Lexy’s Little Angels Dachshund Hospice and Hotel

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Hospice care for elderly, terminally ill, or emotionally damaged dachshunds, and pet sitting dachshunds for owners who travel and do not wish to kennel their dogs.

Is this a handsome pair or what?  They are my newest fosters, Bernie and Bandit.  They are brothers, three years old, cr...
04/08/2024

Is this a handsome pair or what? They are my newest fosters, Bernie and Bandit. They are brothers, three years old, crate and house trained, use a doggie door, and are available for adoption through Happy Tails Dachshund Rescue. While adopting them as a pair would be ideal, if there is enough interest in them individually that is a possibility as well. They will be available to meet at the PACC911 adoption event in Surprise this coming Sunday. If you are looking for sweet, friendly, fully vetted dachshunds with all their manners and training done, come out and meet them. You can get an adoption application at [email protected].

Watch your dogs like a hawk in this heat.  I just lost Tay to a heat stroke.  She was outside too long and I got her in ...
17/07/2024

Watch your dogs like a hawk in this heat. I just lost Tay to a heat stroke. She was outside too long and I got her in and cooled off, she drank water, I gave her some subcutaneous fluids, she was resting comfortably, and she suddenly seized and did not recover. I was thinking I had better take her to the vet just to make sure she was recovered. She was over 17 years old and had gotten kind of frail in the last year but was healthy enough. We just did her senior blood and wellness exam and all was well. This heat is a killer, and the dog does not always know when they are overheating. This was my fault for not seeing that she had been out too long. Rest in peace my beautiful girl…we will all miss you.

17/07/2024

My surgery date for my knee replacement is set for September 18. I will only be in the hospital overnight and then home and into physical therapy. Not my first joint replacement, so I know what to expect. I will not be taking any visitors to Lexy’s for the last half of September and all of October but should be ready to go by November if there are no complications. There is never a good time to be out of commission for six weeks but I have put this off and put this off, and now I have no choice. I have all the walkers and elevated toilet seats and such that I need to make this work.

05/07/2024

I would like to address a topic for which I am liable to get a lot of pushback, and since I am not a dog trainer lots of you will wonder where I get off, but I have had LOTS of experience with dogs, mine and those of others, so here goes. The issue is the term “housebroken.”

I pet sit for dachshunds whose owners are traveling. One of my prerequisites is that the dogs are housebroken since they stay in my house with my pack of dogs who are housebroken. I have a doggie door that I take the time to assure every one of my visitors know or come to know how to use during their stay. It is a double soft flap, and in fact the flaps are taped up in the open position always since I have one little dog who is very face shy and just cannot get the hang of that second flap.

There are two types of housebroken, one of which I will call leash broken and one of which I will call truly housebroken. The difference is in the mental association of what to do when they need to go to the bathroom.

The truly housebroken dog, when they get the urge to go to the bathroom, seeks a way to get outside, because in their mind that is where you go to go to the bathroom. They either make use of a doggie door or they go to the door and scratch and whine/bark, or they come to you and indicate their discomfort and need to be let out. The truly housebroken dog rarely goes inside because it never occurs to them to do so. They have associated going to the bathroom with going outside. Not that, due to illness or extenuating circumstances like hours of relentless fireworks, they won’t relieve themselves inside, but it is a rarity. I have one dog who will literally go out and stand in the pouring rain to go because the thought of fouling where she lives is so foreign to her. This is a dog who lived at a puppy mill in a wire cage for the first four years of her life, so housebreaking was not part of the agenda when she was a puppy.

The “leash broken” dog associates the leash and a walk with the duty (notice I did not say need) of going to the bathroom. When the leash is snapped on and they are taken outside for a walk, they know that they are supposed to go. The exercise is usually the stimulus. But if you snapped on the leash and walked them around the house, or took them to a mall and walked them around, they would still go to the bathroom. It has nothing to do with location and everything to do with circumstance of walking on a leash. These are the dogs who wake up in the morning and the first thing they do is have a wee on the bedroom carpet. They then go to have breakfast and then casually move to the other side of the kitchen island to take a p**p. Or worse, they will take the time to go all the way back to the bedroom to p**p on the carpet when the doggie door in the kitchen is RIGHT THERE and a closer option.

