The Labraventures of Carbón, Spanish (ex-) foster dog extraordinaire

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
Ok, I'm already in bed so this is going to be short (ha, ha - I know). I'm really trying to keep up with my challenge to myself to write a little something about our day every day. It's harder than I thought! But I will preservere, even if it comes down to incoherent ramblings amounting to "My feet, my feet, my poor sore feet". :D

So, my feet really hurt. Can you tell? I've started using my cane full time now and while it's a huge help, it makes me feel even worse about the state I've let myself get into. I've felt like my body was my enemy for a long time, but I really feel now that it hates me as much as I hate it. Why can't we just trade parts - or the whole thing - in when we need a refresh? Argh.

However to look on the bright side, all this walking has GOT to be doing something good for me. And the cane is good for blocking Carbon from getting particularly tasty bits of nasty former food laying in wait on the ground. I may be slow on my feet, but I'm fast with that cane.

Today it rained and rained and rained some more. Then finally around noon it settled in to just nice and gray and Carbon and I headed out amidst the puddles. We took the tram again and again it was standing room only. Carbon was more of a pro and I got better at snapping up a dog-friendly seat.

May I just say that this TAIL business is a pain in the backside on public transport? I've never had to deal with a tail! Four feet, yes, but NO TAIL. The darn thing goes everywhere. Just when I get the feet corralled, the tail pops out the other end to be stepped on. My strategy with Brogan was always to block his feet inside my own, so my feet were on the outside and would get stepped on before his. I can do this with two front feet, but obviously not the tail. I kept trying to tuck the darn thing in behind one of my feet, but then our perpetually-happy Carbon would wag wag wag and the tail would pop out again into the danger zone. Argh! I have a steep learning curve here. :oops:

Once in Florence, the streets went better today. Unless distracted by food on the ground or another dog, Carbon has become really good at moving through crowds without me having to steer him with the leash. No Italian men kissing him today, but he got massive pets and hugs from a young American couple who were missing their golden retriever. Carbon was happy to be a stand in.

My only goal today was to visit my former Italian school and my favorite teacher pretty much of all time. I first attended Accademia del Giglio ten years ago and with the exception of a couple years have come back for a visit - or visits - every year. My former teacher, Cecilia, used to fawn over Brogan - and put up with his gassiness in his later years - and she did not disappoint in her attentions to Carbon.

She's not a dog person, she's a parrot person. Her beloved parrot who had been with her 35 years passed away a couple of years ago and she went through the whole "No, I'm not getting another" thing but last year got a young African Grey. She was telling me about the challenges taking him on holiday with her. I didn't even know that was possible! It sure made travelling with a dog sound easy peasy. At least if Carbon gets upset he doesn't pluck all his chest hair out, he just tries to stand on my face.

She also says her new parrot talks constantly...even asking her "Che fai?" (What are you doing?) when she's in the kitchen making dinner. That made me think how weird it would be if our dogs could do the same. I think Carbon's - and most Labradors' - monologue would be "I'm hungry, feed me!" pretty much 100% of the time.

I wasn't going to stay all afternoon - she's running a school after all - but I did. I thanked her later and apologised for taking her whole afternoon and she said that's all she planned for the day. "I just wanted to sit and talk!" she said. So we did. :giggle:

I'll stop by tomorrow to say (maybe) a brief goodbye and to take photos. I forgot to take photos! With Brogan we did photos every visit. This was his last visit with Cecilia:

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I walked with Cecilia back to the train station and at first Carbon was really putting on quite a polished show of his new working heel skills. Then we ran into one dog too many - another Labrador at that - and the strain of all that good behaviour kind of popped out and he went a bit off in the head, poor boy. I think it was operator error as well as I was having a hard time working with him, speaking Italian, and limping along fast enough to keep up with Cecilia.

Next Carbon and I walked back into the centre of town and visited my favorite ceramics shop to buy some gifties. I love this one place because they are so dog-friendly and have their own Labradors. Over the years I've met the husband, wife and daughter who run the shop as well as make the ceramics themselves. Today it was the wife. She was very impressed by Carbon and had to show me new pictures of their girl, Ginger. She was the crazy puppy when I first went into the shop with Brogan - now she is seven years old. Time flies!

That was another hour chatted away in my bizarre - but apparently comprehensible - mix of Spanish and Italian. As Carbon exited the shop, I did a little victory dance because there was NO BREAKAGE. In a tiny ceramics shop with THAT TAIL. Whew!

