Sunday
Aug312003

Hobo
We bought our first house in 1991. John was 6 and we were moving from New Orleans to the North Shore. One of the benefits of home ownership to me was being able to have a dog. I am a dog person. I had a few good dogs growing up. There was Okie a beagle cocker mix my mother brought home from selling Avon one day. Cindy was a toy collie and was killed chasing a squirrel into the path of an oncoming car. Jake was a terrier poodle mix and really smart. He loved to play.
We first tried to get a dog at the humane society. I wanted to save one of the pooches from death row. Barb, John, and I looked over their puppies and settled on a little blonde cocker spaniel. We even named him - Joe, Joe the cocker spaniel. John was really excited but we could not take Joe home with us. He had to stay to be fixed. It was supposed to take a week. Several days later I get a phone call from the Humane Society. Joe had died along with the other three puppies in his cage. There had been a parvo outbreak.
I couldn't believe it. What a drag, now I had to tell John his new puppy he was so excited about had died. That evening he came with Barbara to pick me up at work. I took him in my office and told him I had some sad news then explained about Joe. He cried and cried. I felt so bad for him, but one of the things a parent cannot fix is a broken heart.

We have loved Hobo for twelve years now. He is getting old and getting up and down is hard for him. I hate to think about him not being around. As I write this I need only look out the corner of my right eye to see him laying by my chair. So many good memories. Hobo's first day at our house was traumatic for John. He was afraid of the snapping gator dog at first and sought refuge on a chair. He and Hobo soon became pals and Hobo slept with John for years until he could no longer jump up on the bed, so he sleeps on his dog pillow in our room.
For the last twelve years Hobo has been with me continuously. He is the only one that saw the board slide from the rafters of our shed and hit me on the bridge of my nose. He is the only one that heard the expletive laden tirade that followed. Hobo has walked with me in the early morning and we have witnessed many sunrises together. He knows the beauty of the sun rays shining through the trees and the morning haze. I know that when we walk by the blue house I have to tighten up on the leash, because if he sees the gray cat he will lunge for it - always missing, yet always trying. He has witnessed our son's metamorphosis from child to man. He is part of our family.
A few years back I wrote a poem about Hobo - here it is:
My Dog

My dog was free, but if you offered me
I wouldn't take the world for him
Because no matter who or what I am
He will always be my friend
Sure there were times, when he was a pup
I had a doubt or two
For when we lost track of his whereabouts
He was probably eating a shoe
And it seems when the rain is its hardest
And the night is dark and cold
He stands at the door with that look that says
My bladder I can no longer hold
But the comfort I get from just seeing
His black furry form on the floor
And coming home finding him waiting
And wagging his tail by the door
And the pleasure I get from just watching
Him running and jumping at play
Grows my love and my laughter
More and more every day
So my dog was free but he has given me
What I leave to seek all day
Love and joy and loyalty
Beyond what I could pay
Here's to man's best friend - I think I will pet him right now.
Until the next time
John Strain