
Teo at home in the afternoon sun, February 6 2021.
Teo is the pride and joy of his rescue parents, Valerie and me.
He came into this world on January 13, 2020 at breeder Kylie Byrn’s farm in Downing, Missouri. She named him Brownie. His parents – Tank and Pixie – are both full-blooded Cocker Spaniels. Kylie offered the pup for sale on Puppyspot.com,a service that connects buyers with legitimate breeders. This belated post is meant to thank Kylie, and to assure her that Brownie found a loving home.
I’d wanted a dog for years, but my full-time job required too much travel. So I waited. At last, in August 2019, I retired from Esri and we started looking. I wanted to raise a puppy. We wanted a pup that would grow up to be a medium sized dog, big enough to hike with me in the nearby foothills. We searched rescues locally and regionally without a match. Then we expanded our search to include breeders and “concierge” services like PuppySpot. Here’s the picture that won our hearts.

Teo (then Brownie) at about 4 weeks old, as we found him pictured at PuppySpot.com.
Kylie arranged to have Brownie shipped from Missouri to Palm Springs International Airport. He arrived in a comfy crate, not too freaked out. Val held him on the 45-minute drive home. Here they are after we arrived.

Teo arrives at his new home in California after a his flight from Missouri. Both Val’s delight and trepidation are apparent.
I named him “Teo” after Teo Macero, the legendary producer of Miles Davis and Dave Brubeck, among others. I relied on The Art of Raising a Puppy by the Monks of New Skete for advice about naming, and lots of other things. (“We suggest short, two-syllable names that end in a long vowel sound”, p. 122.) Here he is getting used to his name.
We didn’t expect Teo to be a pandemic project, but that’s what he became. From his arrival on March 10, 2020, we’ve been inseparable. It took a year for him to be fully housebroken, and my patience was tested at times. During a seeming lull in the pandemic (April-May 2020) we went to Obedience training – which of course was primarily training for me as a new dog parent. He’s pretty well behaved now – when he feels like it.
He runs free on our ridge-top property, rousting up grouse as he’s bred to do, and sometimes bounding into neighbors’ lands to chase deer. We try to keep him at heel early mornings and evenings, when coyotes are likely to be on the prowl. He’s also obsessed with lizards, which are plentiful here in warm weather. Every morning he scampers down the switch-back trail to the boundary of our property with neighbors to the south, where he hunts lizards and does his business.
One morning we heard a panicked bleating and found a fawn stuck halfway through our neighbor’s metal rail fence. Two does watched helplessly from a cautious distance. Teo’s barking made the deer all the more anxious, so I ran him back up to the house. Then I returned to the fawn, grabbed her rear legs, and pulled her back out of the fence as gently as I could. Her flank was rubbed raw after her struggles. As she bounded off to rejoin the does, I wondered if she’d survive the coyotes long enough to heal.
I was by myself during all this, and didn’t even think of trying to record the scene. However, I did find this video of another fawn caught in a wire fence in Colorado. It looks and sounds like what Teo and I saw and heard.
Teo’s favorite place may be the Huntington Dog Beach, which is 75 miles west of home. We go there once or twice a month. He loves cavorting with other dogs, and chasing his tennis ball into the Pacific. Here he is splashing into the surf after a ball, then meeting a new pal.
Just as we’d hoped, Teo grew up to be a great little hiker. He’ll pull me up and down hills for hours, so long as it’s not too hot and bright outside. Here we are in October 2021 on the trail at Whitewater Preserve, a favorite outing near Palm Springs. Thanks to our friend Kelleann Foster for the photo.
I call us “rescue parents” because I feel like Teo rescued us. He’s been a constant source of love and joy for Val through her unrelenting work as a Sleep Therapist and Doctorate of Nursing Practice student. He got me outside more, and made me laugh every day. He made us into a family. On this Thanksgiving Day, we’re so thankful for him.