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Pets: Dog-Gone Piggy

I have always had at least one dog since I was eight years old. I can’t imagine living without a dog in my life. Think of what would be missing if there was no cold muzzle to wake you up before the alarm or no tongue lolling out of the side that same muzzle smiling with satisfaction after dropping the fetched ball at your feet.

Having had dogs at all stages of my life means that I have a large assortment of dog tales that come in handy at events where the conversation hits a speed bump in the socializing road.  And one of the best stories is about the dog most unlikely to be remarkable in that parade of canine companions

Piggy was a mistake

I never intended to have a Yorkshire terrier. I liked big dogs with deep barks who were tough enough to wrestle with my sons and each other. I liked dogs that rode in the car with the windows down and stuck their heads outside even though my windows had caked drool etchings. I liked dogs that I could walk through the woods or down dark city streets and feel safe with.

Yorkies did not fit those criteria, but I ended up with Piggy after sipping wine with a friend who had just one puppy left, a precious little bundle of fur with bright eyes that stared into my heart.

My husband was not particularly enthusiastic when I brought Piggy home because we had already been suckered into taking a “reject” Yorkie pup from the same friend a year before--Sir Winston Churchill--who never weighed more than 2.5 pounds and had a cleft palette so his tongue stuck out sideways. Piggy’s exceptionality was not so exotic; he was just dumber than dirt.

Piggy Discovers a Delicacy

We moved from the city to a small cottage on the coast right on the water in a small fishing community.  We transplanted our two Yorkies, Standard Poodle, and seventeen year old cat from a fenced in city yard to the wide open edge of a small finger of the sound.. Marsh grass and oyster shells were the only fence that limited our dogs out back except the timidness caused by the move.

A small dock stretched out over the marsh grass and oysters and that became Piggy’s second home. When we opened the porch door he would run as fast as three-inch legs could go for the dock and his favorite dining delicacy – sea gull droppings that littered the wood planks. Even after dark, Piggy would run for the dock, wearing the kid’s trick-or- treat safety light my husband had attached to his collar so we could keep an eye on Piggy.  He'd run blinking down the dock as he grazed his way to the end of his snack.

Piggy's Gone

One windy November evening when I pulled up the drive after dark, my husband was at the edge of the water waving his arms and yelling as I opened the car door.

His voice carried over the wind, “Piggy just blew off the dock.  I saw his light hit the water.”

I ran through the marsh grass into the cold, choppy, waist-high water and frantically called Piggy’s name, looking for the small blink of the orange light.

I trudged through the water, my shoes sucked into the muddy bottom, trying to find Piggy for an hour, and then scoured the marsh grass along the shore in tears trying to at least find his body. My husband held my hand as we moved up and down through the grass with a flashlight.

Finally my teeth chattered so hard and I shook so much that I realized I had to get something warm in my body before I could continue. I walked out of the water and crossed the yard to the flagstone terrace by the back porch.

I was crying and shaking with my head down in the wind when I looked at the flagstones and saw small wet circles in a staggered line across the terrace. I followed the circles to the picket fence that enclosed the front yard and opened the gate. I stood for a second, numb and not really understanding what I was looking for; then I started up the front porch steps to go inside to get a cup of tea. As I reached for the doorknob, I looked down in the pool of yellow from the porch light and saw Piggy, wet and shivering, looking up with an express that clearly said, “Open the damn door. I am wet and cold.”

We will never know exactly how Piggy survived being tossed back on shore and just how he made his way to the front porch. I never saw him swim, and he never made it through the gap between pickets again, but I don’t care. He just did.

About Les: Les grew up in Raleigh, North Carolina, the child of two university professors. With a master's degree in English-Composition and Rhetoric and teaching credentials for early childhood – high school as well as media specialist Les has taught at university and high school. Now she divides her time as a poet, writer, avid reader, librarian, and photographer. She lives in down east North Carolina with her husband, a small armada of boats in various states of disrepair, one standard poodle, and a white cat.


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1 Responses »

  1. i love this story, les - how i wish i had met piggy .... hey, wait ... i DID meet him!

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