Archive for July, 2008
Mini Update - Dog-a-Thon 2008
From the Humane Society’s website: Dog-A-Thon 2008 A Howling Success!
$130,000 raised for homeless animals! Updates coming soon, but preliminary results show that the Dog-A-Thon raised $130,000 for homeless animals!!! Stay tuned for more information!
And on a side note, more donations continue to pour in on our firstgiving page! Thank you! Our on and offline total is at $665.00. Rock and Roll!
Updated: Photos from the event taken by Marguerite here >>
6 commentsDog-a-Thon 2008 Results

Greetings! Dog-a-Thon 2008 totals are still rolling in, but our individual totals for the day came to $570.00! Thank you to everyone who participated in sponsoring us, your contributions make a difference! Even better, I have noticed that donations are STILL coming in online and in the mail, and this is wonderful! All these contributions go straight towards the The Humane Society for Tacoma and Pierce County. The closest I can get to a total for the entire event is for online contributions from firstgiving: 365 people have raised $74,082 for The Humane Society for Tacoma and Pierce County . My guess is double this for the number of people who collected off line. I hope there is some Tacoma News coverage that will surface soon for this very important event .


This year there were lots of lovely dogs! We saw a few Great Danes, Some Chinese Crested Powder Puffs, a few sable Huskies, Basset Hounds, Beagles and the list goes on. A dog lover’s paradise! Our Team Mixed Bag ‘o Mutts had a collective total of at least $4000.00. Way to Go Mikki & Puccini and Margaret, Fiona & Neva! You can see a little slideshow Margaret has posted from the event.


Lucy did really well on the 1 mile walk. She gets pretty tired these days, she’s no longer the 4 mile girl she was when she was 2! Also she gets more cranky than she used to. After a while she was over all the hub bub and actually snapped at Bosco the Bulldog and a nice Boxer. Wrinkle discrimination? I don’t know. It was embarrassing!
After the event we celebrated with lunch and a beer at the Spar, with Jeff and Andrea. The perfect ending to a perfect morning!
Thank you Corey for taking these the great pictures of the event featured in this post.
Special Thanks to Mom Cristina, Chica Fernandez, Julie, Dawn G, Dawn AJ, Mom Sue, Laura, Dee Dee, Andrea and Jeff, Dad Larry, an Anonymous Donor (Mazzy), Corey, Lucy and Deezy.
4 commentsDog-a-Thon 2008 Fundraising Status
3 days until The Humane Society of Tacoma Pierce County’s Dog-A-Thon 2008 event happening on Saturday July 26. We’ve raised $295.00 online so far. Visit www.firstgiving.com/dionneknafelz to donate or pass along this link to anyone who might be interested. This year we’ll be walking in Mazzy’s name. Rock n’ Roll!
No commentsReconstitution
It’s Day 3 of being unemployed and I decided to check out the The Frye Museum. This is something I have wanted to do for a while since the R. Crumb exhibit (that I foolishly did not see) and after my visit today, I was mad at myself for not going sooner. But oh well. No regrets. I went specifically to see Dario Robleto: Alloy of Love. I loved this exhibit. Much of the artist’s work involves melting and/or pulverizing an original material and reconstituting it into something new different.
Here’s an excerpt from the Frye Museum website about the exhibit:
…The resulting artworks are much more than just the sum of their constituent parts or factual interpretations of particular events and personalities; rather, they are sincere and emotional meditations on love, loss, spirituality, and ultimately, healing.
It seemed very appropriate for my week. After the show I walked over to Bimbos Cantina for some nachos and to finish the book my mother gave me called:Good Dog. Stay. by Anna Quindlen.
I only teared up once while reading this, but it brought up a couple of things I had been thinking of with regards to Mazzy. 1.) That we made the right choice by not keeping her alive for our sake, but to let her go with dignity that she may suffer no more pain and 2.) Like many dog owners, I am a projector of feelings to my pets.
I sometimes say to Corey, “Lucy looks sad today.” To which he will reply, “She always looks sad. She’s a bulldog.” Then I will say, “Yeah, but today she looks REALLY sad.”
I have been feeling like the dog and cat do not know how to deal with Mazzy being gone. Lucy has been laying in weird places. She’s seemed a little despondent and not her wiggly self. And the cat is really super needy all over us. Almost annoyingly so. When I read Good Dog. Stay. I thought, well that’s probably it, I’m just projecting my feelings about this to Lucy and Deezy. But I can’t be sure, so I spent the afternoon with Lucy in the park just looking up at the clouds, Lucy at my side. She seemed to cheer up after that.
Riding in Style!
Cheyenne Frontier Days, The Daddy of ‘em all! You really have to sing that to its proper tune - I can’t seem to find a sound-bite online although that radio jingle has been in my mind for weeks. Anyway, we weren’t in Cheyenne for that event, but we were there for a family event and here we are loading up to go to Grandpa’s house. Cooks was riding in style in Brandon and Juliana’s convertible - However it may have been a little too hot and dry for such a dainty creature as a bulldog. It was so hot and dry that we all got bleedin’ noses at one time or another during our stay but only some of us had to resort to foliage to stop the hemorrhaging.
Lucky
A lot of things happened here at Stoutpup last week. A few days before we embarked on our trip to Wyoming and before the loss of our beloved Mazzy, I was also laid off from my job. I wish I could say it was for something exciting like getting dooced but I don’t write about work because that’s not the kind of blog this is. Work doesn’t deserve a spot on the fun pages of Stoutpup.
Anyway, today is my second day of unemployment - my first day was spent having lunch and drinking pinot gris at my mother’s house and then meeting my father for dinner in the evening. I felt lucky that I got to see both my parents on the same day - that hasn’t happened since my brother’s wedding four years ago. At dinner dad told Corey and I that he felt lucky about his recent bicycle accident in which he was struck by a vehicle and sent to the hospital unconscious. How could that be lucky? most people would ask.
Dad said he felt lucky because the truck that hit him, struck his rear tire and not his body side - on. He felt lucky the truck came two seconds later than it could have sparing him serious injury or death. I hate thinking too much about this, but I will say that my dad’s words resonated with me because all week long I had been thinking how lucky I was, despite the job and dear old Mazzygirl.
Being back home in Cheyenne during the most difficult time I’ve had in 10 years made things bearable. I was so lucky to be surrounded by my immediate and extended family all in one place for 4 days. I was so lucky to be immersed in such love and kindness, forgiveness and comfort at a time when I could have been under the covers crying my eyes out for days, cursing life. I was lucky to dance and laugh the night away with my sister at my cousin’s wedding instead of drinking myself silly in my apartment from sadness. More than once through this trip I thought to myself, we are so damn lucky we sold that house in Tacoma in the worst housing market because now we’re not stuck in a town that has no job opportunities for art and media. We are so lucky to live in the best city in the Pacific Northwest. And I haven’t stopped thinking about how lucky I am to have grown up with my cousins three blocks away where I have lasting memories and strong bonds, even after 16 years of not returning home. And how lucky I am to have grown up with grandparents and aunts and uncles around me. That doesn’t happen for kids as often as it used to.
This week, though an end to an era in some respects, has also spawned new beginnings. A new marriage for my cousin and family, rekindled family bonds, and a new life for me. I vow to not let life pass me by anymore, and to focus on the things that matter, family, friends, love, and enjoying my time here on earth.
So today I took myself to the Seattle Art Museum - something I never seem to have time to do. I chronicled it in these photos. I saw the Impressionism exhibit I’d been dying to see. Job schmob — I’ll do that next week. It brought me back to my art school days and it was another good familiar feeling, but being carefree out on the town I was also filled a very inspirational exciting feeling. The type of feeling you get as a fifth grader when you know that you might run into you know who at lunchtime or in the hall. Just maybe something exciting is waiting around the corner…
2 commentsMazzy ~ 1995 - 2008
Our beloved rock ‘n’ roller, Mazzy, passed away on Friday July 11, 2008 while we were in Wyoming. She was the best dog in the world, and oh did we love her. We will all miss her so much. These eyes won’t be forgotten.
Tribute to a Best Friend
Sunlight streams through the window pane
unto a spot on the floor…
then I remember,
it’s where you used to lie,
but now you are no more.
Our feet walk down a hall of carpet,
and muted echoes sound…
then I remember,
It’s where your paws would joyously abound.
A voice is heard along the road,
and up beyond the hill,
then I remember it can’t be yours…
your golden voice is still.
But I’ll take that vacant spot of floor
and empty muted hall
and lay them with the absent voice
and unused dish along the wall.
I’ll wrap these treasured memorials
in a blanket of my love
and keep them for my best friend
until we meet above.
— Author Unknown
10 commentsHat ‘n’ Boots - Georgetown

