I go in for a mole and almost leave with a dog
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Fair-skinned people shouldn’t spend a lot of time in the sun and,
if they do, they should expect to suffer the consequences.
After a lifetime on the beach, I have a standing appointment with
Dr. Mailman, my dermatologist. Each month, I go in, and he
unceremoniously hacks off two or three skin cancers. They’re on my
head, my legs, my arms and my chest. About the only part of my body
that hasn’t developed skin cancer is my rear end, which is a good
argument against nude bathing.
I appreciate all Mailman has done to keep me in decent health over
the years, but my real pleasure in going to his office is it gives me
a chance to catch up on Mrs. Mailman and her dogs. Mrs. Mailman works
at the Laguna Beach Animal Shelter. Anyone who works at a shelter
obviously has a soft spot for animals, and Mrs. Mailman is no
exception.
So soft is her heart that on a regular basis -- almost as regular
as my doctor appointments -- she brings home one of the dogs from the
shelter.
This is difficult enough for Dr. Mailman, who hasn’t the same
passion for dogs as his wife. To make it worse, she never adopts
small dogs. There are never fewer than three dogs in the Mailman
household, and every one of them is huge.
As an example, one of her adoptions was a bloodhound. It was a
beautiful dog about the size of a miniature horse. Enraptured, I
decided to take it off her hands. I would adopt the bloodhound.
If I had not been one of Dr. Mailman’s favorite patients before, I
instantly became so. He enthusiastically supported my adoption bid.
My wife was decidedly less enthusiastic. She went around the house
muttering and, since I am hard of hearing, I could only catch a
little of it, something about a dead body.
Unfortunately, Mrs. Mailman was also unenthusiastic. She could not
bear to part with the bloodhound, and so it remained in the Mailman
household.
I was bitten by the bug. I was going to get a new dog, and not
just any dog. A big dog.
Soon, I saw an ad offering a Labrador retriever to a caring
family. I answered the ad, and a woman showed up with a big, burly
black Lab. I instantly said I’d take her, and when my wife got home
from the market, imagine her excitement at this new addition to our
household.
I love to walk, and now I had a dog to accompany me. There was
only one small problem. Maxine, the new dog, was quite good on the
leash -- until she saw another dog, and then she insisted on bounding
over to that dog, dragging me with her.
When she had been with me about two weeks, we were walking in the
grass at Inspiration Point in Corona del Mar, and she saw another
dog. Gathering her large, black body, she lunged for the other dog,
but this time, the leash somehow got tangled in my legs, I went down
and was dragged unceremoniously across the grass, only stopping when
Maxine reached the other dog.
I was not only covered with grass stains, I had suffered a broken
hand. At that, my wife rose up, and Maxine was banished to my
granddaughter’s, where she lives quite happily.
That was the end of big dogs for me. Instead of an 80-pound Lab, I
now have a 14-pound beagle.
Physically, she is a small dog. However, if you know beagles, you
know she doesn’t consider herself small. She probably thinks she’s a
Great Dane. That is, if she even considers herself a dog.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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