Kelly shared…
Posted: March 11, 2009 Filed under: Art and Photography | Tags: Kelly Ronk Leave a comment »Kelly sent…
Don’t know if you have seen thisyet. If not I want you to click on the horses eye. Very intesting!!!!! I thought it was pretty cool idea so sent it to you.
:My story of Lawrence…by Kelly
Posted: October 15, 2008 Filed under: DRambles on Black Mountain | Tags: Kelly Ronk Leave a comment »Upon Lawrence’s recent passing, I asked Kelly to write about him. He was the last living tie, the last pet of mom’s on the farm. Before I share Kelly’s words, here’s what Lori had to say:
Kelly had mentioned to me that she told you about Lawrence. I had planned
on writing you to tell you but was letting a few days pass. It’s crazy but
I cried about him every day last week. I loved that old cat. The last
couple of months he had really started to go down hill. I didn’t realize
how many times I’d get up during the day to check on him, to make sure he
was okay or if he needed food. I’d never set too much out at one time
because he’d only eat a little bit and I didn’t want it to get dried out. I
wanted him to be buried down here instead of in the pet cemetery. Ron
buried him out in the flower garden under one of the bushes. He always
spent a lot of time out there during the warm months. I suppose he liked
the shade.

Lawrence 1989-2008
The year of 1989 a very wild cat took over our mom’s corn crib. This barn was used to store hay bails for the horses. This wild cat decided it was the perfect place to make his home. Here is some of his journey as I remember it.
The year was 1989 when our mom announced “a wild cat has taken over the corn crib”. She named him Lawrence after Lawrence Welk. His nickname was Bubbles. I thought that was rather clever and called him Bubs.
Over the years our dad would make the remark, “Marilyn, when I die I’m coming back as one of your cats”. He teased, “she takes better care of her animals than me”. Well, Lawrence showed up a year after our dad’s death. Mom always teased, “it’s you dad, he came back as a cat”. I guess the reasons she might of felt that, it due to Lawrence buttering up to her so fast. Letting her know that he likes fancy canned cat food. As a wild cat he would run from anyone but her. Lawrence was always vocal with his meows. You see our dad had a gift to gab!! Perhaps one more reason she felt a connection. Mom had him a good two years before he would let me even look at him. One day she said, “I can get him in a crate, he needs to be neutered. We chatted with our dear vet abut this ordeal, asking him if he would be willing to work with a semi wild cat. Dale, the vet said,”well sure”. Long story short I still to this day hear Dale trying to handle a cat gone crazy in his surgery room. I heard him say Kelly, I would only do this for your mother!! From that day on Dale called him Larry. He had to work with that cat on a few occasions, Lawrence had worked a special place in he’s heart.
Bubs was a tuff cat with a tender heart. He fought battles to keep the farm his, surviving one encounter later in his life, we think with a raccoon. With the help of our vet he pulled through it but after that he really started to show his age (20). Every one that got to know him, thought of him as a *cool* cat. You see eventually he would greet anyone that came to the farm. He got so tamed over the years that if Lawrence wasn’t helping mom teach her obedience classes, you would wonder where the heck that cat is.
With a caring hand, mom took care of old bubs for nine years before she died. We figured he had to be between 2-3 years old when he found the farm. For me I had to place her animals but when it came to Bub’s and he’s friend, Pretty Woman there would be no other place but the farm. The farm house remained empty but we would check the cats often. My sister Lori and her husband Ron moved in a little over a year after mom died. With their caring hands and hearts, Lawrence continued to live a wonderful life on the farm. I’m so ever grateful for that!!! I figured if they didn’t move in, whom ever would buy the farm well Lawrence would have to be part of the deal. A huge part of the deal!
On the 6th of October the final good byes were said. Bub’s was losing the battle to jaw cancer. I figured him to be close to 23 years of age. I will end my short story of him with the words that Dr. Dale wrote to me in a card.
Kelly,
Please accept my regrets and sympathy with the passing of Larry. I know he held a special place in your heart, and the attachment with mom. Understand the hardest decision made for Larry was the kindest. Take comfort in the joy he brought to you and your mom. And know he is at peace.
Sincerely, Dale

