Billie (February 26, 2001-June 4, 2013)

Billie B&WThe bad stuff: Billie had been having real problems getting around the last week and a half.  I thought it was a reaction to the antibiotics she’d been on for a UTI but when I came home on Tuesday she was lethargic, not really unconscious, but not able to rouse and her rear legs were cold.  Called the vet, they said bring her in.  There was a mass, which, on ultrasound looked like it was not on her spleen, but was, nevertheless, clearly Not Right, her liver didn’t look good, she still wouldn’t really rouse up, and her front feet as well as her rear were now cold.


She was twelve.  She had a lot of issues.  I opted not to do exploratory surgery and let her go.


Billie rachel VIThe slightly less bad stuff: I asked them to do an autopsy and they found that the mass was indeed on the spleen, just oddly positioned and her liver was, to quote her vet, a mess.  There wasn’t one nodule that wasn’t compromised in some way. Some sort of fast developing cancer, possibly hemangiosarcoma.  I feel lucky, in a way, that she was as good as she was for as long as she was, that I did the right thing for her, that I got to say goodbye and all those things you hope you get to do.  She was an awesome dog and I had her a long time and I miss her.


The good stuff:  I lost Riley (my very first Rottweiler) in August, 1999 and for awhile there was just me and John Henry, but I knew I wanted another dog eventually and when Ruth Vogel told me she was planning a litter, I knew I wanted one of those puppies.  There were nine puppies in the litter and I remember that I kept looking for a puppy that would be just like Riley until I realized that there would never be a puppy just like Riley, so I let Ruth pick my puppy.  And I didn’t know for sure until the day before I picked her up that Billie (who, of course, didn’t have a name yet though we called her ‘Dot’ or ‘the dotted ribbon girl’ because of the dotted ribbon around her neck to tell her from the other puppies) would be my girl.


the I litter


 


This was the ‘I’ litter and Billie’s full registered name is Vogelhaus I’m A Charmer or Charming Billie or Billie.  And she was, always, a charmer (at least in my opinion).  She and John Henry got along well in that loud way that Rottweilers get along.


Billie and John Henry


 


She was little by Rottweiler standards and would always be little.


Billie yard Billie yard III


 


 


 


 


 


But mighty.


 


 


 


 


 


At least in her own mind.


 


 


Billie TD


 


 


She had one of the best noses of any of my dogs, but also one of the most difficult to read so that when she finally got her TD in Omaha, it was a BIG deal.


 


 


 


She had idiopathic seizures from the time she was four and a half and for seven and a half years she was on phenobarb and potassium bromide.  These drugs helped but in the beginning she had a pattern of being fairly well controlled and then having breakthrough seizures that got closer and closer together until we upped the dosage and would go through it again.  I was terribly afraid we’d reach a point where we couldn’t increase the dosage any more and there would be nothing to be done.  Fortunately, before that point we tried acupuncture, which helped tremendously.


A little over six years ago, the Ames hospital started a pet therapy program so Billie got her TDI and we started visiting and kept visiting nearly every week right up until two weeks ago.  She was especially fond of depressed teenaged girls, but, really, I’m pretty sure she believed that people came to the hospital not because they were sick, but to see her.


Billie sad photoShe was an incredibly hard dog to take a picture of.  This is a typical sad Billie picture full of sadness because the world is sad and why are you taking my picture.


 


 


Billie rachel III Billie rachel IV


 


 


Luckily for me, Rachel Ritland managed to take some lovely pictures of Billie back in 2010 and I’m grateful that I have them to remember her by.billie


I’m also tremendously grateful to Dr. Safris and Dr. Paulin and their staff at Westfield Veterinary and to Dr. Farr at Natural Solutions.  And, finally, thank you to Ruth for giving me this wonderful girl.  I couldn’t have asked for a better companion.

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Published on June 08, 2013 11:47
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message 1: by Eleanor (new)

Eleanor With Cats I'm so sorry. I'm not sure what I can say to make you feel better, but that picture of Billie looking sad is hilarious. She must have been very vivid.

Thank you for letting her out to be a therapy dog. I was in a psych hospital for 4-5 days around 2004 and spent a long time afterwards going to outpatient therapy. The adults came into the building for morning and early afternoon shifts, then left right before the arrival of the adolescent patients, whom the hospital had assigned a therapy dog named Summer. All us adult patients stood in line waiting to sign out as Summer and her human walked past us and every one stopped and gave Summer a hug as she walked past us. That was definitely one of the best things to look forward to in the day. As a former depressed teenage girl, I'm certain Billie was very well-loved by those people in Ames.


message 2: by Deborah (new)

Deborah Coates Eleanor wrote: "I'm so sorry. I'm not sure what I can say to make you feel better, but that picture of Billie looking sad is hilarious. She must have been very vivid.

Thank you for letting her out to be a therapy..."


Thank you for sharing that! I'm so happy that we were able to visit for so long. It was interesting too watching attitudes change at the hospital--we were one of the teams that started the program and when we first visited staff would look at us like we shouldn't be there, but we (the entire program, not just me and Billie) changed a lot of minds and, I hope, helped a lot of people.


message 3: by Eleanor (new)

Eleanor With Cats we (the entire program, not just me and Billie) changed a lot of minds

That is really great. I seriously think humans underestimate the (non-food) importance of animals. I mean, I eat meat and I love it, but I think cats and dogs and primates and squid and parrots and stuff are morally entitled to more rights than they currently have, and they are also....I guess, not something you can cut out of human lives without consequences? I mean, some humans don't care about animals, just like some cats don't care about going outside. But if you do something like abandon a cat, it hurts the cat and is not right, and if you do something like *encourage* people to have pets (for instance, funding therapy animals, having cats at nursing homes, letting people with developmental disorders have relationships with animals), then it benefits both sides.

I guess for completeness I'd add other ways animals are important are transportation and bioengineering your environment, but humans don't use animals for that a lot anymore, or at least not here. Although we benefit the heck out of earthworms and zooplankton.

I'm really glad you and Billie enjoyed the visits and had interesting experiences though! Companion animals are awesome.


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