Monday, 20 July 2015

In which Mr Rustypants and I discuss chatup lines.

Me: Hey, Mr Rustypants, I’ve had a thought...

Mr Rustypants: Ah, I was wondering what that noise what. Can I help?

Me: Yeah, chat up lines. Do dogs have chat up lines?

Mr Rp: Ah, now I’m glad you answered that, it’s a very important subject. We do indeed have chat up lines – we’re very civilised I’ll have you know, unlike the feline devils.

Me: So, tell me all.

Mr Rp: Well, when getting ready to go out on the pull we have to get ready, like humans do. So first things first, a quick bath in the nearest mud pond so we can sneak up on the ladies without them realising. It helps to put on some doggly scent of course, Cow Pat #5 or Eau du Fox poo.

Me: Hmmm, well that explains a few things. Anyway, carry on!

Mr Rp: Well, when we meet up, it’s quite nice to go for the subtle approach sometimes. One of my personal favourites is ‘I wish you were my back garden, so I could bury my bone in you’. Or ‘If you like tennis, wait until you see my balls.’

Me: Subtle?

Mr Rp: You better believe it. When that’s softened them up a bit, you start to do the romancing. For example ‘Your eyes are like pools of doggy gravey, your paws have the aroma of digestive biscuits and your bum smells of kennel.’ That’s always a good one. Or ‘I’d ignore piles of fox poo just to get to yours’. Then there’s a passing reference to popular culture: ‘If I was called Scooby, could I Doo you?’ and ‘Of all the parks in all the world, you had to pee in mine’.  See what I did with those? I crack me up. You’re lucky to have a dog like me.

Me: I’m really regretting my curiosity. Do any of these get any better?

Mr Rp: Well, I don’t know if ‘better’ is the word I’d use. But try these; ‘you put the ‘ruff!’ in Crufts’, ‘Let’s get our owners cross so we can spend time in the doghouse together’. ‘You can round me up anytime’ – but that one is best said to collie dogs.

Me: What about those confusing times when you and another dog get it together?

Mr Rp: Oh! Glad you mentioned that. Couple of good lines I’ve had used on me ‘I’ll cover your back, if you’ll cover mine’ and ‘Does your tail wag both ways?’

Me: Enough already! Do any of these really do the trick?

Mr Rp: Well, to be honest, I generally find ‘Brace yourself girl, I’m Rustypants by name, but not by nature!’ is all that I ever need.

Me: I should have known better than to ask.


Mr Rp: Silver tongued cavalier me. But not the King Charles kind mind!

In which Mr Rustypants goes for a short walk

Mr Rustypants: Dad! Dad! Dad!

Me: I’ve told you before, it’s very disconcerting when you put your paws on my knees with your nose an inch from mine...get down!

Mr Rp: Yeah, ok, whatever. Anyway, it’s time for my walk! Let’s go! Let’s go!

Me: No, I don’t think so, you’ve hurt your paw again remember?

Mr Rp: No, that’s fine, I saw Gareth and he mended me. I’m ready to go!

Me: You’ve only had one set of tablets, 13 to go – no walks yet.

Mr Rp: Oh I’m fine! Look – I can jump up!

Me Oooph!

Mr Rp: I can jump down.

Me: Phew!

Mr Rp: I can jump up!

Me Ooooph!

Mr Rp: I can jump down. All mended. Let’s go!

Me: You were limping yesterday.

Mr Rp: No, that wasn’t me, that was the other dog.

Me: What other dog?

Mr Rp: The bad one! The one that nicks bread out of the kitchen. The one that ate your supper that time. It must have been him, fooling you.

Me: I only have one dog – that’s you.

Mr Rp: It’s an invisible dog then.

Me: I really don’t think so. Besides, if it was invisible, how would I know it had a limp?

Mr Rp: <Pause....> Anyway, it’s time for my walk.

Me: OK, short leaded one, alright?

Mr Rp: Sure, let’s go for it.

<A short drive later>

Mr Rp: What in the name of cats is that horse doing there?

Me: It’s a working horse, it’s pulling logs out of the woods.

Mr Rp: You know, I reckon I could ‘av ‘er.

Me: What? You’re serious considering trying to shag a horse?

Mr Rp: Not so loud! You’ll frighten her. And too much more of that and you’ll have a hoarse voice. Hah! See what I did there? I crack me up. You’re lucky to have a dog like me.

Me: No! No horses. Wrong species, wrong size, wrong shape, just wrong wrong wrong!

Mr Rp: Well, if you balanced me on your shoulders, I could give it a good go I reck..

Me: No! Don’t drag me into your perverted fantasies. Besides, I thought you’d learned what it was like the other day.

Mr Rp: Oh yes. That husky. There I was, minding my own business, having a sniff of the grass, and out of no-where, I was assaulted! Assaulted I tell you!

Me: Well yes, you did get jumped by a husky, who was rather bigger than you. The look on your face was priceless.

Mr Rp: Fat lot of good you were. All you did was laugh. I thought you were going to bust a gasket or sumfing.

Me: I’ve never seen you look so surprised and puzzled. You were so shocked, you just stood there!

