Tag Archives: Pugs

Pug luck

Photo by Sneaky Elbow on Unsplash

Are pugs truly lucky? I thought so. I came across an older pug that needed a home. I was excited and couldn’t wait for the day when her kind and wonderful owners would deliver her to me. When she arrived, with quite a bit of equipment and belongings, I was surprised. She was a funny little creature with an energy that was sweet and loving. She was round and strong and moved with purpose. Her step was jaunty and happy. I almost laughed out loud when I saw her and had to restrain myself, because I didn’t want to offend anyone.

I soon found out why Marie Antoinette collected pugs and had at least three and most of her ladies in waiting followed her suit and carried pugs with them. Pugs may be the most loving breed of dog in existence. I’m sure that this can be debated, but this is what I found. Pugs make you the center of their life and watch you raptly as if you are the most wonderful thing they had ever seen in their life. They are the best companions, because they love what you love and wait anxiously for you to include them. They also have thick luxurious coats that were meant for sinking your fingers into. Their fur is like thick velvet and wonderful for sinking nervous hands into. As you pet them, their breath deepens, becomes rhythmic and sedating. Instant stress relief is received from petting a pug.

My pug was 10 when she arrived. She inserted herself quickly into the household routine and established her dominance. Her eyes were huge and bottomless and she followed me everywhere and stared at everything I did. She was the living definition of companionship. She quickly overcame her transition and became an integral part of our life. She was funny. Whirling and twirling when it was mealtime and running to the kitchen whenever I headed in that direction. She loved all food and I had to be careful not to overfeed her. She had transients episodes of thickening due to her tendency to eat, eat, eat.

In ancient china there was a legend that the wrinkles on the forhead of pug signified the triad. The number of energy-birth, life and death, the past present and future, and the trinity. Stroking the wrinkles on a pug’s forehead, would bring good luck and manifest abundance. So, everyday, time is set aside to spend time with the pug and have a love fest for the betterment of my world and everyone else.

Tropical California

I looked towards the small mounds that were California coastal mountains. The mounds were covered with brush and small trees. Heading south towards Mexico, the occasional spring would rise into the low crevices of a  canyon and create a lush almost tropical scene.  A pool of clear, fresh water nestled between the rocky faces and numerous varieties of green  plant life sprouted. Palm trees soared above; their thick fronds heavily festooned with clusters of coconut pods. This land  had been traversed for centuries by all kinds of animal and human life. It was a  luxurious and comfortable home under the sun with morning mists that crept over the mountains each morning from sea. Each day dawned clouded in sea mist  that dissipated as the sun rose and cast it’s glorious bright light over the canyons.

This region of California was the edge of the high desert. The high desert rose from the edges of the lowlands into a drier climate and endless blue skies. It was mostly scrubby and full of brush;  but the canyons were small oases of  lush vegetation and pools of water. Some of these bastions of hydration had been developed into famous hot springs where people from all over the world gather. They came, as they say;  to  take the water for rejuvenation and relaxation.




These mountains were full of history and mystery. Just above the city of Corona were old roads that wound around the hillsides and created passages into Orange County and the neighboring beaches.  The roads dated back to the pioneer days. Cabins of the first homesteaders and abandoned  mines  still existed and waited to be explored. Vintage tools could still be found buried in the dirt roads. The old roads were a local hiking favorite. There were historic homesteads and oddities; such as a wall made of over ninety antique cars to hold back flash floods. There was a hill where an  nineteenth century victorian had stood and was now rumored to be haunted. It was a  favorite Halloween pastime to head up there and try to spot the spooks and  make contact with the netherworlds. Each town along the interstate heading south had it’s story and it’s local folklore.

Most of all, there was beauty. A wild, lush, cacophony of plants, birds and animals that thrived along side civilization. The contrast of dryness and water, sometimes only inches away from each other created unique and beautiful natural environments. Everything from succulents to pine trees grew untamed and created a harmony of natural  life that could only be found in this part of the world. Cougars ranged the mountains with bears. Bluebirds flew in the vast skies with seagulls that were vacationing at inland lakes.

I decided one day to take my dogs on an outing to the local dog park next to the Corona Airport. It was situated in a park with baseball diamonds and a playground. It was the end of the day and the sun was setting. Beyond the airfield, the edge of the Prado basin rose it’s lush, green head of thick vegetation. Just behind the greenery, the dry hills of Chino created a boundary between the inland valleys and Los Angeles county. The sunset was spectacular in hues of red, orange, purple and blue. There was a small bench just at the edge of the park and perfect for viewing the show.

 




Dogs were running about enjoying the last minutes of light and the cooling breeze as darkness descended and cooled the earth. Another dog lover joined me and we had a chat about her pug as we watched the glorious sunset. As the sun descended behind the green skyline, casting it’s rays upward one last time into the purple blanket of night; the silhouettes of palmtrees took the stage. One last vision of tropical nights in Southern California.

Pug McSnore




I walked in the door and the little old pug was snoring on the carpet in the entryway. It was a very exposed place to be sleeping and seemed a bit odd. She was a loyal little girl and probably fell asleep waiting for me. Her snoring was somnolent and every time I listened for more than a minute, I became hypnotized and started to doze myself. She was in a deep sleep and I called her name. She didn’t stir. I bent over and said her name more loudly and still she didn’t move an eyelash. I nudged her and she snored on. Then she stopped breathing. I pushed her and her body moved like a soaked sock full of sand. The thought rushed to my mind that she maybe she had passed, but hadn’t she been breathing just a moment ago when I walked in the door? Suddenly her legs stretched and she inhaled a deep noisy breath and got to her feet. She looked at me and wagged her tail. I proposed to her, “C’mon, let’s get something to eat.” She was off like a rocket and shooting to the kitchen.

mcsnoreThat’s a pug.  They love food.  They love fun.  They most definitely must have descended from the Sybarites.  My sweet little pug even has my scheduled memorized so she knows when it’s the best time to head into the kitchen.   She knows the routine and as soon as she hears my footsteps she’s there to greet me with her huge soulful eyes and dog smile. She spins with joy and snorts to the heavens that it’s time to eat!  She’s expectant and watches my every move. Anticipating a small morsel of something, anything.  She believes in equal opportunity. No food is discriminated against.  She gets chubby quick, so I hold back.  It’s so fun to feed her, but when she gets too round, she can barely waddle.

Ms. Pug McSnore likes to cuddle too. She makes a warm companion,  with a thick coat that feels like velvet. Her little body is warm and comforting and she makes a great winter cozy.  She’s the antidote to insomnia.  Take her to bed and you will quickly find that her deep breathing would seduce any insomniac into the  shadowy land of Nod.  If only physicians could prescribe pug snores rather than sedatives.




Taking a pug out in public like having a living  social network follow you everywhere you go.  Constant exclamations of “Oh, she’s so cute!”, ” I love pugs!”, “She’s so funny!”, ” Can I take her picture for my girlfriend?” follow you as you move through the store, the groomer’s, the dog park and even the parking lot. People are happy when they see a pug and by the end of my errands, I’m smiling unconsciously and I’m happy too.   The world is happy because of this one little Ms. Pug McSnore.