Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Polar Bear Picnic

.

Background:

As some of you know, I am a founding board member of CorgiAid. CorgiAid's mission is to help homeless corgi dogs (Pembroke and Cardigan) and probable corgi mixes get healthy so they can find their forever homes.

As you might guess, dogs who end up in rescue are very often dogs who have not been kept up on the most basic health care. They almost always need vaccinations, heartworm tests, microchips. They very often need to get their teeth cleaned, and in some parts of the country, nearly every dog comes in to rescue with heartworm.

An adoption fee can only cover so much, and it is very common for rescuers and foster homes to foot the bill, themselves, to help their charges get healthy.

Over the years, watching rescue, it is crystal clear to me that *the* critical factor in saving lives is foster homes. Fosters take homeless dogs in, and give them a temporary place to rest and get healthy and get basic training in manners. Without foster homes, dogs will die.

My postition is -- fosters are the true heroes of rescue. It is fosters who put the blood, sweat, and tears into the dogs.

It is only fair that the rest of us pick up the tab.

CorgiAid's work is to stop fosters from going broke, so they can stay in the fostering business, saving lives.

Incorporated in 2000, CorgiAid has been instrumental in saving hundreds of dogs over the years.

One of the coolest things about CorgiAid is that so very many people rightfully take ownership and pride in what CorgiAid does. CorgiAid truly is everyone who helps in any way with raising money.

Most of CorgiAid's supporters come from the Corgi-L mailing list. Corgi-L is a friendly and helpful list, meant for all corgi owners (and wannabes). Get advice, share stories, enjoy your corgi with others who enjoy theirs..............


Polar Bear Picnic Background:

CorgiAid has been chosen to receive a major award for Best Breed-Specific Fund Raising.

The award sponsors wanted to send a film crew to "our office" to show "CorgiAid in Action." Hmmm. CorgiAid was conceived of, was organized, was incorporated, and has always run online. CorgiAid staff is scattered across the continent (Oregon, California, Nevada, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Tennessee, Ohio, Texas), and most of us have never met face-to-face. "Our office" doesn't really exist.......

The CorgiAid staff's work is ... people typing at computers to discuss an application for a grant, or someone typing an authorization for a check, or someone typing a note to supporters to let them know about the latest dog they've helped.... Not very photogenic or interesting....

Now the actual fund raising -- that is often *much* more interesting.

Many people raise money for CorgiAid by throwing a picnic. Lots of people, lots of dogs, games for dogs (relay races, bobbing for hotdog slices, etc.), contests for dogs (best trick, biggest ears, loudest bark, etc.). Very fun, very photogenic.....

Picnics often have a silent auction, which is where the fund raising comes in.

When the award sponsors talked about filming "CorgiAid in Action," the thing that came to mind is a picnic.

But no one throws a picnic in January. Not California, not Texas, not Florida. No one.

The CorgiAid staff talked over this conundrum, and the Tennessee staffer, who throws a picnic each year in May, consulted with her husband and declared that they could throw a picnic for the benefit of the film crew, on *very* short notice. "We've got all the stuff in boxes in a closet. We can throw the first-ever Polar Bear Picnic for CorgiAid!"


The Picnic of Epic Proportion:


As you would guess, everyone connected in any way with CorgiAid was thrilled about the award. That our little home-grown charity would receive this sort of public recognition on the Big Dog Stage is amazing and wonderful.

It was clear immediately that the Polar Bear Picnic was the way everyone could participate in the celebration.

A logo was designed for the picnic, and merchandise was made available on CafePress.

The picnic was announced on Corgi-L, and enthusiastic, energetic, and creative people immediately began to put their heads together about donations to the Polar Bear Silent auction. Someone suggested State Baskets, and the explosion of wonderful ideas reached new heights. (The Texas "basket" was a corgi-sized dog bed in the shape of a covered wagon!)

Dozens and dozens and dozens of boxes began to arrive in Tennessee. People from all over the eastern half of the US began to make picnic travel plans. Dogs rehearsed tricks, tried on costumes, and practiced fishing hotdog slices out of a tub of water.

