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Dog Bike Seat

Posted on Saturday, February 9, 2008 in Uncategorized

dog bike seat


Kryptonite Evolution Series 4 Standard Bicycle U-Lock with Bracket (4-Inch x 9-Inch)


Kryptonite Evolution Series 4 Standard Bicycle U-Lock with Bracket (4-Inch x 9-Inch)


$73.99


Big city cyclists need big city protection, as would-be thieves aren’t intimidated by flimsy cables or weak U-locks. That’s why serious cyclists turn to Kryptonite for their security needs. The Evolution Series 4 U-lock is a cut above other bike locks, with a 14mm hardened Max-Performance steel shackle designed to resist both cutters and leverage attacks. Ideal for anyone who lives in moderate to …

O2 Cool Flexi Clip Fan - O2 Cool 1261 - Colors may vary Package Quantity 1


O2 Cool Flexi Clip Fan – O2 Cool 1261 – Colors may vary Package Quantity 1


$5.25


Uses 2 “AA” Batteries Not Included Assorted Colors…

Kryptonite 720018210818 KryptoFlex 3/8 x 4' 1004 Double Loop Security Cable


Kryptonite 720018210818 KryptoFlex 3/8 x 4′ 1004 Double Loop Security Cable


$11.99


The Kryptoflex Cables feature a double loop design and are compatable with all Kryptonite U-Lock and Padlocks.Braided steel cable for increased cut resistanceDouble loop for use with all Kryptonite U-Lock and PadlocksHook-n-Loop strap for easy carrying included with 4 and 7′ cablesItem SpecificationsLock Size4′ x 10mmBracket IncudednoLock StyleNot included…

Crane Adorable 1 Gallon Cool Mist Humidifier


Crane Adorable 1 Gallon Cool Mist Humidifier



Adorable Crane Cool Mist Humidifier provides additional comfort to cold symptoms, dry itchy skin, and chapped lips. The whisper quiet humidifier operates on a low power consumption providing up to 11 hours of moisture from a removable one gallon water tank. Includes an automatic shut off safety feature when water tank is empty….


Terry Mens Fly Ti Gel Black


Terry Mens Fly Ti Gel Black


$145.00


Terry SaddlesItem SpecificationsColorBlackWeight280gWidth146mmLength277mmGenderMen’sRailTitanoxClamp StyleStd RailsDefined ColorBlack…

Skip Hop Zoo Pack Little Kid Backpack


Skip Hop Zoo Pack Little Kid Backpack



The Zoo Pack backpacks are perfect for school, traveling, and everyday.The cute animals bring fun and function together in one item. It has roomy compartments with an insulated pouch for snacks. This backpack is appropriate for 3 and up. It has an easy to clean lining….


Terry Womens FLX Black


Terry Womens FLX Black


$110.00


Terry SaddlesMinimalist performance saddle with low-profile front and rear reliefItem SpecificationsColorBlackWeight172gWidth142mmLength260mmGenderWomen’sRailManganeseClamp StyleStd RailsDefined ColorBlack…

InStep Sync Single Bicycle Trailer, Green/Gray


InStep Sync Single Bicycle Trailer, Green/Gray


$83.97


The entire trailer packs down to a remarkably compact size, allowing for easy transport. Take your kids along on the next bike ride while keeping them safe, dry, and comfortable in the InStep Sync trailer. An outstanding value for family-minded recreational cyclists, it boasts a simple design that folds down for easy storage and transportation and a versatile coupler attaches to almost any bi…

Skip Hop Hug and Hide Activity Toy, Owl


Skip Hop Hug and Hide Activity Toy, Owl


$10.00



Burley Bicycle Trailer Hitch (Standard, Forged)


Burley Bicycle Trailer Hitch (Standard, Forged)


$15.37


Keep all bikes ready for trailering with extra hitches.All current Burley trailers include a quick release standard hitchBicycles with Breezer-style dropouts require use of alternative hitches…

dog bike seat

From the Wild

He came out of the night, appearing suddenly in my headlights, a big, golden dog, panting, his front paws tapping the ground in an anxious little dance. Behind him, tall cottonwoods in their April bloom. Behind the grove, the San Juan River, moving quickly, dark and swollen with spring melt.

