Nasal activity

Dogs come in a variety of sizes and types. The types include at least two ways of interacting with the world. Some dogs, usually referred to as sight hounds, tend to be visually oriented. They identify and chase their prey using their eyes. Greyhounds are a good example of sight hounds. The other major type is a dog that depends mainly on scent. A bloodhound is probably the most well-known example of this type of dog.

I think Jesse, who I mentioned in an earlier post, was mainly sight oriented, but she still had an acute sense of smell. Once when I was in graduate school, I tried to go for a run at my parents’ house without taking Jesse with me. When I got to the back of their yard, Jesse came trotting across the yard. When she crossed the path I had taken, her head jerked towards me like it was tied to me by a rope. My scent path must have been obvious to her. She could tell not only that I had been that way, but which direction I had been going.

Zeke definitely falls into the scent-oriented family. When I take him for a walk, he spends most of the time with his nose a fraction of an inch off the ground. It can be annoying, especially for someone more used to sight-oriented dogs like Doberman pinschers, which is the type of dogs I had before Zeke.

A couple of weeks ago Zeke was lying on the deck, taking things in — mostly through his nose. It’s subtle, but his nose is working all the time.

Zeke lives in a different world from you and me. I can smell strong odors, like smoke or cookies baking, but I think that for dogs like Zeke, that’s like a black-and-white movie compared to a 3D color movie.

Woe is Zoe

Zoe has a lot of issues. The ones I want to talk about now are medical issues – arthritis and glaucoma. Cats generally can’t take the kinds of pain-relieving arthritis medications that dogs and people can, so finding a treatment is hard. First the vet tried injections of a kind of supplement that is supposed to act like glucosamine is supposed to work for humans. Unfortunately, it worked on Zoe about as well as glucosamine worked for my bad knees, which is not at all. So now he’s getting some laser treatments that are supposed to work kind of like the one that Goldfinger was going to use to cut James Bond in half, crotch to crown. No, forget that last part. It’s a low level laser, not a metal-cutting laser.

Here he is hiding his head while receiving a laser treatment.

zoe and the laser

Zoe is a good patient, which is not what I would have expected.

When we’re getting him ready to go to the vet, he doesn’t want to get into his carrier, and when he’s at the vet, he doesn’t want to get out of it. At home he treats the carrier like his little kitty cave.

I was skeptical about laser treatment for arthritis, but apparently it works quite well for most patients, human or animal. However, at this point it appears not to be working for Zoe. I have suspected for some time that his grouchiness is partly a result of being in pain. It would be nice for him and us if we could find a good treatment.

Zoe’s other problem is glaucoma. The vet has prescribed Latanoprost eye drops, which are the same type drops prescribed for humans with glaucoma. The drops seem to be working, at least as indicated by the pressure in his eyeballs.

We think his vision is already compromised. Sometimes when we talk to him he looks around the room like he’s hearing voices from the ether.

Zoe does not cooperate when we put in the eye drops. He acts like it’s torture, like we’re putting acid in his eyes, and I don’t think the fact that I told him that has anything to do with it. He squeezes his eyelids shut as tightly as he can, and then, after we put the drops in, he shakes his head and usually slings the drops out onto the counter. Of course the drops are cold since they have to be stored in the refrigerator. Maybe that has something to do with it.

Here he is recovering after the ordeal.

bar zoe

The eye drop prescription is $49, and it lasts under a month. It looks like Zoe is going to be a high-maintenance cat for the rest of his life.

Friday Felines

Sometimes we can’t find Zoe, until we remember that he has a few favorite hiding places, and sometimes Sylvester, Smokey or Zoe annoy Chloe so much that  she finds a hiding place. Sometimes they are the same place.

chloe and zoe behind the bed

The space between our headboard and the wall is a pretty secure place. Sylvester and Smokey haven’t tried to chase Chloe out, at least so far. Zoe goes there sometimes when we’re trying to get him so we can put his eyedrops in (he has glaucoma) or go to the vet. It’s nice and enclosed, and it makes them feel safe.

Good day sunshine

Is there a better feeling than lying in the sun on a clear, cold, windy day? No, at least if you ask the dogs.

dogs in the sun

We wait until the sun is high enough to give some warmth before we open the curtains, so sometimes there’s very little sunlight when Lucy comes into our bedroom.

a little sun

There’s a little sliver from the window. A little sun is better than none.

Zoe likes to lie in the sun, but sometimes he mistakes the location of his head for the location of his entire body.

cat on a hot carpet floor

But perhaps I do him a disservice; perhaps he simply wants to adjust his solar gain and thermal emission to maintain a constant, comfortable internal temperature. Yes, that must be it.

It’s no accident that the rear of our house faces south. When I was laying out the foundation lines for the house, I wanted the rear of the house to face as close to due south as I could manage, because I planned to have lots of windows in the south-facing side. One day I put a stake vertically in the ground, calculated the exact time of local solar noon, and waited. When it was solar noon, I made a line along the shadow of the stake. I used that line to define the direction that the house’s rear would face.

I could have simply used a compass, or waited until my watch said it was noon, but I wanted to be as accurate as possible, and both of those methods have problems. The compass would have shown me magnetic north, which, where we live, it is about four degrees away from true north. And, since each time zone is 15 degrees wide in longitude, the sun’s position at civil noon varies depending on where you are in the time zone. We are close to the western border of the Eastern Time Zone, so there would have been several degrees error from that.

Using a compass would have worked pretty well, all things considered, but since I knew the longitude of my house from a GPS receiver, I could calculate how far solar time is away from civil time, and, theoretically, get closer to true north.

Unfortunately, the sun’s azimuth (the compass direction from which the sunlight is coming) at noon at a given location varies through the year, so unless you put the stake in the ground on exactly the right date, your stake’s shadow will not point in a true north-south direction. Depending on the date, the sun’s azimuth can be a few degrees away from true south (in the northern hemisphere) at solar noon. However, a true north-south line would be the best orientation. Since the sun’s azimuth varies on both sides of the north-south line, that line would be closest on average to the sun’s azimuth.

My line was only a few degrees at most from a true north-south line, close enough that it makes very little difference in how much sun we get on a cold winter day. I could and maybe should have calculated the optimum roof overhang to provide shade in the summer and minimum interference with solar gain in the winter, but what we have is just about right.

We have six-foot sliding glass doors in the bedrooms and an eight-foot sliding glass door in the living room. We keep one side of the door in our bedroom covered with an insulation panel, so we only get half the possible solar gain in the bedroom, but that’s plenty on a sunny day. Even on sunny days when the outside temperature is below freezing, the bedroom temperature will exceed 70 degrees without running the heat. The living room will do the same.

I didn’t really maximize the house design for passive solar heating. There is no provision for increased thermal mass, so the temperature goes up quickly and then tends to go down fairly quickly when the sun dips below the pines in the back. But that’s what wood-burning stoves are for. Burning wood is just another way to get solar energy, although not as cleanly as absorbing it directly.

If I had it to do over again, I would probably change the house plan and construction a little. But I’m happy with what we have. The dogs, too.

Sunrise, 15 January

It’s been a while since I posted a sunrise picture. This morning was nice. We had an almost complete overcast with a slim opening right at the horizon. The sun came up, peeked through the opening for a few minutes, and then disappeared into the clouds.

sunrise15jan14

The plumes on the right are from the Georgia Power coal-fired generating plant at Euharlee. Most of what looks like smoke is actually steam from the cooling towers. The plant is working fairly hard because the temperature dropped a little last night. Once the sun rose far enough that the clouds hid it, the wonderful red light disappeared, and now it’s just gray.