Georgia, 10/16/2014. The day she came to us.
Blog Note: If you're getting a little impatient with all the doggy posts and have been wondering "When is this guy going to get back to photography?" I have two things to say: First, this will be the last post about dogs for a while. Second, what I have been doing all along is giving an object lesson about one of the very most important functions of photography: using it to document and enhance your life.
After the deaths of Rusty and Honey, Louise and I grieved for them. Especially Louise. I said, "Let's ask God to send us a new dog. So we prayed.
Our farm was about a half-mile back on Sourwood Lane, a private road that branched off Andrews Lane in McLemore Cove. Back in the spring, Louise had seen a small, orange, long-haired dog hanging around the entrance to our lane, but couldn't entice her to come. Debbie and Jeff, who lived across Andrews Lane from our property were able to get her to come live with them. They named her Georgia. She had a litter of four puppies, which they gave away. Sadly, in early fall, Debbie died suddenly.
Georgia would go constantly from room to room looking for her friend. To make things worse, she was not yet housebroken. Jeff determined to send her to the pound, and told his mother. She said, "No, don't do that," and called Louise. And that's how Georgia came to live with us, just three weeks after Honey died.
She is, we think, a long-haired Chihuahua with a mixture of Corgi and perhaps some Pomeranian. Mostly, she is herself. Bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, as the saying goes.
How's that for a dog's life?
She has been with us for more than ten years now, and is a full member of our household, sleeping between us in our king-sized bed. She enjoyed living in our 5th-wheel trailer, and is now enjoying dominating the other dogs in our townhouse community. Although she is at least 11, possibly 12 years old, she is as frisky as ever and shows few signs of aging. We hope she will be with us for a long time to come.
She knows she has it good.
Photos were made with an Olympus E-M5 digital camera and the Olympus Zuiko 45mm lens or the Panasonic Lumix 14-140mm lens.
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