BRAINERD - Last week my dog Axel, a male Deutsch Drahthaar, turned 11 years -old.
Axel is my fourth dog, and his birthday reminded me about times I've shared, good and bad, with him and his past "brothers."
My first dog was a German shorthaired pointer named Jake. He was followed by Ace, a German wirehaired pointer. Then came Viking, also a German wirehaired pointer, and finally Axel.
All were good dogs (have you ever heard of a hunting dog owner with a lousy dog?), but each had his quirks. If the four dogs could have talked, they probably would have said the same about me.
Of the four dogs, most of the horror stories that come to mind involved Viking.
Viking was a bit of a misfit from the beginning since he had not a wirehair on his body. In fact, his solid brown coat was so short he was always mistaken for a German short-haired pointer.
But beneath that brown hair was a body built to run. Viking bound through the woods and fields with the speed and grace of a deer. He was 80 pounds of solid muscle. A Manitoba farmer on whose land we often hunted said "now that's a barrel-chested son of a gun" when he first met Viking.
Viking was not the brightest pointer in the woods, but what he lacked between his ears he made up for with his vigor. Like most hunting dogs, Viking had only two passions; hunting, and being with Dad (me).