Klahowya Campground, the Sol Duc River & the Battle with Big Paw, Olympic Peninsula, Washington (8-21-12)

Day 14 of Lupe’s 2012 Dingo Vacation to the West Coast.

Lupe’s day began uneventfully enough.  She woke up on a soft bed at a motel in Tacoma.  Before checking out, SPHP gave her a bath.  Afterwards, Lupe and SPHP spent part of the morning at the same park where Lupe had played Frisbee the evening before.  Next was a boring stop at a laundromat.  When the clothes were all clean, the interesting part of the day began.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP left Tacoma on Hwy 16, and headed for the Olympic Peninsula.

It had been sunny and warm out in Tacoma, but by the time Lupe was crossing the Hood Canal on Hwy 104, the sky was overcast.  After a while, a light mist began, but it was intermittent and didn’t amount to much.  The Olympic Peninsula is mountainous, but between the clouds and the tall forest that lined both sides of the highway, there wasn’t much to be seen.

From the Port Angeles vicinity, there were views of the ocean off to the NE.  SPHP had been looking forward to taking Hwy 112 W along the N shore of the Olympic Peninsula, but Hwy 112 was closed due to road construction.  Instead, Hwy 101 took Lupe into the N end of Olympic National Park.  After Yellowstone and Glacier, Lanis and SPHP now knew better than to bother stopping anywhere in a U.S. National Park.  Dingoes just weren’t allowed in the backcountry.

Lupe, though, knew this place was different.  For here, in the towering old rain forests of the misty mountains, is the home of a creature from a forgotten age.  Seldom spoken of by American Dingoes and Carolina Dogs, and even then just in low growls and whines, is a race of ancestral Dingoes known only as Big Paw!  U.S. National Park or not, no human has ever been able to find, capture or record Big Paw.

Hwy 101 left Olympic National Park and entered the Olympic National Forest.  In the national forest, Lupe would be less restricted.  Lanis and SPHP started looking for a place to camp, and soon arrived at the Klahowya campground.  Klahowya campground was in a forest full of ferns and moss.  It had a real jungle look to it.  There were plenty of open sites in the campground, too, some of them next to the Sol Duc river.

Lupe's campsite at the Klahowya campground in the Olympic National Forest looked like a real jungle.
Lupe’s campsite at the Klahowya campground in the Olympic National Forest looked like a real jungle.

Lanis and SPHP selected a site, and set up Lupe’s tiny house.  Lupe was still sitting in the Honda Element.  She wasn’t so sure about things.  What if Big Paw was lurking somewhere out there?

Lupe in the safety of Lanis' Honda Element, but still on the alert for Big Paw!
Lupe in the safety of Lanis’ Honda Element, but still on the alert for Big Paw!

Eventually, Lupe came out of the Element to inspect the campsite.  Klahowya campground really was a very impressive place.  Lupe’s tiny house was set up in a jungle setting unlike any place Lupe had ever camped before.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP took a short walk through the jungle down to the Sol Duc river.

From the size of the exposed rocky riverbed, it was easy to see that even though there was a fair amount of water in the Sol Duc now, normally it was a much larger river.  However, a dry spell and the late August season meant the river was quite low.   Lupe sniffed around in the bushes and young trees growing near the rocky riverbed.  She was having a good time exploring.

The Element parked in the Klahowya CG.
The Element parked in the Klahowya CG.

Element and tent at Klahowya CG, WA 8-21-12

Lupe's tiny house at Klahowya CG.
Lupe’s tiny house at Klahowya CG.
Lupe arrives to inspect the campsite.
Lupe arrives to inspect the campsite.

After spending a little time down along the Sol Duc river; Lupe, Lanis and SPHP returned to the campsite for a picnic.  When the meal was done, Lanis and SPHP thought it might be fun to find a trail.  Everyone got back into the Element.  Lanis drove back to Hwy 101, and turned W.  In just a few miles, there was a side road to the N that looked promising.

The side road wound around in the woods.  It emerged from the forest at a large clearing where there were some old abandoned buildings.  The road went past the buildings, and soon ended at a trailhead.  No other vehicles were there.  Lanis parked the Element.  A very wide, level trail led Lupe, Lanis and SPHP into a dense forest.  Perhaps 30 – 50 feet down a steep embankment to the right, flowed the Sol Duc river.