Mr Rp: Well, I was taken aback it’s true, but after the first few seconds, it felt oddly – enjoyable.

Me: Didn’t look like it. Specially when you got a bit, shall we say, ‘damp’ at your rear end?

Mr Rp: Pah. That comes from associating with amateurs. He was so stunned by me, he couldn’t help himself.
 
Me: Yes well, now it’s happened to you, maybe you won’t do it again yourself.


Mr Rp: Yes, you carry on thinking that, it’s what you’re good at. By the way, my paw hurts. Can you carry me back to the car and give me some treats?

In which Mr Rustypants and I play a game.

Me: Hey Mr Rustypants, let’s play a game!

Mr Rustypants: Sure dad, I’ll just get my tennis ball.

Me: No, this isn’t a game with a tennis ball, this is a game of ‘what happened this week’

Mr Rp: Well, if there’s no tennis ball involved, it’s not a proper game. However, if you insist, after a few biscuity type snacks, I’m sure I can oblige. How do we play this game?

Me: Well, I say something that might have happened, and you play ‘one up-dog-ship’ with me. Look, I’ll start.... ‘What’s more embarrassing than when you take a leak against someone else’s car?’

Mr Rp: <munches on a snack> Ummm, no wait, I can get this, I can get this... when the owner is stood there talking to you and telling you that he thinks I’m well behaved?

Me: Well done, you win a snack! Let’s try another, shall we? What’s more gross than you taking a dump in long grass, making it really hard for me to pick up?

Mr Rp: <munching on another snack> Oh, that’s easy! When I also make sure that I manage to hit some thorny prickly things and you yelp!

Me: Yes, exactly. That was very painful and also unpleasantly messy.

Mr Rp: Well, I have no shame, it hasn’t prickled my conscience. Hah! Prickled! See what I did there? I crack me up. You’re lucky to have a dog like me you know.

Me: Yes, well, that’s a matter of some debate. How about this one. ‘What’s worse than when you jump into someone else’s car boot?’

Mr Rp: <choking on a bit of biscuit> Well, you have to admit, that was very funny!

Me: No, the sight of you trying to hump some poor unsuspecting boxer in the back of her owners car was not funny – not even a little bit. And while we’re on the subject, what’s worse than you trying to shag that poor spaniel? Honestly, it was so small you had to get down on your knees and elbows, it was appalling!

Mr Rp: Well, let me guess now... what’s worse is when the spaniels owner got down to try and untangle us? It’s not MY fault I thought she was offering herself instead of her dog!

Me: It was appalling! They’ll never let us back in the dog training centre at this rate!

Mr Rp: Oh, you worry too much dad, I don’t think they noticed. They were all trying to revive that other woman who had fainted. Serves her right for watching in the first place if you ask me.

Me: Ok, last one. What’s worse than you diving into a stagnant pool of water?

Mr Rp: Where’s my biscuity treat? <snap, munch, swallow> Well.... could it be when I shook myself dry next to that other dog walker and half drowned her?

Me: Yes, that’d be the one, exactly. Oh, how about this one. What’s worse than when you thunder upstairs in the morning, jumping on the bed, paying close attention to thumping your paws down on my sensitive bits and burp your breakfast in my face?

Mr Rp: Oh, that’s a hard one. Let me think...<snap, munch swallow> Oh yes, of course – when I then turn around and fart the previous nights supper into your face?

Me: Yes, that would be the one exactly. How about this one – what’s worse than nicking another dogs ball and running off with it?

Mr Rp: Oh, that’s not fair! That was a total misunderstanding. How was I to know that plate thing was a toy? Didn’t look anything like a tennis ball.

Me: And what did you do with it? How much humiliation did you put me through with that one?

Mr Rp: Well, see, it was like this. I know you like collecting up my dumps, so I thought I’d make it easier for you. I didn’t know it was a ... what was it? Frizbee! I thought it was some new fangled dump dish, so I merely borrowed it off the other dog and did a dump on it to make life easier for you!

Me: Yes well, I had a lot of explaining to do, I can tell you. I had to give the lady owner some money to buy a new one – understandably she wasn’t too keen on throwing it for her pooch again!


Mr Rp: Well, that one mistake – just one mistake apart, I like this game, we must play it next week. I’ll see what I can rustle up. Rustling... hmm, that gives me some ideas – how do you like rabbits?

Thursday, 11 June 2015

In which Mr Rustypants visited Conference

Me: Hey – where have you been all day Mr Rustypants? I’ve not seen sight nor sound of you!

Mr Rustypants: Oh hi Dad, no, I’ve been around, just chillin’, you know.

Me: You haven’t been here all day! I know because a) it’s been quiet, b) the house is still neat and c) I haven’t needed a gas mask once today.

Mr Rp: Oh, you’re a harsh man. Accurate, but harsh. Anyway, I was out. At the conference.

Me: Conference? What conference?

Mr Rp: The Dog Conference. We have one every year, like people. You have your conferences, we have ours.

Me: I think we’re entering the realms of the unwell here, but never mind, I’ll bite. What do you dogs do at your Conference?