More and more boxes arrived in Tennessee. The auction began online, so that people who were unable to attend the picnic would not be deprived of the chance to bid.

The gateway to Picnic Central:



Lily Woof, one of the lucky inhabitants of Fort Corgi, by one of the many handy water bowls. Buzz tried each one, I think.....



As the picnic day grew near, a core group of supporters arrived in Tennessee to help with preparations. People met who had known each other for years but who had never been in the same place at the same time. Bandanas were made, posters showing dogs helped by CorgiAid were prepared, chicken cake was baked, the park space was reserved, the tent was erected, cards for the auction items were made.....

The picnic took place on January 27, 2008, a chilly and breezy day in Tennysea.

On the day of the picnic, auction goodies were transported (many loads in the back of a big pick-up, in mini-vans, in cars) to the park. Rows and rows of tables (also hauled to the picnic site!) were covered with goodies. Thank goodness it was dry; we were able to put some of the bigger boxes on the ground, which made room for smaller things on the tables.







The film crew arrived from California. The hotdog bobbing was just outside this pic, on the right. You can see the camera, on the ground, pointed at a contestant.





Shiner is *ready*!!! for his turn.



I think everyone had a very good time. There was pizza, there were moon pies, there was a gorgeous cake for people, and the chicken cake for the dogs. There were games, contests, prizes. There was a blessing of the animals by a minister. There was a reading of a story written especially for the picnic. And there were alllllllllllllll those wonderful auction items to drool over and bid on.

Several CorgiAid alumni attended the picnic. This is Bob-who-fell-off-a-mountain. Bob was found by someone who had to rappel down a mountain to retrieve him. He had trouble walking, and it was feared he would need orthopedic surgery to recover. Luckily he felt very much better after some rest. He brought his new family to the picnic. How nice to see him so happily settled!





In addition to the crowd who were able to attend the picnic in person, there were people attending in spirit all over the world. One mom had a picnic in the living room with her young child. People baked Corgi-L's signature cookies -- Spotted Corgi cookies -- on Sunday and enjoyed them as they thought about those of us in Tennessee.

It was *everyone's* CorgiAid Polar Bear Picnic.



The sun swam across the sky. The games ended, the auction bids were declared closed.

Some of the items were won by people who attended the picnic. All the rest were transported back to the staffer's house to await shipping off to the lucky winners. (Yes, this is really an "after" pic!)




The park was cleaned up. People departed, leaving only long shadows on an empty tent.




The final total is not in yet, but it is clear this was The Picnic of the Century for CorgiAid.

From the very first glimmer of an idea to the successful conclusion of the Picnic of Epic Proportion was a three-week period.

Corgi people rock.


And that's how I spent my weekend!

There are more picnic pics here, including some shots of the costume contest.



In order to facilitate chronological traverse of these Tennessee Polar Bear Picnic trip posts, a link to the next one is here.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Jan. 22 -- sunset

Another sunset from my office window.



Saturday, January 26, 2008

A Place to Bark

Of all the faces on Bernie's A Place to Bark blog right now, this is the one that gets me.......

Please, if you have $10 you can spare, help the next one like him who needs Bernie to save his life. Visit A Place to Bark for the link for donating. Thank you!

roses

more grocery store flowers.......





amaryllis

My amaryllis put an awful lot of itself into going to seed last year. I was afraid I had asked too much of a window-sill plant.

You know I was happy to see this:

Friday, January 25, 2008

A Place to Bark (and Meow)

Bernie Berlin of A Place to Bark has, almost single-handedly, saved hundreds and hundreds of dogs and cats in the last several years. There is now a very special opportunity to help Bernie help the animals, and you can be a part of the solution. Note button in sidebar on right to go visit A Place to Bark.

The following text was borrowed (with permission) from Foodie Farm Girl.

For the past 8 years, artist and animal lover extraordinaire Bernie Berlin has been running a full-time, non-profit animal rescue in Tennessee called A Place To Bark. . . And Meow. Last year alone Bernie rescued and found homes for over 500 unwanted animals, many of whom were abused or injured. She literally goes to the pound and takes home dogs who are scheduled to be put down the next day. I think Bernie is one of the most wonderful people in the world, and right now she could really use our help.

