Entries Tagged as 'Sadie'

January 15, 2011

The Book of Sadie, Chapter 3

This is the final chapter in the scrapbook I’ve been doing of Sadie’s life.   My last steps will be to go through the rest of the pictures to make sure I have all the ones I want in the album and to have my dh go through the book to add any memories I haven’t collected.  Then it’ll be off to the printer.  Building the album and documenting my memories has been so healing for me.   I’m ready to love a new pug now.   I’m already planning the next dog bed.  I saw some really cute dog fabric that I think I’m going to have to get.   I’m also ready to start quilting again.   I’m going to start on a quilt for me this weekend  and I’ve got a few in progress that I’ll start sharing now that Sadie’s album is done.

So without further ado,  here’s the final chapter.

Chapter 3 – The Grown-Up Years

In the fall of 2004, Charlie and I started dating.   Over the next few years, Sadie definitely decided that Charlie was “Dad.”  She seemed to really like it when we moved to the surburbs, a big yard, and two people to sleep between.   A pug’s life doesn’t get any better than that.

Sadie had so many fun quirks.   She snored with her eyes open.  She had poots that were deadly.  At night when she got cold, she’d nudge my shoulder to get me to lift up the covers so she could crawl underneath.  She loved to sleep curled up against my stomach.   She’d spend the first part of the night curled up next to me, then she’d move over to cuddle with Charlie.

Once we went to Myrtle Beach with some friends.   Of course, Sadie went with us.  We’d been at the beach for most of the day.    We took Ike (my friend’s dog) to the pool to swim later in the afternoon.   I was missing my Sadie, so Jim brought her back from the condo with him.   I was on the far side of the pool from the entrance and I called out “Sadie” when I saw her.    She made a beeline for me – the problem was that there was a pool in the way and she couldn’t swim.  She just walked right off the edge into the deep end of the pool.   I stood up and yelled, “she can’t swim!!”  Charlie was closer to her, so he jumped in the pool, she was bobbing up and down and he grabbed her out of the water and saved her.    I held her so close for the next few hours and she never tried to walk on water again.

In 2007, Sadie got her new brother Jake.  Jake is a Sheltie Shepherd mix and at 10 weeks old he was the same size as Sadie.  She was less than thrilled with the new addition, but she did her best to teach him how to be a princess.

It wasn’t long before Sadie had just about had it with Jake.  He was such a puppy and she was a grumpy old spinster who just wanted to lay around like  the princess she was.  She did not want to play with him all the time or have to work to keep him in line.   We also realized that everything Jake knew about being a dog, he was learning from a spoiled princess pug.

So, in 2008, we decided that he needed someone different to play with and Sadie needed a break from the puppy torment. In February, Pete joined our family.   Pete’s a mutt, the rescue group claimed he was a pug-labrador mix, but no one really knows what he is.  He’s a wonderful snuggler and in the end, he restored peace to the house.   I think that’s when Sadie decided he was okay.

In the evening, we’d be on the couch watching T.V.    She could be sound asleep, but when she heard the T.V. click off, she’d jump up and start barking her head off.  She’d jump off the couch and run around herding everyone to the bedroom.   I don’t think she thought we could make it to bed without her help.  She’d do the same thing when the doorbell rang.   It was really funny if we were watching “House Hunters” because she didn’t understand that the doorbell ring was on the T.V.

In the last year or so of her life, when she would get to barking, she’d poot at the same time.   She couldn’t help it, but it was the funniest thing to watch.   She’d be barking away, eye’s bugging out, to a symphony of poots.

If I went into a room without her and closed the door on her, she’d push the door open with her face and come on in.  This was always nice when you were on the toilet and wanted a little privacy.   She’d come right on in and sit between your feet until you were done.   It wasn’t that she meant to be invasive, but in her mind, you were her person, and she was supposed to be with you always.  Sometimes she was unladylike, underfoot, or demanding to be picked up and placed on your lap, which she always regarded as her spot.   If you sat down on the floor, she’d get up, walk over to you and crawl into your lap and lay down.  She snored. She pooted when she barked too enthusiastically. She was my shadow and followed me everywhere.  Mostly though, she was my princess companion.

Rest in Peace my dear Sadie.   You were loved and will be missed.   We’ll never forget you

Thanks for sharing these memories of a very special pug.

