Birdie, our Border Collie Corgi mix, and I, have been on a roll lately with our daily walks. In the past week, since retiring, I have determined that I cannot spend my retirement lounging in my recliner. Though comforting, my mid-section is rebelling and making a move to be the predominant feature of my physique. It is prepping me to be a department store Santa come Christmas and I won’t need a pillow to round out the costume. With some hesitation and reluctance, some optimism, and a whole lot of prompting from the dog and wife . . . we transitioned to walking . . . lots of walking. I figured out if I was going to walk I should go all in . . . both feet, literally.
It's not like walking hasn’t been a part of my life’s regime. Until my wife retired a year ahead of me, it was my task to walk the dogs. Four to five evenings–weather permitting, I walked the dogs. Yep, that’s right–dogs, Birdie and Quinn (a tiny miniature Dachshund). Such a combination is an adventure. Quinn’s idea of a walk is from any room into the kitchen. But she put up with it because she wanted to be where her sister was. It was half walk, half drag . . . constant encouragement . . . and at times, pick up and carry. At all times being stared down with a look of “what the hell!” The point is that I walked the dogs.
Once my wife retired she finagled walking the dogs from me. She convinced me to relax and rest after a hard day at work. She’d walk the dogs, besides she needed exercise. Who was I to argue? For over a year she became the primary dog walker. The dogs didn’t complain . . . especially Quinn who recognized a downgrade when she saw one. Less distance, less effort, and less time from napping. It worked well . . .
. . . until I retired.
Walking the dog duties have been split since I have retired. Birdie walks with me. Quinn protests with the wife as they attempt to walk. Birdie gets longer and more vigorous walks with me. Quinn, when she is not protesting, gets shorter and more pedestrian walks. Birdie loves walks. Quinn, at best, tolerates walks. Remember she is a miniature Dachshund. That means everything has to be just “right” for a walk. There can be no wind. No moisture of any type–no snow, no rain. No weather. It has to be perfect. If forced to walk when she doesn’t want to, there are two results . . . she plops her butt down, spreads her front legs and dares to be pulled to walk. We live on a dirt road and proof of resistance is well documented in the trial she leaves down the road. This typically leads to the second result . . . she gets picked up and carried. Which she enjoys and loves. Either way the wife gets more exercise than she bargained for. The bottom line is that the dogs get walked in some shape or form.
As I stated earlier, Birdie and I have been on a roll since starting. We have walked all over the community and so far have not repeated a single route. That is the nice thing about living in a small rural community in Montana . . . there are lots of places to go strolling. Lots of variety in the landscape. Lots of doggie and wildlife scents . . . lots of pee mail. Birdie is on scent overload and I am combatting elderly tummy spread. We are both happy.
At the same time, I worry. I worry that I might kill my pup. I stand at 5’10” in height. Birdie stands 15 inches at her shoulders. She is a small dog–that is her Corgi side. My strides are much longer than hers. Like every exercise optimist I use a Fitbit to monitor my physical activity. It tells me how many steps I walk each day. On our daily walks, Birdie and I are averaging 7,500 steps. Well, that is what I average. I imagine that Birdie averages two to three times more steps since she is so short. In my estimation–in doggie steps, she is walking between 15,000 and 22,500 steps. For the two of us that equates to about 3.7 miles. We’ve been cooking it and we both sleep well at night.
Still, I worry.
Luckily her breeding makes her smart. Probably smarter than me. She does know her limits and is not afraid to let me know. She either intensifies the pee mail reading, constantly stopping, and attempting to get every word of what she is sniffing. Or she slows down to a crawl or Quinn pace/ Thus far our walks have not been a problem for her. It’s tough to wipe the smile off her face at the end of our walks.
I’m not sure if Birdie and I will continue at our torrid pace. The competitor in me says that we are just beginning. That we are setting the baseline for walks . . . that the sky is the limit. There is much of our area we have not explored . . . adventures not taken. We have many walks ahead of us. It is important. Each afternoon, Birdie comes and sits at my feet and stares . . . watching for that moment, that moment that I move towards the door and utter those two words, “Let’s go!” It makes her day. Together we are happy and filled with joy. At this rate I won’t be playing Santa at Christmas.