Mr Rp: Well, same as most conferences really, a lot of hot air – which does chuck up a bit sometimes; personally I blame the canned meat, but we have speeches, networking, Master classes, that sort of thing. In fact I gave a Master class myself this year.

Me: The mind boggles. In what?

Mr Rp: Advanced Shagging, I would have thought that was obvious.

Me: Advanced.. shagging? What does that entail then?

Mr Rp: You really want to know?

Me: No, fair point well made, we’ll gloss over that. What else?

Mr Rp: Well, there was the keynote woof to start with. A Great Dane gave it this year; ‘Sofas – for human beings as well?’ which was rather controversial, but interesting. Then we had the morning break – networking and bum sniffing. As usual, we got a bit involved, but the sheep dogs soon rounded us up and herded us back into the next session. I was particularly looking forward to that; it got really heated!

Me: Do I even dare ask?

Mr Rp: It was called ‘Settling down at night – clockwise or counter clockwise turns before bed?’

Me: And that got heated?

Mr Rp: You have no idea! The bulldogs were all in favour of tradition, but the German Shepherds were all for trying a new approach. It ended up in a right old set to, and the Rottweilers had to break it up before it got nasty. It didn’t help that the Jack Russells decided to get in on the act and try and balance on the backs of the fighters – a bit like horse rodeos, you know?

Me: No, but I’m getting a good idea. I suppose that you’re going to tell me that the Red Setters then piled in?

Mr Rp: Are you kidding? Everyone knows that they’re as mad as ten and a half fleas in a crisp packet; they spent the entire fight chasing their own tails. Morons.

Me: What happened next? I’m intrigued.

Mr Rp: Well, then we had lunch. It was a really great buffet this year – raw meat, kibble, bones, anything you could want – and a special buffet for those with particular dietary needs.

Me: What – diabetics or something?

Mr Rp: No, not quite. Let’s just say that cat litter trays were involved and leave it at that, shall we?

Me: Yes, I think we should. What happened in the afternoon session?

Mr Rp: Oh, that was very enlightening – 5 steps to ridding the world of the scourge of the feline devils.

Me: Oh? And those steps were what, exactly?

Mr Rp: Step One. Eat breakfast. Step Two. Get some shagging in. Step Three. Chase some tennis balls. Step Four. Afternoon Nap. Step Five. Round up all the cats and dump them on an island in the Pacific. Preferably with a volcano on it. Preferably an active one. Job’s a good’un.

Me: So apart from your Master class, did you have any other involvement?

Mr Rp: Ah, I was hoping you wouldn’t ask me that question. I had an afternoon fringe meeting slot. Called ‘How to ensure your owner thinks they are in charge while keeping the upper hand yourself’.

Me: Charming. I’m guessing that was purely theoretical then?

Mr Rp: Oh absolutely Dad, no question about it – I have no practical knowledge in that subject area at all, obviously.

Me: Good, glad to hear it. So what about other breeds – what was their role?

Mr Rp: The poodles brought around trays of kibble for dogs that needed a quick snack between meals. The Chihuahas were busy making afternoon snacks....

Me: Which were?

Mr Rp: You really ask the wrong questions don’t you? But since you ask, poo on pigs ears. Very tasty treats I’ll have you know. Don’t look at me like that! It’s not my fault – some dogs are built that way. Not me I might add – I may say rude words now and then, but I’m not a potty mouth. Hah! Do you see what I did there? I crack me up. You’re lucky to have a dog like me.

Me: I’m completely ignoring that. Any other dogs?

Mr Rp: Well, we got a couple of Dalmatians to stand there so we could play ‘spot the difference’ with all the proceeds going to the Dogs Trust. There were a few French bulldogs and spaniels there, but no-one could make out a single work they were yapping, so we just ignored them.

Me: Really, is this nightmare never going to end?

Mr Rp: Well, we wrapped up with the last session of the Conference; “The mystical importance of the tennis ball.”  Almost brought me to tears that one did, I can tell you. Then we finished off Conference with the usual anthem and...

Me: Hang on; you have an anthem?

Mr Rp: Of course we have an anthem. We all leave conference barking ‘Who let the dogs out’ – pretty obvious really.

Me: Yes... obviously.

Mr Rp: Anyway, I’m back home now, any chance of some tea, I’m famished. Oh, and then we can take a walk up the woods afterwards, but only if you’re up to it of course.

Me: Oh, okay. We can do that. Umm, what was the title of your talk again?


Mr Rp: Oh, don’t worry about it, it’s not important......

In which Mr Rustypants shoots to magazine fame!

Me: Hey, Mr Rustypants, there's something that's come in the post, and it's addressed to you. AND it's not from Gareth the vet - what's going on?
Mr Rustypants: Ah, yes. I meant to tell you about that dad.
Me: Tell me about what?
Mr Rp: Well, a journalist saw one of your posts to your group thing, and he rang up, wanting to interview you. But you were out, so I took the call instead. And umm, supplied a picture. Or two.
Me: You spoke to a journalist?
Mr Rp: Well, if I didn't he would just have kept hounding you. Hah! See what I did there? I crack me up. You're lucky to have a dog like me.
Me: Well, I suppose I'd better take a look, see what you've managed to get me into this time...
<tears open envelope>
Me: O. M. G.


