Animal Hospice – All of God’s Creatures

Originally published by Evergreen Newspapers

 

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Shorty is a courtly cat.

 

Fluffy and golden-eyed and comfortably plump, Shorty is at all times sober in his demeanor, and wears that perpetual look of supreme self-satisfaction distinctive to the finer classes. Shorty is also a generous cat, and one that doesn’t forget a kindness. Once or twice a year, Shorty dispatches a trusted representative to Mount Evans Home Health Care & Hospice bearing his sincere and tangible regards.

“He’s a sweet man, very friendly, and he always has ‘a peso from Shorty’”, smiles Debbie Schwartz, who accepts each gift in the winking spirit with which it’s given. “His wife was a Mount Evans hospice patient, and ever since she died he comes in once or twice a year with a donation from Shorty. Never anything huge, but always something, and always in person.”

After gratefully receiving Shorty’s benefactions for a time, Schwartz impudently requested a photograph of the reclusive patron. A gracious cat, Shorty was pleased to send one along with his very next bequest.

“You can see from the picture he’s a cat of great dignity,” says Schwartz, with a twinkle. “The man told me it’s his job to take good care of Shorty, because Shorty took such good care of his wife. And he said it was very important to do something for Mount Evans, because Mount Evans took such good care of all of them. And that’s why we always get ‘a peso from Shorty.’”

 

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If Mount Evans doesn’t have much official interaction with the lower orders, it has a whole lot of the informal kind.

 

That’s hardly surprising in a semi-rural mountain area where pets are as common as pine trees and come in a wide variety of people-friendly shapes and sizes. Sallie Wandling remembers one dark and stormy winter’s day when she found herself marooned among the beasts of the field.

“Long before cell phones, texting and twitter, I was visiting a patient who lived on a ranch in Pine,” recalls Wandling, now Mount Evans’ director of community relations. “He was elderly, and a bit grumpy, and he always answered the door in his underwear, even on this day when it was snowing.”

Still, even cranky old exhibitionists deserve proper care, so Wandling troopered on. As bad luck would have it, things only got less comfortable at the visit’s conclusion.

“I must have left my lights on, so my car battery died,” she says. “I went back in and used his phone, but it wasn’t a place I really wanted to wait it out.  I was seriously stuck, sitting in my car, in the snow, waiting for a staff member to come and help me jump my car.”

And yet, as alone as she was, Wandling had plenty of company.

“While I waited a good hour, the patient’s cattle gathered around my car, licking the salt off my windows while my car swayed back and forth to the rhythm of the snow and wind.”

 

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Compassion is a constant value, like the speed of light, or gravity. As a general rule, people who have it can’t un-have it. True compassion can’t be turned on and off at will, or selectively applied. It’s in the bones.

When Mount Evans intake coordinator Evelyn Newton’s 17-year-old cat, Spirit, began her final surrender to time and decay, Newton did both what her heart commanded, and what she was trained to do. She turned the principles of hospice to Spirit. If it was a natural act of compassion, it also imparted an unexpected lesson on the constant value of mortality.

“I was amazed at how similar her journey was to the patients I had taken care of in the past,” Newton says. “She would have good days followed by days of sleep. Her energy level slowly decreased until she slept most of the time. She quit eating solid food, then canned food, and finally drank only water. She lost weight. During this period she found comfort, and could still purr, when lying in our laps.

“Her final days were typical – sleep, difficult to arouse, and a change in breathing habits. The last two days my husband and I took turns holding her on our chest. The last night of 2012 she took her final breath while being held by my husband. She never showed any signs of pain or distress during the whole process.

“I do believe that, in old age, all of God’s creatures die the same way. They just need love, care and support during the process.”

Ghost Hunter – Getting into the Spirits

When there’s a dirty job to do, I do my best to get out of it, and if I simply can’t shirk it, I do it grudgingly.

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I grudgingly tooled up Miner Street and parked in front of the Underhill Museum and Book Store. In the noon light it didn’t look too dangerous – high windows at street level and sun-washed brick and mortar laid in the ornate style that masons haven’t employed for the better part of a century. Sighing deeply, I got out of the car and walked up to the door. It was closed. The spirits had smiled upon me. I took an unremarkable picture of the façade and, since I was already pointed in that direction, continued over I-70 onto Highway 103. Less than two minutes later I was standing among the mute and mossy monuments of the Idaho Springs Cemetery.