Then it was another tour around the Duomo, a beeline for the railway station and tram stop, another standing room only tram ride and tail-protection dance and BOOM we were home. Despite appearing to wilt of exhaustion in the tram, Carbon did crazy zoomies around the garden with his Bunny. I think this boy needs more free runs and a bit less 'working' time. After tomorrow and our last day in Florence, countryside here we come!

Oops, that wasn't short after all. Quelle surprise. :p
 

Lisa

Moderator
Location
Alberta, Canada
“And the cane is good for blocking Carbon from getting particularly tasty bits of nasty former food laying in wait on the ground.”

Hmmm....I can see how this would work! Maybe I should get a cane!!

Sounds like a lovely day. Glad you had a chance to catch up with your teacher. Hope he enjoys some zoomies tomorrow! B):nod:
 

Boogie

Moderator
Location
Manchester UK
I think it's amazing, given how much you travel, how many close friendships you've developed in all these various countries.

The "tail on public transport" question is a real pickle. Maybe @Boogie has some insights on how guide dog trainers deal with it?
I wish I did! Keir loved to leave his magnificent tail in the way for all to stand on/run over! I could see it and tuck it in, what his owners will do I’m not sure as s/he won’t be able to see what’s happening. I do know that, at school, the dogs are trained to sit by the window seat on buses and trains and the owner on the aisle seat - maybe tail protection is the reason.

.
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
I hope the poor old sore feet are more comfortable after a night's rest.
All rested up and ready to tackle our last big day in Florence. :D

I just reserved a place from tomorrow night until next Tuesday (five nights): Brenda Apartment - Apartments for Rent in Chianciano Terme, Toscana, Italy

I got invited to visit Rome by a Spanish friend, so I picked a place that was still in Tuscany, but that Carbon and I could go in for the day to Rome on the train. Talk about an adventure! Otherwise, it's a good central area to explore a beautiful area that I know a little, but not nearly enough.

OK, off to go get my feet sore again. It's a beautiful sunny day today - that sure does lift the spirits! :giggle:
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
he dogs are trained to sit by the window seat on buses and trains and the owner on the aisle seat - maybe tail protection is the reason.
Yes, I agree it must be. The only time on the tram that I felt his tail wasn't in danger was when we had a window seat and I could tuck him between my legs and under the seat. Hopefully we'll have some luck and be able to get such a seat again!

But I feel better, Mags, knowing it's not just me who battles the mighty tail. :LOL:
 
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The tail is a real risk on public transport, and restaurant patios! I try to get Quinn to sit between my legs while I stand if it is busy on the bus/subway with our backs towards the seats or doors so less chance of getting stepped on as people go by. I don't sit down unless it's not busy at all, because then she will sit or lay beside right in the way of people going by with the tail front and centre for potential stepping. I also try to make sure people see her, and if it's getting risky, I have her stand up. Her tail has been stepped on twice on transit and once on a patio and she gives an indignant look to the stepper!

Sounds like Carbon is doing so well on his travels! I wonder if languages confuse dogs...
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
I wonder if languages confuse dogs...
Carbon strangely has almost zero language comprehension. I've never experienced that in a dog. I'd think he was deaf except I know he isn't. He really only works on hand signals and context. I understand the reason why - little to no human contact as a puppy/young dog - but I really did think that by now with me chattering away, he would have started to pick up on certain words. But no. Dinner? Nothing. Walk? Nothing. Even his own name doesn't really register most of the time.

On the bright side, that means that all the language swapping is not having any adverse affect on him at all.

Brogan on the other hand, knew the word for 'cookie' in five languages. I was very proud of his peculiar multi-lingual abilities. :p
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
My ankle said "No" today. "No," it said, "You shall not walk around Florence all day and up the big hill to take photos and let Carbon free run in the pine forest."

"But I want to!" I said.

"I don't give a cr*p," my ankle said back.

So we didn't.

The end.

Sorry, just kidding. :sneaky:

It was a beautiful sunny day, my last for now in Florence, and I was determined to go up to Piazzale Michaelangelo. Even if you've never been to Florence, you probably know the view from Piazzale Michelangelo...
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If you go up just a bit higher to San Miniato church, there is a wonderful little pine forest that people use as an off leash dog park. So that was my goal today: give Carbon and good off leash romp plus grab some fabulous photos of him with Florence in the background.

However Florence was so mashed with tourists and my ankle was spasming so bad by the time we got from the tram station to the foot of the hill, that I realised that I just wasn't going to make it. Thirty years of coming to Florence and this was the first time I wasn't going to climb up that hill. It made me angry and sad and frustrated.