:Weekend in Seward, NE..4th of July capital
Posted: April 25, 2008 Filed under: Apso Aficionados, DRambles on Black Mountain | Tags: Exhibiting, Ginny Johnson, Julie Timbers, Kelly Ronk, Melissa Torgerson, Vickie Kuhlmann Leave a comment »
Yep. That’s where I’m headed, along with Julie, Melissa, Ginny, Vickie, my sister Kelly and her friend Ingrid. Seward, Nebraska. Why would we all be going to Seward? Why in April? After all, it’s not the 4th of July. Now that would be a reason to go to the 4th of July capital!
You guessed it. Dog shows. What else would lure us to meet in Seward?! This isn’t a big dog show…nothing like the Specialties in Minnesota or the Rocky Mountain Classic in February. Conformation is judged in one of the only two closed sided buildings on the fairgrounds. Getting grooming space ‘inside’ is a feat, one Vickie has mastered. She has also reserved three motel rooms, side by side, with a grassy area right outside the doors. A small park adjoins the motel, backing right up to our rooms. Perfect! Our Lady of Reservations, I affectionately call her.
The motel itself is one of those old Ma and Pa kind, the kind you rarely see these days – unless it’s on Colfax, being rented by the hour. About 5 years ago a young couple purchased it. Their tender loving care in renovating something from the past is evident. For me, I love these kinds of places. Character. History. Not the same ol’, same ol’ you find with the chain hotels and motels. The owners had packets made for each room last year, containing dog treats and a handy hairbrush/mirror for a people treat. This meaningful gesture was certainly appreciated! It’s nice to know the dogs are not just tolerated, but welcomed.
The dining options in Seward are limited. Pizza Hut is about as good (if you can use that word to describe it) as it gets. A couple three years ago, after eating a meal Vickie titled the Fried Feast, we decided to cook our food in the motel. The rooms have a refrigerator (or maybe Vickie made those appear – she has the capability!) and a microwave.
The purpose of this trip, this weekend isn’t ‘winning’. It’s a great midway place for Julie and me to meet, to see the youngsters living with each other, to evaluate their growth, to exchange dogs. It’s something we do at least once a year, maybe twice a year. Why not do it in conjunction with a dog show, especially one with a relaxed (as long as you have grooming space!) pace, a relaxed energy. It’s a great way for the canine youth to experience dog shows, a travel trip, building their experiences so when it’s time to put ‘pressure’ on them in the ring, they don’t have a meltdown. In fierce competition, a dog must be able to handle the intensity, the competitive energy. Not only handle it, but continue to show off. Some dogs are born naturals, but most must learn.
So, hi ho hi ho, it’s off to Seward we go!!

Debby on..the weekend..sisters..and ghost country
Posted: January 20, 2008 Filed under: DRambles on Black Mountain | Tags: Kelly Ronk, Lori Petsche, Toshimi Leave a comment »Early Sunday morning…ahhh. The candles continue to flicker in the library window, adding warmth, a certain coziness, as I sit here sipping coffee, reading email, writing.
Toshimi sent me a note. Yesterday, the 19th was the anniversary of Koyuki becoming part of Toshimi and Tet’s family. She posted about it on her blog, including several photos of a very young Koyuki. Her blog is in Japanese. The characters, the letters that comprise the language are beautiful. There’s a link to Toshimi’s blog in the left hand column. Visit her FFT composite/collage page.
There’s something I’ve just become aware of called RSS feed. My web site skills, my blog skills are basically self-taught, so it could take some time for me to figure RSS feed out. When I do, this blog will alert viewers when Toshimi or Katy or whoever/whatever updates their page. Nate has a facebook page, which is one reason I decided to learn how to blog. I remember the day he and Rick brought Queen Mary III home. Within 10 minutes, he’d taken photos of her perched cattywompus (that’s one benefit to vehicles designed to crawl over rocks in the back country) and uploaded them onto his facebook page. That’s all it took for him to share Queen Mary III with his friends. Wait a minute! Show me how you did that! Just last week I asked him for another tour of facebook, noting the many features, how he and his friends used them.
Jason Steinle, a gifted healer, is my young, bright, handsome chiropractor. That, in and of itself, has been a welcome addition to my life, giving these sometimes-weary bones a new lease on life. Gotta keep brushin’ those dogs! The icing on that cake is Jason’s technical knowledge. He maintains a couple of websites, a blog or two, has done radio and television interviews and is now venturing into interviews for the internet. Additionally, he’s a self-published writer. A great resource, he originally gave me the information on this blog’s host WordPress, explained the many benefits - search capabilities, categorizing, archiving – of blogs. If I can’t figure out RSS feed and how to incorporate it into the blog, maybe I’ll book an extra chiropractic session, to be spent in front of the computer.
That slight diversion, that siding in rail speak, was simply to say one day, the blog – without my input – will let you know when Toshimi updates her blog. Maybe by Koyuki’s next anniversary??
Like a year ago when I met Julie to pick up Koyuki and Edie, along with Josh and Crystal for the Tomu handoff, yesterday I drove to Nebraska. This time is to meet my sisters for lunch.
Oh. And to return Ranpa.
About equal distance between my hometown, Norfolk, where my sisters remain, and my home in Colorado, we met in North Platte, Nebraska…which is where I met Rick 31 years ago, come to think of it. Arriving 20 minutes before me, Lori and Kelly scouted out downtown and found a Japanese restaurant named Tempura. We settled in for a couple hours of tea, food and laughter. It was really, really, really fun – just the three of us having lunch. I think we should do it more often!