The wide level trail. It turned out this trail was an old roadbed mostly hidden beneath the leaves of the undergrowth on both sides of the apparent trail.
The wide level trail. It turned out this trail was an old roadbed mostly hidden beneath the leaves of the undergrowth on both sides of the apparent trail.

After a little while, SPHP realized the wide trail was actually an abandoned road.  Under the leaves on the trail was a layer of pavement, occasionally exposed at the edges where the where the old road was starting to crumble away.  From the left, small streams trickled down a mountainside.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP came to a single track trail that led up the mountain.  A sign said it led to Snider Peak, elevation 3,055 ft.

Lupe, Lanis and SPHP took the single track trail, although how far it was to Snider Peak, no one knew.  The trail switch-backed up the mountainside until it was out of view of the abandoned road below.  Although the trail was in seemingly good condition, no one else at all appeared.  Lupe was having fun exploring the forest, but Lanis and SPHP eventually decided Lupe had gone far enough.  It was time to return.

Back down at the old abandoned road, it was still early enough out so Lupe, Lanis and SPHP continued farther along the abandoned road instead of returning to the Element.  Through the trees were glimpses of the Sol Duc river down the embankment on the right, which was steeper and higher here than before.  The river was now 50 – 100 feet below the road.

The river curved away from the old road, and the road began to climb through an exceptionally shady and gloomy portion of the forest.  At the top of the rise, the road leveled out at the edge of a clearing.  On the opposite side of the clearing was a decaying old mobile home, and some dilapidated outbuildings.  No one was around, but a flag was flying – a black flag with the skull and crossbones on it.  Lupe had come to a pirate hideout!

Lanis and SPHP didn’t think it wise to tangle with pirates, and retreated back through the gloomy forest down the wide trail to the bend in the Sol Duc river.  There was no sign of pursuing pirates, but the hair on Lupe’s haunches was up.  She was staring down the abandoned road ahead.  On the side of the trail opposite the river, up on the mountainside, a dark form was moving at high speed through the trees – and coming closer.

Lupe growled deeply.  Suddenly, out of the forest and onto the abandoned road ahead, leaped the approaching menace.

It was huge, as tall as either Lanis or SPHP!  Its long, shaggy fur was mostly dark gray with silver streaks, but where Lupe sports a beautiful white vest on her chest, the creature had a vest of ebony.  A huge curly tail arched high over its back.  The creature’s large soft ears were flattened against its head.  Its gray eyes glowed with a distinctly reddish hue.  Saliva dripped from its fangs and gigantic pink tongue.  Big Paw!

With a low, snarling growl, Big Paw bounded to the attack!  There was no escape.  Lanis and SPHP faced certain doom.  A brown and white flash streaked toward Big Paw.  It was Lupe, barking wildly!  Big Paw paused to consider this noisy, tiny Carolina Dog for only a moment.  Big Paw lunged at Lupe, but she was too fast.

Lupe circled around and around Big Paw, biting his heels and harassing him.  Big Paw snapped at her again and again.  At times Lupe dashed into the trees to get away, with Big Paw hot on her tail.  Lupe barely escaped.  Once, Big Paw was so close, his slavering jaws snapped shut on the upper end of her tail, ripping her fur there away.

Lupe darted between the trees like lightning.  Big Paw crashed into several of them trying to catch her.  Finally, Big Paw hit one of the trees so hard, it leaned and then plummeted down to the Sol Duc river below.  As its roots tore away from under the old abandoned road, a big chunk of the road gave way.  It too, went crashing down into the Sol Duc river.  Lupe and Big Paw almost fell with it, but both managed to scramble back away from the crumbling bank.

Lupe was panting hard.  She had put up a valiant fight, but Big Paw was too fast and strong.  Only Lupe’s agility was saving her, but her energy was fading with each daring escape from Big Paw’s jaws.  Finally Big Paw had her cornered.  He snarled and lunged, but Lupe lunged first.  Her fangs sank into Big Paw’s neck.  She clamped her jaws shut, and hung on tightly.