It was peaceful there, which is not uncommon for such hallowed precincts, and it was quite deserted. No voices, no chapeaued gentlemen, nothing but quiet stones and gently waving grass. Perhaps my little photo-safari wouldn’t be so troublesome after all, I thought. I am perfectly capable of enduring inconvenience, so long as doing so isn’t difficult or unpleasant. I took a few snaps and headed back across the bridge to the Argo.

CCCargo“Ghost hunters come through here all the time, and we’ve had people on the tour – mostly kids – get really scared and see shadows and think they’re ghosts,” admitted Jim Maxwell, master and chief guide of Idaho Springs’ looming centerpiece, the Argo Mill. “I just ignore all that.”

Ignoring all that is what I do best. I took a couple of ignorable photographs and moved on to the Indian Springs Lodge. At noon on an autumn weekday, the place was bustling with bathers lining up for a shot at steamy, mineral-rich relief in the century-old spa’s storied baths. Jessa Logan was busy in her office, just off the lobby.

“Is this place really haunted?”

“I’ve never witnessed it myself,” Logan began, “but some people say an old gentleman sometimes appears sitting alone in Bath No. 4.”

While I understand the impulse, I’m afraid the “old gentleman” may be expecting more curative vigor than even Indian Springs’ potent waters can deliver.

“And Room No. 205 is supposed to be haunted. Some people say they’ve seen a woman wearing Victorian clothes walking down that hallway.”

CCCbath“Some people” were beginning to make me feel uncomfortable, and is this office getting smaller? I excused myself, snapped an apparition-free shot of Room No. 205, and steeled myself for the main event.

 

 

 

The Phoenix Gold Mine rests snug and isolated in a tight canyon just west of town. Climbing the two miles up Trail Creek Road felt like free-falling out of the safe and civilized and into the mysterious and, possibly, sinister.

“Is the Phoenix actually haunted?” I asked Bob, who, like Cher, Enya, Tiffany and Charo, embraces a succinctness of self-identification.

“Like you wouldn’t believe,” said Bob. “We’ve had National Geographic, Discovery Channel, and a bunch of other folks up here looking for ghosts, and they all found ‘em, too.”

“Ever seen one yourself?”

“Just one time. It was the end of the day and I saw the silhouette of a man pass in front of the light coming in at the end of the tunnel. Nobody was supposed to be in there, so I figured he was up to no good. He passed by real close, so I quick jumped to the side and swung a punch where I knew he had to be. But all I hit was solid rock. Hurt like heck, too. But you should take the tour and see for yourself.”

That sounded like entirely too much not sitting down to suit my taste, and I was about to make my apologies when I saw the boy. Tommy Lowry, 13, was visiting from Illinois with the parents and grands, and the whole troop was putting on hardhats for their guided trip into the heart of darkness.

“They say this mine is haunted,” I told Tommy. “What do you think about that?”

For the record, that’s a journalistically legitimate question, and not merely a cruel attempt to needlessly frighten a child who’s done me no wrong.

“I think it’s a bunch of baloney,” Tommy said, nonchalantly. “It’s just a hole in the ground.”

Hmmm…I may be lazy, but I’m also vain, petty and insecure, and I wasn’t about to let a kid I don’t know show me up in front of grown-ups I don’t know.

“Okay, Bob. Let’s do this.”

CCCmineOutside, the Phoenix is rustic and charming and kissed by gentle breezes. Inside, it’s dim and close and looks like a poor man’s tomb and smells like cold earth and sounds like secrets you’d rather not know. I trailed after the boy and his crew for perhaps a hundred steps before realizing that I was above Tommy’s brand of childish antagonism, and that the best thing I could do was set the lad a good example of mature male behavior by removing myself from the pointless competition at once. I don’t mind saying that I felt a touch of smug self-satisfaction as I raced back into the sunlight and hunched in the parking lot clutching my chest and gasping for air. It feels good to do the right thing.

At home a half-hour later, snug in my footie-pajamas and comfortably reclined, I congratulated myself on a job well done. In nearly three wearying hours of sitting and standing, I’d uncovered lots of non-verifiable evidence for the existence of ghosts without being made to suffer the awkwardness and distress of actually meeting one. Ghost hunting, it turns out, is a business nicely suited to my sedate and sedentary nature, and I’ll be sure to mention that the next time I run into a certain type of dewy-eyed young lady.

