Category: Dogs


News first: I got back my Foreword Clarion Review for Tourist Trap, snippets from which I blogged here last year. 5 Stars, and they don’t give them often!

Continuing on from last week on War’s End, Coralie is stranded on a strange planet, and has sent her dog, Bounce, to find the others from the ship. Bounce is a pocket herder, a small herding breed capable of limited telepathy. The breed was inspired by my first Sheltie, Derry, who was also my first tracking dog. Bounce is a clear sable, not darkly shaded like Derry, and has no white markings. If you want more background, click on the Index tab at the top of the page, and then on Six Sentence Sunday.

Shetland Sheepdog herding beach ball

Can Ch Rogene’s Sean Lord Derry Am/Can CD TD  herding his favorite ball.

Now she was able to follow Bounce mentally, and to her pleased surprise she had no problem keeping track of the little dog’s location as Bounce searched.  A familiar scent reached Bounce’s nose, but not the one she was hunting for.  Coralie noted the dog’s position, but sent her on.  There.  Bounce stopped dead and turned into the faint whisper of wind, zigzagging up the cone of scent as she searched for its source.

Coralie couldn’t see much through Bounce’s eyes–everything was in shades of gray to the dog, and nothing seemed sharply in focus.

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Spirograph Nebula, HubbleThis is a continuation of the scene from War’s End, the third book of a trilogy in progress I’ve been posting from for several weeks. Coralie was on a spaceship, threatened by strangers, and has suddenly found herself tumbling through a swamp with her baby. Her dog, Bounce, has just found her. The dog is a pocket herder, a small breed capable of rudimentary telepathy with some humans.

She wasn’t alone!  “Where are the others?”

The little dog cocked her ears, and when Coralie listened, she managed to sort out human voices from the cacophony around her.  One, deeper than the others–Kelty?–was calling names.  “Coralie here,” she shouted, and he answered at once.

“Are you all right?”

Well, at least she knows that whatever happened, it happened to the pilot, too.

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Off to the Shows!

Every year the Tanana Valley Kennel Club holds 3 days of dog shows and obedience trials over the Memorial Day weekend. I used to participate in both breed and obedience. (In tracking, too, but that’s a different weekend.) Sadly, I was already too unbalanced (physically) to participate by the time the AKC added agility, herding, and rally obedience, but I still enjoy watching and fantasizing about what some of my Shelties could have done if those activities had been available back when.

I still attend, to catch up on old friendships and watch the dogs. Here are a few of the things I saw—mostly this year, though I’ve included one shot from past years to show the Chinese Crested.

Papillion

This Papillion won Rally Advanced B, which included heeling off lead between a dish of bacon treats and a toy.

Great Danes

Harlequin and mantle Great Danes. Cropped and uncropped ears are now equally acceptable (at least in theory.)

Wirehaired Pointing Griffon

A Wirehaired Pointing Griffon, not a common breed.

Last Minute before the ring

A blue merle Sheltie , ring ready, with ringside activity in the background.

Campers and tents

Most of the exhibitors camped out on the fairgrounds, with a wide assortment of campers and tents.

Shelties resting

The first day’s group second, chilling out after ring time. Exercise pens are common in the camping area.

Chinese Crested

Not a breed adapted to Alaska!. This Chinese Crested is not shaved; the breed has hair only on the head, legs and tail. The spotted skin is actually not uncommon in some white dogs.

A pair of whippets outside the shhow building.

A pair of Whippets outside the show building

Occasionally I review books, including my own. Here is an index to posts that can be considered in some sense book reviews.