Blood streaked Big Paw’s fur.  He howled with rage and pain.  Big Paw shook his head violently, but the little Carolina Dog dangling from his neck refused to let go.  Big Paw couldn’t shake himself free of Lupe!

Big Paw took off into the forest, retreating back up Snider Peak, howling in pain the entire time.  Lupe hung on.  For how long she didn’t know.  It seemed like an eternity, but may have been for just a minute or two, if that.  Big Paw made a mighty leap over a giant old tree trunk laying horizontal on the forest floor.  As he did, Lupe crashed into the tree trunk, smashed between Big Paw and giant tree.  She lost her grip and fell dazed to the ground.

When Lupe woke up, Big Paw was gone.  She was alone in the terrifying forest.  Big Paw might return hunting her at any moment!  Suddenly, she heard voices rising faintly up the mountainside.  Lanis and SPHP were calling her, and looking for her.  Lupe staggered to her paws, and took off running down the mountain.

Soon Lupe was back with Lanis and SPHP.  Both shouted with joy at seeing her alive.  They petted her, and hugged her, and kept congratulating her on her most stupendous victory ever in all of American Dingo or Carolina Dog history!  SPHP promised her endless treats, steak and ice cream.  Lanis said he had captured her entire battle with Big Paw on film.  She was going to be rich and famous!

Hmm? Did I doze off? Was I dreaming? Uh, yeah guys, you just go ahead and sleep in the tiny house without me. Think I want to stay here in the Honda Element tonight. Mind locking the doors for me, Lanis, before you turn in? In fact, leave me the keys if you would, please! And maybe pull the blankie back over my head before you go?
Hmm? Did I doze off? Was I dreaming? Uh, yeah guys, you just go ahead and sleep in the tiny house without me. Think I want to stay here in the Honda Element tonight. Mind locking the doors for me, Lanis, before you turn in? In fact, leave me the keys if you would, please! And maybe pull the blankie back over my head before you go?

It doesn’t happen often in that distant land of mist, but on the night of the full moon, when the wind is right and blows the clouds clear away from the mountains, as the pale light filters through the ancient rain forest, if you go to the old abandoned road above the bank of the Sol Duc river, and follow it to the start of the single track trail to Snider Peak, then there the Dingoes say, you can still hear Big Paw howling with rage far up the mountain.

And, if you continue on in the moonlight, on the abandoned old road, you will come to a wide open view of a curve in the Sol Duc river where the road and forested bank caved in during the Battle of Big Paw.  But unless you are looking for trouble, don’t continue on the road up to the pirate hideout, or worse yet, go up the single track trail to Snider Peak.

And, if you ever meet Lupe, the American Dingo, you will know why the fur on the top of the tip of her curly tail is missing to this day.Klahowya CG, Olympic NF, WA 8-21-12Links:

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Lupe’s PupJoy Experience (12-6-16)

On the day after Thanksgiving, Erik told SPHP that a gift from Erik & Ana would be arriving soon in the form of an email.  Erik & Ana know how crazy SPHP is about Lupe, so they had chosen wisely.  When the email turned up a couple of days later it said “Congratulations!!  You’ve Received a Gift Subscription to PupJoy!”

When SPHP told Lupe about the email, she quickly agreed it sounded promising, despite the fact that, neither SPHP nor Lupe had the faintest idea what it really meant.

The email contained a link to claim the gift subscription, which took SPHP to a screen where basic information about Lupe had to be entered to proceed (size, age, sex – that sort of thing).  That was easy enough, but next came a few options about various subscriptions – how many boxes did Lupe want, how often, etc?

All SPHP wanted to do was claim Lupe’s free gift, not sign up for an ongoing subscription, so SPHP used PupJoy’s online chat feature and wound up speaking with a very pleasant fellow by the name of Dustin.  Dustin explained that Lupe’s free gift subscription was for a single shipment of one box.  The box would contain items chosen by PupJoy for Lupe based on the initial information SPHP had provided about her.  Only a few clicks later, Lupe’s PupJoy box was on order.