“Behind every man now alive stand 30 ghosts, for that is the ratio by which the dead outnumber the living.”  Arthur C. Clarke, from “2001: A Space Odyssey”

Ghost Hunter – Shades of Clear Creek County

“Are you troubled by strange noises in the night? Do you experience feelings of dread in your basement or attic? Have you or your family ever seen a spook, specter, or ghost? If the answer is yes, then don’t wait another minute. Just pick up the phone and call the professionals.”  Dan Akroyd, as Dr. Raymond Stantz in “Ghostbusters”

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It being late October, I resolved to hunt ghosts.

I didn’t necessarily want to find ghosts, just as I suspect that many who stalk the sasquatch and the yeti don’t necessarily want to blunder into mauling range of their quarry, but enjoy the blush of romance that attaches to the endeavor and find that the implied risk of death and/or dismemberment has a magnetic affect on a certain type of dewy-eyed young lady.

While not particularly brave, I yield to no one for laziness, and it occurred to me that I could proceed most efficiently by selecting a locality that has been exhaustively pre-investigated by specialists in the field of paranormal infestation, and then re-packaging their findings as my own. After several moments of arduous deliberation, I chose Idaho Springs, which historic settlement contains both an abundance of ancient buildings and evocative settings wherein the disembodied classes might feel at home, and a crack team of spirit seekers possessing the energy and expertise needed to unlock the area’s macabre secrets while lacking the foresight to legally protect their intellectual property.

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Since its inception on Halloween night back in 2009, Idaho Springs Ghost Hunters has grown to 13 dedicated members (14, if you count the black cat, Athena), who together have fearlessly probed points paranormal from Empire to Alma. Mother and son founders Teresa and Mike Kaminski agreed to meet me at their Riverside Drive home, where I found the club’s entire roster busy constructing a haunted house in the garage.

“It’s just a lot of fun,” Teresa smiled, “and if we’re lucky we might make enough money to buy a thermal camera.”

Haunted houses are a lot of fun, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a little put out that they didn’t already have an $8,000 thermal camera. Somebody else’s expensive and dramatic infrared images were just the kind of high-tech and highly persuasive evidence I was hoping to get for nothing. Still, I suspected that the Kaminskis and their ghost hunting compatriots could provide me with a reasonably clear snapshot of Idaho Springs’ deceased demographic.

“Is this town haunted?”

“Oh, it’s very haunted,” replied Mike, helpfully. “Clear Creek County is definitely a center for paranormal activity.”

I suppose I should have been glad to hear it, but instead felt a powerful urge to race home, climb into footie-pajamas and turn on every light in the house at 11 o’clock in the morning. On the other hand, I’d driven almost 20 minutes to mine the Kaminskis lode of phantom lore, and bolting after a single question seemed kind of lame, even for me. I gulped hard and pressed on.

“Like what?”

“Our first investigation was the Idaho Springs Cemetery,” said Teresa. “We were there for about two hours, and there were a lot of voices saying things like ‘get out’ and saying somebody’s name.”

CCCcemetery“We were spread out all over the cemetery, but almost all of us saw a man wearing a top hat,” Mike continued. “Every time he got close, you started feeling sick and you’d have to move away. It was a little scary, but really cool.”

“On the way home we stopped at the Argo Mill,” Teresa added. “There are voices there, too.”

Mission accomplished. Avoid cemetery and Argo at all costs, I scribbled on my pad.

“Well, that’s great,” I said, rising from the sofa. “You guys have been a big help.”

“Some people say the Underhill Museum on Miner Street is haunted,” Mike declared. “When I was a kid I took the tour, and the place definitely gave me the heebie-jeebies.”

“Oh,” I said, slumping back onto the cushions and silently hoping the Underhill wasn’t next to any of my favorite restaurants. “The museum, huh?”

“And the Indian Springs Lodge is absolutely haunted,” said Teresa, apparently not noticing my increasing pallor and hunted-animal stare. “People say a woman died in room 102, and last year we set up an investigation there.”

