The long road to recovery.
Posted by Larry on Wednesday Jul 15, 2009 Under Oras turbulent pastThe weeks continued to pass and we continued to play in the back yard. It was amazing to see Ora adjust the way she ran and jumped to accommodate her lack of feeling and control of her back end. Oh, she still had her share of spills in the back yard but never once did she miss a beat or show any sign of slowing down.
I shelved all my expectations and for the most part we just played to play. I used multiple discs and a renewed patience to work on the bad habit of not switching discs that I inadvertently allowed to happen. In mid June 2009 we went out to play some more, the upcoming weekend was the MNDDC Rochester Fest weekend which was a big 2 day disc dog event.
I started with some handler in the middle and she nailed them all without a second thought often leaping in the air to heights I havent seen since before she got ill. I ran around collecting discs and tossing them as fast as I could and she continued at a breakneck pace only balking at a couple throws. On one occasion, after a particularly high leap, she landed solidly on all fours but in her zeal to return for another disc tried to turn sharper and sooner after landing than she could control. She tumbled through the grass, regained her feet, grabbed her disc and bolted back toward me for a chance to grab a another disc, totally unphased and undaunted by her tumble in the grass.

Rochester Fest 2009
As we went in after our disc session I was almost overcome by a combination of awe and pride. It was one of those nights where things just clicked. No expectations, no demands, a zen state where things just flowed, dog and handler working as one, the whole situation made that much more profound by the fact that about 6 months earlier the vet basically sent her home with us to die.
While I certainly hope no dog or owner has to endure the problems we have I sincerely hope that you can all experience a similarly profound moment with your own dog. Its truly magical.
We competed on Saturday at Rochester fest and Ora ran for both me and my wife who I talked into competing for the first time in novice toss and catch. We didn’t bring home any trophies but finished in the middle of the field in the sport class which is the highest division but taking the field itself was reward enough.




