Spent grain? Huh? Homemade dog treats? Explain…
My husband is a hobby brewer (beer) and last weekend was a Brewing Weekend. I’m not going to pretend to understand it all (I’m only really interested in the final product), but during the brewing process (which looks a lot like the “double, double, toil and trouble” witches-around-a-cauldron scene from Shakespeare’s Macbeth), he winds up with some soggy “spent” grains. In the past, he’s thrown them in the yard (don’t get me started…) and we’ve noticed that the dogs love to eat the spent grain. Here’s what spent grain looks like:

Because I was home and not working (for once) on a weekend, I got a bee in my bonnet and decided to make spent grain homemade dog treats.
I surfed around a bit (thanks, Google) and found a great recipe on Deschutes Brewing (great beer, btw). You gotta love a brewery who takes the time to add a dog treat recipe to their website. Anyway, it’s about as simple as it gets — four basic ingredients: peanut butter, eggs, spent grain, and flour.

You just mix it all together with your hands (always fun to roll up my sleeves and get right into the mix with my hands), roll it out, and then use whatever cookie cutters you have. I used hearts (it was just Valentines Day, y’know), dog bones, and of course a Labrador!

Those are the raw cookies. Wanna hear a secret? I tasted the dough. Raw. With eggs. And I didn’t get salmonella. I know, I know. It can happen. I live life on the edge. I’m a risk-taker like that.
That cookie dough wasn’t bad. If I was really going to dig in, I’d need some sugar, but the dogs don’t have the same sweet tooth we humans do so they’re just fine without it.

So those are the finished spent grain homemade dog treats! The dogs said they loved them. SOMEONE ate half a plate from the counter. There are only two dogs who can actually reach that high [::cough Nemo:: ::cough Schooner::], but there isn’t any incriminating evidence upon which to convict. So I guess they’re all innocent. Yeah, right.
Spent grain, by the way, can be acquired fairly easily if you live near a brewery or if you know some home brewers. Do not give the dogs hops in any form — that’s a big ol’ no-no.






An entire bed. To myself.
Aging dogs
We love living out in the country.







She was feisty and a real handful. She had gotten so attached to Rocky, the first service dog, that I was seriously concerned that she’d fall apart when he went back to the agency for his advanced training. Turns out she missed him a lot, but service pup #3, Tango (who was keeper #2), was a nice distraction and he kept Lily busy so she didn’t have much time to cry in her food bowl about missing Rocky. Lily was released from service dog training for a few reasons. She has a tactile sensitivity that made her quite unhappy in a service dog vest. She hated wearing the vest and doesn’t really even like wearing a collar, even today. She also didn’t love working in public. She’s very friendly, but I liken her to an introvert who would rather stay home than go to the party. She’s most comfortable tucked under my desk, under the table, or in her crate. Being out in public wasn’t really her thing. She wasn’t happy with the life of a public working dog, so the agency made the wise decision to let her live the life she really wanted — a pet dog that didn’t need to interact with the world all day every day. She’s now almost 14, but can run circles around any of the other dogs (with the exception of Great Dane, Schooner — and she runs circles under him!). She’s active, fit, and can keep me walking at a speedy clip for miles and miles!
A total “man’s dog,” he mainly tolerates me while living for my husband’s affection. Once when my husband was on business travel for six weeks, we had a gentleman come over to fix something in the house. Nemo was attached to that guy the whole time he was here. Before the guy left, Nemo crawled his 85 pound self up into his lap and was the most contented dog you’d ever want to see. Visually, Nemo looks like the oldest dog, as he’s gone almost totally grey in his face. Silly and playful, Nemo is the one who’ll run around the yard doing zoomie laps while playing chase with me or the other dogs. A ridiculously handsome (and yet also goofy looking) dog, Nemo garners the most attention when we have him out. People seem to gravitate to his stately stature, his houndish face, and his friendliness. At the end of the day, he loves nothing more than to crawl into the LaZ Boy with my husband and drift off to sleep.
Traction on hardwood floors is hard to come by.
