Stick Art

It’s a good thing we live in the forest! Because Kloe loves chewing on sticks. With pines, oaks, and cedars all dropping their deadwood around the Golden K Kloe always has a wide variety of sticks to choose from.

When Kloe was a puppy I worried that she might swallow a big piece and choke. Or that the accumulation of stick particles would cause harm to her mouth or stomach. But she doesn’t really eat any of the stick. She gnaws on the larger sticks and shreds the smaller sticks. Kloe can take a moderate size stick – say a half inch to an inch round – and make toothpicks. With larger sizes she is like a wood carver. She’ll create various shapes – sometimes over a period of days with the same large stick – until the stick is small enough to then shred into toothpicks.

A variation of the stick chewing is when Kloe methodically dismantles a pine cone -scale by scale- placing the scales in a pile until the pine cone is reduced to what looks like a corn cob with all the corn off of it. If I try to pick up a pine cone with my bare hands I get stuck if not careful. So it always amazes me that Kloe can pick pine cones up with her mouth with no regard for the sharp needle-like ends of the scale.

Kloe takes her stick chewing pretty seriously. Her focus and intensity is a lot like the aforementioned wood carver carefully planning and then executing each stroke of the knife. Or in Kloe’s case, each chomp of her jaw. She demonstrates quite a bit of artistry with her sticks!

About a year ago I came upon Kloe in one of her favorite chewing spots and captured the photo below. Taken with my iPhone in portrait mode this shot highlights my sweet girl at work in her “studio” carving away with a large inventory of sticks nearby for future Stick Art projects.

7 Comments

Such a sweet photo! I used to worry when my dogs chewed on sticks, too, but like Kloe, they never had a problem. I guess some dogs are just smart enough spit out the pieces. Years ago, though, we had a dog who ate an entire rose bush. I don’t mean chewed on it, I mean ate it…in one go. One day we had a rosebush and the next day we had the chewed off stubs. Amazingly, nothing bad ever happened as a result, but we were plenty worried!

Wow – a whole rose bush. That is pretty impressive! Glad your pup was ok after that. It sounds like she didn’t get in trouble and came out smelling like a rose!… πŸ˜… (Sorry – I couldn’t resist.)

Love the pic! I always worry, too, that the Z kids are going to end up with an obstruction. Or cutting their mouth, like you said. But I always limit and supervise their stick play to manage my own stress level.

I still worry a bit but I realized early on that unless they are not out in the yard when I’m not home I can’t control it. And that would not be practical. They have a very large, fenced, and safe area to be out in. But there are sticks everywhere. Interestingly, I think Kloe is less inclined to chew sticks when we’re not home. So often I come home from being away for some time and she is sitting at the gate waiting for me. As soon as I get home and walk through the gate, and after obligatory excitement and greetings, Kloe will run off to her stick pile and begin chewing.

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