an English Bobby’s whistle and the stagehand would let him go. This was our most difficult scene because of the fog, action, and so many people on the stage. Most of the time Malcolm was flawless, however, there were those days where he’d want to take a romp. Thank goodness, we had a back up plan just in case and one of Fagin’s boys would snag Malcolm and get him off the stage to me.
His favorite part was curtain call. He loved the applause. We’d send him out dressed in one of the production company’s T-shirts with Bill or The Artful Dodger and he would bow right along with the cast. The dog was truly a complete ham.
Malcolm always knew when it was the last performance. That was the only time he ever whined on the ride home.
Each of the four directors staged and directed in a different way. There were often years in between the productions. For the rest of his life, if you played a recording of ‘Oliver!’, you could tell that Malcolm never forgot a musical cue.
Posted in Dog related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Love, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing
10 1/2 lbs of candy and hordes of kids…
Posted by doggonedmysteries
I’d no sooner slipped into my costume and crammed the wig on my head when my neighbor called upstairs to me, “There are kids coming up the street.”
I applied my black lipstick and yelled back, “Holy cow, it’s not even six yet, be right there.”
Hurrying down the steps, I almost went ass over teacups when my witchy gown tried to gift-wrap my high heels. However, I grabbed my cauldron full of candy and made it outside without injury in time to hand out the first Halloween candy of the night.
What a night it was! For the next two hours, we never got a chance to catch our breath between large groups of kids of all ages. My Bone-ified dog in the crate prop was the hit of the night. Parents would grab their kids and drag them back to make sure they’d seen the dog. You couldn’t hear the dog talk over the loud music but he looked as though he was singing along with it.
Strobe lights, black lights, strings of tombstone, pumpkin, and gargoyle lights, Meat loaf and Queen blasting from the CD player, the fog machine running full tilt, and the pumpkins had kids and adults grinning. Dazzled by the display, we had to remind over half of the kids that we had candy to give them.
By eight o’clock, the ten and a half pounds of candy in my cauldron was gone, my neighbor’s basket had been empty for a half an hour, and my feet were killing me. (I don’t often wear high heels.) We were tired and pleased with the wonderful turn out we’d had. This year, every child, teen, and adult were polite, appreciative, and just plain fun.
We’re already looking forward to next year.
Short break for Halloween
Posted by doggonedmysteries
Tomorrow we begin preparations for Friday’s Trick or Treat night. My neighbor and I will carve only four pumpkins this year. Hate to admit it, but we are getting older and if we carve more than two pumpkins apiece, our hands are killing us for days. To top it off, my porch is so crowded with Halloween props that four pumpkins will be quite enough.
I won’t have a moment to spare for the blog during the next two days. Not only will we carve pumpkins on Thursday, but also we will begin cooking up a storm for our annual party that we have as soon as the kids are off the streets Trick or Treat night.
All day Friday, we’ll decorate the porch-we have to have everything in place, working, and be in costume by six o’clock. (Occasionally, we’ve had kids arrive as early as five o’clock.) We’ll put the final touches on the inside party food and when the clock hits six we’ll start the fog machine and crank up the music. When eight o’clock rolls around, the people we’ve invited to join us are already here or they begin to show up at the door and our party begins.
See you Saturday…
Malcolm’s predecessor, Joey
Posted by doggonedmysteries
Joey was with us for only a short time, he was all white except for a tiny patch of brown over one eye. He was my introduction not only to the dog show ring but also to the stage.
It began with a Saint Patrick’s Day parade. I’d walked him the four blocks from our house to where the parade would go by to see how he’d respond to the noise and excitement. This was after he’d had a few dog shows under his belt, so to speak, and he enjoyed being in the crowd getting attention.
At one point, a very excited man and woman ran up to me. Both were babbling about how perfect Joey was. I placed myself between them and my dog wondering what these people were after. Imagine my surprise when they told me he was the director of a local production of ‘Oliver!’ and they wanted to use my dog in the play. What fun!
We went to rehearsals. He learned his musical cues and loved the cast especially the kids. However, we found out opening night that he didn’t like curtain calls. All that applause scared him. He’d try to hide behind the nearest person, part of the set, or run off stage to find me. By the third performance he’d become more used to the sound and didn’t try to hide or run off stage.
Two months after his final performance, and at the age of twenty-two months, we lost him to the kidney problem I spoke of in an earlier post. For months after that I’d run into cast members and they’d ask me about him. I felt awful telling them he’d died. Joey went out as a local star and he started a stage tradition for Malcolm and me to follow in the years to come.
