Luci has a new preoccupation--building a Luci-sized tunnel under the fence between our back yard and the neighbors who live in the blue house on the corner. For all these years of neighboring, she's been oblivious to their yard.
Apparently there's a new pet or a new threat over there. While I can't determine what it is, I did see the tail end of it scooting under the house one day last week, something grey.
My girl, however, has taken it on as her job to attend to it from our side of the fence. To observe it for long stretches of time. To begin the tedious and thrilling vocation of building a tunnel for herself. To occasionally express herself with threats-barks alternating with greeting-barks.
I have attempted to block the potential opening of the tunnel by throwing a rock or two into the hole she made progress on yesterday. Then I found a board, stuck it in there, too. But the passage to her worksite is hard to enter for a human, a narrow space behind the storage room full of pokey things.
While she usually sleeps like the proverbial log all night, she's taken to meditating on her plan during the night. If I so much as move, she nudges me, "Hey, Ma, I got an idea! Let me outside!"
I'm onto her. I know there are only so many times a day when an 11-pound mutt can pee. Without a doubt, she has a new strategy tucked up her sleeve and the night vision to achieve it if only her human would let her get to it at 2 in the morning.
After the second trip out in the wee hours of this morning--and her reluctance to return, even for her favorite salmon jerky--I refuse. I explain to her that her work privileges depend upon her obeying my call when it's time to come in--not to mention that the scent of skunk, cold weather notwithstanding, permeates the back yard.
She may be a bit timid in the light of day, but in the dark, she's a hunter and a warrior, brave and strong!