Submitted by Fred on

Charcoal Won

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Lifestyle

As you may know, Joanne and I share a wonderful 11 year old Schnoodle (Schnauzer/Poodle mix) named Charcoal (pictured).  As time went by, a pattern developed that the night shift was my sole responsibility.  

Charcoal spends her somnolent night hogging space on our bed and when Nature calls she hops off the bed and snorts.  Up until recently, that was the opening signal for a contest of wills between us as I would pick her up, whisper to her it was too early to go out and place her down between us.  Usually she took the hint.  However, this routine was sometimes unsuccessfully repeated a number of time consuming and sleep depriving cycles.  

Recently, she hopped off in concert with my own Nature's call and I told myself that I was already up and it was her turn, so I let her out and, lickety-split, she was done and we were back in bed in minutes.  

Realization dawned on me and a whole new routine or culture was born.  Now she calls the nocturnal shots :)

Is there a parable here?

Comments

Ray Walcott

Sounds like Charcoal has mastered the art of nighttime negotiation! Love how you adapted to her routine. Sounds like Charcoal has mastered the art of nighttime negotiation! Love how you adapted to her routine.
Paul Napolitano

Great story! My cat Bucky literally sleeps on my head every night. But since I’ve been away for most of the last month, he found another special place with Victoria! Now that I am back home, he’s sticking with his new spot!
Daniel Schwartz

I do know the feeling. While we do not permit our pup to sleep with us, she resides in her crate. But will let us know when its its time for her to go. A small yelp followed by progressively louder barks should we ignore her. We are trying to call out "sleep" which helps but maybe just for an hour more. Sleep has been a rare commodity by us.
Robert Intelisano

A critical decision has to be made early in the training process if you will let the dog sleep in your bed aka The Tail Wagging the Dog! My former poodle Bailey (RIP) was too small to jump on the bed so he was happy to sleep in 1 of the 3 beds we had for him.
ODEY RAVIV

Sleep is vital and maximizing is not easy as we climb the age ladder! Good diplomacy.
Rich Slomovitz

Going through the same with our 14 week old lab mix puppy that we are raising for Canine Companions. He's in a crate in our bedroom. At this age, the rule of thumb is a lab can hold it one hour more than their age in months. On a good evening, we get to 4am before he wakes up and needs to go out. Then, it's back to the crate in hopes he'll settle down for another hour or two as he is usually hungry by then too. Thankfully, until now, the weather has been good here in NY and we aren't freezing when we put him out in the middle of the night.

Submitted by Judy_Mauer on Fri, 11/22/2024 - 00:49

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Judy Mauer

Well at least you're on the same schedule -lol

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