Book Reviews

Homecoming 10/20/10
The Book Video is Here! 12/15/10
Quick Comment on Reading 2/8/11
Homecoming Award 3/1/11
Beauty and the Beast 3/24/11
The Animal Connection 6/28/11
Tourist Trap: What’s it About? 8/16/11
Shipbuilder (Guest Post) 9/8/11
Is That a Ghost? 10/31/11
Once and Future Giants 11/22/11
The Land of Painted Caves 2/28/12
Tourist Trap 3/27/12
Pride and Prejudice 4/17/12
The Fire Rose 8/14/12
Anne McCaffrey’s Pern novels 8/28/12
Rescue Operation Preview 9/4/12
Alone in Paradise (blog tour) 9/6/12
Darcy’s Decision 1/22/13
The Real Jane Austin 3/12/13
Georgiana Darcy’s Diary 4/9/13
Darcy’s Diary 5/7/13
Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman 7/10/13
Death Comes to Pemberley 8/13/13
Mr. Darcy’s Guide to Courtship 9/10/13
Jane Austen, Game Theorist 10/8/13
Betrothed to Mr. Darcy 11/12/13
Pride and Pyramids 12/10/14
Mansfield Park 1/14/14
The Matters at Mansfield 3/11/14
Mansfield Park and Mummies 5/13/14
Mansfield Ranch 7/8/14
Mansfield Park Revisited 8/12/14
Murder at Mansfield Park 9/9/14

With 550 posts as of today, I’ve started to have problems remembering what I’ve already put on here. This is particularly a problem with posting existing content such as poems, short pieces from the Summer Arts Festival, or science explanations originally written for the Alaska Science Forum. I can’t remember which books or DVDs I’ve posted reviews on. It also is starting to be a problem when I want to link to a previous post and can’t remember when it was put up or what the title was. And there are posts on this blog that have permanent information, like the series on planet building and the one on horse color genetics, or the book and DVD reviews. I want to make it easier for my readers as well as myself to find things.

I made a start some time ago by adding an index page, which can be accessed from the menu at the top of any page. Right now, the only links are to index pages on my author site. This takes you out of the site and sometimes back in, which is rather clumsy. The index list is also incomplete.

I’m going to start posting an occasional entry which is strictly an index of past posts on a particular topic. These posts will be linked from the index page, and will link forward to the individual blog posts. As it takes a while to find all the posts that belong together, this will be a slow process—probably extending over the next few months. The first in this series, on DVD reviews, is already queued for January 3. Others will follow, most on Thursdays.

I probably won’t be indexing every post. Some, like those early posts which were simply glossary entries for my books, are on the author site and really belong there. Others, like the regular Monday updates on North Pole weather starting in November 2010, can be found easily enough just by using the calendar on the site. But I hope that by the time I have finished this, older posts of interest will be easier to find.

I just got tagged by Samanatha Stacia to tell ten things about myself, and tag three other people. Well the ten things are fine, but have you any idea how many people that kind of tripling every day would involve?

Just for the heck of it (and because it’s a good example of what a regular doubling (or tripling, in this case) can do, I calculated how many bloggers would be affected if each one tagged actually tagged three others, and if those tagged posted their blogs the next day. Ready? Here’s what it does:

day number
1 1
2 3
3 9
4 27
5 81
6 243
7 729
8 2,187
9 6,561
10 19,683
11 59,049
12 177,147
13 531,441
14 1,594,323
15 4,782,969
16 14,348,907
17 43,046,721
18 129,140,163
19 387,420,489
20 1,162,261,467
21 3,486,784,401
22 10,460,353,203
23 31,381,059,609
24 94,143,178,827
25 282,429,536,481
26 847,288,609,443
27 2,541,865,828,329
28 7,625,597,484,987
29 22,876,792,454,961
30 68,630,377,364,883
31 205,891,132,094,649

That’s over 200 trillion people in the first month! (The population of the Earth is only about 7 billion, which would be exceeded by day 22.)

Obviously many people who are tagged do not respond, people rather quickly start getting tagged twice (or more) and the whole thing breaks apart from its own weight. So I’ll play the game as a blog-publicizing exercise, but anyone I tag should not respond if they’ve already been tagged once. Regard it as advertizing for your blog.

1. I started talking before I could walk. (And I still like birthday cake.) I still also talk better than I walk.

2. I’ve loved horses ever since I can remember. (My parents claimed they had to pry me off the pony, which belonged to an itinerant photographer.

3. While still in grade school, I discovered my father’s subscription to Astounding Science Fiction, and later, his back issues to the late 30’s and read them all.

