Friday, March 4, 2016

Valley Fever and the Adventure of Recovery - Part 1

Quartzsite, Arizona, from January 17, 2016, until February 2, 2016, was where Bailey, Chloe, and I dry camped in our trusty motor home.
  We had a wonderful time and did much hiking the local area.  Both dogs loved running in the dry riverbed with so many quail, rabbits, and ground squirrels to chase they were in dog's heaven.  But lying in the dirt was a small hidden hell quietly in wait to be activated by digging dogs or blowing wind: the spores that cause Valley Fever.
My wife and I joined the dogs last week for a 5-day RV trip through northeastern California.  Bailey was not feeling well even before we left but I didn't think much of it.  He had a cough and wasn't his normal happy self, but he had thrown up a big wad of spring grass a few days before and I thought he had just irritated his system.
During the trip he got weaker and more lethargic.  His breathing became labored and his cough became more persistent.  We let him rest a lot and upon our return I called our local veterinarian hospital we always go to and scheduled an appointment later that day.  They asked if I could come in at the end of the day because of the cough Bailey had.  They didn't want to contaminate the area if it was something like kennel cough.
Our local vet, who has known Bailey since a pup, found Bailey had a temperature of 104 degrees F
but he wasn't coughing.  I told the vet that Bailey hadn't been eating.  I told him how weak Bailey was and lethargic and about the grass he had thrown up.  He listened to his heart and lungs and found all ok.  He gave Bailey a couple shots of antibiotics thinking he had a sore throat from the grass maybe and sent us home with a bottle of antibiotic pills to take twice a day.
Bailey was down to 51 pounds, 8 pounds lighter than last fall (as shown in the above picture that he's thin).

Wednesday, on a short 3-mile hike, Bailey was having a hard time just walking.  His left rear leg was giving him trouble and he was coughing.  When we got home I called our vet.  He wasn't there but one of the technicians suggested we go to Sage Emergency Vet Hospital in Concord where they had x-ray machines.  So I loaded Bailey into the car and we went to go see what was up with the boy, not knowing what we were dealing with.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Thirty Hikes in Thirty Days

Bailey and Chloe got quite the workout these last 30 days.
Along the trails up in Briones Regional Park
  Established a goal set on January, 15th to hike 30 long hikes of 5 miles or more each and every day. Here are just 7 pictures of adventures.


In the Mount Diablo foothills

 digging in the soft sand in Quartzsite, Arizona after a ground squirrel
hiking along the ocean beach in Ventura at the Channel Island Harbor
Enjoying a cool dip in the Castle Rock stream in Walnut Creek

viewing the hills ahead in Las Trampas Wilderness.
We made that goal on February, 14 and then some.  185 miles of trails in 30 days.  Dogs are getting in good shape.
  Doing this body good also.
Join us any time.  We almost always enjoy company.
You can reach us at:
Overlooking the San Ramon Valley from Las Trampas

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Getting Ready for a Hunt

Sunday morning was perfect weather for a late season pheasant hunt.  It had been six weeks since Bailey and I had hit the fields at Hastings Island Hunting Preserve.

Took a friend who had never been on a hunt before.  Jim grabbed this shot before the 7:30 opening of the field we started in.
We had a successful hunt and Bailey was in excellent form and my marksmanship has improved over the year.  We were done by 9:15 with four pheasants in the bag. 
 

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Desert Days with Bailey and Chloe


On top of Mount Q there always is an American Flag flying proudly.

Sunrises in the Arizona sky on our 12-day sabbatical.
Vizslas are great RV partners.

 We "dry camped" (fully self-contained) in late January at the Las Posas Long-Term camping area. This is BLM area just south of Quartzite, Arizona.  $40 for two weeks or $160 for six months.




This is our fourth year coming out here.  It is truly something we enjoy.  Just books, music, hiking and being in the desert with Bailey and Chloe.  Once a day I would tour part of the desert or run into town for supplies on my trusty Honda Trail 90.

The sand and rocks are tough on Vizslas' pads as they run through the riverbeds and sage brush desert. The bushes and plants have plenty of thorns.  This is where quails, rabbits, and ground squirrels love to hide, so thorns in pads are common.  


After every time out, I would apply "Musher's Secret" to their pads to keep them from drying and cracking. I get the 200 gram size.
January is a great time to go to the Arizona desert. The sunrises and sunsets are great.  Maybe the highlight was the thunderstorm that blew in one late afternoon. 40 mph winds, lightning and thunder shaking the RV.  Glad we have a well-built unit.  As I lay in the back area with the BIG windows, the night became a light show, the rain came down in waves, and the wind rocked the Lazy Daze.

The next morning, the ground was only just moist and the sky was on fire.  I love the desert.