Malcolm’s Mayhem 7
Posted by doggonedmysteries
My first experiences with dog shows began with Malcolm’s predecessor, Joey. We’d started with a match show as part of a dare between a neighbor and me. She entered her Pomeranian and I entered my Bull Terrier, Joey. She chickened out and didn’t show her dog. I didn’t chicken out and my dog won. That was it; hook, line and sinker, the dog show world had me.
Malcolm the ham loved dog shows. His first show was an outdoor summer match show. He was the only Bull Terrier entered, which meant we had a trot around the ring, and the judge handed us a first place ribbon. La-di-da, no big deal, but Malcolm loved it, showed beautifully, and made us proud. We stayed for terrier group. At that point, Dear Hubby and I had figured the experience for Malcolm was good, but we’d never do anything in the group ring that day.
Group ring for Malcolm was like obedience classes at home. Malcolm, the obedience class clown had a brand new audience. By the time terrier group began, the temperature had hit 89 degrees and was still climbing. Rested, watered, kept cool, Malcolm was eager to strut his stuff.
Malcolm sparkled when he entered the ring. DH snapped pictures like crazy. We lined up with all the other terrier breeds and waited for our turn. He was an angel and stood like a stone when the judge went over him. Malcolm didn’t need me on the end of the leash. He showed himself, loose lead, and flawless turns, stopped in front of the judge and stacked to perfection. The judge motioned us to the end of the line and went on to the next dog.
After the judge had gone over all the dogs, she sent us all around the ring one last time.
I wasn’t sure but I thought she pointed at us and said, “First.”
I turned to the woman next to me and asked, “Did she mean us?”
She flashed me a huge smile and said, “Yes, get up to the head of the line.”
DH was going nuts with the camera. Malcolm and I went to the front of the line. The judge handed me a Group First ribbon and a small trophy. I couldn’t tell you how many hands I shook as we left the ring. Malcolm stopped every few feet to pose for pictures his tail a blur.
Outside of the ring, after loving on Malcolm, I turned to DH and said, “You know this means we have to stay for best in show, don’t you?”
He made a quick check of his camera, “Damn, I’m almost out of film.”
We went back to the van, covered Malcolm in a cold, wet T-shirt, gave him water and treats, and waited for the best in show competition. My nerves thrummed. Malcolm took a nap.
The call came over the intercom, “Best of show competition, ring 5 in twenty minutes.”
By now, the temperature had hit 95 degrees. We headed for the ring. It was in full sun, not a speck of shade. We stood in line, the judge checked each dog, and sent them down the ring and back.
Next thing I knew Malcolm and I were singled out and standing next to a Yorkshire terrier and its handler. The judge had the Yorkie and its handler walk down the center of the ring and back. He had Malcolm and I go down and back. He stood back, stared and had us repeat it. Down and back.
The fourth time Malcolm made a decision, if the judge couldn’t decide he’d do it for him. It was hot out there. We went down the ring, we came back, and Malcolm did not stack himself. Instead, he looked the judge in the eye and sat down. No treat in the world, no amount of nudging would make him stand. He’d had enough of the judge’s indecision. He didn’t win the Best in Show ribbon that day, but we didn’t care.
Posted in Dog related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Love, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing
Malcolm’s Mayhem 6
Posted by doggonedmysteries
A week after we’d lost our young male Bull Terrier, Joey to a congenital kidney defect we were visiting his breeder. She’d offered to replace our pup and was showing us the dogs she had available. I took pictures of them so we could take them home and think about which one we wanted.
One dog in particular stood out. We kept going back to his picture. He was ten months old. In the three pictures I’d taken of him, he was sitting, had his paws on the kennel run fence, and had a look on his face as if he were saying to us, “Psssst, you. Come over here. Have I got a joke for you!”
The following weekend we brought Malcolm home. As soon as our third Bull Terrier entered our lives, we realized that our new dog was going to be a real hoot. Malcolm was a ham.
This dog, when being walked down the street, expected everyone to stop and pet him because normally everyone did. One day, while Dear Hubby and Malcolm were out walking, a person walked towards them, Malcolm got excited. Malcolm stopped. He sat down and waited for the expected attention. The person walked past them, he didn’t pause, he didn’t stop, and he didn’t pet. The poor dog looked stunned.
DH laughed and told Malcolm that the world didn’t revolve around him. They continued their walk. However, Malcolm couldn’t stop thinking about that missed petting. The poor distracted, dejected, and disillusioned dog kept looking back at the person who’d ignored him. Malcolm became so preoccupied looking over his shoulder that he walked smack into a telephone pole.
My Snoopy card.