“The woman’s ghost communicated with us through our EM detector,” said Mike, warming to the subject even as a chill began creeping upward through my innards. “Spirits often communicate by controlling electronic devices, and we asked the ghost to indicate ‘yes’ with the detector’s green light and ‘no’ with its red light. It answered all of our questions for about 15 minutes, then just quit. It was really cool.”

Cool like the all the torments of the Pit, maybe. Stay clear of Underhill, Indian Springs, I jotted quickly, then rose with purpose.

“I think I’ve got everything I need,” I croaked, wiping the stinging sweat from my eyes onto my sleeve and forcing my lips into something that in bad light could be mistaken for a smile. “If you can just email me some jpg.s of ghosts, we’ll be in business.”

“We don’t have any,” said Teresa, smiling warmly, as if she didn’t know she’d just pronounced my doom. Fact is, she probably didn’t know it because, fact is, the Idaho Springs Ghost Hunters are, to a man, woman and black cat, nice, friendly folks who appreciate the fun aspects of their avocation at least as much as its scientific and philosophical dimensions, and who would never make me go take my own photographs out of malice.

“That’s okay,” I said, dismissively. “I brought a camera.”

But it wasn’t okay, not really. I would have to drive four, maybe even five extra miles to get the necessary pictures, and would be forced to place myself in physical proximity to people of unknown motives and temperaments who are, in fact, undead. Teresa and Mike walked me to the door.

“Whatever you do, don’t miss the Phoenix Mine,” said Teresa.

“The Phoenix has more paranormal activity than any place in this whole valley,” Mike added. “It’s famous for ghosts.”

Criminy.

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‘Anything we can do to help’…

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From little acorns mighty oaks do grow.

 

 

 

Just a week before, a motorcycle rally from Littleton to Bailey to benefit victims of the terrifying assault that occurred Sep. 27, 2006, at Platte Canyon High School was just a hopeful posting on a high-country electronic message board. By Saturday, it was a thundering ribbon of steel connecting mountain and plain and two disparate communities forever united by loss.

The horrific attack on Platte Canyon High School that ended with the murder of 16-year-old Emily Keyes left the small mountain town of Bailey reeling. Like many of his neighbors, Bailey resident Dan Patino felt angry, heartbroken and desperate to do something – anything – to assist the victims and their families. Because fresh air and distance help him think, Patino got on his motorcycle and took a long ride, at the end of which he went online.

IMG_0755“I was surfing Pine-Cam when I saw Dan’s post,” said Donna Sue DeLisle of Woodside. “He needed people to help him pull together a benefit ride from Columbine High School to Platte Canyon, and I wrote back that I’ve done food drives for the fire department and I’ve been pretty good at organizing things. Then I just jumped in and started helping, then other Pine-Cammers jumped in and started helping, and then we went from the swimming pool to the ocean.”

School authorities high and low immediately promised their unflinching support for the project, DeLisle said, and police and fire departments across the front range quickly followed suit. Word spread through Colorado’s biker community like wildfire DeLisle’s inbox was soon jammed with registration requests. “I answered over 3,000 e-mails in six days,” she said. “We never expected anything like the response we got.”

IMG_0753To participate, bikers were asked to contribute to either the “I Love U Guys” Emily Keyes Memorial Fund at any Citywide bank or the Columbine to Canyon Account at any Bank of the West location, with all receipts going to aid Platte Canyon victims. In exchange for their financial and physical support, small-town hospitality demanded that the guests be rewarded with something solid and restorative on arrival.

“Somebody in Pine Junction offered 2,000 breakfast items, and boy scouts troops from all over said they’d bring hot dogs,” DeLisle said. “And I had every kid in Bailey and their mom baking for all they’re worth.”

IMG_0537By Wednesday, local radio stations had picked up the story and offers of support poured in from around the state. A Pueblo business pledged enough soda pop to quench 4,000 parched throats, an outfit in Lake Wellington promised 1,000 pounds of ice, and one downstream woman with a mobile lunch wagon put up 250 sloppy joes.

“People just started coming out of the woodwork,” said Trina Scherr, the Bailey resident tapped as the event’s catering coordinator. “I got people bringing pizza, burritos, soft pretzels, you name it, and it’s all donated. This whole thing is completely volunteer, so every penny goes to the girls and their families.”

