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Home » The Dog Report

The Dog Report

Author:

Joanna Cismaru

Last Updated: 7/6/26
74 Comments

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Energetic dog creates a huge splash while chasing a floating orange ball across a beautiful backyard pond beneath clear summer skies.

A periodic dispatch from the two most important employees on the acreage, neither of whom does a single moment of actual work.

Energetic dog creates a huge splash while chasing a floating orange ball across a beautiful backyard pond beneath clear summer skies.
If you can’t see Solo, don’t worry. Just look for the explosion of water and flying droplets.

We finally finished the pond a few days ago, and I want to be clear that it has already reorganized the entire social structure of this household. We did not build a pond. We built a stage, and one of these dogs has cast himself as the lead.

Meet the Employees

portrait of han solo.

Han Solo. Occupation: Lifeguard, self appointed, unpaid, wildly unqualified. Mini Aussiedoodle, almost 7, King of the Acreage. Has one personality setting, and that setting is play, one hundred percent of the time, no off switch, no low power mode, nothing. He is almost seven and has apparently never been informed, because he still moves through the world like a puppy who just overheard the word walk.

portrait of jack ryan.

Jack Ryan. Occupation: Mom’s Shadow, Head of my Personal Security detail. Springerdoodle, almost 3, deeply misunderstood. Wherever I go, he goes. Kitchen, hallway, bathroom, does not matter, he is there, my slightly fluffy bodyguard, protecting me primarily from the danger of ever being alone in a room. He loves everyone he meets, but he loves me the most, and he would like that on the record.

The Pond Situation

Wet shaggy dog proudly swims toward shore carrying a bright orange ball while two eager dogs watch from nearby rocks.
Solo has one speed: FULL SEND. Ball acquired. Mission accomplished. Repeat approximately 437 more times. In case you’re wondering, the pit bull is Jack’s boyfriend, Zion!

The pond is new, and it has revealed the two of them completely. Throw a ball in on a sunny day and Solo launches himself off the bank without a flicker of hesitation, fully committed, a furry cannonball with a mission. He retrieves with Olympic level dedication and no interest whatsoever in stopping. He has also recently decided that ping pong balls are more thrilling than tennis balls, for reasons known only to him, and now considers stealing them a legitimate career.

Man gently encourages a hesitant black doodle into the backyard pond while another dog patiently waits nearby on the shoreline.
Remo: “You’ll love swimming.” Jack: “I have serious trust issues right now.”

Jack, meanwhile, takes one look at the family water feature and hides. When Solo dives, Jack removes himself from the situation entirely. He has filed the whole pond under things that happen to other dogs, and he stands by that filing.

There are supposed to be fish in there eventually. For now it is just toys and one very wet dog. When the fish arrive, I will report back, though I suspect Solo will consider them coworkers and Jack will consider them further evidence that the pond was a mistake.

Feeding Time, or, How I Lost Control of My Own Home

I would like to tell you that mealtime is simple. It is not. These are the most spoiled dogs in the province of Alberta, and I have only myself to blame.

Jack will not eat from a bowl like a normal animal. Jack eats from my hand. That is the arrangement. That is the whole arrangement. I have made peace with it.

Curious shaggy dog investigates a playful laser dot while happily eating dinner from a white plate on hardwood flooring indoors.
Whoever invented the laser pointer owes Solo an apology. He now thinks dinner is trying to escape.

Solo is worse, and his is a production. Solo will only eat if you shine the laser pointer on his food. But you cannot simply point it at the bowl, that would be too easy. First you must move the laser around the house so he can chase it for a while, get it out of his system, and only then, once he has hunted the little red dot to his satisfaction, will he settle down and eat the meal it is now pointing at. Yes, I know. Yes, I did this to myself. No, I will not be taking questions.

Toys, and the Short Violent Lives They Live Here

We buy toys. We buy so many toys. I would be embarrassed to tell you how many, except I have photographic evidence of what happens to them, so there is no point pretending.

Sweet shaggy doodle gives an innocent guilty expression beside a carpet covered with scattered paper and tiny treat crumbs.
This is the face of a dog who definitely did it… but would appreciate if we could all move on.

