My designer dog is a hellhound
Jeremy Clarkson
The Sunday Times October 22, 2006
Alarming news from the pet shop. If current trends continue, then at
some point in 2007 more families in Britain will own a fish than
will own a dog.
Experts suggest this is because of changing lifestyles: children
prefer virtual dogs on the computer, and working parents don’t want
to leave a real dog at home all day, in case it eats the blender and
ruins the Fired Earth natural organic carpet, which cost £47.50 a
yard.
Rubbish. We read last week about a Scottish hill farmer who suffered
a stroke while out in the glens, and was saved from certain death by
his faithful collie dogs who snuggled up with the stricken chap to
keep him warm, and then ran around barking when they saw the search
and rescue helicopter circling nearby.
This would not have happened if he’d been up there with Shep and
Rover, his trusty sheep-fish.
And when you hear a noise in your house at 3am you are entitled to
feel frightened if all you have downstairs is a brace of carp.
Whereas if you have a huge dog with big spiky teeth, you can roll
over and go back to sleep. Dogs bring peace of mind, then, whether
you are being burgled or if you’ve had a stroke.
Nevertheless, between 1985 and 2004, dog ownership in Britain fell
by 26% and now, fewer than one in five households has one.
I have three. There’s a mother, a quiet and wise old thing, and a
daughter, who’s stupid and yellow and who spends half of her time at
the local rugby club, eating whatever she can find in their
dustbins. And the other half bringing it all back over my organic
natural flooring.
She swallowed some slug pellets when she was younger and after a
£740 stay at the vet’s emerged as a cabbage patch dog. I feel sure
that if I were to have a stroke while on the moors, she would eat
me. And then regurgitate my wallet through a burglar’s letter box.
Despite this, and the dog-logs they leave in the yard, and the
incessant barking, and the smell, I find it comforting to have dogs
around the place, so when my daughter said she’d like a new one for
her birthday, obviously I said yes.
Things, however, have changed. Not long ago, you bought a dog for
40p, taught it to sit and fed it a tin of diced horse once a day.
Not any more. Because now, in addition to the usual array of normal
dogs, there are all sorts of hybrids, usually with a poodle in the
mix somewhere. I don’t know why. Poodles are horrid, vicious things.
But anyway, you can have a cockerpoo or a pekeapoo or the one chosen
by Tiger Woods, Graham Norton and my daughter, a labradoodle.
Do you have any idea how much such a thing costs? Go on, take a
guess. Nope: you’re miles off because the price of what is basically
a mongrel is £950. And I’m sorry but how can something discovered
accidentally in Australia possibly be worth more than a 1991 BMW?
Of course, it arrived as cute as cute could be but, alarmingly,
within 15 minutes had become the size of a small mule. Now, eight
weeks down the line, it has to duck when it comes through the door,
and it doesn’t chew my wellies, as you’d expect from a puppy; it
swallows them whole. Some people think we may have accidentally
bought a poodlephant.
But no. Stroke it and you quickly realise that what we’ve actually
got is a massive bath mat draped over a skeleton. This is the
world’s first meat-free dog. When he’s wet, he completely
disappears. It’s spooky.
He is also, I’m afraid, the subject of some bitter controversy in
dogdom. Both the poodle owners’ club and the labrador society —
normally sworn enemies I presume — have put out statements saying
that the labradoodle is a wicked piece of interracial designer dog
experimentation built only to quench the thirst of ungodly media
luvvies. They wonder what disease and madness may result.
Labradoodle owners therefore have been driven onto the web,
arranging secret dogging locations where they can dog quietly, away
from armed vigilante groups of labradors and poodles.
It’s terrible. We’re now on a Kennel Club blacklist, we’ve had to
tune the house to accommodate our labracow, my wellies have been
eaten and we’re £950 worse off.
And this is just the start. Because if you’ve spent that much on a
dog, then it’s wise to get it insured, and they will insist that in
addition to the collar it has a microchip inserted in its skin, so
it can be tracked by satellite. And this, it turns out, annoyingly,
cannot be inserted by an electrician. You’ve got to get a vet, which
costs another million pounds.
I haven’t finished yet. You’ve also got to factor in the fact that
designer children’s designer dogs like designer food, which is made
from panda bear ears and the lightly fried scrotum of a fin whale,
and they need vitamin supplements and holistic liver oil from a cod.
And a fully machine washable bed, made from myrrh.
That’s why the fish is about to overtake the dog as Britain’s number
one pet, because these days running a dog is more complicated and
more expensive than running a nuclear power station. And of course
when a dog dies, you can’t really flush it down the lavatory.