A Place To Bark is a 501c3 non-profit rescue funded entirely by donations and Bernie's own personal money. She keeps the animals in kennels on her property but is in desperate need of a shelter building. Bernie currently has 50 dogs in her care, and she brings them inside her home during cold weather. It's getting a little crowded. But there is a very good chance that A Place To Bark will win one of four $50,000 Network For Good grants being awarded during America's Giving Challenge.

Here's How It Works:
Six Degrees has partnered with the Case Foundation to create America's Giving Challenge, sponsored by Parade. The four charities to receive the highest number of donations through their Six Degrees badge will receive $50,000 for their cause.
A Place To Bark is currently in second place! America's Giving Challenge runs until January 31st.

Here's How To Donate:
The minimum donation is $10. All donations are tax deductible and must be made through A Place To Bark's Six Degrees badge (found on the A Place To Bark blog) in order to be counted toward the challenge. You can make your donation via credit card or paypal. International donations can be made via paypal. Anonymous donations are welcome. In order to win the grant, A Place To Bark needs to have the highest number of donors, not the highest amount of money donated. (Note: there is a 4.75% service charge added by the Network For Good to your donation, so you can choose to either 1) donate the full $10 to A Place To Bark and pay a total of $10.47 or 2) pay a total of $10 including your service fee which means that $9.54 will be given to A Place To Bark.)

In addition, all donations up to $25,000 made to A Place to Bark's Six Degrees Badge between now and June 1st will be matched by the Zoline Foundation. That means your $10 donation instantly becomes $20! Does your employer match donations? That could mean another $10 for A Place To Bark.

And there are prizes! Everyone who donates through A Place To Bark's Six Degrees badge during January will automatically be entered in a drawing for all sorts of wonderful prizes, including signed copies of books and beautiful original works of art created by Bernie and other talented artists.

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Back to your regularly scheduled blogger now -- if each of us give Bernie a little, it is matched, and our contributions, all added up, will make a big difference for a lot of dogs and cats.

Please go visit A Place to Bark and look at the faces of some of the dogs at Bernie's now.

Please help Bernie save the next bunch of critters.

Thank you.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Jan 24, including Buzzupdate

These three pics were taken today.

Frost on the window on a sunny morning.






Buzz, wishing I wasn't getting ready to go to work.

He is doing fine. Aside from his shaved bits (which he is working diligently to regrow), you wouldn't know anything was wrong with him. Eager to fetch up a toy, eager to eat, eager to bark and to pick on his brother.................






Blue sky and clouds out my office window.

Unfortunately I can't see this particular view unless I lean way into the window and look way to the left. What I see when sitting at my desk is nearby trees and house tops. I'm not complaining. Before this building, our offices were in a totally windowless basement. This building is lovely, and I am so grateful to have my enormous window. Which *opens*!!!!! Not that I'm even thinking of opening it in this weather, but you know what I mean. An office with a window that opens?? Unheard of..........

color!





Mmmm.





Mmmmm. This next one is my fave from that trip to the grocery.



Ah. Now that feels better, doesn't it?



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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

live plants

Live plants at the grocery, in addition to the cut flowers.






Monday, January 21, 2008

my banner!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Woohoooo! My banner showed up!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Ever since I started using Firefox, and noticed that my banner didn't show up (it is fine in IE), I've been thinking that I needed to work on that. I even bookmarked a site that explained how to fix it.

But I never got around to it, and today, hooray, magically, it showed up. A blogger fix, I presume.

In any case, I'm glad to see it again!



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pink and white roses

I can appreciate white-on-white, and I can admire monochromatic color schemes, but it is color that sings my song.

More grocery store color. Mmmmmm.





Sunday, January 20, 2008

cold

I wanted to catch the frost on the bedroom window, with the car behind.

I will leave to your imagination the gnashing of teeth and rending of garments over the new camera's auto-focus, which patently refused to focus on the frost (even when set on macro), and over its manual focus which seems to be entirely totally utterly worthless....