Then I thought about how this trip so far as been all about doing familiar things in a different way. Backwards, sideways, upside down..but not slavishly following a certain path because that's what I always did with Brogan. So what if my ankle wouldn't make it up the hill? Maybe that hill was still filled with too many Brogan memories. Brogan definitely OWNED that hill. Just look at him in that photo above. I called him the King of Florence in that shot, because he was.

It was time to think about what would be best for Carbon and me to do today. Me with my wonky ankle and Carbon who had had just about enough of being dragged through the too-crowded streets of Florence. At the foot of the hill leading up to Piazzale Michelangelo, I turned around and walked back down the quietest street I could find. I walked slowly with my trusty cane and let Carbon have a good sniff. We limped our way back down to the Ponte Vecchio and then through the back streets to my former Italian school in front of the Bargello. We panted our way up the stairs and flopped onto the bench across from Cecilia's admin desk.

"There are too many tourists in Florence and I'm part of the problem. So I am removing myself from the crowd and we're hiding out here for the afternoon."

And we did.

Carbon had a nice nap, interrupted by lots of art students petting him. I had a nice chat with Cecilia again, not to mention talking with all the students petting Carbon. Over two hours later, Carbon, Cecilia and I walked to the train station together and then said goodbye before Carbon and I got on the tram. I'll miss her until the next time, but I always know I'll be back.

Carbon returned to our little house in Scandicci and I threw the ball for him over and over and over.

It wasn't the day I planned, but it was a darn good day. :)
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
Hola todos, it is Carbon, your favorite Spanish gentleman dog. It is my turn to show you the photos, not all those many boring words, oh no.

Foster lady PROMISES me that it was the last day in the big city of Florence. She had better not be lying to this poor little dog, because I can take it no more. Who knew there could be too many people to pet you? And someone stepped on my toe today! Aye, aye, aye.

We have a very comfortable car where I can travel in true style with my Bunny and Hippo and water and a soft bed. But do we use this car? No! Every day for three days, we leave the house and walk by our car and I looooook at it and loooook at it and you would THINK that foster lady would understand that she needs to open the door and DRIVE me to where I want to go. All this walking! And being in a big shiny long snake train with so many other people. No, no, no.

So mañana, I really want to see some improvement in the quality of this travel business, vale?

At least today we saw the lovely Italian lady in the big building, plus some very pretty señoritas petted me and told me I was handsome. That was very very nice. And the shiny snake train was not TOO bad as I got to sit next to a guapita little chihuahua señorita.

I also got a brand new ball to play with in the garden, so foster lady is not ALL bad.

Except after my dinner we went out of our house again and towards the shiny snake train AGAIN and I said "No, no, no!" and would not move. "Ugh! Carbon, come on...we're just going to the corner to get pizza!" said foster lady. So I went. We waited in a deleeeecious-smelling place and then foster lady got a deleeeecious-smelling box and we went home with it.

And she at the whole thing BY HERSELF. Aye, aye, aye!!!!!

So foster lady IS all bad. She had better take me someplace GOOD in the comfy CAR tomorrow or I will be taking applications for a new foster lady, vale?

Wait, were was I? Oh si, photos.

Here I am in the Piazza della Signoria...laying down because I am soooo tired...
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...until foster lady made me stand up. Argh, and I was just getting comfy.
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Un-necessary scenery shots. Who cares if there is no me? Nadie, nessuno, nobody!
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Here I am laying down again. I am telling you, I am a very tired puppy.
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Foster lady got me to stand here in front of Santa Croce...
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...but not for long.
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Finally we got to got to the nice Italian lady's school again...
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...where I had a very long siesta.
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Then I woke up so that I could look very guapo for my last photo with Cecilia!
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Hasta mañana y buenas noches!
 

Lab_adore

Moderator
Staff member
So sorry your damn foot is giving you so much grief Emily.

Just loving this....thank you! Carbon is so funny when he takes over :giggl: and your exploits are so beautifully described it's like I'm there with you. To make it even more interesting, we are planning a trip to Europe next year and Venice and Florence are on the list! So it's making the trip even more exciting for us as well as giving us some necessary knowledge about what to see and do.

Take care on the next leg and am waiting with anticipation to hear all about it :listening:
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
So sorry your damn foot is giving you so much grief Emily.
It's not that big of a deal, just couldn't get up the darn hill yesterday. I'm sort of worried about Rome, though, as it will be three hours travel each way (albeit in car/train) and then six hours or so walking in Rome. I just heard from my friend who said, "Great, you can spend several days in Rome with us, then." Um, no...that would be ONE day. Don't get me wrong, I'm excited to see her and Rome, but just one day of that and Carbon and I both will be shattered.