Solo’s relationship with a new toy is simple. Solo’s mission is destruction. He is not satisfied, he cannot rest, until a toy has been completely dismantled. If it is a stuffed toy, God help it, because he will not stop until every last bit of stuffing is out and scattered across the floor like the aftermath of a very small, very fluffy crime scene, and the toy itself has been reduced to a million unrecognizable pieces. He does not do this out of anger. He does it out of joy, which is somehow more alarming.

Jack has no interest in destroying toys. Jack’s mission is theft, and specifically, theft as provocation. He will wait, he will watch, and the moment a toy matters to Solo, Jack takes it, not because he wants it, but because he wants Solo to want it back. Then the chase is on, the two of them tearing through the house, Jack triumphant with his stolen prize, Solo in hot pursuit of his own property. Jack does not even like the toy. He likes the reaction. He is, essentially, a furry little instigator with a getaway plan.

Between the two of them, a new toy stands no chance. One dog wants to obliterate it and the other wants to weaponize it. It is a miracle any toy survives the afternoon.

A Day in the Life

two dogs walking.
Enjoying our morning walk!

We start with our morning walk, the whole crew out on my trail around the acreage, Solo detonating ahead and Jack tucked in at my heel. Then breakfast, see above, allow forty minutes.

After that the day begins, and the two of them split the property between them. I keep the door open to the shop, which is what I call my work kitchen, the separate building where I cook for the blogs. So while I am in there working, Jack is in the kitchen with me, good as gold, a model employee. Solo is outside being king, patrolling the grass, chasing birds, guarding a pond from nothing.

Jack is genuinely well behaved in the kitchen, with one exception, and the exception is Remo’s fault. He does not beg while I cook. He only begs the moment we sit down to eat at the table, because at some point Remo started slipping him food there, and now it is tradition, and now it is my problem.

The afternoon is patrol and destruction, in whatever order the day allows. Somewhere in there a toy dies. Somewhere in there a bird is told off. If a cart moves, Solo chases it and Jack watches in horror. This is the productive part of their day, by which I mean they accomplish nothing and are very proud of it.

Woman in a bright red shirt plays with an excited black and white doodle beside a sunny backyard patio and fire pit.
Jack trying to jump in my lap after Remo threw him in the pond!

By evening the batteries finally start to run down, even Solo’s, which I did not believe was possible for the first several years. Dinner happens with the same laser pointer ceremony as breakfast, because we would not want the King eating like a commoner. Then comes the brief window every dog owner knows, the one where they are suddenly, suspiciously calm, and you realize the whole house has gone quiet.

Night is the only time these two fully agree on anything. Solo abandons the throne, Jack goes off duty from his security post, and both of them end up exactly where they have decided they belong, which is as close to me as physically possible. The King of the Acreage and my personal bodyguard, off the clock at last, twitching through dreams of birds they will never catch and toys they have already killed. It is the only quiet they offer all day, and I take it.

Ground Transportation

We have a golf cart and a larger, more powerful UTV and the dogs have very strong and very opposite feelings about both.

solo in golf cart.
Solo: “I’m the king of the road!!”

If we drive either one, Solo chases it. Not casually. He pursues the vehicle at full speed until he can leap aboard and ride shotgun like he owns the fleet, because in his mind he does. Jack, on the other hand, is scared out of his mind of both carts and wants it noted that he considers them death machines and Solo a lunatic for getting in.

Known Nemeses

The acreage has villains, and our employees take them seriously.

There is a weasel. It comes around, it hides, and it drives both dogs completely out of their minds. They bark at it with the focused fury of two animals who have found their life’s purpose.

There are also some wild chickens, currently at large, whereabouts unknown. I have not seen them in a while, but their memory lives on in the hearts of these dogs, who would like another chance.

And of course, the birds. Every bird. All of them. This is the one issue on which Solo and Jack are fully united, the shared belief that every bird on this property is up to something and must be answered.

Closing Notes

Solo believes he runs the acreage. Jack believes he runs me. Neither has produced any paperwork, but both are extremely confident, and honestly, between the laser pointer and the hand feeding, it is not entirely clear who is running whom.

This has been The Dog Report. The employees were informed but declined to comment, as it was nap o’clock.

Black doodle watches another dog happily swim across a landscaped backyard pond while waiting patiently along the rocky shoreline.
Jack: “I’m not getting wet… but I will judge every decision Solo makes from the shoreline.”

