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Truce!

Posted on by Hank

r&kMatt’s 36.  Greg is 33.  Robby’s 24.  So you’d think my days of dealing with sibling rivalry were history.

Then came Kemba.  And Baby Ryan.

Technically, they’re not siblings.  (Okay, technically they’re not even the same species.)  But now that Greg and Kelly have moved up from NYC to WePo, Kemba and Ryan spend lots of time on the same turf.  And things, for awhile, had started to get just a lit-tle bit hairy.

peace
Keeping the peace between dogs and baby

Ryan’s first few weeks were a piece of cake.  Per conventional wisdom, we kept Ruckus (Greg and Kelly’s dog) and Kemba at arm’s length from the little prince.  After that first month, we’d allow them a quick sniff and the occasional face-smooch.

Over the next couple of months, as the dogs’ access to the pipsqueak was eased, Ruckus actually started to lose interest in him . . . but Kemba became obsessed with the newest Herman.  He’d hover near him all day, lick him as much as he could get away with, and — if we were all together for a weekend — he’d sleep all night right outside Ryan’s room.  I bragged about Kemba’s devotion to my grandson to whoever would listen.

bomb
Kemba photobombs his little rival

All this was going on when Ryan was, for all intents and purposes, still an inanimate object.  But at right around six months, once he was able to sit up, once he could reach out with his little hands and kick his little feet and motor around in his walker and smile and say, “Ahhh!” — in other words, once he began grabbing all the attention in the two households — things between Ryan and Kemba began to go south.

Oh, it was still fine if it was Kelly who was playing with Ryan.  Or Greg.  Or Carol.  The problem was only when the Beagle Man fussed over Ryan.  While Kemba possessed enough smarts not to show his aggression overtly, he had his ways.  Instead of gently nudging the precariously balanced sitting baby, he’d just bulldoze him over.

aggressive
The duck dog being affectionate. Very aggressively

Instead of giving him a tender, loving lick or two, he’d slurp — with vigor — all over Ryan’s big red cheeks.  His message was loud and clear:  Hey, Beagle Man, remember me??

This was clearly just a Kemba problem, not a Ryan problem.  As far as the little guy is concerned, a couple of dogs two to three times his size are part of his landscape, and have been since the day he opened his eyes.  When one of them knocks him off his sitting position, he just waits patiently for someone to come and set him up again.  When Kemba or Ruckus gives him sloppy kisses, he just wipes his face with his pudgy little arm and goes on with his business.

happy
Happy days are here again. I think.

I wasn’t quite sure how to handle this until I came upon these words of wisdom on Pet Runway’s website:  “Give your dog lots of attention, and divide attention as equally as you can between your dog and baby.”  Duh.  Seemed pretty obvious, after I’d read it.  Why hadn’t thought of that?

So now, if I play-wrestle on the floor for a few minutes with Ryan, I then do the same few minutes of tug-of-war with Kemba.  If I mash my face into Ryan’s onesie and make blowing noises on his belly button, I then have Kemba roll over and I give him a nice, thorough tummy scratch.  Equal opportunity.

Things these days seems to be hunky-dory between Kemba and Ryan.  And if the duck dog gets touchy again, there’s always that gentle little reminder from his PetSafe “buzz” collar to fall back on.

LOOK FOR A NEW BEAGLE MAN POST EVERY THURSDAY. OR PRETTY CLOSE TO THURSDAY. COULD BE WEDNESDAY. OR FRIDAY. LET’S NOT GET TOO OBSESSIVE HERE . . .  🙂  OH, AND BTW, YOU CAN ALSO FOLLOW ME ON FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM



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