But…but…but isn’t that how you housebreaking a dog? You take them out on a leash and praise them for “doing their business” outside? Yes and no. Once you have introduced the concept of going to the bathroom outside, take them to the same spot every time to use the bathroom. Let them associate that location with relieving themselves. Make sure it is away from the house, perhaps somewhere other dogs have been so they get the idea and have smells to indicate what they are supposed to do, and don’t leave that area until they do. Then continue on your walk. Let going outside become the primary reason to go to the bathroom rather than walking until they do. They can then enjoy the walk, as can you. Once they start taking you to that spot immediately to use the bathroom, that is the beginning of housebreaking. It means they understand that they are to go there to relieve themselves, not just w***y nilly as they are cruising around the neighborhood.

When dogs come here to stay, and usually on their pre-stay visit, I establish whether they use a doggie door or not or if they have a yard there they can go outside free. That tells me if I am going to be cleaning up after them or not.

When I have more than a couple of visitors I use p*e pads like crazy because I know that dachshunds are notoriously hard to house train and most who come here are not. Especially when they come in and p*e on the rug or the couch corner in the front room 5 minutes after they get there there with their owner looking on in horror. “They NEVER do that at home!” If they will p*e with complete lack of control right in front of us, that tells me they are not terribly housebroken and I have my work cut out for me.

So try harder, folks. Don’t just assume because they toilet on a walk that they are house trained. Figure out whether your dog loves going on a walk and using the bathroom happens secondary to that or do they know when they need to use the bathroom that they should seek the outside.

Okay…comments?

05/07/2024

Fourth of July aftermath. They only fretted for about the first hour, and after I had the ribs for dinner that was all they could think about. Everybody survived and got through another noisy holiday!

05/07/2024

I HAVE SOLVED IT!!!

Are your dogs freaking out because of fireworks? Cook a big rack of barbecue ribs in the oven so the whole house smells, then pull them out, cut them up, and eat them VERY SLOWLY and VERY NOISILY, dropping your fingers down for a sniff every few minutes. Trust me when I tell you all their attention will be on you and not on the noise outside. By the time you are done the noise outside is background noise and they are pretty much over it. Of course, the dogs have to be dachshunds, and you have to be eating the ribs on a TV tray while watching Yellowstone reruns for the umpteenth time.

03/07/2024
Song for HeidiI know your lifeOn earth was troubledAnd only you could know the painYou weren't afraid to face the devilY...
03/07/2024

Song for Heidi

I know your life
On earth was troubled
And only you could know the pain
You weren't afraid to face the devil
You were no stranger to the rain

Go rest high on that mountain
Girl your work on earth is done
Go to heaven a-shoutin'
Love for the Father and the Son

Thanks to Happy Tails Dachshund Rescue for this timely posting!
01/07/2024

Thanks to Happy Tails Dachshund Rescue for this timely posting!

26/06/2024

It is with a sad heart that I say goodbye to Heidi. She passed this afternoon at home, which was my wish for her. Her dementia was getting quite advanced and I knew her time was short. Heidi came from a hoarding situation and never in all her years trusted a human. Over the 12 or so years I had her she loved me in her own way, and I let her live life on her own terms. Vet visits were traumatic but necessary and she always cooperated, but the instant I took off the harness and leash she was away and back to her feral self. Early on I tried to befriend her and only made her distrust of humans worse, so I quit. In the last year as her dementia progressed she let me pet her and love on her a little before she would suddenly remember and scurry away. She did not suffer and is at peace finally. I will never get over feeling like I let her down somehow because she was never able to know a loving hand…her early damage was just too severe. Maybe God can fix that.