In keeping with our western theme for the month, I thought it would be appropriate to post this picture taken yesterday of Corey and Lucy at this famous landmark in Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood. The giant hat and boots are featured on RoadsideAmerica.com, a site that you will find other such oversized curious objects as Tucson’s Giant Ax Wielding Man on the corner of Stone and Glenn and Tacoma’s Giant Coffee Pot, World Famous Bob’s Java Jive.
‘Which one is our Bulldog?’
I’m not much for sports but the article here talks about two of my favorite things - Bulldogs and Design. As part of their rebranding, Louisiana Tech has redone their bulldog logo for consistency and fit. Apparently the athletics department was just using a bunch of random bulldogs as their logo (in paper documents at least) up until last year. As a designer, that baffles and fascinates me, but I like this article because it talks about the process of choosing just the right look for the Louisiana Tech bulldog.
Creating a new bulldog logo proved to be more difficult.Buskirk said Tech considered about 12 basic bulldog concepts, with three or four variations of each concept.
Minor adjustments — as simple as removing a wrinkle, or reshaping the tongue, or adding teeth — were made until the logo looked just right.
He said by the end of the process, 50-60 different bulldog logos were considered.
“We looked at photos, we looked at an actual bulldog, people sent in photos, we looked at paintings,” Buskirk said. “It was really difficult. Some people wanted a real cartoonish bulldog, someone else wants a real aggressive one.”
The final bulldog logo features a white bulldog head with a red collar. “TECH” is written on the color in blue letters. A gray bulldog with identical features will also be used.
“We were trying to come up with a bulldog that fit Tech,” Buskirk said. “Well, what is Tech? It’s a lot of tradition, a lot of class, and that bulldog is an elite bulldog. He’s at the top of the mountain, not slobber-jawed with drool dripping down.”
I can’t think of a better way to spend the day than looking at 50-60 bulldog logos. No two bulldogs are the same. And Louisiana Tech gets it!
3 comments