It was nearly midnight, and we were looking for a place to throw down our sleeping bags before starting our river trip in the morning. Next to me in the cab of the pickup sat Benj Sinclair, at his feet a midden of road-food wrappers smeared with the scent of corn dogs, onion rings, and burritos. Round-cheeked, Buddha-bellied, thirty-nine years old, Benj had spent his early years in the Peace Corps, in West Africa, and had developed a stomach that could digest anything. Behind him in the jump seat was Kim Reynolds, an Outward Bound instructor from Colorado known for her grace in a kayak and her long braid of brunette hair, which held the faint odor of a healthy, thirty-two-year-old woman who had sweated in the desert and hadn’t used deodorant. Like Benj and me, she had eaten a dinner of pizza in Moab, Utah, a hundred miles up the road where we’d met her. Like us, she gave off the scents of garlic, onions, tomato sauce, basil, oregano, and anchovies.

In the car that pulled up next to us were Pam Weiss and Bennett Austin. They had driven from Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to Moab in their own car, helped us rig the raft and shop for supplies, joined us for pizza, and, like us, wore neither perfume nor cologne. Pam was thirty-six, an Olympic ski racer, and Bennett, twenty-five, was trying to keep up with her. They had recently fallen in love and exuded a mixture of endorphins and pheromones.

People almost never describe other people in these terms — noting first their smells — for we’re primarily visual creatures and rely on our eyes for information. By contrast, the only really important sense-key for the big, golden dog, doing his little dance in the headlights, was our olfactory signatures, wafting to him as we opened the doors.

It was for this reason — smell — that I think he trotted directly to my door, leaned his head forward cautiously, and sniffed at my bare thigh. What mix of aromas went up his long snout at that very first moment of our meeting? What atavistic memories, what possibilities were triggered in his canine worldview as he untangled the mysteries of my sweat?

The big dog — now appearing reddish in the interior light of the truck and without a collar — took another reflective breath and studied me with excited consideration. Might it have been what I ate, and the subtle residue it left in my pores, that made him so interested in me? It was the only thing I could see (note my human use of “see” even while describing an olfactory phenomenon) that differentiated me from my friends. Like them, I skied, biked, and climbed, and was single. I had just turned forty-one, a compact man with chestnut hair and bright brown eyes. But when I ate meat, it was that of wild animals, not domestic ones — mostly elk and antelope along with the occasional grouse, duck, goose, and trout mixed in.

Was it their metabolized essence that intrigued him — some whiff of what our Paleolithic ancestors had shared? Smell is our oldest sense. It was the olfactory tissue at the top of our primeval nerve cords that evolved into our cerebral hemispheres, where thought is lodged. Perhaps the dog — a being who lived by his nose — knew a lot more about our connection than I could possibly imagine.

His deep brown eyes looked at me with luminous appreciation and said, “You need a dog, and I’m it.”

Unsettled by his uncanny read of me — I had been looking for a dog for over a year — I gave him a cordial pat and replied, “Good dog.”

His tail beat steadily, and he didn’t move, his eyes still saying, “You need a dog.”

As we got out of the cars and began to unpack our gear, I lost track of him. There was his head, now a tail, there a rufous flank moving among bare legs and sandals.

I threw my pad and bag down on the sand under a cottonwood, slipped into its silky warmth, turned over, and found him digging a nest by my side. Industriously, he scooped out the sand with his front paws, casting it between his hind legs before turning, turning, turning, and settling to face me. In the starlight, I could see one brow go up, the other down.

Of course, “brows” isn’t really the correct term, since dogs sweat only through their paws and have no need of brows to keep perspiration out of their eyes, as we do. Yet, certain breeds of dogs have darker hair over their eyes, what might be called “brow markings,” and he had them.

The Hidatsa, a Native American tribe of the northern Great Plains, believe that these sorts of dogs, whom they call “Four-Eyes,” are especially gentle and have magical powers. Stanley Coren, the astute canine psychologist from the University of British Columbia, has also noted that these “four-eyed” dogs obtained their reputation for psychic powers “because their expressions were easier to read than those of other dogs. The contrasting-colored spots make the movements of the muscles over the eye much more visible.”

In the starlight, the dog lying next to me raised one brow while lowering the other, implying curiosity mixed with concern over whether I’d let him stay.

“Night,” I said, giving him a pat. Then I closed my eyes.