Sleek Sue and I took back roads back to Colorado, eventually joining I-76 in Brush. I love road trips and back roads. As the years pass, I feel melancholy, driving through town after town, rural, dying. Family farms have been swallowed up by corporate farming. Footprints, if you know what to look for, are there. A shelter belt in two rows, forming an L. The skeletal remains of a last barn. I love barns, small quaint towns, church steeples rising above the hills and prairie, beautiful farms. the country. Now I sense ghost country, the Death Of An Era.

Photo by Eugene Richards
In the January 2008 issue of National Geographic, The Emptied Prairie gave me a better understanding of the brief, really, history of farming the prairie. If you’re so inclined, be sure to check out the Photogallery link on the upper left hand side of that page. The hauntingly beautiful images are by Eugene Richards.
Hey! Note RSS feed at the bottom of that site!
Very disappointing news about Ranpa
Posted: January 10, 2008 Filed under: Gompa Lhasa Apsos | Tags: Breeding, Kelly Ronk 1 Comment »My sister Kelly’s Gompa dog, Ranpa, has been with me since November 30th for breeding. Her heat cycle and hormone levels were textbook. She bred naturally with Keeper, in addition to one artificial insemination by Dr. Milan Hess who is a veterinary reproduction specialist. Yesterday Ranpa saw Dr. Hess again for a scheduled ultrasound. The larger dark spot on the left is Ranpa’s bladder. The smaller dark spot is a possible resorption site, a uterine cyst or uterine fluid.
She is not pregnant. This is very, very disappointing news. In 2007, not having had much luck at all with the Gompa dogs reproducing, I embarked on a journey to learn everything I could about modern reproduction tools now available to breeders, to utilize these tools to help with the Gompa dog breeding program. I have always been a ‘back to Mother Nature’ breeder, so this was a big leap for me, something I titled Reproduction 301.
After many trips back and forth – one hour one way – during the 2007 spring breeding season, still no puppies. With the exception of one, the females had conceived, but resorbed. Dr. Hess and I looked at possible factors that could be causing this. The viability of the gene pool was one. Age of mothers was another. And yet another was their environment. The last one was ruled out when I compared breeding records between the FFT dogs with me and the Gompa dogs during the same time frame. The FFT dogs had ‘missed’ once; a repeat breeding resulted in 4 puppies the next time around. Meanwhile, there were 12 attempts at Gompa dog litters, resulting in 5 full-term pregnancies. Two of those consisted of one dead puppy. A total of 8 live Gompa dogs have been born at my house since their arrival in 2001. Not very encouraging…
After that disappointing round, I arrived at Plan B, incorporating Dr. Hess advice to breed at a younger age. I added a young male, not a Gompa dog, but a compatible dog in appearance, size and heritage. His lineage, the entire lineage traces back to the 13th Dalai Lama. At the time, Julie disagreed with this. She thought I should stay with the original intention of keeping that lineage intact. I thought there would be no lineage at all if I didn’t introduce ‘hybrid vigor’.
Keeper is not yet two and sired a litter of 7 (AKC) puppies for his breeder before coming to me for an extended stay. Besides being fertile, he offers ‘hybrid vigor’ and the opportunity to reintroduce some important attributes necessary for optimum health – like full dentition and sound patellas. My original plan was to breed him to a couple of the Gompa girls, particularly those that are closely related to the young males I have available. Given the latest news, in addition to what we’ve previously discovered, Julie has changed her opinion about utilizing Keeper and suggested he be bred to all three young females I have available to me. The thought has crossed my mind too.
We live. We learn. We keep soldiering on. Was there something in that Breeder’s Life about not giving up? Perhaps the definition should be stubborn? Stupid? Willing to beat your head against a concrete wall? Willing to throw money to the wind? :::sigh:::
Nagpo, Ranpa’s littersister, was bred to Keeper on December 23 and 25. Both these were natural breedings. I hadn’t planned on having Nagpo ultrasounded, but now I’m going to. I need to know if she did conceive, if she’s still pregnant or if she resorbed. Keep your fingers crossed!
This next year really is ‘do or die’ for the Gompas. Maybe the reason they’re with me is something else entirely…that’s something to ponder.



Recent Comments