Thought of the day
This story has been sitting in draft mode since 2013.
I decided I should try and finish it.
Maybe because we lost Tank around this time, 9 years ago.
Or maybe for some other reason that I can't explain.
But whatever it may be, this is the story of the basset hound we rescued from Utah and how he left a lasting impression on all of us.
And it is a little long so here's a TL;DR:
Tank, our new basset hound who appeared to be the picture of laid-back doggy chill, stunned everyone when he transformed into a four-legged fur missile and made a break for a Chihuahua by the lake.
Let’s set the scene: July 3, 2010, a Saturday. We brought home Tank, a quintessential Basset hound: long ears that nearly touched the ground, short legs perfectly designed for low-level sniffing, and a sturdy, heavy-boned body. Tank looked every bit the laid-back, couch-companion type.
For that first week, Tank was the dream dog: potty trained, listened, traveled well, and—brace yourself—a basset hound that did not shed.
That’s right. I shed you not.
If you’ve ever met a basset, you know they can coat a small nation in fur during a lazy afternoon nap. Tank must have spent his time in foster care gripping onto his hair like it was the last rose on The Bachelor. And I might’ve just been too sleep-deprived from chasing around Kyle, who was only 15 months old at the time, to notice at first. But don’t worry: his talents bloomed, and soon enough, our home was covered in his “basset glitter."
The very next weekend, we braved a trip up to Hayden Lake in Northern Idaho with Mrs. Shife’s family.
During this time, I was a stay-at-home dad taking care of Kyle, so Tank was not my first pick.
I was vying for Sophie, a gloriously chunky, five-year-old basset diva who, by all accounts, would rather nap than chase anything faster than a cheese puff. Mrs. Shife, of course, fell for Tank’s online profile and thought bringing home a 19-month-old with puppy energy—while we already had toddler energy—was going to be OK. Guess who won? (Here’s a hint: it wasn’t the guy writing this.)
It turns out, what caught his eye was a lady strolling her unsuspecting Chihuahua, which, from Tank’s vantage point, looked exactly like a protein-packed Scooby snack just waiting for a headstrong hound to ruin its afternoon.
I should probably do something about that, I thought—preferably before Tank secured a new best friend or landed us on a neighborhood watch list. So off I went, charging down the hill to wrangle our unhinged basset and praying that next time, his Usain Bolt moment involved something less likely to sue.
By the time I caught up to Tank and his target, he was howling louder than a karaoke night hosted by howler monkeys. The Chihuahua looked like it wanted to enter Witness Protection, and the woman holding the leash gave me a look so icy that you would have sworn I asked her if she had a few minutes to talk about her car’s extended warranty. Or maybe she just needed a moment to figure out if she had taken crazy pills this morning.
I apologized profusely.
I will keep moving forward.
I will be the stream.




Tank kind of lived up to his warlike name!
ReplyDeleteHe sure did. We were going to rename him but he was a Tank so the name stuck.
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