Ranger Trampings
  • Home
  • Fieldwork
    • Bolivia – Ambue Ari 2019
    • Antarctica – Cape Shirreff 2019-20
    • Antarctica – Cape Shirreff 2018-19
    • Antarctica – Cape Shirreff 2017-18
    • Aleutians – Buldir 2017
    • Aleutians – Buldir 2016
    • Pribilofs – St. George 2015
    • Yukon Kuskokwim River Delta – 2013 & 2014
    • Conservation Canines 2012-2013
  • Travel
    • Torres del Paine via COVID-19
    • Mexico
    • Hawaii
    • Canada
    • New Zealand
  • Thoughts
    • Alaska
    • Mixed Bag of Topics
    • Reflections
    • Seasonal Life Planning
  • Galleries
    • Ambue Ari, Bolivia 2019
    • New Zealand 2011-12
  • About
  • Search Icon

Ranger Trampings

The world is ahead.

Not Saying Goodbye

Not Saying Goodbye

March 17, 2013 gingerranger Comments 0 Comment

What do you mean I have to say goodbye to this face?

puppers
D’awwww

And this face?

Tucker
Tucker!

And this one?

gingers
Ginger buddies

Pardon me, but this sucks!

Pixie
The best sister I could have asked for

Ever since I can remember, I’ve loved dogs. I was about 2 years old when my family got our first Shetland Sheepdog. Pixie and I were always best buds. Although she was a family dog, we were the closest – maybe because I was the closest to her size. I could hug her and pet her all I wanted while others didn’t necessarily have the chance. I’d walk her around the neighborhood, chase squirrels up trees with her, patrol the Lake Superior beach for seagulls with her, cuddle with her, and make her a sandwich to open on Christmas morning. I have an older brother, but I was closer to my little sister. 🙂 (Hey, my bro speaks computer, so I think it’s understandable!)

Sadly we put Pixie down in spring of my senior year of high school. My parents, Belgian exchange student, and I left home for the weekend (worst. idea. ever. with a sick dog), and we knew it was time to say goodbye when we returned. Watching my good friends come say bye to Pixie was absolutely awful. As I type this, I have tears in my eyes just thinking about it. The day was a half day of school, and the appointment to take her in was later in the afternoon. With my free hours, I did a lot of crying and lying on the hard floor, just looking at my buddy. I had spent the last 2 nights sleeping on a cot while praying she’d just pass away in her sleep. I didn’t want to make that trip to the vet’s office. Unfortunately, that’s what it came down to. Before we left home, my mom and I carried Pixie on a tour of the house. Having not been allowed on the carpet, she’d basically never seen any of our bedrooms. I carried her to my room and laid her gently on my bed, telling her “my bed is your bed.”

bed
Her bed

Somehow I survived losing Pixie. I drove her to the vet clinic and hugged her for dear life as she faded away. At this point in writing, I’m not too tough to admit that I’m practically sobbing. March 20th makes it 6 years ago, but I will always love my pup.

This story was a horrible way of introducing the end of a field season, but I was thinking about saying bye to these Alberta dogs, and the memories came rushing up. Thankfully none of these 10 dogs are going away in that fashion, but I’ll be leaving them for “home” in just a couple weeks. Since there aren’t many projects in the works, the majority of our crew won’t be staying on for summer, meaning we’re heading separate directions and hoping this wolf, caribou, moose, and deer study will happen again next winter.

Anticipating the end is the roughest part of every field job – at least for me, since I’ve liked every job and crew I’ve been a part of so far. This season has extra poignancy because I have to go from life with 10 dogs to life with none. In my opinion that’s the epitome of depressing. In general I feel I’m a pretty independent person. However, a friend back in AK contradicted me, saying, “You’re dependent on those dogs!”

He does have a point. Dogs are kind of my favorites. When I started dating a friend, my other friends said to him, “Listen, you know how this works, right? First come dogs, then you, then it’s the rest of us.” (You may think it’s sad, but it’s true.) Face it: dogs are cuter, smarter, more forgiving, and happier than humans! Why shouldn’t I love them?

Saying bye to our human team members will be sad, but I think we can essentially all agree that saying bye to the dogs could be the real tearjerker. These pups are amazing; they have the highest work ethic and love their job more than anyone I know! With their charming good looks and sweet personalities, they’re fantastic co-workers.

With that in mind, come morning we’ll be rolling out of camp and on our way to Jasper for the night. But of course that’s only after we try to see the aurora again, drop off a freezer in Edmonton, and drive the snowy roads – you know, the usual for our Alberta crew.  Time for road trip adventure part 2. This time it leads back to the kennel at Pack Forest, where we’ll find Pips, Pepsi and …(see below)… waiting for us! (Not to mention Frehley, Buddy/Dexter/Steven, Alli, Annie, and Casey. Oh, and some people like Heath, Bud, and Julie.)

Dozer
Dozer

It’s not time to say bye yet, but that time is creeping closer. I think I need a hug from my ginger bud Chester now.


Conservation Canines 2012-2013
Alberta, Conservation Canines, dogs, fieldwork, goodbyes, losing pets

Post navigation

NEXT
Where next?
PREVIOUS
Life as a Non-coffeeholic

0 thoughts on “Not Saying Goodbye”

  1. Pingback: My Journey North – (part 1 of 2) | rangertrampings

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • The Doghouse
  • Ros
  • 2020 in Bullets
  • Kesugi Ridge in Denali State Park, Alaska
  • Hiking Through Coronavirus

Archives

Tags

adventure AK Maritime NWR Alaska Alberta Aleutians Ambue Ari Antarctica Antarctic fur seals baking Bering Sea biking black brant Bolivia books Buldir California Canada Cape Shirreff changes Chile Conservation Canines dogs Fairbanks field life fieldwork freedom friends goodbyes Hawaii Homer humor memories New Zealand penguins photography R/V Tiglax reading Riverboat Discovery running Seattle St. George travel UAF Washington weather

Categories

lake superior hdr
Path to Lake Superior from my cabin
Canadian Rockies
In Banff National Park, Alberta
Lago Verde
Lago Verde in Jeinimeni National Reserve, Chile
sunset beyond a boat on a tidal river
Low tide sunset on the Tutakoke River
© 2025   All Rights Reserved.