Tuesday, 26 May 2015

In which Mr Rustypants and I discuss the possibilities of a new companion

Me: Hey, Mr Mr Rustypants, come over here, I want to run an idea past you.

Mr Rp: What’s up Dad? Huh? Huh? Huh? Idea? I’m good at ideas I am. I have lots of them. Like the time I thought we could set up a girly lab beauty school, and I could be head dog... that was a great idea, don’t know why you didn’t like it.

Me: No, this is slightly different, I was thinking about getting a cat.

Mr Rp: ...

Me: Don’t look like that, it’s worrying.

Mr Rp: I’m thinkin’!

Me: Oh yes, right, I wondered what the noise was.

Mr Rp: This cat – can I ask a question?

Me: Sure! Go ahead.

Mr Rp: Is it for breakfast or supper?

Me: Mr Rustypants! It’s not for eating! It’s for having around the house. Being, sort of cat like. You know, meow meow, that sort of thing.

Mr Rp: Oh yes, I know exactly what sort of thing. Vicious evil creatures. We don’t want one. Nope, nope, nopetty nope.

Me: You like Auntie Becki’s kittens.

Mr Rp: No, I like Auntie Becki, there’s a difference. If Auntie Becki had a dog, it could have my puppies.

Me: Dear god do you *never* think of anything other than sex?

Mr Rp: Sure! When I’m asleep. Then I’m dreaming about it.

Me: Don’t snigger. I hate it when you snigger. It’s creepy. Anyway, Auntie Becki’s kittens – they’re very cute.

Mr Rp: No, they’re spikey little balls of fluff, with talons and fangs and claws and whatnot.

Me: They’re tiny little lovable things!

Mr Rp: No, they are highly dangerous. One piggybacks on the other, they get under my legs, they’re using my danglies as a punchbag, it’s not happening, I tell you!

Me: Well, we could get a fully grown one, how does that sound?

Mr Rp: ...

Me: Could you get your paws off my knees please? And get back a little bit. Like with your nose more than an inch away from mine. And did I mention you have disgusting breath?

Mr Rp: Oh, that’s easy. We can sort that out. I could have *cat* scented breath, how would you like that?

Me: A cat  would be company for you!

Mr Rp: No, it would not be company for me. It would sit there looking all sneaky, flexing its little tail, and giving me the evils. I’d rather we had a snake. At least I could play pull games with you using it, so there’d be some point in having it. Or, have a snake as well as a cat, then we’d soon just have a snake. Snakes like cats for breakfast, it’s a well known fact.

Me: Look, there is to be no eating of cats. Can’t you look on the bright side for once?

Mr Rp: ... Ok. Well, tasty treats, hows that?

Me: I said, no eating of cats!

Mr Rp: And I said tasty treats – chewy crunchy ones out of the litter tray.

Me: You are totally disgusting you know that don’t you?

Mr Rp: It would be a catastrophe if we got one. Hah – see what I did there? I crack myself up. You’re 
lucky to have a dog like me.

Me: You and the cat could snuggle up together of an evening. It’d be nice for you.

Mr Rp: You really are living in another world, aren’t you?  

Me: We could call it ‘Lucky’ since it would be lucky to have you as a companion.

Mr Rp: <Mutters> We could call it ‘Lucky’ because it would be lucky to last the night.

Me: What was that?

Mr Rp: I said ‘Yes dad, you’re absolutely right’.

Me: My last cat was called ‘Mrs Whiskers’ – we could do something similar. Would match nicely with Mr Rustypants, don’t you think?

Mr Rp: Whooahh! Hold up a minute there fella. You had a cat? In MY house? You never told me this!

Me: Well, it’s long before you arrived, and I seem to recall that it’s actually my house.

Mr Rp: You can go on thinking what you like, that’s what you’re good at. But a cat? Creeping around being all cat like? No wonder I thought there was a funny smell around here.

Me: Yeah – you’ll find that funny smell is rather less cat and rather more dog’s bottom.

Mr Rp: Are you saying that I pass wind? That I am uncouth? That I ... fart?

Me: Nooo, perish the thought. It’s not so much passing wind as starting a large hurricane in the living room. They could have used you in World War One you know, gas masks would have stood no hope. When you do that, it’s like opening a gateway to Hell’s sewer!

Mr Rp: Could have been worse. Could have been in the car.

Me: Oh yes! Now you come to mention it, do you remember that time we took Mr and Mrs Snugglychops down to the seaside for a day trip. And she was sat in the back with you, when you let one rip?

Mr Rp Yes... you did well.. opening the window and saying ‘Oh you can smell the countryside can’t you?’

Me: I had to do something – I thought she was going to faint!

Mr Rp: What really cracked me up was that she blamed her husband, I couldn’t stop laughing.

Me: Oh, I didn’t hear her say that, which does explain the rather strangled barking sound that I heard.

Mr Rp: Anyway, it was alright on the way back wasn’t it!