4. I’ve been telling myself stories (mostly about horses to start with) in third person past tense since grade school.

5. My first attempt at publication was in high school or thereabouts. I sent a werewolf story to John W. Campbell, editor of Astounding. He wrote back saying it was too much a fantasy story for Astounding, but I could write. (The story has since been totally rewritten at novelette length and I’m thinking of e-publishing it on Amazon.)

6. I took a poetry writing class at Harvard, even though my major was physics. (Unfortunately — or perhaps fortunately? I’ve lost those poems.)

7. I bred and showed Shetland Sheepdogs for over 25 years, and my first dog, Derry, became the first dog of any breed from north of the Alaska Range to earn an AKC tracking title. (He was also the canine telepath who inspired the pocket herders, a breed of dog that is important in my unpublished trilogy.)

8. At one time I developed and programmed scientific models in FORTRAN on punched cards, and later learned to make web pages with HTML and Netscape 1.

Dot

9. Although none of my Shelties after Derry had much herding instinct, I had three Shetland sheep and competed in herding trials with my Border Collie, Dot.

10. At one time, some 20 years ago, I was lead writer for The Alaska Science Forum, a weekly popular science column that went to media outlets all over Alaska.

And to my surprise, I find myself 70 years old.

My picks (the three latest in the WordPress group on SheWrites because quite a few I read already have been tagged) are:

Colleen Crinion

Pat Nance

Costa Jill

This isn’t really a book review, or if it is it is a very biased one — I wrote the book. Maybe it would be more accurate to call it a much longer version of the synopsis on the back of Tourist Trap. A synopsis has to be very limited in length; this gives me room to introduce the characters and the conflicts.

Tourist Trap: the second novel about the Confederation that grew from Jarn. The white lead dog is Snowflake.

Tourist Trap is the second novel I’ve written about the Jarnian Confederation. This is a loose confederation of human-occupied planets, with a remnant population of R’il’nians, who hybridized with proto-humans to produce modern humans around 125,000 years ago. Some of the hybrid descendants followed their R’il’nian progenitor back to space; others remained on Earth and became our own ancestors. Most of the pure R’il’nians are extinct, but the remnant and their descendants from recent cross-breeding have the responsibility of protecting the human-occupied planets from other intelligent races and (more often) of preventing them from warring with each other.

In Homecoming (set around the time of George Washington’s birth) the last R’il’nian surviving in the Confederation, Lai, discovers that the human lover who left him years ago fled because she was pregnant with his child, in defiance of the Genetics Board. The child, raised a slave, is rescued at thirteen and given the name Roi — but he is found because he is struck down by a paralyzing disease. Homecoming deals with Lai’s discovery of a woman of his own species, Marna, on a distant world and their acceptance, Healing and education of Roi – himself an untrained Healer — who must finally accept that he, as having the most R’il’nian characteristics of Lai’s children, will replace his sociopathic half-brother, Zhaim, as Lai’s heir.

Tourist Trap starts a year and a half after the end of Homecoming. Roi, now eighteen, has been given a trip on Falaron, a planet terraformed from ice age Earth, as a graduation present. His three closest friends from slavery have been given to him as slaves, though as far as Roi is concerned the slavery is simply a legal fiction that allows him to act as their protector while they gain the education they will need to survive on their own.

The markings on this horse are a good match for Amber's horse, Splash.

Roi is well aware that his father and the other adults around him consider that he is lacking in independence because of his slave upbringing, and partly because of that is determined to handle the journey on Falaron without aid. Underneath, however, he is both afraid of Zhaim and fearful of becoming like his older brother.

Flame, slave-born and the one who has known Roi the longest, has every intention of staying with him and doesn’t much care whether she is his slave or free.

Amber, kidnapped into slavery as a child, also loves Roi. But she is very aware that she will grow old and Roi will not, so she has decided to stay with Timi. She trusts Roi to release her when she has the education she recognizes she needs.

Tim, also kidnapped into slavery, wants his freedom now, and has begun to resent the fact that Roi owns him. In partial response to this, he is pursuing a friendship with Zhaim.

This foal is obviously much younger than Roi's horse, Raindrop, but the color and markings are right. Photo courtesy of Gail Lord.