On Saturday morning, riders started arriving at Columbine High School at shortly before 10 o’clock, a trickle that quickly became a flood. By 10:30, the right lane of south-bound Pierce Street was a solid line of rumbling metal waiting to file into the school’s sprawling main parking lot which, by 11:00, had become a continuous sea of chrome and leather and generous spirit.

IMG_0544Pink was Emily’s favorite color, and many bikes flew small pink flags maybe 6 inches square. Carefully and colorfully hand-decorated, each was created by a Columbine student to carry a message of comfort to their grieving counterparts in Park County.

Biding their time next to a gleaming Honda BTX 1800 sporting a flag reading “Random Acts of Kindness,” Bea Green and Daniel Rakes motored down from Evergreen to lend their wheels to the cause. “We heard about this on KHOW and wanted to help out,” Green said, watching with some amazement as the last square feet of blacktop disappeared beneath the fat tires and booted feet of bikers from Cheyenne to Santa Fe and every city, town and hamlet in between. “Emily’s family – all those families – deserve our support. We believe in the Emily fund and everything it stands for.”

IMG_0571H-hour for the Columbine to Canyon Ride – or “Emily’s Parade,” as many preferred to call it – was high noon, by which time nearly every parking space at the high school and in the entire eastern half of adjacent Clement Park was packed fork-to-fender with shiny roadware and eager riders. Words of thanks were spoken; balloons released; a favorite song of Emily’s played. Then, led by Park County Sheriff Fred Wegener, an estimated 5,000 Harleys, Hondas and assorted custom choppers roared to life and formed a solid column, two abreast, headed west.

The afternoon’s good purpose aside, Saturday was a splendid day for a spin up Highway 285. Dressed in autumn gold, aspen and cottonwoods stood out in brilliant contrast to the dark pines covering both sides of Turkey Creek Canyon, and unseasonably warm temperatures prompted many riders to shed their heavier gear.

IMG_0628Beyond Conifer, the rally passed small groups of people seated in folding chairs on the shoulder and whole families standing in the backs of pickup trucks festooned with pink ribbons. Young and old, they were stationed along the highway to greet the bikers, and every one held a sign that said, in one way or another, thanks for coming. South of Pine Junction, pink ribbons fluttered from virtually every sign, post and rail along the route and, at the bottom of Crow Hill, residents of Bailey formed a waving, cheering line along the town’s short main street. Just in case someone in the long line of bikes felt inadequately welcomed, busy hands had transformed Platte Canyon High School into a perfect pink storm of balloons, ribbons and gratitude.

IMG_0598Platte Canyon is half the size of Columbine, with commensurate parking, so hundreds of bikes wound up arrayed around the school’s northern sporting field, putting those drivers in excellent position relative to the fantastic chow line assembled there. For an impromptu kitchen that was still adding menu items and staff as the first riders were cruising past Shaffer’s Crossing, the outdoor smorgasbord was a delicious testament to Bailey’s picnic know-how.

“We never expected anything like this,” DeLisle said. “It’s a miracle anything came together at all. Practically the whole community is volunteering to make this happen, and that says a lot about this town and these people.”

IMG_0703Near the end of the 30-yard wood-plank serving counter, Bailey volunteer Jenny Little was dishing savory pork ’n’ beans out of an industrial-sized pot. “I don’t have any idea who made them,” smiled Little, one of at least 100 local volunteers who kept the machine running smoothly. “They just gave me a ladle and put me here.”

A few feet away, Castle Rock businessman Guy Shingleton oversaw a huge convocation of propane grills where a half-dozen folks furiously flipped burgers and rolled frankfurters. “I’m a scout master, so I just brought up all of our cooking equipment to help them out,” he explained. “I also brought 2,500 hot dogs, but I don’t know where we got the 3,000 hamburger patties.” Not that he seemed inclined to care, busy as he was loading empty plates as they passed by.

IMG_0678“I can’t believe how the people in Bailey opened their hearts to welcome us,” said Pete Perez, standing in line with an empty plate and sampling the swift-approaching food-line with his nose. A Centennial resident, Perez didn’t drive his flaming yellow Yamaha V-Star trike all the way to Bailey for grub. “I wanted to show them that we’re all together in this – that they’re not alone.”