SPHP told Lupe that her PupJoy box was on its way!  Every morning after that, SPHP made a big deal about letting Lupe out on the front step to see if her PupJoy box was here yet.  Lupe enjoyed this routine, but seemed a little puzzled by it, since even using her amazingly keen Carolina Dog sensory powers, she didn’t notice a single thing different about the front step than before.

Nothing changed until the morning of December 6th.  When Lupe went out to inspect the front step, there it was!  Lupe’s PupJoy box had arrived!  Even though what might be in the PupJoy box was still a total mystery, Lupe already seemed happy.

On the morning of December 6th, 2016, when Lupe went out to check on the front step – there it was! Lupe’s first PupJoy box had arrived! She already seemed happy about it, although what might be inside remained a complete mystery.

Both Lupe and SPHP were curious.  What was in this PupJoy box?

When you’re about to open a treasure chest, you don’t do it in front of the whole world.  SPHP took the box in the house.  Moments later, it was open.  Inside were 4 items – 2 dog toys and 2 bags of treats.  Before trying any of it out, Lupe agreed to pose briefly on the back step with all her newly acquired PupJoy loot.

Lupe on the back step with all her new PupJoy loot.

All of Lupe’s new possessions looked like high quality items.  SPHP was hopeful Lupe would like them.  Maybe Lupe would like to try the dog treats first?  SPHP opened the 8 oz. green bag of Down Dog Snacks – Peas, Love & Carrots flavor.  The package said they were made of All-Natural, Real, Simple Ingredients.

Lupe received an 8 oz. bag of Down Dog Snacks – Peas, Love & Carrots flavor in her PupJoy box.
According to the back of the Down Dog Snacks package, these Peas, Love & Carrots flavor treats had received the paw of approval by Rumi, the Chief Tasting Officer.

The Down Dog Treats were shaped like hearts, about the size of a half dollar.  When SPHP gave one to Lupe, she took it in her mouth, held it for a second or two, then dropped it on the ground.  SPHP gave it back to her several times.  Each time she did the same thing, except faster than before.  Lupe didn’t want one.

Well, that was disappointing.  Maybe she would like some of Grandma Lucy’s Organic Baked Dog Treats – Pumpkin Recipe?  Lupe had a big 14 oz. bag of those.  Pumpkin seemed like an odd flavor for dogs, but who knew?  Sometimes Lupe likes things one wouldn’t expect.  SPHP opened the bag.  The treats were small and shaped like little teddy bears.  Lupe could have several of them, if she liked them.  They did smell like pumpkin.

The biggest bag of treats Lupe received in her PupJoy box was a 14 oz. bag of Grandma Lucy’s Organic Oven Baked Dog Treats – Pumpkin Recipe.
The Grandma Lucy’s pumpkin recipe treats were small and shaped like little teddy bears as shown on the back side of the package. If Lupe liked them, she could have several at a time.

Unfortunately, the Grandma Lucy’s Pumpkin Recipe treats suffered the same fate as the Down Dog Snacks.  Into the mouth, then dropped almost immediately on the ground.  Lupe simply didn’t want them.  She didn’t have the slightest interest.

Normally, when Lupe gets dog treats, she practically inhales them.  One wonders if she can even taste them?  Half a second and the treats are gone, with Lupe begging for more.  Not with the PupJoy treats, though.  She didn’t want a thing to do with either of them.

Well, it was too bad.  Although Lupe sometimes likes to share oatmeal, squash, sweet potatoes and a few things like that with SPHP, Lupe wasn’t used to organic vegetable treats.  Peas, carrots, and pumpkin aren’t on the usual Lupe menu.  All the treats she gets regularly are meat flavored or animal-based – chicken, beef, pork, bacon, cheese.  Maybe Lupe would eventually get used to these PupJoy treats, if SPHP kept giving them to her over a few days?  If not, SPHP could try giving them away to a more appreciative neighbor’s dog.

What about the PupJoy toys?  The American Dog brand carrot was bright and colorful, but seemed like a strange thing for a dog to play with.  It did have a squeaker inside.  Besides making the squeaker squeak, though, what would Lupe do with it?  Not a darn thing was the immediate response.  When SPHP offered her the American Dog carrot, Lupe sniffed it with almost total disinterest before walking away.  Hmm, so far, PupJoy was 0 for 3.  Not good.