Special Note:    If you have a pug, please be aware that because they are so small, their condition can deteriorate very rapidly if they get sick.  Please don’t hesitate to take them to the vet.  Sadie seemed absolutely fine on Saturday.   She started acting like she was dry heaving Saturday evening and over the course of the night, it moved to difficulty breathing.  I had her to the vet at 8 am on Sunday morning.  It turned out that she had pneumonia, but the initial diagnosis was suspected heart failure.   We lost her early afternoon on Monday.   I still wish I had taken her in on Saturday evening, although it might not have made any difference.

December 26, 2010

The Book of Sadie, Chapter 2

I’ve finished a bit more of Sadie’s Book.   Here’s part of Chapter 2.

Chapter 2 – Starting a new life

In March, I decided to move back to the South.  Sadie made the trip from Salt Lake to Georgia in a crate between the bucket seats in the front of the moving truck.   She really thought she should be in a lap the whole way.

I was staying with family while I searched for a job in Georgia.  Sadie went to the lake for the first time that summer.  Pugs are notorious for not being able to swim, so I got her a life jacket.  When I first put it on her, she was so top heavy, her feet started lifting off the ground.   I had to push her back end down until she shifted her weight.  I wish I had thought to take a picture.  It was so cute.  While she loved being with Mom, she was not a big fan of the boat.  We let her stay at the house during the rest of the boat rides.

Sadie stayed with a family friend while I spent 8 weeks traveling in training for my new job.   During this time, she went to family’s car lot during most days and hung out with their son on his nights off.   She developed her love of pizza during this time.   From then on, she would bark at you if you had pizza and didn’t give her some.   I would only let her have small pieces of crust and she always thought she should have more.

She decided pretty early on in life, that her spot was in a lap, preferably Mom’s lap, but definitely a lap.

If there was no lap available, her second choice was a pillow.   I don’t just mean a pillow on the floor.  If there was a pillow on the couch, then that’s where she’d be.  Not on the couch, but on the pillow on the couch.  If things were really bad, then the couch would do.

I was in my first Atlanta apartment when Sadie met her first and only boyfriend.   He was a beautiful Maltese.   When she saw him across the parking lot, she’d pull on her leash until she got to him.   He seemed just as fond of her.   We had some play dates for them.  It was really precious.  We lost touch of him when I moved to a new apartment.

When we went to visit my Dad and Dixie, she loved playing with their cat BJ.   She would chase BJ into their bedroom, and BJ would chase her back into the living room.

My first holiday season in Atlanta, we spent Christmas with my dad’s family in SC and then we flew to AR for New Year’s.  It was Sadie’s first time on a plane.  I had a soft side carrier for her.  She had so much fun playing in and around the kennel while it was in the living room, but the minute it was time to get in it for the plane ride, the fun was over.   She did not want to be in the carrier.   She thought that she should be riding on Mom’s lap, not under the seat at Mom’s feet.  I always had to take her out of the carrier at the gate until time to board because she would fuss the whole time we were at the gate.   Luckily, she was cute enough that the attendants never seemed to mind.

That’s all that I have done for now, but it has been helpful to work on this album.   I love knowing that the memories are documented and that I don’t have to worry about forgetting them.

We were visiting with my nephew yesterday on Christmas.  He’s 5 1/2 and sometimes says the most precious things.  Here’s what he said to me when I said his new Rudolph was good for snuggling.   “Like Sadie?   I wish she could come back to life.  She was my favorite pug.  I miss her.  She was special to me.”   Isn’t that just so sweet?    He’s been so good about letting his pug, Zoe, snuggle with me while we were here so I could have some pug love.

The best part of Christmas isn’t the gifts.  It’s the moments like these, together with family, letting each other know how much we care.

December 21, 2010

The Book of Sadie, Chapter 1

I decided to use My Digital Studio (MDS) to create a scrapbook of Sadie’s life.   I really want to document some of my favorite memories of her.   I’m thinking of splitting her life into 3 sections.   Chapter 1 is the beginning, when she was first born and came to live with me in Salt Lake City, UT.     Chapter 2 is that time period during my single days after we moved to GA.  So much of her personality developed during this time.   And, the third and final chapter of her life  is when Charlie entered both of our lives.   I’ve been working on some of the pages.   I’m going to include the text from the scrapbook pages here as it’s hard to read when you’re looking at a picture of the scrapbook page

Sadie Jean

December 10, 1999 – December 6, 2010

Ogden, Utah

Chapter 1 – The beginning.