I got out the old camera, whose manual focus is actually on the lens (unlike the new one's joystick -- "joy" *humbug!*). Its battery was empty. I plugged it into the charger and did other things.

The frost was still on the window just now, so we tried again, and Old Faithful came through for Mama.


I can't decide which of these should come first........






The temperature is currently 6F. Which is cold, but we've had worse. The thing that makes it bitter outside today is the wind. Windchill of 15F below zero. Brrr.

So glad to live here and now and be warm and comfy.



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more advantages and disadvantages

I don't like being at work when it gets dark.

But.

I get a much better view of the sky from my office than I get at home (all those houses and wires I mentioned yesterday -- my office is higher that the houses behind it, so I can see the sky with no wires or buildings.....).




Saturday, January 19, 2008

advantages and disadvantages

I look at pictures people take, out their back windows, of mountains or country meadows. Then I look out my back window at wires, houses, more wires. I am jealous of views that don't include very much man-made stuff. How peaceful, how quiet, how uncrowded, how ... breatheable........................

Sigh.

On the other hand......

Our vet is one mile from our house. The Chrysler dealership is one mile from our house. I can vote, do a little light retailing, and pick up library books as I walk to work, without going out of my way (well, ok, into the school to vote is out of my way).

It is good to not have to depend on internal combustion to get where you need to go. Imh.

And -- if you can't have everything, it is Good to appreciate what you have.....


Monday I walked over to retrieve the minivan from the dealership where it spent the weekend, waiting for a turn to get repaired..





This vine is on our street. I've walked past it a thousand times. More. Have I ever paid a jot of attention to what sort of vine it is? Nope.

It has obviously been there for a long time....... That's a telephone pole it's climbing......







We are talking serious vineage here!





Later in my walk to the car dealership, I walked past a small woods.

Ok.

It's vine day!

Here's something else I can't name.

I don't remember seeing this sort of shiny black vine before.





This one, though. I think I know this one. I think this is poison ivy. A large-ish, rather serious poison ivy, which has been here for a long time. Perhaps the parent of some of the poison ivy I have weeded out of my back yard.....





(close-up of vine tendrils clinging to tree bark)

Friday, January 18, 2008

doggy update

Buzz is ok. He had his iv chemo (vincristine) on Wednesday. He had to be coaxed, just a little, to eat his breakfast this morning (and he left a little of his 10pm yogurt in the dish, last night). But for a cancer dog who just got chemo, he's doing well. (Metoclopramide/reglan before breakfast and before supper and just before bed.)

If he follows the pattern he's followed in the past, he should be back to "just fine" in a few days. We'll hope for that.


Today was Wilbur's turn to go to the vet. He has been pretty congested for most of a year. He coughs, a little (4-6 times a day?). He sneezes. He reverse-sneezes. He snorts out great gouts of snot.

But he's cheerful and lively and smiley and waggy and eats well. He feels ok, aside from being all congested.

He has been at the vet multiple times for this, and is on antihistamines.

Today they took xrays, to see if his lungs look like he ought to be on steroids. The conclusion is that he does not need them at this point, anyway.

But we learned he's been shot. Metal on one of his rear ribs. :-( People suck......

He was stray for the first year of his life, as far as we know. What happened to him during that year we don't know, but we do know that he keeps his own council as to what is safe and what isn't. He is much less likely than any other dog I've ever known to take my word for it that a situation is ok. And no wonder, I guess. :-(

So the basic "news" is that we'll keep on doing what we have been doing (hydroxyzine), and will try mucinex or something similar, to see if it helps.

And I have a note from his doctor that he is not contagious! :-)

walking home on Jan. 10

I got rides home from work for several weeks in a row. On Jan. 10, I walked home.

It gets dark enough, between 5:00 and 5:30, that it's not easy to get decent pics.

The upside of that is that I walk straight home, instead of dawdling along taking pics, and it's much more a cardio workout than when I am taking more pics.....

Three images taken on Liberty, in downtown Ann Arbor.





Thursday, January 17, 2008

red and chartreuse









And now for a bit of 'shopping.....