Me: Yes, only because they took the train. I really don’t approve of being your flatulent partner in crime, you horrible creature.

Mr Rp: So anyway, you get me to come over here, taunt me about stupid cats and then insult me. I’m not standing for this any longer, I’m going back to my bed. Upstairs. In your bedroom.

Me: I think you’ll find that’s MY bed.

Mr Rp: (In the distance) Yeah, you carry on thinking that, it’s what you’re good at.

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

In which Mr Rustypants spends an enjoyable afternoon - for him

Me: Mr Rustypants, I need a word with you about this afternoon.

Mr Rp: Ok Dad, what is it? What are we doing, huh? Huh? Huh?

Me: Well, we’re off to see a lady and her dog, called Amber.

Mr Rp: Lovely. What’s the dog called?

Me: Amber.

Mr Rp: What, as well? Isn’t that a bit odd?

Me: No! The dog is called Amber, and the lady owner is called Tracy.

Mr Rp: Ok, Amber, Tracy, Tracy Amber. Got it. Why do I need to know?

Me: Well, you see, you and Amber are going to have the afternoon together playing. And then in a few weeks, Amber will have lots of lovely little puppies.

Mr Rp: When you say ‘playing’, you mean shagging, don’t you? I’m going to get a shag! I’m going to get a shag! Oh YES!

Me: Well, it’s not the term that I’d use, but you’re essentially in the right area. Now, you be a good boy, and do your job, and don’t show me up, ok?

Mr Rp: No Dad, I’ll be as good as gold, oh yes.

4 Hours Later...

Me: What the hell was that?

Mr Rp: It was fantastic, that’s what it was!

Me: Well, I’m glad you think so, I thought it was a disaster!

Mr Rp: Well, it’s not my fault Ambers mum knelt down to tie her trainer lace up. I thought she was giving me a freebie to start me off. Y’know, foreplay.

Me: No! You almost gave the poor woman a heart attack. I didn’t know where to look, or what to say!

Mr Rp: I did!

Me: Don’t snigger, it’s not natural. Come to think of it, you’re not natural.

Mr Rp: You always do it don’t you, you have to bring up that one time in the woods.

Me: Well, can you blame me? Can you blame me? What was the other one called?

Mr Rp: Barney. And before you say it, he was as keen as I was.

Me: Damn right! It was like some filmset – Mr Rustypants and Barney frollocking in the woods in a gay dog orgy.

Mr Rp: Yeah well, it gave dogging a whole new meaning didn’t it!

Me: Anyway, back to this afternoon. You could at least have acted a bit apologetic to Amber’s mum.

Mr Rp: Well yes, I would have... except...

Me: Yes? Go on! Say it! Admit it!

Mr Rp: Ok, well, it’s not MY fault that Amber’s dad tried to pull me off her mum – I merely thought he was showing some interest. I was just showing willing.

Me: Listen mate, you were showing a lot more than willing – I didn’t know where to look, honestly. Thankfully, he was very good about it, once he’d staggered indoors and locked the door behind him.

Mr Rp: Well yes. But I didn’t think that other dog was much cop – the thin white one that just stood there.

Me: Oh. You mean that white plastic chair? Yes well, by the time you’d got your legs over it, it was beginning to buckle under the strain. Why couldn’t you have just gone straight up to Amber, introduced yourself and got on with the job?

Mr Rp: Well, I could have done. Did you see the tail on her? Phwoarr! But to be honest, that look she gave me was a bit off putting. I could count the number of teeth she’d got, and I knew where she wanted to sink ‘em.

Me: Right, so that’s why you were running after her was it?

Mr Rp: Me? Running? Nah, I wasn’t running. I was just exercising. Besides, I thought it was better to have her teeth in front of me, rather than taking a bite out of the merchandise, you know what I mean?

Me: Oh dear god.

Mr Rp: Anyway, it all turned out ok in the end. When you weren’t looking, we went at it. Job was a good’un.

Me: That’s all well and good for you to say mate, you weren’t the one who had to hold on to you and make small talk to Tracy while she was holding onto Amber while the deed was being done.

Mr Rp: You could have had a better chat up line than ‘Nice weather we’re having’ couldn’t you?

Me: Strangely enough, I was put off by your leer and the amount you were wagging your tail – it was almost obscene.

Mr Rp: Hey, it’s hot and thirsty work – I was just using my tail to keep a bit cool. It’s one of my signature trade marks.

Me: Do I really want to know what the others are?

Mr Rp: Well, showing considerable enthusiasm for shagging anything in sight – it was a damn good job you didn’t follow me around the shed, that lawn mower had the time of its life! And then of course there’s showing off the puppy making kit. We all do that – you just have to look at the pictures in that group of yours. I should be in ‘Studs monthly’ you know – centre spread.

Me: You really have no shame do you? None at all?

Mr Rp: Nope. Ask Barney. And Amber’s mum. And Dad. And the lawn mower. Best not bother with the chair though, it was looking like it was on its last legs! Hah! Last legs... I crack myself up I do. You’re lucky to have a dog like me.

Me: Well, Amber is coming over here in the next couple of days, for the second leg, so you’d better better be on best behaviour, right?


