The Island of Vieques is one big barnyard.
Paso fino horses,
the mount of Conquistadores, roam
roads and fields … chickens and roosters clutter both country lanes and city
streets … residents keep goats, geese, parrots, cockatoos, peacocks and more.
And then there are the feral dogs.
Each Viequense family
has at least one dog, most have several.
Martin Luther could have had Vieques in mind when he
commented, “The dog would be much
esteemed were it not so common.”
Puerto Ricans do not esteem dogs. In fact, they’ll tell you
the dogs to whom they feed scraps aren’t theirs. The dogs are never allowed
indoors … they aren’t neutered … they never visit a vet.
As a result, their average life span can be as brief as two
years.
In Disney’s 1955 classic, Lady and the Tramp, the foot-loose and collar-free Tramp expounds on
his lifestyle: “One family for every day
of the week. The point is, none of them have me.”
The Viequense word
for the feral dogs is sato. Although
they are mixed-breed, satos share a
look – short in the leg, long in the body, big-eared and a bit bug-eyed.
If there are an estimated 9,000+ human residents on Vieques,
the pooch population is two, three, four, five times that number. We’ll never
get an accurate count because the population changes hourly.
Take Angel, for example, the Puerto Rican guy down the road
from me. He started with a single male that had a lot of Labrador in his
background. A female sato came around
and stayed for the scraps – and the love. Within the past six months she and
the Lab have spawned two litters – six new puppies in all.
North Americans who live here can’t
get enough of the satos. Alex and
Glen keep three, as does Dorothy. Beverly has a brace. Dottie has about 10 and Ingrid
might have 20 at any given time.
North Americans adopt satos and treat them like their children – down to inviting them to sleep in their beds. There is only one part-time vet here, so it’s not uncommon for North Americans to fly with their dogs to the main island of Puerto Rico for veterinary care.
North Americans adopt satos and treat them like their children – down to inviting them to sleep in their beds. There is only one part-time vet here, so it’s not uncommon for North Americans to fly with their dogs to the main island of Puerto Rico for veterinary care.
North Americans who own rescued satos say these dogs are intelligent and loyal beyond belief
because they seem to comprehend that their new owners have taken them off the
street.
Which testifies to Mark Twain’s claim that, “If you pick up a starving dog and make him
prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a
dog and man.”
Who’s to say what the dogs themselves think about it all?
Disney took a crack at it:
Lady: It's morning.
Tramp: Yeah. So it is.
Lady: I should have
been home hours ago.
Tramp: Why? Because
you still believe in that “ faithful old dog" routine? Aw, come on, Pidge.
Open your eyes.
Lady: Open my eyes?
Tramp: To what a dog's
life can really be! I'll show you what I mean. Look down there. Tell me what
you see.
Lady: Well, I see nice
homes, with yards and fences ...
Tramp: Exactly. Life
on a leash. Look again, Pige. Look, there's a great big hunk of world down
there, with no fence around it. Where two dogs can find adventure and
excitement. And beyond those distant hills, who knows what wonderful
experiences? And it's all ours for the taking, Pige. It's all ours.
In my next blog: Tormenta!
Entertaining AND educational! I had to look up "brace" to find out how many dogs that was.
ReplyDeleteI'm up to 4... Only 2 are Satos, however. Truly I would have more but for the expense.
ReplyDelete