Look at this beautiful face.  This is Oliver.  He is a Chiweenie, about a year and a half old.  He stayed with us about ...
25/05/2024

Look at this beautiful face. This is Oliver. He is a Chiweenie, about a year and a half old. He stayed with us about a year ago when he was a baby and he and Sedona formed a fast friendship, being about the same age. Today when they met again they picked up right after they left off, running and playing and wrestling. They were joined by the dapple gang, and Zippy and a few others, and it was a lively afternoon. He is just here for the long weekend but he will make the most of it!

Just had the cutest little guy for the weekend.  Meet Paul.  His owner decided years ago she would have a dachshund and ...
20/05/2024

Just had the cutest little guy for the weekend. Meet Paul. His owner decided years ago she would have a dachshund and his name would be Paul. It’s not a great picture because he was never still. Wiggly, active, friendly, loving, all the right stuff, and completely besotted with Sedona. He got along with everybody. I look forward to his next visit. Please pardon the bits and pieces on the floor…I have a toy killer staying with me.

12/05/2024

Mother’s Day. A time for reflection and memories and to ask yourself a few important questions.

WHAT was I thinking getting this many dogs?
WHERE did they all come from?
What do you have in your mouth?
What was your name again? Let me see your collar tag.
You know if you run out that door I am going to have to chase you, and running bent over screaming “COME HERE, COME HERE,” is a very poor look for me.
When did I start keeping Chewy in business?
I wonder if I could exist on grain-free kibble?
WHO did THIS?
When did my vet bill surpass my mortgage?

And lastly,
HOW much do I love you all? (Not sayin’ I would not trade you for the Ferrari I could afford for what I spend on you).

We have lots of visitors here this week.  The two smooth red sisters, Wilma and Harriet, are back for almost a month whi...
12/04/2024

We have lots of visitors here this week. The two smooth red sisters, Wilma and Harriet, are back for almost a month while their parents go on a fabulous transatlantic cruise. They did a little extra eating over the winter but are running it off here. They claimed their chair once again.

The two dapples in the photo are not together but happened to be still. The one in front is Dexter, and he is here until end of May since his mom is having hip replacement surgery and did not need her baby underfoot during her rehab.

The lovely girl behind him is Clementine, and she comes to us with Roy Rogers, my favorite Yorkie. I agreed to sit Clementine back when she was younger and looked like a dachshund/miniature Aussie cross. She kinda kept growing, so they did DNA testing on her, and she is half mini Aussie, but the other half is Bassett Hound. Their parents are in Hawaii for 2 weeks.

Last is the lovely smooth red in the bandana. That is Schatzi. You may remember I was her foster mom and she was adopted by a lovely couple who split their time between California and Prescott. They are in D.C. for a week on a museum junket, so Schatzi came back for a week with her bestie, Sedona.

That makes 16 at my house this week, and while some will go home and others will come in, that is going to be my number for the rest of the month and probably May. With this many dogs I don’t travel much any more, but I get to do it vicariously through all their owners who bring me stories and pictures and little mementos from their trips.

18/03/2024

It is with a sad heart that we helped our oldest hospice resident, Scooter, to the bridge this morning. His quality of life had diminished in the last six months and he was in pain with arthritis and weak tendons in his legs no matter what medication we tried. Most mornings my first job was to help him get up off his bed and started towards the kitchen for breakfast. He spent most of his time sleeping on his bed in the TV room and really did not want the other dogs near him. Just about anything I tried to do with him or to him got me bitten as I think he was afraid of hurting. He is pain free now and with the others from Lexy’s who have gone before to wait for me at the bridge so they can show me the way. RIP Scooterman.

11/03/2024

I am afraid once again I need to stress procedures at my house when dropping off or picking up dogs. Recent visits have resulted in pure pandemonium for me and all the dogs because clients come in, leave the door open, stand around, wander around, go over and stick their hands over the barrier to pet the 16 or so jumping/barking/excited dogs on the other side, and then they are amazed when someone bites their hand. Please, please, PLEASE follow my instructions to keep both dogs and visitors from harm.

