Sandy said... Love the pics! In fact, I love this blog! Thanks for sharing and your ox and dog are both very beautiful. October 25, 2011 7:08 PM Vicki said... Thanks for your terrific blog! I love the anatomy diagrams. Scout is handsome and the dog is cute, too; not to mention the lovely family. So much good info, presented beautifully. May 3, 2012 9:01 AM
Monday, April 12, 2010

His Only Friend
John Charles Dollman, (1851-1934)
from The Illustrated London News, 1875
The dog cares not his master’s esteem among men.

Victorin and His Dog
French aviator Victorin Garaix was born in 1890. He earned his aviators licence in 1912, and set a new altitude record of 7,328 feet in a bi-plane --- with five passengers. This photo of Victorin and his dog was taken in March, 1914; he was killed in action at about 24 years of age, August 15, 1914, in WW I.
U.S. Library of Congress
Saturday, April 10, 2010
The Dog's Territorial Disposition and Pack Mentality have Served Us Well for Watching and Guarding Ourselves, Our Property, and Our Loved Ones
Monday, April 5, 2010
Search and Rescue, and Herding, are Refinements of the Hunting Instinct
Saved!
Sir Edwin Henry Landseer (1802-1873)
Sir Edwin Henry Landseer (1802-1873)
This is a painting of Milo, a lighthouse keeper’s dog. It is said that in dense fog the dog’s barking warned approaching boats of the rock on which the lighthouse sat. To his credit, it is said, Milo rescued several children from drowning. The lighthouse rock is off the coast of Massachuset near the town of Nahant. The black and white variant of the Newfoundland dog became known as the Landseer Newfoundland.
In 1820, at the age of eighteen, Landseer painted these dogs rescuing a traveler on the Great Saint Bernard Pass (Switzerland). A monk from the Great Saint Bernard Hospice can be seen in the background of the painting. The dogs, which have become known as St. Bernards, were bred to travel through the deep snow to find and rescue lost travelers. The hospice was founded in 1049; it is said that artist Salvatore Rosa painted the dogs as early as 1690. The dogs were sold in 2004 as a cost cutting measure, but the breed is being kept alive today by dog fanciers.
The Shepherds of the Landes
Yan Dargent
1869
Mid-Manhattan Picture Collection
The use of stilts by shepherds in the boggy, brushy country of the Landes dates back to the early 18th century. The stilts helped the shepherds make their way through the brush and vegetation, helped them keep their feet dry, and enabled them to view their flocks of sheep from a distance. Today the Landes is home to a large forest of pine trees planted in the middle of the nineteenth century. The shepherds in this illustration appear to be herding cows.
.jpg)
Checker ---The Comedian
Larry T. Dake
Copyright 2010
My Australian Kelpie x Border Collie dog with Suffolk rams in 1988, while herding sheep in Eastern Oregon.
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Natural Hunting Instinct Makes Dogs Useful Hunting Companions

Die Eber-Jagd
Frans Snyders, (1579-1657) and Sir Peter Paul Rubens, (1577-1640), Artists
With all-highest permission of His Majesty the King of Barvaria
Château Royal à Schleissheim
Friday, April 2, 2010
Bringing Home the Tiger
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
The Ponies Propensity for Speed Was Good for the Races and Wars of Men

Midnight Ride of Paul Revere
by William Robinson Leigh 1866-1955
The National Heritage Museum
http://www.nationalheritagemuseum.org/

Sunday, March 28, 2010
Essay: Ox, Dog, Pony and Man Walking
Four Species Went for a Walk Today
by Larry T. Dake, Copyright 2010
Peaches, the pony, usually isn’t invited on the long walks I take with Harry and Scout. However, on this winter evening I do decide to include her. She doesn’t like to walk: she’d prefer to run —full gallop —flat out, — top speed! Our plodding quickly bores her so I keep her on a long lead to prevent her getting out of sight and into trouble. She circles impatiently, keeping me busy untangling rope from paws, hooves, and feet (sixteen in all). Amongst horses, speed equals survival. It is the equine's advantage in this world, and is what makes them better suited for races and wars than for leisurely walks.
Harry, the puppy, hunts for road-kill on both sides of the gravel up ahead of us. Because of his constant searching, he covers many more miles than the rest of us. When Harry finds some nasty tidbit he gulps it down as though we might wish to grab the nasty thing from him! The first pup in a wild pack to scavenge something to eat is the pup most likely to make it through a hard winter. The dog’s keen ability to find (and catch) food makes them useful for search and rescue, hunting, and herding. As dusk falls, we walk by a farm place with barking dogs. Harry is uneasy sharing our space with another “pack.” Canines are staunch defenders of territory, be it twenty-square miles of wilderness, or the tiny cottage at the edge of the field. They will guard either with a vengeance!
Scout, the bull calf, has a strong preference for walking at my side, his nose about even with my elbow. He maintains a steady pace throughout our exercise. Amongst bovine, calves follow cows. As his surrogate cow, he prefers to follow me. In general cattle move together; their steady migrations keeping their four stomachs full. Their large size gives them an advantage when threatened by the wolf. They form tight-knit bunches and fend off the attackers with their horns. We think of cattle mostly in terms of prime rib and nicely marbled steaks. (Along with a glass of milk, beef is what’s for dinner!) These mighty oxen were yoked together to pull the heavy wagons across The Great Plains, to skid the heavy logs from The Big Woods, and to break the heavy Sod with the Plow.
It was pitch dark and we still had two miles to go when headlights appeared in the distance. I quickly got Harry and Scout on leads, and along with Peaches, I pulled us all into the ditch, where we struggled belly deep in the snow. The unknown driver rolled past as we slowly gyrated in a tangled ball of mixed species. The steam from our mingled breaths glowed briefly in the headlights, the lights passed, and darkness enveloped us again. Only I, the one with the oversized brain, could have gotten us into this curious mess; now I’d have to get us out.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Riding a Steer?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)