My dad loved Maggie very much and he wanted us to post his tribute to her.
He sent a note out to let his timber framers know of her passing. Please get a comfortable spot and grab a cup of coffee. This will be a long posting.
Around this
time yesterday, we brought our AireGirl, Maggie, to the New Haven animal
hospital. We had made the hard decision that we knew was the right decision and
our dear sweet Maggie was put to sleep.
We discovered a tumor in her mouth on Christmas day. For the past month,
we tried our hardest to make her life special and in return, she let us know
what a special girl she was. Maggie came
home to the House at Pooh Corner here in Northford, Connecticut, the first week
in September in 1998. She was 7 weeks old.
Melissa left a few days later for her senior year in college. We were just finishing up the barn project in
Windham. From the day we brought Maggie
home, I had the sense that she was a special girl. She looked like something out of a cartoon
and she acted that way too. As much as she made me smile, I always noticed that
she was smiling too. She always had a
smile on her face and happy eyes.
I took
2 weeks off in mid-October when she was 12-weeks old. I had a task in front of me. I had made an agreement with Charles Crump to
build new doors for the end of his barn. In return, I would be able to store
lumber there. So while Sue was at work,
Maggie was with me – literally beginning her life hanging around, playing and
making mischief in a 200 year old barn.
She barked at the geese that flew overhead; she chased butterflies and
bees; she ran through the hay and rolled in the dirt and we delivered truckload
after truckload of boards to Crump’s barn.
She used to sit next to me in the front of my ’87 red F-150. She used to
lean against me like a bottle of milk and as many times as I looked down at her,
she looked back at me. A few months later, the calendar turned to
1999. We spent the entire year, Sue and Maggie and me, building the 17th
Century frame as an addition onto my workshop. She was alongside of us making
mischief every minute that we worked.
In
November of ’99, I was diagnosed as being in heart failure. Throughout the year of 2000, I was in denial
as we watched my brother, Jon, battle and lose his battle to cancer. In June of ’01, I retired from work and began
the process of being listed for a heart transplant. On my first day home from work, we took on
the job of building a small timber frame barn for Don and Donna. Such a
struggle the summer of ’01 was! It
seemed each day it was harder and harder for me to breathe. Maggie was by my
side as we worked on this project and each day for lunch, when I would lay down
to rest, it became our routine that she would lay down with me. As I look back now, it seems that Maggie
carried us along – me and Sue and the work we were doing. She was always with
us and she was always involved in something.
Almost until the end of ’04, our lives continued this way. Maggie was with Sue the morning that they
found the card, which was the six of hearts, laying in the road only hours
after my heart transplant, which was on November 6th. Through the
literally hundreds of doctor appointments and 30+ heart catheterizations and
heart biopsies – through hundreds of trips to Yale, pre and post transplant,
the one thing I could count on was when I returned home and opened our back
door, she was there waiting for me with a happy face and a smile. It would be hard to explain how it felt for
me to return home to the House at Pooh Corner with my donor’s heart having lived
through such a challenge. I remember how
good her fur felt and her cold black nose. He tail just about knocked me
over. I was home safe and alive with our
Maggie.
Maggie was a familiar face at
many barn raisings – Don’s and Gene’s and the Miller barn and the Dudley Farm
and Paul Sanderson and Ross Goodhue and Mike and Lauren, Todd and Tim - she was
such a part of our lives.
Maggie went
to Nantucket for the first time on her first birthday. We had the good fortune
of returning back to that special cottage many more times with Maggie. Some of
our best memories ever are being on Nantucket with Maggie and then when there
was 4 of us when Mitch came along.
We
dismantled Crump’s barn in the summer of 2008.
I used to say to Sue all the time – I will be a happy man when Maggie
can lay in front of a fire in the fireplace inside of the barn where she
started her life with me. That dream and
that vision came true on more than one occasion – most recently last week, when
Maggie laid on a quilt alongside of Mitch on a quilt in front of a blazing fire
in Crump’s restored barn while I warmed my backside and worked on an Oliver
bandsaw. I sat on the floor next to her,
stared into the fire and I thanked God for the moment that we were having. Maggie loved most everyone. She especially loved her human sister and
Gene Jones and Uncle Phil. Most of all,
Maggie loved her mom. She adored her. She was never secure if her mom wasn’t
around. If she was gone, she waited and
she watched for her return.