Posted by doggonedmysteries
Above my desk sits a card sent to me by my wonderful Aunties. It has Snoopy and Woodstock on the front. Above the picture are the words, “Here’s the world-famous author at work.” Snoopy is typing; It was a dark and stormy night. Suddenly a shout rang out. When you open the card, the center pops up and there are Snoopy and Woodstock in silly hats. Surprise! Happy Birthday! They sent it to me a few birthdays ago. I keep it on my desk to remind me that these amazing ladies have always been supportive of my writing. They have faith that they will see my books published one day.
It’s heartwarming to have a cheering section-people who believe in you and who don’t belittle what you are doing. To all those people (related and not related to me) who cheer me on, keep me encouraged, and don’t call my writing a ‘nice little hobby’ I say thank you and I won’t let you down.
Then there’s Dear Hubby who will proudly tell everyone that I’m a writer. He’s my rock. On those days where I’m groping for words to write and they won’t come, he is willing to listen to me and offer ideas. To him I say, thank you for believing in me, for loving me (even when I’m going crazy with my writing), for being there for me when I need you, for letting me sleep in a little later when I’ve been up all night writing, and most of all, thank you for 35 years of laughter and love.
Malcolm’s Mayhem 5
Posted by doggonedmysteries
We’ve owned or rather, over the years, seven Bull Terriers have owned US. If there’s one thing we’ve learned in those many years is when given half a chance, a Bull Terrier will eat almost anything.
One incident comes to mind. Do you remember those gumball style machines that had tiny toys in them? For a quarter, you got a cheap toy, and many times, it was a tiny Superball. The neighborhood kids had dozens of them. Knowing my pup had a penchant for anything made of rubber, I asked them to let me know if they accidentally bounced any into the yard. I wanted to find them before Malcolm did. Usually the kids did darned well about letting me know so I could return the toys. However, one day they forgot.
Two days later Malcolm fell ill. We made a quick vet run. Our vet ran a series of tests and took x-rays. All he could see was that Malcolm had a blockage right below his stomach.
“Surgery,” he said.
I panicked. We had to leave him there over night. The next afternoon we received a call that Malcolm went through surgery with no problems and the vet wanted us to come in. We raced to the office.
Our vet brought out a container and inside it were one Superball and an end piece of a Kong toy.
“I found the Kong in the stomach but that wasn’t causing the blockage.” He pointed to the Superball. “This was the problem. Luckily, I didn’t have to cut into the intestines or the stomach. I only had to do the abdominal incision. I was able to work this ball out of the intestine and up into the stomach where I retrieved it with the scope.”
They kept him another night and the next day we brought him home to the tune of $750.00. (I still tell people that I own the world’s most expensive Superball) Malcolm had a long belly incision but he healed rapidly.
For the rest of his life, whenever we took him to the vet, he’d flop on his back, splay all four feet out, and show off his scar never failing to crack up the staff.
Posted in Dog related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing
Malcolm’s Mayhem 4
Posted by doggonedmysteries
There are limits to how much lunacy even a Bull Terrier owner can endure. I hit that limit after several weeks of daily company. I don’t remember a time where I was so glad for a family reunion to end. During the reunion, we had a houseful of people, much to Malcolm’s utter joy.
There was my mother, who thought Bull Terriers were the homeliest of dogs. My older sister, her husband, and two daughters, ages four and nine. Then, my younger sister, her husband, and her two sons ages one and four. It was during this visit that I discovered exactly how much trouble one enthusiastic Bull Terrier and two four year olds could get into.
Malcolm was famous (or is that infamous?) for his love of mischief, he had a real nose for finding trouble. This sixty-five pound white dog, with his two four-year-old allies, succeeded in making my house look like a nuclear disaster area.
I called this faction ‘Malcolm’s marauders’ which amused Dear Hubby. However, I never used the term within earshot of the sisters. The marauders also managed to terrorize our poor cat to where she only crept out of hiding after everyone left for the night.
Malcolm was in his glory. Chaos reigned. The dog had a blast leading his two willing victims into trouble. Always playing the innocent bystander, he’d sit back, tail a wag, eyes twinkling with merriment, while his cohorts caught hell. That dumb, innocent look saved his hide from both sisters’ wrath many times.
Okay, I admit I found it a hoot. After all, neither sister was the least bit familiar with how much trouble a Bull Terrier could get into all on his own. Moreover, I am guilty of not pointing out the fact that he was the leader of that small group of bandits. Things were quiet after they left.
Then the new rescue dog arrived.
Posted in Dog related, My blog
Tags: Author, Beads, Bones, books, Bull Terriers, Care giving, Caregiver, Coffee, Crafts, Dead, Disability, Doggoned, Dogs, Fiction, Humor, Life, Multiple Sclerosis, Murder, Mysteries, Mystery, Writer, Writing