Dropping Off: when I answer the door come in quickly and SHUT THE DOOR behind you. Do not immediately turn your dog(s) loose. Sit down holding your dogs. The quicker you sit, the quicker mine will stop barking. If you turn your dog loose in my living room, the FIRST thing they do is p*e on the rug or the furniture, both of which are slowly being ruined by visitor dogs because mine are not allowed in there. When you are ready to leave, hand me your dog(s)’ leash and make a quick exit and SHUT THE DOOR. If one of my dogs breaches the gate inside, please give me a moment to get them back behind the barrier…DON’T OPEN THE DOOR.

Picking Up: once again, come in, SHUT THE DOOR BEHIND YOU, and SIT DOWN. I will get your dog to you. DO NOT go to the inside barrier and try to lift your dog over. That will result in somebody getting bitten. I will try to have all your dog’s belongings (and maybe your dog(s)) already in the front room. Please stay seated as much as possible. The more you are up and walking around, the more noise my dogs will make. Don’t try to get in and out in a hurry…that NEVER ends well. DO NOT open the door and attempt to leave with your dogs if any of mine are in the front room. I know which ones will make a dash for freedom and I am incapable of chasing them. If they are a visitor or a new foster and they get out, they do not know where they are and will run blindly.

I am asking this in the name of my sanity. I will often have 14-18 dogs here. It is chaos if they all bark or if they get out. And in that chaos somebody or some dog is going to get hurt. I cannot stress shutting the door enough. Standing around chatting with an open door is a recipe for disaster. I have been very lucky in six years I have only had two escapes, but one of them ran blindly up Waltann and right into traffic on 51st Avenue and stopped traffic (and my heart).

Thank you in advance for helping with this. I look forward to every visitor and don’t want to greet you with the news that your dog escaped and ran away, and I don’t want you to end up in urgent care because you couldn’t wait to see your baby after a trip.

This is Lucy practicing her paw lift.  She is my newest foster from Happy Tails Dachshund Rescue.  She came from an unha...
12/02/2024

This is Lucy practicing her paw lift. She is my newest foster from Happy Tails Dachshund Rescue. She came from an unhappy home and needs some time to normalize, and my pack is just the gang to get her there. She has been in an apartment and I have never seen a dog enjoy her freedom like this girl. She just goes in an out the doggie door like she cannot believe she can, like someone is going to take it away or it won’t be there in the morning. She will get her vetting done later this month and then she will be ready to adopt. She is sweet and friendly and gets along with all my dogs. She is very frosty in her face but is only 8 years old.

Carlos is back for his first weekend of the year while mum and dad go skiing in Colorado.  He is such a sweet dog and al...
27/01/2024

Carlos is back for his first weekend of the year while mum and dad go skiing in Colorado. He is such a sweet dog and all the other dogs just love him. He has always been a little on the portly side, but mom switched him to The Farmer’s Dog dogfood which is made and portioned especially for him, and he has lost 3 pounds and looking very slimmed down and handsome!!