The Falaron guide, Penny, makes the fifth of the group. Dog sledding, hang gliding, a trip across a landscape much like Pleistocene North America by horseback, sailing across a large lake, river rafting and rock climbing are all part of the fun.

Penny starts out treating Roi and his friends as clients. But she finds herself caring more for all of them –especially Roi – than she really intended.

But Zhaim is using Timi, and intends that none of the five will survive their trip. He is not stupid, and realizes that either Lai or Marna would protect Roi if they had any idea of what he was up to. So he plots to get them far away from Falaron – Marna to combat a plague he engineers, and Lai to stop a holy war he has goaded on. Even before the two R’il’nians leave he uses Timi and the weather against the travelers.

The geophysics and weather patterns of Faleron were carefully thought out, as was the seasonality. Yes, I modeled it on the rain-shadow effect of the Rocky Mountains, but the weather patterns and climate are reasonable for mid-latitudes on an Earthlike planet.

I had fun writing this. I’ve had considerable experience with dogs and horses, and they, as much as the people, are individuals. Amber and Timi’s lead dog, Snowflake, is an older dog, arthritic, and a bit of a telepath – so was the first dog I owned. Snowflake might well be the leader on the cover of Tourist Trap. And the five horses they ride are individuals too. Roi’s Raindrop is a spirited animal that responds well to Roi but is far too much horse for Timi, who does fine with the rather lazy Dusty.

It’s science fiction, but the surroundings are primitive and the focus is on the people: R’il’nians, crossbreds and Humans alike. Try it. You might be surprised to like it, especially if you think you don’t care for science fiction.

This is from a prompt Jeanne gave us: write something on “readiness” using the wild word “furnace.” She was talking about being ready if inspiration strikes, but for me, the word “furnace” took over.

We are never quite ready for the unexpected.
Water rising.
Power failure
Flames bursting from the top of the furnace
(But you are already on 9-1-1, having smelled smoke, and the voice says “get out! Get out! We’re on our way!”
But the dog is crated in the bedroom
And by the time you run back and release her
The flames are barring the way to your parka
And it’s twenty below out, but the dog is safe …)
No, we’re never ready
But we cope.

©Sue Ann Bowling

Sheep

Sheep are contrary creatures, and these
Not content with the grazing in their pen
Had pushed down the fence,
Gone seeking lusher green
Along the busy road.
“Dot,” I called, “sheep.  See sheep.”
As if she were not already caught, fixated by those sheep far beyond my stumbling reach.
I waited for a break in traffic.
One word:  “Away.”
And after that just wait and close the gate behind the sheep she brought,
Knowing,
As she did,
Far more of sheep than I.

Last month I blogged about an article in The New Scientist based on a book due to be released soon. The book, The Animal Connection by Pat Shipman, is now available and was one of the first I bought for my iPad.

This is a book anyone interested in animals, domestication or human evolution should read. Dr. Shipman points out that hunters must observe animals and learn to anticipate them in order to hunt successfully. She links tool-making to the hunting of animals, pointing out that we are unique as predators in using tools, not teeth or claws, to hunt. The addition of meat to our diet may well have been what made us able to support increasingly large brains, as brains have a very large energy cost.

The need to get “inside the skull” of another species may also be behind much of the empathy and imagination we share.

Later, the need to share information about animals may well be one of the driving forces behind our acquisition as a species of language. Language, although one of the traits that define us as a species, does not fossilize, so arguments here tend to have more than a little arm-waving about them. The fact remains that animals, rather than plants or other people, are the main subjects of Paleolithic art.

If animals were living tools, as the author argues, they are tools whose best use must be based on mutual understanding, not on force. There is nothing really new about this; Xenophon’s tretise on horsemanship said it over two thousand years ago.

The future? To quote the author, “The post-animal world, if we choose to live in it, is a fearsome place that threatens to destroy the very best qualities of humankind.”

I tend to believe most of the arguments in this book partly because they reflect my own conclusions. I wrote a short story over ten years ago suggesting that the connection between people and dogs may have shaped both into a new symbiosis, and I am glad to see that idea now accorded some degree of scientific acceptance.

Book: The Animal Connection, by Pat Shipman. Published by W.W. Norton,
ISBN 978-0-393-07054-5