Posts from the ‘Bear’ category

B is for…

Bananas!

Bananas and I have finally come to a peaceful resolution. A whole banana does not sit well with me, but a half does just fine. What to do with that other half…

I’ve been freezing them – first on a cookie sheet and when solid, into a zip bag. Yes, that is more than a half – I had a half and then was testing a 2nd for ripeness to use in NYTimes’ Melissa Clark’s Chocolate Crusted Banana Blondies.

(If you’d rather see the video, look here )

Oh, my – these are good…they are really, really good.

The bottom is a chocolate cookie crumb crust. I used Jennifer Perillo’s Chocolate Snaps for the chocolate wafers specified in Melissa’s recipe. I baked them just a wee bit longer than normal and stored them overnight in a covered but not airtight, container. They were nice and crunchy and much better than storebought.

The blondie top: bananas, brown sugar, browned butter and I subbed half rye whiskey which is bourbon-ish and half vanilla extract, for the dark rum – that top, it is a banana-walnut caramel top…salted.

Like I said, these are really, really good. I might back off just a bit on the brown sugar next time, but that is my “not so sweet tooth” talking.

YUM. I have a package put aside for my UPS guy for tomorrow’s delivery. He will love me.

What else is “B” for???

Bear!

Sweet Bear, in a spot of sun, late this afternoon.

And Bob!

Easter Morning

As the sun came up.

Waffles (Buckwheat-coconut!), pineapple and sausage for Easter breakfast.

An Easter Robin…first Robin I’ve seen this Spring!

A little rib roast getting ready for the oven. Dinner will be prime rib, fresh horseradish, baked sweet potato, white beans and braised greens.

It is a beautiful morning. Happy Easter!

Today

Today, March 28…it is Karl’s birth day. It was some 7 weeks from his birth day that he came to be with me and his cat brother, Gus, but we always celebrated the day he was born as well as the day he came home.

It is also 16 weeks exactly since Bear’s first TPLO – his right leg surgery.

So today we celebrate Karl’s birth and Bear’s 16 week post op – right leg – a GOOD day!

AND…FedEx brought a gift to help in all…

Last week, I ordered 2 prints “on wood” from Simply Color Lab. Simply Color Lab is my go to lab for prints, gallery canvas prints and now prints on wood.

I am so very pleased with the prints on wood.

They made me cry, but with joy and with pleasure.

I’m not sure this is the best place for these…I think they need a space that allows a little more space…

I’ve found, that for me, sometimes I need to live with things for a bit before I know where they belong.

For now, these dear reminders of my dear Karl – they are in a good place.

Sixteen weeks for the right leg and Two and a half weeks for the left leg.

We had a good day of walks.

And time outside with Bob.

Today.

Morning Mountain Walk

Just before 8:00 a.m. this morning on the front part of the loop walk. We aren’t walking the entire loop but the start and end are mostly flat and add some variety in view and smells for me and Bear respectively :) !

It felt brisk at 30F, just before sunrise – perfect for a morning, mountain walk.

Beardog in the sun

52F…sunny, warm, a soft breeze high in the trees.

We walked. Walks are going well with Bear using both legs normally. He still rests most weight on the right leg when we stop but has been peeing off the left making me just a little nervous.

These last sunny days, he has resisted coming in after a walk and so have I.

Beardog in the sun.

***photos from my phone camera

T.P.L.O.

TPLO: Tibia Plateau Leveling Osteotomy = the surgery Bear has had on both stiffle joints, aka knees.

Tibia – lower leg bone
Plateau – an area with a relatively flat surface
Leveling – to make level
Osteotomy – a procedure whereby a surgeon removes a wedge of bone near a damaged joint

Following is a link to a one page article about TPLO, including some of the why and why both knees – if you don’t feel like reading all, there are some xray images about 3/4 of the way down that are very clarifying.

Link: T.P.L.O. Article

Bear’s tibial plateaus, before the surgeries, were sufficiently steep to predispose him to cruciate ligament tearing. Add his propensity for leaping and his early life in a fenced yard where he might have run to the fence and then come to a quick stop – all are contributing factors to potential cruciate ligament damage.

Last Fall he started picking up his right leg. It is a bit of a mystery as to why that leg seemed worse as ultimately there was more damage to the left.

Before Bear had the TPLO in the left leg (2nd surgery), the femur (upper leg bone) sat far forward of the tibia indicating that the cranial cruciate ligament was torn completely, allowing this scenario also known as drawer motion.

Now, after surgery, the xray shows the femur centered directly over the tibia and the tibial plateau is at an 8 degree angle vs a 29 degree pre-op angle. The leveled tibial plateau now supports the femur, even in the absence of the cruciate ligament, i.e. Bear has a stable knee(s).

If you read the entire article, the end of it explains the need for low activity, slowly increasing as the bone heals. A fall, a twist or too much weight (hard landing) can stress the screws and plate to breaking point (surgery blow-out) until the bone has healed from the break (osteotomy) made for the plateau leveling.

The trick in all of this, for every dog … they tend to feel very, very good, very, very soon after surgery. All is now in alignment. The torn stuff that can catch and pull has been removed. After the post-op discomfort has gone, they are raring to go. But the bone and probably the supporting muscles are not.

My situation is fortunate in that I work from home and so Bear can be with me, supervised in a room where it is hard for him to get into trouble. We can take the frequent, gradually longer walks that are prescribed for the strengthening of supporting muscles. We can take rides in the Jeep that allow him to look around, relieve some boredom and use some energy. Dogs whose people work outside the home must be crated when left alone unless there is some room that is small and safe. I remind Bear that despite having to endure these surgeries, he is one lucky dog to have the situation that we do :) !!

We have 6 2/3 weeks of gradually longer walks. At week 4 we can start some functional strengthening…sit to stand, figure 8’s, trotting. At week 6 we continue the strengthening with up and down hill walking, figure 8 trotting…you get the drift – gradually increasing activity level and moving slowly back to normal.

The desired outcomes:
no knee inflammation
full range of motion at the knees
full muscle recovery
complete bone healing
halt to any osteoarthritis
return to pre-injury state at 16 weeks

I talk to Bear and tell him the why and what we have to do. We’ve done this once and I am confident we can do it again: one week at a time.

***Comments are open for this post. If there are any other questions, ask away and I will answer if I can.