Mr Rp: Coming here? Fantastic, it’ll give me time to set up some traps for her. No messing this time; all I need is a cat. What you looking at me like that for?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some pictures of Rusty and Amber's puppies:





Monday, 20 April 2015

In which Mr Rustypants recovers on his (my) bed of pain...

Me: Er, what are you doing on my bed, Mr Rustypants?

Mr RP: I’m ill, so I’m restin’, like Gareth told me to.

Me: No, he said short walks on a lead, didn’t say anything about sleeping on beds.

Mr RP: Yeah, but be honest, it’s the same difference. A woof is as good as a growl to a deaf dog, that’s what I always say. I also need my comforts; I am ill and exhausted.

Me: You weren’t exhausted when you thundered up the stairs and leapt onto the bed like a mad thing.

Mr RP: Well, I used up all of my energy getting here, that’s why I need to sleep on your bed. Besides, I had a bad night.

Me: Oh, was your paw hurting?

Mr RP: No, it was the sleepytime stuff Gareth gave me, very confusing. Mind you, I had a great dream – it was me in a field with about elebenty hundred girlie labs and I...

Me: No, I really don’t need to be party to your shagging dreams, thank you very much.

Mr RP: Oh well. But now you mention it, I am feeling a bit faint, can you nip to the Chinese for me? I could do with a meal to get my energy back.

Me: Chinese?

Mr RP: Yes, Gareth said. Rice, egg, chicken – if that’s not special fried rice I don’t know what is. Go on chop chop! Hah – see what I did there? I crack myself up 
sometimes. You’re lucky to have a dog like me you know.

Me: It’s not happening mate. You can say what you like, and you can look at me with those brown eyes as long as you... oh, ok – how about a nice chew instead?


Mr RP: If that’s all you’ve got, I suppose it’ll have to do. 

Friday, 17 April 2015

In which Mr Rustypants brings me a 'present'.

Mr Rustypants Dad! Dad! Dad! Look what I got

Me: Dear God, what IS that?

Mr Rp: It's a thing! I found it! I found it! I'm clever!

Me: Drop it please, let me have a look

Mr Rp: <drops> Isn't it great! I found it! I found it! I'm clever!


Me: Oh dear god, leave the dead mouse alone!


Mr Rp: What? Wait? What? Can't I eat it? But I found it! I found it!


Me: It's disgusting and vile and it's the kind of thing that cats do.


Mr Rp: Cats? Pthooooey! That's horrible, take it away. Nothing to do with me, why have you got a dead mouse at your feet?

Monday, 13 April 2015

Mr Rustypants and I - the first few months.


In which I meet my dog and we spend time together and with the local vet....

As I settled down onto the bench in the vet’s waiting room Mr Rustypants was sniffing around on the floor, head down, quite intent. So intent in fact that he banged his head on the edge of the bench. The dull thud echoed around the room, and the woman sat next to me with a cat in a box looked at me and said ‘Ooops... is he a bit careless?’ Before answering her I thought back over the last six months...

It should have been obvious to me at the start really – the first time I met Mr Rustypants he was in a large kennels, with his own space in a large enclosed well maintained barn. He padded straight up to me, and when I knelt down to say hallo, he just tucked his head under my arm. That was basically it and I knew then that he’d got me, and I wasn’t going to leave without him. The breeder said casually ‘he likes his ball’ and threw me a tennis ball. I took it and looked at Mr Rustypants, who was basically imploring me to throw it for him, so I made a half hearted attempt. The tennis ball skittered down the length of the barn and Mr Rustypants set off in hot pursuit. The ball hit the door and bounced back, but unfortunately the hound wasn’t quite that quick, or perhaps he was too quick, because he came to a stop by simply hammering himself into the door. Within a second or so he was off again racing for the ball, which he got and brought back to me. I threw it again, and once again, he raced the length of the barn, thumped into the door and came back. It should have been obvious to me at that point – the god of the canines was looking down at me and basically shouting ‘Look you moron – this dog has very little by the way of brain and even less of self preservation, escape while you still can!’ However, the soft brown eyes rendered me incapable of listening to any sense, and the deed was done, the dog was mine.

Things went very well. For a couple of days. Well, until I let him off the lead that is, at which point he realised that he could run far and wide after a ball, without bashing into any walls, doors or other annoying encumbrances. I took him up to the meadows, which is a lovely open air space with lots of hills, grass, walks and all sorts of doggy goodness, and the threw the ball for him. He was off like a rocket, and this developed into a good game quite quickly. However, I then made a mistake and threw the ball, which bounced downhill. The hairy arsed muppet leapt for it, misjudged his leap and landed on one back leg. He yelped. A lot. I dashed over and we both stood and looked at his passenger side back leg, which was not quite at the angle it was when we went out. I looked at him, he looked at me, and then picked up the tennis ball and stood there on three legs. He was clearly expecting me to throw it again and had the look of a footballer in pain in a cup final saying ‘it’s ok, I’ll run off the pain gaffer’.  I didn’t think that this was wise, so we limped back to the car, while Mr Rustypants was reciting the bit from Monty Python and the Holy Grail ‘Tis but a scratch. The leg is still connected, I’ve had worse’ or words to that effect.