However, SPHP hoped the best had been saved for last.  The last toy was the Tuffy Ultflyer by MyDogToy.com.  It was like a Frisbee, but made of cloth.  Like the American Dog carrot, it also had a squeaker sewn inside.

The last item from Lupe’s PupJoy box that she got to try was a Tuffy Ultflyer by MyDogToy.com. It was like a Frisbee made of fabric instead of plastic.
The Tuffy Ultflyer was the last great hope from Lupe’s PupJoy box. A flying disc made of cloth did seem like a good idea to SPHP. Surely, Lupe would like this toy?

When Lupe was very young, she used to play with a hard plastic Frisbee.  She liked the Frisbee, but the hard plastic often resulted in mouth injuries that bled.  For that reason, Lupe’s early days playing with a Frisbee were confined to only a few months.  After a while, the mouth injuries didn’t seem worth it, even though Lupe completely ignored them and appeared to be having lots of fun.

When Lupe was a still growing Carolina Dog, she used to play with Frisbees, but the hard plastic often caused minor wounds that made her mouth bleed.

Lupe’s cousin Dusty has a soft pliable plastic flying disc like a Frisbee, but Lupe never plays with it.  Lupe prefers to play defense, trying to herd Dusty when Dusty tries to catch it.  Even the soft pliable plastic flying disc occasionally makes Dusty’s mouth bleed.  The worst part of it, though, is that both Dusty and Lupe will chew pieces off of it when no one is watching.

A cloth Frisbee made of really tough material seemed like a good idea to SPHP, but it had been years since Lupe had chased a flying disc.  Would she like it?

Yes, she did!  Lupe did like the Tuffy Ultflyer.  Her new flying disc was an instant hit!

Lupe and SPHP weren’t in very good flying disc form at the beginning.  SPHP found the disc rather stiff and hard to throw accurately.  Lupe’s favorite toys have been balls.  She is used to letting them bounce once before snatching them out of the air.  Lupe kept making the mistake of letting the flying disc hit the ground before trying to grab it.  The flying disc didn’t bounce at all, although once in a while it landed rolling on edge.

The flying disc almost always died right where it first hit the ground.  Still, Lupe did have fun chasing it.  In hot pursuit, Lupe kept coming to screeching stops, before scrambling back to grab it.  She then thought it was fun to try to make the flying disc squeak.  The squeaker wasn’t very loud, but those big soft Dingo ears could hear the squeaker well enough.

Lupe was very happy with her new Tuffy Ultflyer flying disc. It was the only one of the four items in the PupJoy box she showed any interest in on the day she received it.
Come on, let’s play!

Lupe wanted to go practice with the flying disc many times that afternoon.  She kept bringing it to SPHP, who obliged her with a few more tosses each session.  Gradually SPHP was getting the hang of throwing the flying disc.  It took a while for Lupe to realize she could catch her new flying disc in the air without letting it bounce.  She had even more fun streaking after it then!

Mind flinging this flying disc for me a few more times, SPHP?
At least the flying disc was a success!

Despite SPHP offering the Down Dog Snacks and Grandma Lucy’s Dog Treats to Lupe several more times that first day, Lupe’s opinion of them hadn’t changed.  She didn’t eat a single one of either kind.  Neither did she show any interest in the American Dog fabric carrot.  1 out of 4 isn’t very good, but at least Lupe did get some real enjoyment out of her Tuffy Ultflyer.  PupJoy hadn’t struck out completely.

The next morning, there was another email from PupJoy.  This one requested feedback from Lupe.  Ouch!  It wasn’t going to be too pretty.  SPHP felt sort of bad filling out the response questionnaire, but the truth was the truth.  Besides, the opinions were really Lupe’s, and Carolina Dogs are always honest about their feelings.  Still it seemed a shame, when all the PupJoy products were high quality, and Dustin had been so nice to deal with.

On a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the best, SPHP gave PupJoy a ranking of only 2.  SPHP wrote a detailed explanation of what Lupe thought of each product to explain the low ranking, then hit the send button.  Nothing happened.  The feedback didn’t go through.  Maybe there was a limit to the number of characters or time taken for the response?  Technology – who knew?

