Editor’s Note: This is a reprint of a column written by Publisher Emeritus Jerry Robinson celebrating a life with dogs.
by Jerry Robinson
Mack, my beautiful Border Collie was actually my second dog. I had "Boots" a mutt of mixed breed who we lost in a horrific traffic accident near Astoria, Oregon in 1927. Dad's car was cut in half by a wayward driver, in the rain. Boots was riding with me and my baby sister Norma, in the back seat. The car was cut in two with both halves ending up on the side of the road. The chassis just split, leaving us sprawled up in the back half, unharmed. Mom and dad were up front, also basically unharmed. Boots was gone, never to be found.
Months later we got Mack. A wonder dog who was quite smart. I don't recall how we got him but he was already grown up when he appeared at our door step. In those days, there may have been more stray dogs than people, so it was easy to adopt a pet simply by leaving a dish of food out on the porch. Maybe Mack was a visitor who stayed. We loved him and he loved our stray cat, Nicodemus "cheesebomber". So named because it was our first cat and had the peculiar habit of passing gas on a constant basis, possibly because we often fed it table scraps, including moldy cheese.
I had Mack well into my teen years and moved away to work and get married. I don't know what happened to Mack. Mom and dad took care of him by then but Nicodemus was not so lucky. We entered ourselves in the local pet parade down Vancouver Avenue in 1932. We put a slip knot around Nic's neck and took him along as our pride and joy. Mack was busy hunting gophers in the woods across the street from our house or we would have taken him too.
The parade had barely begun. We were in the middle of the pack, practically dragging Nic through the streets. Our slip not turned out to be a poor idea. We did not realize we were strangling the cat with every tug on the leash. If there was a prize for dumb, we would have won. By the end of the parade, Nic was nearly blue in the face. If he didn't have fur, we likely would have noticed it. He was wobbly, but okay and deserted us the moment we got back home. I don't think he came back. He probably found another house where the kids were smarter than us.
I got married in 1942 and moved into a small house in McMicken Heights. One afternoon a wonderful Collie showed up in our neighborhood. My wife Lee was a sucker for a hungry dog. She put out a bowl of food. The dog stayed. We named him "Skipper" until she gave birth to McTavish a few months later. Someone who previously owned the dog must have known and dropped her off in our neighborhood. Skipper (now a she) and McTavish were our two dogs until we moved to Beverly Park. We could not take them both. We opted to give Mctavish away to a neighbor in McMicken and kept Skipper.
Some years later we lost Skipper. Son Tim was devastated so Lee took him to the dog pound. Not to leave him there but to find another dog. Tim picked out a cute Terrier mix with soft black and white curls of hair. He was just a pup but so was Tim. It was a match.
Settling on a name was not easy. Lee liked "Richard" and Tim liked " Tiger". A compromise was reached by using both names. Richard-Tiger was welcomed into the family. As a sporting guy I often liked to go bird hunting. My preference would have been to use an English Pointer or similar but opted to rent Richard-Tiger from Tim. Richard was an excellent bird dog if you like your dog to scare the birds hundreds of feet ahead where you don't have a ghost of a chance of hitting them with buckshot. When Richard-Tiger did manage to stay close and scare up a pheasant, I got off a good shot, hitting the bird. It fell a short distance away. Instinctively Richard-Tiger found the bird but instead of dutifully bringing it back to me, he opted to gnaw on it for a few minutes as if wrestling with a ball of socks. The bird was partially shredded when I finally got there. In spite of his tendency to chew rather than retrieve, we loved him none the less.
Cars and dogs don't mix. Richard-Tiger was not a car chaser but was hit by one a few years later. Lee opted to find a new family pet ending up with a pedigree Basset Hound we named Charlie Brown. Maybe it was after the famous cartoon character but the name seemed to fit. Charlie was a terrific slouch of a dog. His baggy eyes drew you in. The floppy ears and loose coat were fine for a hunting breed. I took him out. Charlie was not the brightest dog in the field. If he could find a thistle field or some thick brush, he'd make his way through and come out the other side with burrs, seed pods and stickers clinging to his fur. It is why his skin was so loose, A perfect breed for snooping in the brush but we'd never call him a bird dog. He was a sloppy drunk, on some occasions being brought home from a bender of saucer beer at the Flame Tavern near 128th and Ambaum.
Charlie waddled away one day, never to return. We only know we loved him while we had him.