12/01/2024

Rainbow Bridge: Setting the Record Straight
Most anyone who has loved and lost a dog has most certainly heard of the poem, Rainbow Bridge, a tribute to pets that have passed. The poem has touched the lives of millions of pet lovers around the world.
Most often, it has been shared, posted or inscribed with "Author Unknown" attached to it. Paul Koudounaris, an art historian and a founding member of The Order of the Good Death, was on a mission to find the poem's true auther.
Through his research, Koudounaris found records of 15 separate claims filed under the title "Rainbow Bridge" with the United States Copyright Office, dating as far back as 1995. He compiled a list of 25 names he found that had any connection to the poem. Then, he found the name Edna Clyne from Scotland, in an online chat group. A little Googling led him to the name Edna Clyne-Rekhy, whose authorship of a book about her late husband and their dog made him jot her name onto the list — the only woman and the only non-American.
"What initially would have seemed like the most unlikely candidate in the end turned out to be the most intriguing candidate and, of course, the actual author," said Koudounaris. When Koudounaris contacted 82-year-old Ms. Clyne-Rekhy, she had no idea that the poem she had written more than 60 years ago to honor her childhood dog had brought comfort to so many people.
Major, a Labrador Retriever, was Edna's first dog. "Major was a very special dog," said Edna. “Sometimes I would just sit and talk to him, and I felt that he could understand every word I said.” Her mother used to ask how Edna had trained Major to be so gentle and obedient, and she still laughs about the question, explaining that she had never trained him at all, it was natural between them.
Major died in 1959, when Edna was 19 years old. The day after he passed, Edna found a notebook and pulled a piece of paper from it. As she began writing, she felt as if Major was guiding her pen.
"Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge," the poem begins. When she was finished, she wrote "Rainbow Bridge" at the top of the piece of paper, then showed it to her mother, who responded, "My darling girl, you are very special." Afterwards, she put the piece of paper away and didn't show it to anyone else for a long time.
Years later, she showed the poem to her husband, Jack Rekhy, who suggested she publish it. But, Edna didn't want to, telling him it was something private between herself and Major.
Eventually, Edna typed up a few copies and handed them out to close friends - but she did not add her name on those copies. As more and more people shared the poem, it became cut off from its source.
By the early 1990s it had crossed the Atlantic. In February 1994, a woman from Grand Rapids, Michigan, sent a copy of Rainbow Bridge that they had received from their local humane society to the advice column Dear Abby. It was published with a comment from Abigail Van Buren (Dear Abby), "I'm sure that many readers will be as moved as I when they read it. I confess, I shed a tear or two. Regrettably, you did not include the name of the author. If anyone in my reading audience can verify authorship, please let me know." The letter provoked an overwhelming reponse with mailbags full of letters from pet owners who had been touched by the poem.
When Koudounaris reached Edna, she was surprised he found her, and the reason why. She told him everything, inluding that the original poem sat in a box in her attic marked, "If you can't find it, it's in here."
Edna confessed to Koudounaris that when she took the poem out of the box to take photos of it for him that she began to cry. The memory of Major in the poem still carries that much emotional power for Edna.
"More than anything though, she is simply flattered that something she wrote so long ago has resonated with such a vast number of people—the fact that it has comforted so many is the greatest possible homage to her love for Major," Koudounaris said. "She knew nothing about the inscribed tablets in pet cemeteries.

She had also never heard the abbreviation ATB. I had to explain that it meant 'At The Bridge', and that there are entire mourning groups based around those three letters, which signify the pets waiting to meet their owners at a place she invented for Major."
"As a concept, what nineteen-year-old Edna envisioned is a kind of limbo where deceased pets are returned to their most hale form and cavort in newfound youth in an Elysian setting," wrote Koudounaris. "But it is not paradise itself. Rather, it is a kind of way station where the spirit of an animal waits for the arrival of its earthly human companion, so that they may cross the Bridge together, to achieve true and eternal paradise in each other’s company, and to thereafter never again be parted."
Koudounaris asked one question of Edna that took her aback during their discussions. What advice could she share for someone suffering from the loss of a pet?
"Her response was then immediate – get another pet," wrote Koudounaris. "She said that the relationship with a new pet will never be the same as the relationship with the old one, but it can be equally special and loving in different ways."
Shown: A recent photograph of Edna with her dogs Zannussi and Missy. Courtesy of Edna Clyne-Rekhy
Credits Goes to the respective owner 🌷

31/12/2023

THANK YOU!!!

From all the rescues and sanctuaries and shelters, to everyone who donated, contributed, boarded a dog, sent us a dog in need, comforted us when we lost one of our old friends, cheered us up when we were down, cheered us on when we felt like quitting, said “yes you can” when we did not think we could, said “good for you” when we did, and said “thank you for what you do” when we were just doing what we love and giving back to the dogs who have given us so much joy.

