When we moved into our new home in the summer of 2017, I promised Mathew and my Mom that we would get a dog. They wanted a puppy but, honestly, I just didn’t think I had it in me to do the training; sure Mathew and Mike promised to help, but the bulk of the work would be on me. I am home more than they are. The idea of a puppy was wonderful, but the initial investment and work was far more than I was willing to add to my already overflowing plate. So for over a year, I looked online weekly and visited shelters. As with house hunting, we had very clear requirements and weren’t going to take the first available dog; it had to measure up. Finally, we found Max (now known as Cayde) for Mathew’s 15th birthday at the local SPCA. We are still in the honeymoon stage but he is a wonderful, sweet and extremely gentle dog. Gentle is very important because my 87 year old Mom uses a walker and is a bit unsteady. When she walks, Cadye gives her room but watches her attentively. He is very smart, and with a treat available, he learned to sit, on his first day, so Mathew could put on his harness. Perhaps, we can teach him to push my Mom’s ottoman into place when she needs help. He is definitely strong enough.
We have no information about Cayde’s past life. All we know is that he came from a kill shelter in Alabama and was flown up to Ithaca the week we adopted him. The SPCA said he was around 2 years old, but our Vet thought he was more likely 4 or 5, given his teeth and his disposition. He is sooooo mellow, too mellow to be a 2 year old. We wanted to start the relationship off well with clear rules and boundaries, so we got him a crate to sleep in, at least in the beginning, and when we need to leave him unsupervised. We got him a Kong to play with and to stuff with treats. It bounces, so he can play catch with himself. As a bonus, my Mom can gently toss it so he is occupied with trying to catch it. What a cleaver toy!
The milk bones we bought are a bit too big to stuff in a Kong, so I decided to make special treats for Cayde for that purpose. At the SPCA, they stuffed peanut butter into it, froze it, and tossed them into the rooms at night. This is they way they said goodnight to the dogs. Frankly, peanut butter seemed too messy to deal with, Cayde is not one of those vacuum cleaner dogs. He rarely licks up the crumbs from the milk bones.
I searched the internet and books in the library for examples of dog treats and then experimented with recipes. I finally adapted a recipe by Anne Jonna from book her “The Healthy Dog Cookbook”. It contains all the elements of a great recipe – easy, limited effort, natural ingredients, and yummy. I am able to shape the treat into balls so I can create the perfect treat plug for the Kong, plus when they sit around for a couple of days after you bake them, they bounce ~ another added bonus.
Peanut Butter Ball Treat
Mash up 1 banana
½ cup water
3 heaping tbsp. peanut butter
1 ½ cups whole-wheat flour
Mix ingredients, wet hands and roll into balls.
Bake 350° for 20-25 minutes
Makes about 24
Store in jar, keeps for about a week, but they disappears faster.