How many motorcycles is 5,000? The last bike rolled out of Columbine at 12:58. The head of the column entered Platte Canyon’s green valley at 1:02. For a long moment, that afternoon, an unbroken chain of growling metal and genuine empathy connected the two schools across 40 miles of mountain and forest, binding them together in common sorrow and shared hope. It will be days before the event’s final receipts are known, but the Columbine to Canyon Ride could easily realize tens of thousands of dollars that will do much to heal the wounds of Sept. 27.

“Ain’t no amount of money can replace what these people lost,” observed Mike Bevard, an Elizabeth resident who fully appreciated the importance of Emily’s Parade. “But anything we can do to help them, we’ll do.”

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Walkin’ the Dog

The rank and fashion of Clear Creek County was joined by dozens of hungry competitors from down the hill at Sunday’s fifth annual Westmuttster Dog Day Afternoon, Idaho Spring’s no-holds-barred answer to that other little dog show across the pond.

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Spearheaded by Greg Markle and KYGT ‘The Goat” Radio, the popular event benefits Clear Creek County Animal Rescue League, a welcome yearly shot in the paw for a volunteer organization with about 35 animals under its care at any given time. Sunday’s affair at the football field in Idaho Springs netted about $2,000 for CCARL, a significant boost over last year’s take.

On the make for new homes, four hopeful residents of the Clear Creek Animal Shelter expertly worked the crowd. Peyton, a beautifully mottled pit-bullish puppy, wielded huge, soulful eyes with sweet efficiency while 4-year-old Opie, a cocker spaniel mix, used his friendly good nature to devastating effect. Mabel and Suzy, a spirited pair of black Labrador retriever pups, were not content with passive enticements and took to the field in search of new masters. The dogs had just four hours to win somebody’s heart.

Unlike its pretentious cousin, Westmuttster neither requires nor desires pedigrees of its participants and extends considerable competitive latitude to dogs and owners alike. Snoozer events such as ‘Best Groomed’ and ‘Posture’ have been replaced with nail-biting rousers like ‘Oldest Dog’ and ‘Most Disobedient,’ categories that better reflect the natural aptitudes of man’s best friend.

Master of Ceremony duties were divided between KYGT trollops Poochie and Smoochie, known better to intimates as Dede Waldron and Sally Shriner, and the bearded and mellow Rick Lewis in his Big Doggie Daddy persona. Between them, the trio deftly managed the chaos with a mixture of really bad dog puns and sound advice. “Pick up after your dogs,” Poochie admonished. She asked nicely, but everyone did it anyway.

pooperscoopThe afternoon’s soundtrack was provided courtesy of Jimmy Lewis and the Doggy Dos, a suggestive alias for area trio Jimmy Lewis and the Blue River Rounders. Their soulful music helped ease the terror everyone surely felt at the sight of a lofty stilt-walker looming all over the field in the company of an eerie harlequin. The kids seemed to like them, but what do kids know? Equally disturbing was a six-foot Garfield that hung around the event staging area. Though no one actually mistook that horrible apparition for the nearby cat-shaped pinata, whoever wore that costume was taking an awful chance.

A brutal maze of shallow wading pools and six-inch fences, the obstacle course was the most technically demanding of the afternoon’s events. More than simply a test of endurance and dexterity, a bewildering string of six traffic cones tried each dog’s navigational skills and an intimidating two-bale-high stack of hay measured their courage. Festooned with savory wieners, a diabolically tempting fixture in the middle of the course tested contestant’s competitive spirit. The failure rate was high – okay, total – but then these weren’t pampered, coached and coddled circuit-dogs with hair appointments and personal trainers. They were noble yard mutts with squirrels to chase and holes to dig and within each furry breast beat the heart of a klutzy, easily-diverted, cowardly, true champion.

dogbandTo lend the proceedings due gravity, all judges were drawn from the august ranks of Clear Creek County government and, with official-looking paper certificates at stake, organizers took pains to banish even the appearance of favoritism. On the table in front of each panel, a clearly-labeled bribe jar guaranteed every contestant an absolutely equal chance to bribe the snot out of the officials, a useful lesson for the younger set. How that money was pried from the clenched fists of the politicians and turned over to CCARL is not known. Insert your own acerbic observation here.

Competition for the coveted ‘Best Costume’ ribbon was demeaning and fierce. A brace of Pekinese in pink jumpsuits looked like an only-slightly-less-annoying version the Solid Gold Dancers, and one poor hound appeared to be sandwiched between half-loaves and garnished with mustard as if he were some kind of hand-held lunch entrée. Two contenders rose to the head of the pack.