We are thankful for a wonderful year and looking forward to the next one with lots of two-legged and four-legged friends. Keep your babies safe this weekend and ring in a new year with hope and love!!!

28/12/2023

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Well here it is December 28 already. Hope everyone had a great Christmas. I had an absolute herd of 20 dogs so it was lively and noisy but fun. Many have already gone home but I will have some here for New Year’s Eve.

Speaking of which, are you doing anything to mitigate anxiety in your dogs over fireworks? They are bad here because we are rural and seem to go on for hours. I have already started the ramping up of CBD in their meals as it really seems to help ease their fears. You can also put cotton balls in their ears to muffle the sounds. Play the stereo or TV a bit loud, close windows and doors, even pulling the drapes muffles it some. Play with your dogs, keep them occupied, give them toys and puzzles, anything to distract them. No matter what I do I end up with five or six huddled in my lap around midnight. We get through it but it is not very fun for them.

All the kids are healthy and happy. Little Sholo continues to amaze me with how she functions with no sight. Sedona continues to grow into a really beautiful dog. The two dapple “ferret boys” are happy and well settled here now. All my aging pups are moving a little slower but still moving. Tay, Havasu, Heidi, Yuma, and Scooter are all in the 16-17 yo range, Trixie and Princess are in the 13-14 yo range, but everyone is healthy and happy with no chronic problems. I am truly blessed to have such a group of little friends.

Here is hoping we all get through the new year celebration with no ill effects and that 2024 is a great year for everyone.

23/12/2023

Let’s start a new game. You can name your dachshund anything you want, but it has to be after a famous figure…not necessarily human, just a household name. I’ll start.

Bark Ruffalo.
Peebiscuit.
David Bowowie.

Just keep adding on as you think of one.

20/12/2023

This Merry Christmas goes out to all the animal lovers in the world. The ones who would give up everything they have to save their pet. The ones who rescue and foster and adopt. The ones who work tirelessly to raise funds and awareness for animals in need. The ones who donate funds and blankets and food and a myriad of other things needed by rescues and shelters. And the ones who understand and tolerate and support everyone who does these things. The animals survive and thrive because you do.
Christmas is the time of giving, but thank God for these people the other 364 days of the year as well. Have a blessed holiday, hug your dog or cat or horse or ferret or whatever a bit closer, and give thanks for the animal lovers among us.

Now THIS is what rescue looks like!!
12/12/2023

Now THIS is what rescue looks like!!

21/11/2023

And how are you spending your holiday week? I am spending mine in dachshund heaven! Lots of visitors and residents enjoying the sunny day.

19/11/2023

One of the dapple gang got adopted today. Mayer was a foster from Happy Tails rescue and he went to live with a kindred spirit who has a soft spot for aging doxies. He will have a 13-year-old sister and a 1-year-old sibling (M/F?), both dachshunds, and a German short hair pointer who was the decider today. They hit it off, and Mayer went home to his new family. Happy life little buddy.

13/11/2023

Sholo got her stitches out today and has two eyes again. Granted, she cannot see out of either one, but she is happy to get her stitches out and be done with her cone of shame.

She healed beautifully. Apparently the tiny tumor on her eyelid was not so tiny underneath so they had to resect a wide portion of her lid, but they sewed it together and you can hardly tell.

I think she is tired of being rescued. She has endured vaccinations, one of which gave her a mild form of kennel cough for a week; a dental where she lost several teeth; a very invasive eye exam to determine her sight could not be restored, and a surgery with two weeks in a cone and daily meds. She just wants some peace and to not be poked at for a while!

She is a trooper and sailed through it all. Now she can just enjoy her bed and her meals (2 hots and a cot), her buddies, her mom, and her play space without any fear or harm. When I stop and think of how much she went through to survive on the streets and how anybody could dump this little darling, it makes my blood boil. But I calm right back down with a snuggle and a kiss from her.

11/11/2023

Stay safe and strong 💪💪🔥🔥💪

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