Read this next:

  • The Quiet Out Here
  • We Built a Greenhouse
  • Thursdays at My House
Joanna Cismaru Avatar
Joanna Cismaru
I’m Joanna Cismaru, the cook, writer, and professional taste tester behind AllMyCravings. I traded software code for cinnamon rolls years ago and never looked back. These days, I’m sharing the recipes I actually make in my own kitchen. The cozy, crave worthy, everyday kind that doesn’t need a culinary degree or twelve trips to a specialty store. If it’s easy, flavorful, and makes you want seconds, you’ll find it here.
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Recipe Rating




74 responses

  1. Camille
    July 7, 2026

    Well written and I like your dogs !

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      Thank you!

      Reply
  2. Mary
    July 7, 2026

    I love your dog story! We just lost our dog, I can relate to many of their antics.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      So sorry for your loss, losing a dog leaves such a profound hole in your heart! So glad the dog report brought a little smile during such a hard time! 😊

      Reply
  3. Chris W.
    July 7, 2026

    These 2 are the most – talk about being able to keep themselves busy! When we had our toy-miniature mix poodle, she stuck to me like Velcro. She was really well behaved but if there was cheese around, she would fight to the death for it! Fun times – I still miss her and it’s been a long time…

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      A poodle who would fight to the death for cheese is an absolute icon and honestly a very relatable life philosophy! The ones we lose never really leave us, do they! 😊

      Reply
  4. April
    July 7, 2026

    This… is… freaking… hysterical! You have so eloquently captured the very essence of these four-legged-fur-babies and I am rolling! You need to do some video and have that guy on Instagram that does voice overs for dogs do his thang! LOL OOOh that would be so good.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      Ha, a dog voiceover video of Han Solo and Jack Ryan’s daily antics would absolutely break the internet! Consider that idea officially stolen and filed away for future content! 😊

      Reply
  5. Barbara Lazer
    July 7, 2026

    I just love when people spoil their critters. I have many dogs and cats, I just love reading about how people spoil them since so many are so mean to these creatures. Keep the stories and recipes coming. We all love them.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      Spoiled pets are happy pets and that is simply a fact! Thank you for all the love you give to your many dogs and cats, the world needs more people like you! 😊

      Reply
  6. Ann
    July 7, 2026

    Loved, loved, loved this!!! Ditto for your recipes!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      Thank you so much, love love love hearing that! 😊

      Reply
  7. Kathy
    July 7, 2026

    Thank you for a wonderful morning read.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      So happy it was a good way to start the morning! 😊

      Reply
  8. Rod Blackburn
    July 7, 2026

    Gotta love dogs. My first dog( spitz & something mix) hated the water however my Labrador loved it.
    Thanks for sharing your dogs with us.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      The water lover and the water hater living under the same roof, sounds very familiar! Thank you for sharing your pups with us too! 😊

      Reply
  9. Sandra Parker
    July 7, 2026

    Oh Jo! You are such a great story teller! We have owned several dogs and myself personally 3 pomeranians that all sound like a deadly combination of your two happy fellows! Our current furry friend is Taco Ted the Terrorist, yea his name says it all!
    They try us and sometimes exhaust us but we love EVERY MINUTE of entertainment!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      Taco Ted the Terrorist is the greatest dog name in the history of dog names and I need to know everything about him! Small dogs with big personalities are truly a force of nature and we would not trade a single exhausting minute! 😊

      Reply
  10. Samara
    July 7, 2026

    I’m relieved to know that there are others out there that cater to their dog’s crazy idiosyncrasies as well.
    I have four dogs the smallest is 65lbs and the largest is a 100+ lb German shepherd mix. She was supposed to be a temporary foster situation. I was supposed to get her trained with some basic behavioral skills and then i would find her a new home. That was 7 months ago. I didn’t realize how stubborn German shepherd can be.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      July 7, 2026

      A 100 pound German shepherd foster fail seven months in, she knew exactly what she was doing from day one! They do not call it a foster fail for nothing, sometimes the right dog just refuses to leave! 😊

      Reply
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Meet Jo

We’re Joanna and Remo, a wife and husband duo obsessed with good food, simple ingredients, and turning everyday cravings into recipes you’ll actually want to make.

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