Older dogs, sore joints and running

how I’m coping with my senior dog’s retirement

I haven’t written a post specifically about Ace lately, so this is mostly about him.

My dog is 8.5 years old and in very good shape. He turns a little more “white” each day but overall seems very healthy.

His main issue these days is a sore shoulder, and sadly, my dog is officially retiring from running.

We haven’t gone running together in at least six months, actually, so this isn’t really a big deal.

It’s more about me admitting our running is over.

The significance of this, for me, is because this is a dog that went on multiple marathon training runs back in 2008, covering distances of 10, 12, 15 and even 20 miles. He was a member of a marathon training group that met at 6 a.m. Saturday mornings at what was then the Dick Beardsley Running Co. in Fargo, N.D. (In January, by the way.)

Ace and I would also run together for an hour each morning before I went to work at The Forum newspaper. He led me to eventually quit this job and start a business running dogs. one of the best and most important decisions of my life.

Our running has led me to a lot of things. חברים חדשים. Running with rescue dogs. Fostering. writing a book. finally completing that first marathon, years later.

Still, Ace doesn’t mind that he’s retiring. He won’t even notice, actually, because we still have our walks.

However, Ace also needs to retire from fetch.

מה?!

אני יודע.

My dog is the most ball-crazed, Lab-type there is, but he starts and stops so hard on his right shoulder that it’s causing a re-occurring issue. A very uncomfortable one.

For years, my dog has needed to take a day of rest after a hard fetch session. (Hard, meaning stopping and starting even three or four times on that shoulder.) but lately, that recovery time keeps getting longer and longer. It’s not a day anymore, it’s weeks.

This doesn’t mean my dog can’t play with a ball at all. He’ll still carry his ball around the house if he wants. He can carry it at the park and on walks. I’m sure we’ll even continue playing fetch in the water, because we are so lucky to live just 1 mile from the dog beach.

While “taking away fetch” may sound like a big deal to the humans, my dog will not notice this either. even just rolling his ball to me while he lies on his bed and I lie on the couch is “oh so much fun!” according to Ace. So we do this often, while watching TV.

And we have our walks.

I am so grateful for every single walk I get to take with this dog.

We walk to the beach. We walk to the park down the street. We walk to coffee shops, breweries and cafes.

We are embracing the lazy-beach-town atmosphere we live in.

“Can I pet this old guy?” a man recently asked, while my spouse and I sat at a pub.

And then it was like we weren’t even there.

This grown man was on his knees hugging, kissing and playing with my dog. and Ace was whipping that tail, flinging drool and preparing to follow the man home. He would have followed him home. He just loves everybody, so, so much.

Life is good, if you are Ace.

You live in the moment,

appreciating it all.

Have any of you had to change your routine a bit for your senior dogs?

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