No matter, PupJoy would have been disappointed in Lupe’s opinion anyway.  Although, if PupJoy was really interested in making their services better, it’s patterns of negative responses that are most apt to alert them to potential problems in need of solutions.  However, Lupe’s opinion was only a single data point.  SPHP wasn’t going to try to rewrite and resend all that again.

And that’s how things stayed until the evening of that second day.  Sometime after dark, an unexpected visitor showed up at the door of SPHP’s office.  By golly, if it wasn’t Bugs Dingo!

Aww, what’s up, SPHP? An unexpected visitor showed up at the door of SPHP’s office on the evening of the 2nd day. Bugs Dingo was here and ready for some wild American Dog squeaker carrot action!

Bugs Dingo was looking bright-eyed, curly tailed, and cute as a button.  A carrot still seemed like a crazy dog toy, but Bugs Dingo had a different opinion.  She was ready for some wild American Dog squeaker carrot action!

The game was Keep Away.  Up and down the stairs.  From the living room through the hall to the bedroom and back.  Over and over again.  Bugs Dingo was lightning fast and elusive despite the confined quarters.  However, when SPHP did manage to corner Bugs and make a grab for the carrot, it was made of such slick material that Bugs Dingo had a hard time managing to hang on to it.

Keep Away evolved into Tug-O-War.  It took Bugs a while to learn how to maintain a good grip on the fat end of the carrot.  When SPHP got sole possession, the carrot was flung to the far side of the room, or up or down the stairs.  Bugs Dingo dashed after it every time, bringing it back to SPHP instantly, for more carrot fun.

The games went on to the extent of SPHP’s endurance.  Bugs Dingo didn’t want to let that carrot get put away.  She wanted to make it squeak, and like any rodent, she wanted to gnaw on it.  Bugs Dingo took it to bed with her that evening.  She wanted that American Dog carrot, and not her usual rawhide stick.

Bugs Dingo took her American Dog carrot to bed with her on the 2nd evening after it arrived in the PupJoy box. She wanted it instead of her usual rawhide stick. SPHP had to watch her so she didn’t chew it to pieces, though.

The American Dog carrot wasn’t the only thing Lupe changed her mind about.  After a couple of days of offering the Down Dog Snacks and Grandma Lucy’s Oven Baked Dog Treats to Lupe multiple times a day, only to be turned down each time, SPHP started just leaving a few treats scattered around on the floor.

At first, nothing happened.  On the floor they remained.  SPHP was about to conclude that those healthy treats really were going to have to be given away.  However, Lupe had been pondering something.  Since she was now part rabbit, as Bugs Dingo, maybe she didn’t have to be a total meat-eating predator?  Maybe some veggies were OK?

After laying on the floor for a couple of days, one morning SPHP woke up to find the treats had all disappeared.  SPHP tossed a few more on the floor.  Those disappeared, too.  Not right away, but eventually.  Gradually, Lupe was warming up to healthy veggie treats.  Grandma Lucy’s Pumpkin Recipe was her early favorite, but soon she was just as ready to accept the Down Dog Snacks Peas, Love & Carrots treats.

Over the course of a week, a new PupJoy routine emerged.  With snow on the ground, balls didn’t bounce.  During the day, Lupe preferred chasing her new Tuffy Ultflyer.  In addition to becoming quite good at catching it in mid-air, she enjoyed making it squeak.  She really liked latching onto it with her jaws, and being slung around by SPHP whirling in a circle with all 4 paws off the ground.  Whee!

Many times each day, Lupe brought her flying disc to SPHP to announce that it was time for another flying disc session.  When her birthday came on 12-14-16, Lupe started her day off right with her flying disc.

Lupe with her flying disc on her 6th birthday on December 14th, 2016.

In the evenings, Bugs Dingo wanted to play with the American Dog carrot.  Up and down the stairs, racing back and forth between rooms.  Keep Away and Tug-O-War.  When SPHP tired out, Lupe still wanted to make that carrot squeak, and still wanted to gnaw on it.  Although it’s made of tough material, SPHP had to put the carrot away to keep it from being totally demolished in short order.