When I opened them in the morning, he was still curled in his nest, looking directly at me.

“Hey,” I said.

Up went one brow, down went the other.

“I am yours,” his eyes said.

I let out a breath, unprepared for how his sweet, faintly hound-dog face — going from happiness to concern — left a cut under my heart. I had been looking at litters of Samoyeds, balls of white fur with bright black mischievous eyes. The perfect breed for a winter person like myself, I thought. But I couldn’t quite make myself bring one home. I had also seriously considered Labrador Retrievers, taken by their exuberant personalities and knowing that such a robust, energetic dog could easily share my life in the outdoors as well as be the bird dog I believed I wanted. But no Lab pup had given me that undeniable heart tug that said, “We are a team.”

The right brow of the dog lying by me went down as he held my eye. His left brow went up, implying, “You delayed with good reason.”

“Maybe,” I said, feeling my desire for a pedigree dog giving way. “Maybe,” I said once more to the dog whose eyes coasted across mine, returned, and lingered. He did have the looks of a reddish yellow Lab, I thought, at least from certain angles.

At the sound of my voice, he levered his head under my arm and brought his nose close to mine. Surprisingly, he didn’t try to lick me in that effusive gesture that many dogs use with someone they perceive as dominant to them, whether it be a person or another dog — a relic, some believe, of young wolves soliciting food from their parents and other adult wolves. The adults, not having hands to carry provisions, bring back meat in their stomachs. The pups lick their mouths, and the adults regurgitate the partly digested meat. Pups who eventually become alphas abandon subordinate licking. Lower-ranking wolves continue to display the behavior to higher-ranking wolves, as do a great many domestic dogs to people. This dog’s self-possession gave me pause. Was he not licking me because he considered us peers? Or did my body language — both of us being at the same level — allow him to feel somewhat of an equal? He circumspectly smelled my breath, and I, in turn, smelled his. His smelled sweet.

Whatever he smelled on mine, he liked it. “I am yours,” his eyes said again.

Disconcerted by his certainty about me, I got up and moved off. I didn’t want to abandon my plans for finding a pup who was only six to eight weeks old and whom I could shape to my liking. The dog read my energy and didn’t follow me. Instead, he went to the others, greeting them with a wagging tail and wide laughs of his toothy mouth. “Good morning, good morning, did you sleep well?” he seemed to be saying.

But as I organized my gear, I couldn’t keep my eyes from him. Despite his ribs showing, he appeared fit and strong, and looked like he had been living outside for quite a while, his hair matted with sprigs of grass and twigs. He was maybe fifty-five pounds, not filled out yet, his fox-colored fur hanging in loose folds, waiting for the adult dog that would be. He had a ridge of darker fur along his spine, short golden plumes on the backs of his legs, and a tuxedo-like bib of raised fur on his chest — just an outline of it — scattered with white flecks. His ears were soft and flannel-like, and hung slightly below the point of his jaw. His nose was lustrous black, he had equally shiny lips, and his teeth gleamed. His tail was large and powerful.

The above is an excerpt from the book Merle’s Door by Ted Kerasote Published by Harcourt, Inc.; July 2007;$25.00US; 978-0-15-101270-1 Copyright © 2007 Ted Kerasote

About the Author

Ted Kerasote’s writing has appeared in more than fifty periodicals, including Audubon, National Geographic Traveler, Outside, Salon, and the New York Times. His most recent book, Out There: In the Wild in a Wired Age, won the National Outdoor Book Award. He lives in Wyoming. Visit www.kerasote.com.

Can you walk your dog?

One of my neighbors drives his wheelchair(motorized) around with his pooch running along side, another has a special seat for his dog on his bike. I can still walk mine.

She walks ME. She decides when she wants to go out. She gets all excited when she sees other dogs walking by, then goes to the closet door and looks at it, then at me. She chooses the route and when to head home.

Sasha The Biker Dog Going For A Motorcycle Ride

Anyone who has owned a dog understands the importance of advanced Dog Training, and that it is an often overlooked (but very important) aspect of responsible pet ownership. Obedience Dog Training Techniques lay the foundation for a well behaved and well adjusted dog. And don’t we all want a pet who has no trouble participating in family life, and is equally at ease when strangers are around! To read more, click here for a Dog Training Masters Home Study Course product review!

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