Now that I have Gypsy for comparison, a possible problem which Kim's always had has become more noticeable; a disinclination to make the effort of jumping up onto or into things (e.g. beds, back of the 4WD etc). Gypsy leaps effortlessly onto my bed and anywhere else within reason, as I have seen RRs do often on YouTube. Kim seems to be capable of jumping, but only if he's very excited or afraid, and I know how it's usual to get an extra surge of strength and energy in extreme situations due to adrenaline etc. Some of you have seen him jumping during play on my YouTube videos of him (search for my channel - Gairlochan - to see them all. I have lots more now of Kim with Gypsy but the sheer quantity has created a bottleneck so there's nothing new up there except one of them on the beach chasing each other, Gypsy's first visit to the beach.)
Back to Kim: at just under 22" he's on the short side for a male RR. In fact, he and Gypsy are the same height, though he's 8Kg/20 lbs heavier and much broader in build). I don't know if they will get any taller, and would be interested in any opinions anyone has on this question (they're nearly eleven months old now). But I digress … again …
Even when Kim was only 4 1/2 months old and the size of a spaniel, he was quite capable of jumping onto the bed and into the back of the 4WD with apparent ease, but has only ever done it once, the first time we took him to the beach and he was very excited indeed. Since then he just stands at the back of the 4WD or the bottom of my bed looking helpless and asking for a lift up which, as he's about 40 Kg/90lb, is getting onerous. I have a box at the bottom of the bed to help him climb, but he still makes very heavy weather of it. It's not a very high bed; it's about shoulder height for him. He often compromises by coming up near where I'm lying and putting his front legs up (which he finds easy) and resting on his elbows and socialising with me, like a man leaning on a bar counter in a pub. It's quite amusing to watch, but it does still worry me; I can't imagine Gypsy being satisfied with that. She'd just flow effortlessly up onto the bed in one fluid motion like water going uphill and that would be that.
I know Kim doesn't have Gypsy's high energy and fast metabolism and that he's still carrying a few extra kilos despite the extra exercise thanks to Gypsy, the reduction in the size of his meals -- he gets no more than her though he's much bigger -- and replacement of some with green beans as suggested by some forum members. But he's got enough energy to play rough and tumble with Gypsy for hours each day and run like a mad thing on the beach, so I'm considering two possibilities: hip dysplasia and/or some sort of specific traumatic incident during puppyhood (e.g. being kicked away hard when he tried to hop up the steps and come inside the house as a puppy).
Gypsy was very scared of even approaching our steps let alone entering our house at first (as Kim had initially also been, though they're both fine now), so it's likely they've both been discouraged by brutal means from coming indoors. Given their mysterious provenance, we'll never know exactly what was done to them, only that it was done to Gypsy for a lot longer yet she's a fine jumper, scorning to use the box and leaping onto my bed with ease and grace.
Kim tends to look worried and pleading if I invite, encourage or command him to jump up onto the bed, and the more I do it the more worried he looks, but he still doesn't even climb up, when it's bad (it's quite variable). Maybe he's worried because he likes being on the bed (no fear of being on the bed or of being in the 4WD at all; he loves car rides) but feels he can't, either for psychological or physical reasons, make it up onto the bed or into the car without considerable effort. When he climbs onto the bed you'd think he was climbing Mt Everest, though sometimes it looks harder, sometimes much easier, but never effortless and never at all without the box to help him.
The vet checked a ligaments (I don't know the name; I wasn't there. Alan thinks it was the 'cruciate ligament' but he's not sure) in both dogs, and they checked out fine for both dogs. But hip dysplasia is skeletal, as I understand it, and would need an X-ray to diagnose, wouldn't it?
One of the reasons for buying pups from a reputable breeder is that the issue of hip dysplasia is taken seriously, but we didn't have that luxury, and neither did Kim. I can't bear the thought of him becoming crippled and unable to run around the way he does now. I don't know much about the condition except that it seems to be a hip socket which is too open/not concave or enclosed enough. I have a similar problem with my own 'double-jointed' hips, and can dislocate them at will with a pop (it's technically known as subluxing, not dislocation), and I suffer from chronic pain in one and, increasingly, the other as I get older. I wouldn't wish it on a dog, quite literally!
Any ideas, anyone?