OT/MISC For the love of a dog ( this is for you Dennis!)

Sherrynboo

Veteran Member
I came across this photo on FB so I guess it is ok to post here. This is a man with his 19 year old shepherd who has arthritis. Every evening he takes the dog out into the warm summer waters of Lake Superior to ease his arthritis. The dog falls asleep in his arms every time.
 

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Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
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May I be worthy even the slightest bit of the smile of love and contentment on that puppy's face.


Please God...
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
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Odin is fast becoming a 100 lb lapdog. Everywhere in the house I go, he has to be there. When I shower, he lays on the floor by the tub. Any room I go to, he has to be in. He sleeps on my bed every night. Even now, as I sit on the couch typing, he's laying next to me with his head against my arm and his nose on my hand. For whatever reason, these days he sticks to my side like a Siamese puppy. And I could never break his heart by re-homing him, no matter what.
 

annieosage

Inactive
Odin is fast becoming a 100 lb lapdog. Everywhere in the house I go, he has to be there. When I shower, he lays on the floor by the tub. Any room I go to, he has to be in. He sleeps on my bed every night. Even now, as I sit on the couch typing, he's laying next to me with his head against my arm and his nose on my hand. For whatever reason, these days he sticks to my side like a Siamese puppy. And I could never break his heart by re-homing him, no matter what.

This is Bear exactly. Every second I am home he is my shadow. Laying at my feet in the kitchen, at the desk, in the living room. When I am showing he stands with his nose against the glass LOL. Who could resist? He's starting to gray a bit around the muzzle. Nothing better than the loving loyal look in his eyes when you scratch behind the ears in just the right spot!
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
The rest of the story:

http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/event/article/id/239104/


Bayfield photographer's photo goes viral

A photo of a man cradling his 19-year-old dog in Lake Superior near Bayfield has drawn the attention of thousands of people since being posted on Facebook last week. The story behind the photo is touching.

By: John Lundy, Duluth News Tribune


John Unger cradles his sleeping 19-year-old dog, Schoep, in the waters of Lake Superior near Bayfield last week. The photo, by Bayfield photographer Hannah Stonehouse Hudson, was posted on Facebook and has since been viewed hundreds of thousands of times. (Photo by Hannah Stonehouse Hudson / stonehousephoto.com)

It’s an image that’s hard to look at without smiling.

A dog sleeps in blissful repose, head rested against the neck and shoulder of a ponytailed man standing shoulder-deep in water. The man appears in profile, and he wears dark glasses, but his eyes seem to be closed. The smile on his face matches the dog’s contentment.

The photo has drawn the attention of thousands of people since being posted on Facebook last week. The story behind the photo is touching.

Professional photographer Hannah Stonehouse Hudson took it off Bayfield’s Reiten Beach in Lake Superior on Tuesday. The man is her friend John Unger. The dog, an aging, arthritic shepherd mix, is named Schoep, after a brand of ice cream that’s popular in southern Wisconsin (the dog likes vanilla).

Unger and his then-fianceé found the dog 18 years ago at a humane society in Ozaukee County, Wis., when it was an 8-month-old puppy.

“We knew we wanted to work with an animal who was abused,” Unger said. “I just had a vision of working with an animal to bring out his full potential.”

Testing suggested that the dog had been beaten by a male, and it took Unger another eight months to fully earn his trust.

The relationship with his fianceé didn’t work out. They shared custody of Schoep for a while, but he has been Unger’s full time since his former fianceé moved to Colorado 13 or 14 years ago.

But the breakup with his fianceé caused Unger to enter a depression. One night, he said, he went to a breakwater in Lake Michigan off Milwaukee with thoughts of suicide.

“To be honest with you, I don’t think I’d be here if I didn’t have Schoep with me (that night). He just snapped me out of it. I don’t know how to explain it. He just snapped me out of it. … I just want to do whatever I can for this dog because he basically saved my ass.”

Unger has no other pets, but he said that while growing up he dreamed of having a house full of dogs. Like him, Hudson is a dog-lover. Self-employed as StonehousePhoto, she includes dogs in much of her work. “My dream … is to only take photos with dogs in them,” she said in a telephone interview on Friday.

It’s the right community for people who love dogs, Hudson said.

“Bayfield is a dog town,” she said. “We all love dogs. A lot of us have them, and basically we keep track of each other and our dogs.”

She hadn’t seen Unger for a couple of months and thought his dog might have died. But last week, Unger approached her with a request. “He said it’s been so warm in the lake I’ve been able to take Schoep into the water,” Hudson related. “He’s so relaxed he just falls right asleep.”

Unger, who found his way to Bayfield about six years ago, had a photo of himself with his dog in mind for several years. But that mission took on added urgency last week he said. Noticing Schoep limping, Unger took his dog to a veterinarian in Ashland. The vet prescribed pain-relief medication, but Unger doesn’t yet know how effective it will be. If Schoep isn’t able to get up without pain, it will be time to put him down, Unger said.

Unger stopped the conversation to regain his composure.

“What was going through my mind when Hannah was taking those pictures was that this may be the last time I’m going to be swimming with him,” Unger said.

When Hudson got to the beach on Tuesday, Unger and Schoep already had been in the water for about 10 minutes, so she only had about five minutes to take the photos. She didn’t know the results until she looked at them on her computer later on Tuesday, and she didn’t have time to post them to her Facebook page until Wednesday evening.

It didn’t take long for the image to go viral.

“About six hours later I was in complete awe that it had been shared, I think it was, 200 times,” Hudson said.