Maggie had
several doggie buddies – Charley, her cousin Jenna, Putter and hundreds of dogs
on her dog blog throughout the world. Maggie mostly loved her best buddy – her
Golden Retriever friend, Molly Bruce. They walked 2 miles every day together
for all of the years that I waited for my miracle. This may be hard to
understand and to some it may seem impossible but Maggie changed my life. She
changed our lives. She was a spirited,
sassy, energetic, playful clown who loved living. We had so many adventures with her. She truly cared for and loved her little
brother, Mitch. The two of them were
bonded and after Mitch came along, the four of us have shared many, many
adventures. Our lives have seemed to
revolve around them but it’s Maggie who changed us. An Airedale is a curious creature – not for
everyone. If you are fortunate enough to
bond with one, it’s a very special friendship and that’s what we had with our
Maggie.
In her final moments yesterday,
I thanked her for all she has done for us and I thanked her for believing in me
and waiting for me to come home each time that I have left.
If you knew
Maggie, you know that she always had something to say. She was a
loudmouth! We used to laugh at her
sitting, with her head up, facing Heaven and barking away. She had a way to do it where her lips would
take the shape of an “O” and somehow she’d look like she was yodeling. You always knew where Maggie was because she
was making noise. You always knew when
anything was going on anywhere around you because she was telling you so. Over the years, I got to realize that it was
more than just being a nuisance. I
started to hear her messages. She was saying, “Hey, can’t you see that I am
Maggie - Can’t you see that I am an Airedale and hey, can’t you see that I want
to be your friend – that I just want you to say hi to me and hey, look at me –
listen to what I’m saying. I am Maggie, can’t you see that! And Hey, can’t you
see that I’m telling you thank you, thank you for helping my dad while he is so
sick. Can’t you see that’s why I am barking. It’s me, I am Maggie. Thank you for helping my
mom get through all of this – thank you for being our friends – thank you for
visiting my playground, my dad’s workshop, The Temple and hey, I am Maggie, I
am your friend. I don’t want you to forget me. Can’t you see that it’s time for
me to go. Can’t you see that I have had
a perfect life for an Airedale girl. Wait – I think I see the rainbow. I do see the rainbow. It’s just on the other
side of this Bridge. Hey, can’t you see that I, me, Maggie, I have to go. I have to cross this bridge but hey, please
don’t worry about me. I will be on the other side after I cross over. I will be
barking at geese and chasing butterflies, bees and romping around in some hay
in an old barn and rolling in the dirt and hey, I will be here waiting. I will wait for as long as it takes for my
family to come and hey, I’m Maggie – I’m on the other side now. I’m going to spend a lot of time now
listening, and hey, I’m going to listen for the sound of an Indian motorcycle.
I know it will come and hey, it’s going to be my dad and maybe my brother Mitch
will be in one of those tan saddlebags. Can’t you see that I am Maggie. Can’t
you see that our lives have crossed and can’t you see that we have touched and
can’t you see that I love you all so much and I will wait for all of you and
hey, can’t you see that we’re still going to have another barn raising on the
other side of this Rainbow Bridge and hey, please don’t ever forget me. I am
Maggie. Yup, Maggie from Northford!"
Please
forgive me for my fantasy. I heard what
Maggie was saying and she was saying all of these things. She never wanted us
to forget her. Our hearts are broken. We
have enjoyed nearly 14 years in the presence of a wonderful Airedale Terrier
named Maggie. I named Maggie. Sue named
Mitch. M-n-M. When I came home for the hospital last night,
Mitch was laying on the hearth still and silent laying next to one food dish
where there used to be two. He had Maggie’s pink pig clutched in his paws with
his head resting on it. He just looked
at me.
When we leashed Maggie up to head to the animal hospital, I could feel
my complexion go white. My heart sank
and I had too big of a lump in my throat to swallow. I couldn’t breathe. I was thinking to myself – she doesn’t know
where she’s going and Mitch doesn’t know that he will never see her again. It felt cruel. It may sound strange but how
is it fair that we have control over these wonderful animals and how could
anyone ever be mean or abuse such a good friend. When our back door closed with
Mitch inside, I could feel my heart breaking for Mitch and for Maggie, for Sue
and for myself.
Thank you
all for being a part of our lives and thank you all for being in Maggie’s
presence.
This picture
is of Maggie and me when she was 12 weeks old. This is how she and I both
looked when she was beginning to understand the greatness of hanging around at
Crump’s barn.
Maggie and
Mitch welcoming me home on April 10th of last year. My spirits were down. My strength was low but my determination was
renewed when my 2 Airedales, Maggie and Mitch, welcomed me home and pledged to
share some of their Terrier spunk and spirit with me until I got back on my
feet.
George
We want to thank all of you for your heartfelt comments and for all of the emails and cards and facebook comments and for all of the touching tributes. We appreciate them more than you will ever know.
Yesterday was a very tough day for us but we got through it because we were together.
Love ya lots,
Mitch, mom, dad and angel Maggie