So we made our first proper visit to the vets, or as I like to call it, ‘home’. We met Gareth, who was soon to become our personal vet. You know how some people say ‘I’ll talk to my lawyer’ or ‘See my accountant’? Well, I do the same thing, only with me it’s along the lines of ‘I’ll have a chat to my vet about it’. Only in my case, the vet costs a damn sight more than either a lawyer or accountant. However, in we went, and the muppet did his ‘I’m a good dog I am, and this was entirely an accident’ routine, and Gareth just bought it hook line and sinker. After some deliberation he decided that he’d just strained a ligament. He’s a good bloke is Gareth, but he does like to warn you about everything, so before saying ‘Oh, it’s nothing, he’ll be alright in a few days’ he started by saying ‘Well, it could be an inflamed vetigulated ararythmic anterior cross muscular injury that could cost you thousands if I have to operate’. It might not have been those exact words you understand, though I distinctly remember the ‘thousands’ bit. It’s not the kind of thing you’re likely to forget really is it? Anyway, short walks on the lead for a few days, well sorted. Between those and the anti inflammatory pills we were sorted.

I should also point out that I have a hatchback car, and Mr Rustypants sits in the back. He likes this because he can look forward and bark at me, like the doggy version of a backseat driver, but his advice is limited to ‘look out, there’s a lamppost! Look out, there’s another lamppost! Mind that lamppost!’ with the occasional whine when we drive past a particularly attractive Labrador. But I digress – he jumps happily into the back of the car and sits upright with his ‘where are we going today?’ look. I always say ‘Sit down and mind your head’, and he starts to sit down, while I shut the boot. Only he never actually makes it all the way down, because he sits up again, resulting in his head hitting the glass. However I try it, the same thing happens. I get him to sit, to lie, whatever – up he pops, down comes the boot lid and *thump*. I think he likes it, I swear to god.

Anyway, all went well. For a week or so – heck, it might even have been an entire month, but when I let him out of his crate one morning he was limping. Rather a lot, and this didn’t sound or look good to me, and the ‘thousands’ conversation came back to haunt me with the enthusiasm of a contraceptive seller at a dogging convention. (I should point out that I don’t know if they have dogging conventions, and if they do, I’m certainly not attending, even though I have a dog. He’d probably get arrested for something or other.) Back we went to see Gareth. ‘Hallo Mr Rustypants’ he said, with obvious pleasure at seeing my hopeless hound again – either that or he was considering the size of my wallet. It turned out that this time my canine klutz had damaged the digit on the same rear passenger leg. I should explain at this point that when Mr Rustypants runs after a ball and doesn’t have a door to slam into in order to help him stop, he just spreads his back legs slightly apart and skids to a halt, chucking up more dust and muck into the air than an enthusiastic Icelandic volcano. Some of this mud got under the nail, it got infected and there we were, back on short leaded walks. That’s leaded as in ‘collar and’ rather than ‘dirty great weight around your neck dragging you down’, although thinking about it....

So, antibiotics and anti inflammatories again. I think he was having so much anti medicine I could have taken him to a protest march – any protest march and he’d have been there at the front, barking along to ‘What do we want? Tennis balls! When do we want them? Woof!’ A week later, back to see Gareth to check out the digit, and all is well. Hurrah! Now, I know it’s my fault, and I shouldn’t have said it, and I regretted it as soon as the words were out of my mouth, but I said ‘well, shan’t be seeing you until next year for his next jabs now’.

Next year? Next year? Poor deluded fool – try 3 bloody days later if you please. Now, when Mr Rustypants isn’t trying to injure himself, he’s attempting to drown. Most dogs, when they go in the water keep their heads above it, but not mine, not Mr ‘Look dad, this is my impression of a submarine’. Head straight under, bubbles coming up, the works. Not that he is drowning you understand, he just likes swimming under water. Finally he emerged, shook himself dry and then looked at me as if to say ‘Right, where were we? Oh yes, submarines’ and dived in again. Consequently, his ears became home to the Tom Daley school of waterborne bacteria. Gareth looked up as we came in and said brightly ‘Hallo Mr Rustypants!’. Nice to see they were on first name terms I suppose. My dog did the whole simpering ‘Ohhh Gareth, how lovely to see you again’ while he settled himself nicely on the floor waiting for attention. Gareth looked at me and said ‘back leg again is it?’ and I had to confess it was something different. By this point I’m thinking that I should be employed by the British Veterinarians Association to check out their members knowledge of the canine species. A quick poke around and we’re sorted. Drops this time, but no short walks, just a limit on submarine practice.