It was February of 2000.   My divorce was final.  My ex had gotten custody of our Rottweiler, Brandi and visitation was too difficult.  I’d always had a thing for pugs even though I’d never met one.  Something in their smushed up faces just spoke to me.  Impulsively, I checked the paper without doing any research on the breed and without knowing anything about picking a reputable breeder.   I called one of the ads, drove up to Ogden, and met the soon to be Miss Sadie.   She was about 4 pounds, 10 weeks old, the runt of the litter, and the last one without a forever home.   I was instantly in love.  She was still deciding on me though.  She’d come up and check me out, let me hold her for a bit and then being the true pug that she was, she’d be off to check out something on the floor.    I took her home with me that day.   I guess it was about the time we got in the car that she decided, “okay, you’re mine.”  (If you haven’t been owned by a pug, you wouldn’t understand.  They definitely choose their humans and you can’t override their choice no matter how hard you try.)  All the way home, as my friend Deb drove, she kept crawling up my arm to snuggle between my neck and the headrest in the car.  It was so cute because she fit perfectly.

The first few days she was with me, I snuck her into the lab where I worked and let her spend the day in a box below my desk.  She was so small I could fit her inside my jacket and no one could tell she was there.  After a couple of days, I had to start leaving her at home while I worked.  Neither one of us was happy about that.  I got her a crate that was intended for a much larger dog so she’d have room to move around and I came home at lunch to check on her every day.

The first time it snowed, she was so funny.   The snow was up to her chest (which wasn’t deep for SLC standards). She couldn’t walk through it, so she just stood there at first staring at me, like “what is all this stuff and where did my yard go?”  Finally, she started hopping through the snow till she found the absolute perfect spot for her morning business.  And it always had to be the perfect spot.   We had to sniff and find a spot, then do a figure 8 (a circle in later years), then decide that’s not the right spot and start over.  After about the third time, she’d have found the perfect spot and could finally go.

While we were in Salt Lake, Sadie met her first birds.   My friend Deb, who was staying with me for a few weeks, had a couple of parrots.  Sadie sniffed at them, but never barked.   It was so cute watching her trying to figure out what these feathered things were.  Even then, she never met a stranger.   I can’t remember her ever meeting a creature she didn’t like- not a person, not any animal, even cats.

I’ve got a pic of Sadie with the birds, but I have to find it and scan it in.  Then I might add it to this page.   Most of the other pages won’t be this text heavy, but I really wanted to be able to tell a little bit of her story.

I’ve started scrapping chapter 2, so I’ll post some of those pictures later.

December 10, 2010

Happy Birthday Sadie. . .

Today would have been Sadie’s 11th birthday.   We lost her on Monday afternoon after a brief but hard fought battle with pneumonia.  Never in my life have I been so touched by an animal.   She was my baby, my princess, my shadow, my lap warmer, my companion, my bed warmer, my friend.

Resting on daddy, a week before she passed.

She was born in Ogden, Utah, December 10, 1999.   She traveled across the country with me, sometimes by plane, sometimes by car.  She went camping in the fall when it wasn’t hot.  She went to Pugfest a few times.  There were many trips to the park when she was young.  She even went to the dogwood festival.  She was happiest in my lap with a chew toy.

Sadie at 10 weeks old

She was quiet for a pug, but the sounds of her life created a soundtrack that filled the house.   I can remember friends being surprised at how loud she was to them.  She could snore with her eyes open.  I was so used to it, that I didn’t even notice it, until this week when it was gone.  Now the house is so quiet.

We spent hours together over the years, with Sadie sitting either in my lap or next to me so that she could still touch me.   At night when I would turn off the TV, she would jump up and run around the house barking and herding everyone to bed.   Heaven forbid that I turn off the TV when it wasn’t bedtime!  She’d be so confused.

She would always choose a pillow over the floor  or even the couch.  A pillow on anything was better than just the object alone.    She was truly a princess.

Princess on a pillow

I can remember being so embarrassed when I would take her to PetSmart.  They always wanted to give her a treat.  She’d politely take it, lay it down on the floor and walk off.  Apparently,  those treats were not good enough for the princess.   I did finally stop letting them try,  she did need to watch her weight you know.

She had such a personality.  She’d  actually listen while you were talking to her.   And she never hesitated to make her wishes known.

