A Routine Morning

Every morning around sunrise, I take the dogs out for a walk. By the time the sky starts to lighten, I’m generally into my second cup of coffee and I’ve read Heather Cox Richardson’s “Letter from an American,” checked the weather, read a couple of articles on NPR and the New York Times, and started the daily Wordle.

By this point, Vanessa has read me a few excerpts from The Daily Beast, possibly the Washington Post (to which she recently subscribed), and Twitter. I don’t have a Twitter account. And I don’t like to talk much in the morning, but I don’t mind listening. And she only reads me the juicy parts. I kind of like it.

Though I don’t always show it.

If it’s a lucky day, I’m done with Wordle by the time the sky outside our east-facing bedroom window starts showing off its rosy fingers of dawn (Sorry Homer–the blind one, not Simpson). If it’s not a lucky day, I may have to set Wordle aside and come back to it again. And sometimes again. And occasionally, even, again.

About this time, the dogs start getting restless. Little Lord Mittford, who sleeps at the foot of our bed, unless he can manage to slither up between us in the middle of the night, starts looking around the room and stretching. Cooper (a.k.a. Thumper) either comes into the bedroom, tail wagging ninety beats a minute (thump, thump, thump, thump), or he crawls out from under the bed, tail wagging ninety beats a minute. And Bobo, who sleeps in any part of the house he wants, starts darting in and out of the bedroom. If he licks my hand, he needs to pee.

So, Vanessa and I get up, dress, and she helps me hustle the dogs out the door.

Morning from the top of the driveway.

The dogs do their morning business on nearby bushes and shrubs while I finish buttoning up my jacket, organizing my socks inside my muck boots, and generally readying myself for our morning trip down the hill. I always check to make sure I have at least one leash draped over my shoulders. I’ll need it for the trip back up the hill.

Morning from the bottom of the driveway.

Somewhere between the top of the hill and the bottom of the hill, Mike joins us. Mike sleeps outside, where he likes to spend the night barking. We originally got Mike as a livestock guard dog, which means he should be sleeping in the back of the property with the sheep and goats. But Mike sees his own role as much larger than that. He sees himself as Guardian of the Realm. Midnight barking right under our bedroom window aside, we can’t complain. We’ve never lost a sheep or goat to coyotes.

Morning from the pond.

By the time we get to the bottom of the hill by the pond (about 300 yards from the house), Bobo, Mitt, and Cooper are in a near frenzy, running around, sniffing out deer scat or mole rats or the lingering scent of passing mammals while Mike and I stand on the driveway, looking on, waiting for the excitement to come to an end. Mike has only one basic question for any creature that ventures onto the property: Are you a coyote? If the answer is yes, he will heap the Wrath of Mike upon you. If the answer is no, then help yourself. Take whatever trinkets you want.

A couple of years ago, the neighbors built a house just over the crest of the hill across the road. The roof always makes me think of a ship coming over the horizon. A pirate ship.

Every morning, I am surprised by how quickly the light changes. It’s like, one moment I’m looking one way into mostly shadows and darkness, and then I turn around and someone turned the lights on. The sky has gone from cobalt to pool blue, and the deep rosy fingers of dawn have faded to pastel.

This is when I need the leash. Bobo is pretty directional when we’re going down the hill. I’m not so confident about him going back up. He used to want to eat the neighbor’s dog–a sweet lab mix named Molly–and he would try to get across the fence and do just that on a regular basis. But that was years ago, and Bobo is now older. In fact, he has surpassed me in dog-year equivalence. And Molly died a couple years ago (not, thank-god, because of anything Bobo did).

But old habits remain, so at the bottom of the hill, I leash him up, and we head back up to the house.

A few minutes later, we are climbing the hill. There is an occasional foray to the dock, but there are no mole rats on the dock, so the dogs soon lose interest in that real estate, and besides, they know where the treats are waiting.

The sky lightens.

A few minutes later, and we are back. The dogs have run. They’ve dug for mole rats, sniffed for passing mammals, and rolled in whose-so-ever droppings they wanted to roll in. I have either solved Wordle, or I’m waiting for the answer to bubble up from somewhere in the shadows of my consciousness, or Wordle has kicked my butt, and I am grateful just to be in living in a place where I get to watch the day start afresh every day. Morning after morning.

Have a good day.

Good Morning!

Sunrise from the barnyard.

Morning is my favorite time. We usually wake up around five, or five-thirty if we’re sleeping in, and whoever is the most awake, usually Vanessa, paddles out to the kitchen to push the coffee button. Then, we sit in bed for about an hour, drink coffee, check the weather, read the news, and scroll through Facebook. And lately, I’ve been playing Wordle, but I won’t go into all that now.

Just before sunrise, the dogs start to get antsy. Mitt, who sleeps with us, starts stretching and yawning, and Cooper and Bobo, who sleep on various couches, starting wandering in and out of the bedroom and staring at us expectantly. They know the routine. When I close the flap on my iPad, they get real excited, so I get up and dress, and they bounce around by the laundry room door while I put on my hat, my coat, my gloves and my muck boots. When I finally open the door, they fly across the driveway like they’ve been shot out of a cannon.

They generally run down toward the pond, into the swale where there is a little grove of mostly black walnut trees, and start digging in the soft ground for mole-rats. Vanessa had never heard of mole-rats before, but then she didn’t grow up out in the sticks in Missouri. A mole-rat is any number of little creatures that live underground and make tunnels. Anything, that is, between a mole and a rat, or any combination of anything thereof.

Anyway, just before dawn every morning, three of our dogs (Bobo, Mitt, and Cooper) are Kings of the Mole-Rat Chasers. The mole-rats on our property are generally safe, being smart enough not to be where the dogs are digging. Mike tags along, but he doesn’t have the mole-rat instinct, so he stands back and watches, wondering, I suppose, what all the fuss is about.

I generally take a leash and snatch Bobo by the collar about fifteen minutes into the morning mole-rat foray. That’s the signal for the other dogs to head back to the house, where Vanessa is filling their dog bowls. By they time they eat (or decide they don’t want to eat, which is Bobo’s normal routine), the sun is just rising over the hill.

So we head to the barn. If it’s really cold, like the last several mornings, we’re carrying buckets of hot water to melt the ice that froze on the water bowls overnight.

Vanessa gives all the dogs a treat, which is why they come with us. Treats aren’t as tasty as mole-rats, I guess, but the dogs know they’re a sure thing. Then, Vanessa feeds grain to the goats in the barn, lately that’s Pokey and Justine the Justinator. I feed grain to the sheep and to Buck and Mr. G. over in Buck ‘n’ Ram Palace, on the other side of the garden, and then we give them all hay, at least in the winter time. When we’re not carrying up water, the morning feed takes about fifteen minutes.

Early morning over the sheep pasture.

Which means we’re coming down just when the sun is a few degrees over the horizon. Those are some of the most beautiful times on the farm, especially in winter, when it’s cold and clear, and the slant of light hits the frozen limbs in a particular sort of way. If we’re coming down early enough, and I think I can capture some of it, I will run in and grab my camera to take some pictures.

Robert, not a mole-rat.