You’d think that would be enough really wouldn’t you. I mean – that’s not a bad number of visits to the vets in a short period of time. Believe me, we’re not even started yet, because a couple of weeks later, open crate, out walks Mr Limpy and we visit the vet again. Into the examining room we go and I swear that Gareth has some sort of book going by now, because he cheerfully says ‘ears, leg, or something different this time?’ I just mumble words that should not be spoken and point at my dogs back leg again. It’s the toe once more, only this time the nail has decided that being used as a brake is enough, and it’s decided that it’s going to vacate its position and go off in search of fame and fortune elsewhere. By now I’m able to just tell Gareth what he should prescribe and for how long. I swear, it would be easier to have a top of the range Aston Martin – certainly a damn sight cheaper to maintain. Gareth also agrees with me and says ‘I’ll leave it up to you to decide if you need to bring him back again’. It’s rather concerning that in a few short months I’ve gone from not owning a dog to apprentice nurse.

We had a great week. Really, we did. No damaged legs, no water, nothing. Just me, the dog and a tennis ball. So why was his eye looking sore and weepy? Can’t mess around with eyes, so back we go. Gareth beams, I glower and my dog leaps into the examination room, lies down on his back, legs apart and looks up at his best friend as if to say ‘what do you think of my kit then? Huh? Huh?’ Did I mention he has no shame – he’ll have a go at anything he can get a leg over and a few things he can’t. Remind me to tell you about the time he and another dog called Barney went for it. It was a two dog gay orgy I tell you. I’d never seen two male dogs trying the ‘69’ position before, but Barney and Mr Rustypants were right at it. Honestly, I didn’t know where to look.

Anyway, back to his eye. Gareth pops in some drops and we look at it under ultra violet light. Now, this is going to sound grim, but it’s not as bad as it sounds. He’d managed to puncture his eyeball, and had got an ulcer. Ok, it is as bad as it sounds. He’d obviously gone after his tennis ball, launched himself into a thicket without a second to think ‘hmm, is this really a good idea?’ and made good friends with a bramble bush. Gareth went through the usual routine of vet speak which once again included the words ‘thousands’ in there, but to be honest by this time I was getting immune to it. More drops again. The stuff he’d put in his eyes also dripped out of them as you’d expect, but also out of his nose. Which was fine, except that it was bright lime green. It was at this point Mr Rustypants looked up at me and said ‘Look dad, this is my impression of a zombie dog from Radioactive City!’ That was fine, except a little old lady was coming in with her small rat on a stick while me and Mr Zombie were going out – I thought she was going to faint, and she would have, except that I manage to yank Mr Rustypants’s lead before he could flip up on his back and wave his bits at her.

Days passed. Weeks even. We went for walks, a dip in the sea, tennis ball chases, the works. A nice holiday was on the cards – down to Cornwall, for more long walks and beaches and sea. I was very careful, and only threw the ball short distances, kept him away from puddles, the works. Bee and I took him to see her mother, and he stayed out in the back garden playing with two children. All together now, what could possibly go wrong? Honestly – a Frisbee. A straight forward Frisbee – round and plastic. Short of trying to gulp it down, what harm could it do. Well, it was a bit old apparently, so when he chomped on it, it splintered a bit, and he managed to stand on a sharp bit. Then he padded into the house and we played ‘Look dad, this is my impression of a slaughterhouse!’. Blood pouring everywhere.  He wasn’t bothered by this point, as I think the only thing in his mind was ‘Whee, a trip to see Gareth, it’s been *ages*’.

An inch long quite deep cut requires stitches. 6 of them in fact at about twenty quid a stitch, plus extra for antibiotics. No anti- inflammatories this time, which was a real shame, since I thought I’d take them instead – they might help with my blood pressure. Blue bandage, really nice. ‘Don’t get it wet’ they said. I explained the situation – Cornwall, walks, sea, beaches... ‘Don’t let him go for walks’ they said. So I tried again; Cornwall, walks, sea and beaches. Gareth looked sympathetic and simply said ‘Not great timing really is it?’Did I mention Gareth has a dry sense of humour? My dog didn’t help at all – he just sat there, thumping his tail, looking at Gareth before lying down again and showing him his bits once again.

So, back home to house arrest. Only out in the back garden briefly for business, then back in again. Now, when you have an energetic dog, he’s got to be kept busy. I usually do that with long walks, exercise and tennis balls. He does it by stealing entire loaves of bread, chewing up socks and removing nice blue bandages. Back to the vet for a new one. This time we see a nurse, but this doesn’t stop my canine Casanova, not a bit of it. The nurse says to me ‘Can we get him on his side?’ and no sooner are the words out of her mouth than he’s flat on his back, legs akimbo, looking at the nurse with a look on his face of ‘So, what do you think of the puppy making kit then, huh? Huh?’ New bandage, sorted, while the nurse and I make sure we don’t make eye contact. Two days later, up he wanders, no bandage. So I put a sock on his leg, wrap it around with micropore, then cover the sock in clingfilm, then cover all of that with duct tape, and remarkably it works. For oh... well, until he gets bored with it really, but by then, back we go to the vets for a checkup on how the stitches are healing. Many more and he’s going to start his ‘look dad, this is my imitation of Frankenstein’s dog’ act.

I sit down, Mr Rustypants sniffs around and *thud* his head cracks into the bench, and I shake my head, listening as the woman sitting next to me says ‘Yes, lovely lad, but is he a bit careless?’ I simply smiled at his, stroked his head and said ‘Why, whatever gave you that idea?’