Looking cool and confident behind mirrored sunglasses, 10-year-old Gus had brought his Dachshund, Lucky, for a third shot at the costume crown. “He was a doggie bag last year,” said the Idaho Springs resident, “and a caterpillar before that.” Neither manifestation had caught the judge’s imaginations so, this year, Lucky was dressed in a bright yellow rain slicker, sort of a Little Morton’s Salt Dog. It was bold, it was clever, but would it be enough?

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“I’ve got the perfect costume this year,” declared Jenna, and 11-year-old from Dumont. Jenna recently discovered a treasure trove of plush toy accessories at a Lakewood mall and her miniature Schnauzer, Amelia, was wearing most of them. Deliberations were intense, corruption rampant. In the end, the judges were moved by Amelia’s flowered blue underwear and Jenna took the crown.

“Lucky doesn’t like wearing the costume,” Gus said, by way of explanation. Bruised but unbowed, he and Lucky set their caps for the prestigious “Worst Breath” contest, for which Lucky was well-prepared. “Today he’s had salami, jerky and cat’s business.” Cat’s business? “He gets into the cat’s litter box.” Oh. That could be hard to beat.

Buoyed by their success, Jenna and Amelia prepared for “Most Disobedient,” a difficult category, to judge by the unruly pack on the field. “She won’t do anything I tell her,” Jenna said, confidently. To demonstrate, she repeatedly – and fruitlessly – ordered Amelia to sit. It wasn’t until Jenna gave up that Amelia squatted down to water the grass. If they could reproduce that performance in front of the judges, they’d be a shoo-in.

Of course, Dog Day Afternoon isn’t just about competition and prizes, it’s also about nourishing the “whole dog.” Numerous vendors were on hand offering everything from nutritious dog snacks and dog diet plans to dog massages and dog Reike. Dog photographers and dog portrait artists were doing a brisk business among owners who have trouble remembering what their dogs look like.

1104173_110702120036_fun-frisbeeDEO Speedwagon, a top-drawer flyball team from Denver, set up a demonstration of the sport at the west end of the field. For those not familiar with flyball, it’s essentially an exciting blend of steeple chase and relay race run by dogs using tennis balls as batons. It’s a concentrated, fast-paced entertainment and a good time for man and beast.

Somewhere between all the Frisbee catching and the dog-trick demonstrations, someone brought out Skota the Singing Dog. A malamute-y sort of pooch that would look at home in front of a sled, Skota played the silent Diva until howls of encouragement from the audience loosed her voice, at which point she gave a creditable performance. Any suggestion that her recital was perfunctory or lacked interpretive nuance should be considered jealous grumbling of lesser talents.

New this year, the “Best Smile” competition was perhaps the best-attended event of the day. It should be noted that, on a balmy afternoon under a cloudless sky, distinguishing between two kazillion grinning dogs is akin to naming the worst headache at a bagpipe festival. Everybody’s a winner.

Rather than encourage misbehavior directly on the field, judges in the “Most Disobedient” contest relied on scathing testimonials from owners about their pet’s routine noncompliance and mutinous insubordinations. Unable or unwilling to completely trash Amelia before the world, Jenna sacrificed the prize to a troublesome mutt who allegedly “…barks too much and won’t listen to grandma.” Well, winning isn’t everything.

dogbreath_toothbrush_03During “Worst Breath” inspections, it was heartwarming to see the judges, determined to properly carry out their unpleasant duty, crouch on the ground and stick their noses into maw after drooling, reeking maw. As politicians, of course, they may be fairly accustomed to the stink of the cesspool, but it was inspiring all the same. Incredibly, Lucky was passed over in favor of Bon Jovi, a poodle from Parker, though what that poor dog could have eaten to out-stink “cat’s business” doesn’t bear contemplation. Insert your own Bon Jovi remark here.

Win, lose or draw, the fourth annual Westmuttster Dog Day Afternoon was a barking good time and a lot of animals who need help will get it thanks to the generosity of the event’s organizers, sponsors and guests. And what of the four shelter pups? By day’s end, Suzy was adopted out-right, Opie was matched with a foster family and a couple expressed strong interest in Peyton. Three out of four ain’t bad, they say, and every dog has his day.

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