Sadie listening to Momma

My life is better for her having been a part of it and emptier now without her.  She helped me through some rough patches in the road and loved me always, no matter what.    I already miss her something  awful.   Rest in peace, Sadie, knowing that you were truly loved.

(There will be more chronicles of Sadie in the near future as I continue to document my favorite memories.  Check back here for updates if you’d like to hear more of her story.)

December 4, 2010

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. . . .

I’m a little late getting to my Christmas cards this year.  All my good intentions have run away!    So I’ve decided to design my cards this year in My Digital Studio and print them rather than hand making them.

Here’s a few of the ideas I came up with.   The first one features my lovely pug Sadie.  She’s such a good sport.  Ahem, I mean model.

Front

Inside

I think she kept the Santa hat on for about 45 seconds.   She’s really not much of a hat lady.

Here’s a couple of more ideas. . . .

Front

Inside

Front

Inside

Front

The last one is a variation on a suggestion my mom made.   My hubby likes the first 2, but not the third one, and he hasn’t seen the last one.

What do you think?  Is he right?  Hmmm, time to make  a decision . . . .

October 3, 2009

It’s time to party with My Digital Studio!

Blog Carnival Logo banner

I’m so excited to share some of the project I’ve made using My Digital Studio!  It’s so easy to use and the result are awesome!

First up,  I wanted to play with card, a layout without photos.    You could do this to set up your card before creating it, saving valuable cardstock, or you could print it and use it as it is, or print it and create a hybrid project by adding embellishments to it.

For All You Do Card (MDS)

For All You Do Card (MDS)

Isn’t that awesome!  I had so much fun creating it and now I think I might have to create it the old fashioned way too.

One of my favorite experiences was hiking to Havasu falls in the Grand Canyon with a group of friends.  It was 11 miles in carrying a backpack.  We camped in the canyon for a couple of days, swam in the small lake at the bottom of the falls in absolutely gorgeous blue green water.  I had so many blisters on my feet, that we rented a donkey to take my pack out, but I walked out myself.  I was so proud and so tired when we got to the top.  I’ve never scrapped any of the pics from that trip – until now.  This page shows a pic of some of us  when we got to the top of the canyon after hiking out (yes that’s 11 miles up hill).   Talk about some awesome memories.

Grand Canyon-001

I can’t wait to do the rest of the trip!

Here’s another scrapbook page that showcases a girls lunch we had on a family trip to Destin Florida.  The background is a picture of the ocean I took at Destin, and then I layered on top.

Destin 09 1-001

Here’s one more scrapbook layout – I’ve had so much fun with this.  I just can’t seem to stop myself!

Best Friends-001

I’ve posted this one before, but I have to leave you with my favorite christmas card ever – and my favorite pug. .  . . .

xmas photo-001

Hasn’t it been a blast to see some of the things you can do with MDS?   And there’s even more to see!  Check out this post for links to the other blogs that are part of the party!   And don’t forget the links are good all month, so feel free to stop by and enjoy the MDS party anytime!

or click on this logo to take you there as well!Blog Carnival Sidebar-001

September 6, 2009

Stampin’ Up! is getting ready to launch My digital studio!

So, I’m having a great time playing with SU’s new digital papercrafting software!  It’s available for purchase on October 1, but in the meantime, I’m previewing it!

Here’s my first project using the new software.

sadie morning-001

This page stars my darling princess pug Sadie – who is definitely not a morning pug!   My mom took this picture a couple of years ago.    It really shows Sadie’s normal attitude!    I thought it was a perfect picture to start with in My Digital Studio!

Okay, so I created this digitally using My Digital Studio -  starting with  a Sahara Sand background, layered with  the Textured background stamp in Soft Suede.  Added the flourishes from Baroque  Motifs in Soft Suede, used a couple of digital Soft Suede Brads, and my text in Whisper White.  I think the layout is quite elegant and would work with a number of different colors and pictures!

Here’s one more!  As you can tell, my little princess is a favorite subject of mine!  Even though she doesn’t like to pose for pictures.  Here’s an idea for a photo christmas card.

xmas photo-001

This uses Garden green as the background.  The snowflakes are from Season of Cheer and are in Whisper White.  The bow is in real red.  I love how My Digital Studio allows me to use images from our stamp collection as well as  embellishments we would use everyday like ribbons or buttons.

Can you tell I’m having fun with this?