But that was barely the beginning. By Sunday evening, the photo had been shared 86,000 times, “liked” 150,000 times and viewed in excess of 1.8 million times. The more-than-17,000 Facebook comments on the photo include words such as “touching,” “tender,” “loving,” “breathtaking” and “precious.”

Hudson, 34, who didn’t charge Unger and doesn’t expect to make any money from the photo, accomplished what she set out to do. “A lot of the time if I find an interesting, cool story that’s positive about animals, I’ll just do it,” she said.

Unger, 49, works as a caretaker on the farm where he lives outside of Bayfield. He got his first computer in February and admits to being befuddled by the Internet. He has seen the responses to Hudson’s photo, but isn’t quite sure how to respond.

“He is not really keyed in to the Internet world,” Hudson said. “That’s what makes this all even more fun. Because I think he’s getting e-mails from women asking if he’s single.”

Unger — who is single — said the overtures haven’t been quite so blatant as that, but he has picked up hints of interest from some women online.

Which is fine, Unger said.

“Boy, is it tough to meet women up here,” he said, laughing. “So this might open up a new road.”

The photo of Unger and Schoep is the second photo taken by Hudson to cause a sensation since she started her business in 2005. The first was of a bear crossing the ice on the lake in front of the Madeline Island ferry. “I tend to be in amazing spots at the oddest times,” she said. “It’s Lake Superior, and weird stuff happens.”

Hudson’s husband, Jim, 34, also works on his own. A former police officer, he left the force 10 years ago to be a full-time fisherman. “We call it breathing into the bag of self-employment,” Hudson said. “But he’s having fun and we can do it and make a living and stay in Bayfield, which is very important to us.”

Hudson is having fun in her work, too, especially when dogs are involved.

“I have a blast,” she said. “I can’t believe I get to do this.”
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
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Odin is fast becoming a 100 lb lapdog. Everywhere in the house I go, he has to be there. When I shower, he lays on the floor by the tub. Any room I go to, he has to be in. He sleeps on my bed every night. Even now, as I sit on the couch typing, he's laying next to me with his head against my arm and his nose on my hand. For whatever reason, these days he sticks to my side like a Siamese puppy. And I could never break his heart by re-homing him, no matter what.

I have the same thing going on with Lono, Jim's (now my) red/white husky. He is glued to me since Jim passed on. All three of ours are geriatric now, my Racer is 7, so he is the baby of the group. But Kido is 11 and Lono is 13 and both have had tumors removed.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
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BTW, I know exactly where this is. D'Anne and I used to go up to Ashland for the fireworks display on the 4th. When I went on the first shakedown cruise in the RV, I went to Ashland. It's really beautiful country up there.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
dogpic0806_500px.jpg


John Unger cradles his sleeping 19-year-old dog, Schoep, in the waters of Lake Superior near Bayfield last week. The photo, by Bayfield photographer Hannah Stonehouse Hudson, was posted on Facebook and has since been viewed hundreds of thousands of times. (Photo by Hannah Stonehouse Hudson / stonehousephoto.com)
Read the article: Bayfield, Wis., photographer's photo goes viral


this foto cant not tug at your heart strings
 

Sherrynboo

Veteran Member
Odin is fast becoming a 100 lb lapdog. Everywhere in the house I go, he has to be there. When I shower, he lays on the floor by the tub. Any room I go to, he has to be in. He sleeps on my bed every night. Even now, as I sit on the couch typing, he's laying next to me with his head against my arm and his nose on my hand. For whatever reason, these days he sticks to my side like a Siamese puppy. And I could never break his heart by re-homing him, no matter what.

Odin has come a long way since you first brought him home. Sounds like one of my St's. She is right by me everywhere I go. She is 12 now and there will be no replacing her.

Sherry in Ga
 

Meggsie

Veteran Member
Odin is fast becoming a 100 lb lapdog. Everywhere in the house I go, he has to be there. When I shower, he lays on the floor by the tub. Any room I go to, he has to be in. He sleeps on my bed every night. Even now, as I sit on the couch typing, he's laying next to me with his head against my arm and his nose on my hand. For whatever reason, these days he sticks to my side like a Siamese puppy. And I could never break his heart by re-homing him, no matter what.

If my dog is sleeping in his bed by the fire and I lie down for a nap, he wakes up and can't see me or hear me moving around the house, he checks every room til he finds me, then satisfied that I'm still in the world of the living, goes back to his bed. I can't think of life without him, the most depressing thing I can ever think about, so I force myself not to.
 

Hansa44

Justine Case


"Like a bridge over troubled waters."

When you're weary
Feeling small
When tears are in your eyes
I will dry them all

I'm on your side
When times get rough
And friends just can't be found
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down

When you're down and out
When you're on the street
When evening falls so hard
I will comfort you
[ Lyrics from: http://www.lyricsfreak.com/s/simon+and+garfunkel/bridge+over+troubled+water_20124580.html ]
I'll take your part
When darkness comes
And pain is all around
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down

Sail on Silver Girl,
Sail on by
Your time has come to shine
All your dreams are on their way

See how they shine
If you need a friend
I'm sailing right behind
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will ease your mind
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will ease your mind
 

timbo

Deceased
Since February, we've lost our Jack Russell and then lost our Corgi.
Emma (King Shepherd) has been my burr during the day and DW's about half the evenings.

She guards my bathroom door every time I go in there.

BTW, some years even Lake Superior warms up. It should be that way this year with all the 90s up there.

What I think? Two things. The feeling of weightlessness being held up in the water and the gentle love the man has for his dog.
That's why the dog can sleep like that.
 
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