Exciting about your trip next year! Carbon is glad to be your virtual travel guide. :tail:

We're off to today for a free run with some proper gun dogs and their breeder here in Florence and then a leisurely drive down to Chianciano Terme. I've planned to do the slow route - no motorway - and stop at San Gimignano and Lidl along the way. Perhaps not of equal cultural value, but...:giggl:
 

Emily_Babbelhund

Mama Red HOT Pepper
We made it to our new place in Chianciano Terme this evening and have more or less settled in. It was a day of positives and negatives and a lot of travel frustrations. I know I am very fortunate to be able to do this trip at all and 99% of the time traveling on my own - especially with dog - is completely my cup of tea. On the other hand, being alone also means that everything falls to me to try to work out and when I go down a panic rabbit hole I have no one to give me a good slap and say, "Snap out of it, girl!". I really needed that a couple times today!

Vacating a holiday rental - even if I'd only been there four days - is always sort of a hot and bothered affair for me. I'm absolutely determined that I will not be the person that ruins it for all the other dog vacationers by not leaving a place spotless. So even though I've paid a cleaning fee, out comes the lint roller, broom and a lot of elbow grease.

My hosts in Florence were very kind, but the place really isn't equipped to handle a very hungry Labrador and to my frustration, they kept coming to let Carbon out or off leash. I'd kept him from eating the garden turtles (though he got their food) and the garden cats (yep, got their food, too) and I thought I'd sussed out any potential dangers. However, out went Carbon this morning while I was madly cleaning and I took just a tad too long to investigate where he'd gone off to. By the time I caught him, he'd discovered the compost bucket and was enjoying a hearty snack of last night's bread and who knows what else. He'd only been at it for less than a minute, but for Carbon that's plenty of time to suck down plenty of ick.

Lesson to me - no matter how much it may offend your hosts, the dog does NOT go off leash and no one handles him but me. End of story. I wasn't mad at the hosts, by the way, I was mad at ME. After all, they don't know what a walking furry garbage disposal Carbon is...I do. :mad:

Despite all gastrointestinal adventures, we got on the road right on time. Unfortunately Sean (my erstwhile Satnav) took me through the airport zone to get to where I was going. This was completely unnecessary and rather terrifying. Horns were honked, hair was pulled and I started to question why I wasn't getting the heck out of Italy while I was ahead.

Happily Sean's fickleness didn't affect the best part of the day, meeting gun dog professional and occasional excellent Labrador breeder Francesca and her three girls, Panci, Joy and Koa. I'll post some photos of these beauties tomorrow, I promise. It was a lot of fun to see Francesca again and Carbon LOVED the girls. Francesca even did some dummy retrieve training with him and gave him his very own special Joywave dummy to take with him. :)

Next stop: San Gimignano. I've been there three times, once by myself in the dead of winter and twice with Brogan in October. All three times I've had easy parking right outside the walls and pretty much the town to myself. Today? Chaos, crowds and parking a mile away. What is it with the tourists this year? It was also 28 degrees, which made the hike up from the parking lot in the back of beyond even more challenging for a black dog and his 'robust' (ha, ha) foster lady.

It dawned on my as I was hiking up the hill and sweating that I planned this whole thing oh-so-wrong. I should have gone to the UK and Ireland FIRST, then landed in Italy in late November. Then again, I thought this detour to Italy was going to be two days in Venice and two days in Florence, not a three week extravaganza! :LOL:

Anyway, I'm rambling but suffice it to say the rest of the day was a sticky crowded mess including more tourists grabbing Carbon, the parking lot gates not letting me escape and not being able to find my new odd little apartment. Tragically my excellent plan to stop on the way at Lidl was derailed by the fact that even at 5pm it was still 25 degrees, much too hot to leave Carbon in the car while I shopped.

So tomorrow a catch up day for German taxes, paying bills and following up on that job interview I had nearly two weeks ago. I think that's part of my panic setting in as of course if I've not heard from anyone in two weeks, it doesn't look so good. And on Carbon's side he had some rather interesting eliminations today, so he may need to go visit a nice Italian vet.

Que será, será...and tomorrow is another day (sorry, I may be mixing up Scarlett O'Hara and Doris Day). Brain not working too well tonight and DEFINITELY rambling. :sneaky:

I'll be back mañana with today's photos!
 
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