On Christmas Eve, Lupe even took her carrot with her to Grandma’s house.

Lupe took her American Dog carrot with her to Grandma’s house on Christmas Eve for something to do while waiting for Santa.
Bugs Dingo at Grandma’s house. Christmas Eve 2016.

At bedtime, Lupe continued hopping up on the bed with SPHP like she usually does.  Instead of wanting her usual rawhide stick, though, she had a new idea for a nightly routine.

Apparently Lupe had read the part on the Down Dog Snacks bag about “Feed as a training snack.”  It worked!  She quickly trained SPHP to feed her more snacks.  Lupe stayed next to SPHP on the bed, happily munching and crunching away on Grandma Lucy’s Pumpkin Recipe and Down Dog Snacks Peas, Love & Carrots flavor treats.  Every so often, she would bark or growl to signal the need for a fresh supply.

So where do things stand now, nearly 2 months after Lupe received her PupJoy box?  The Tuffy Ultflyer flying disc from MyDogToy.com is looking kind of bedraggled, but remains basically intact.  SPHP continues to throw it for Lupe many times each day.

The American Dog carrot has suffered quite a bit of gnawing damage, inflicted during a couple of brief oversights when Bugs Dingo was left alone with it for a few minutes.  One of the two green tops is completely gone.  The end of the carrot is missing, and half of the stuffing torn out.  Bugs Dingo still loves the carrot, though, and still gets to play Keep Away and Tug-O-War with it most evenings.

The American Dog carrot has suffered some gnawing damage from Bugs Dingo, but Lupe still likes to play with it.

Lupe still has quite a supply of her usual treats received from Santa and other benefactors at Christmas.  However, all of the Grandma Lucy’s Pumpkin Recipe and Down Dog Snacks Peas, Love & Carrots flavor treats were munched and crunched up long ago.  Well before they ran out, it was clear Lupe was really enjoying them.

First impressions aren’t always right.  Lupe’s initial 2 out of 5 stars first impression drastically under-rated PupJoy.  Lupe wound up enjoying all 4 of the products in her PupJoy box.  SPHP thought only the carrot was a little weak for Lupe.  Even though it is made of military grade material and designed to be tough, Bugs Dingo had no problem causing significant gnawing damage in only a few minutes when left alone with the American Dog carrot.

So maybe PupJoy should have been given 3.5 out of 4 stars for the products Lupe received.  The 5th star should be saved for evaluating cost, always an important consideration.  Of course, Lupe’s first PupJoy box was a gift from Erik & Ana (thank you!), so to Lupe, the price was an unbeatable free of charge.

SPHP did a little checking online and found the following approximate retail costs for the items Lupe got in her first PupJoy box:  Down Dog Snacks $10, Grandma Lucy’s Oven Baked Treats $9, American Dog carrot $10, Tuffy Ultimate Flyer $16.70.  Total retail value of $45.70.  Since the PupJoy website shows a cost for gift boxes ranging from $23 to $44 with free shipping in the USA ($5 in Canada), it appears PupJoy does offer at least fair value for money spent, and perhaps a discount.

What it all boils down to is Lupe’s new PupJoy rating is 4.5 out of 5 stars.  Is she hoping there’s more PupJoy in her future?  Of course, she is!

Reasons to try PupJoy

  • Healthy treats with All Natural, Grain Sensitive, Protein Sensitive & Organic options
  • Premium quality toys
  • Customizable box contents – 28 possible configurations
  • Choice of subscription plans available – a one time single box; or quarterly, bi-monthly, or monthly regularly scheduled shipments
  • Gift plans available
  • Convenient home delivery
  • $2 of each PupJoy box purchase is donated to help give shelter animals a chance at life

Interested in trying PupJoy?  Tell them Bugs Dingo sent you!  Use this link to receive a $10 PupJoy welcome before ordering, and Lupe will receive a PupJoy credit, too!  Simply enter your information where Lupe’s appears and submit.  Lupe thanks you, and hopes you have a wonderful PupJoy experience, too!

Links:

pupjoy.com

$10 PupJoy welcome

Tell ’em Bugs Dingo sent you!

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s Dingo Tales Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.