"A breed of satin and steel. Pit bulls are a mixture of softness and strength, an uncanny canine combination of fun, foolishness, and serious business, all wrapped up in love."

-D. Caroline Coile




Thursday, November 3, 2011

Air Force Family

A veteran and her husband go to great lengths to keep their pit bulls
 despite the dogs being banned from base housing.

                                   By Krista Hernandez (Reprinted from StubbyDog.org)

Our three dogs are our family. They sleep with us, take walks with us, make us laugh and, most importantly, love us! As a military family, one of our greatest challenges has not been the long or unpredictable hours or living away from family: It has been having pit bulls.

I am a veteran and my husband is a staff sergeant in the Air Force. Our second duty station at Edwards AFB in California is where our dogs came into our lives.

Nacho was our first dog. At the time we agreed to take him, I wasn’t even sure what breed he was; I was just helping a dog in need stay out of the pound. That evening we welcomed into our home the dog that would change our lives forever. Nacho was a young, blue nose pit bull who our daughter named after our favorite family movie, “Nacho Libre.”

I was blissfully unaware of the stigma towards pit bulls, but after a few visits to the park all that changed, and over the course of the first year I heard more accusations from strangers, family and friends than I care to remember, not to mention the questioning of our parenting ability. If they all could just see what we see – how gentle he is and how his favorite thing in the whole world is to curl up on the couch with you – they would love him like we do.

After we had Nacho for about 10 months, we decided to get another dog, which our daughter named Mariposa, Spanish for butterfly. She quickly took the role of the annoying little sister, and Nacho never enjoyed peace and quiet again. Mariposa is now almost 2 and is the class clown. Whether she is crashing into the doggie pool or making someone’s lap her chair, there is never a dull moment with her around.


Roxy finally became a permanent member of the family a full year after we met her. Roxy was rescued along with her parents and two other puppies from a situation of neglect – they had been tied up to the fence of an outdoor kennel with no shelter from the winter rains. After my attempts to help the family care for the dogs, they eventually surrendered all five to me. Roxy was initially adopted, but six months later she turned up in the pound with her microchip still registered to the rescue that had worked with me and provided the chipping. So Roxy came back into our lives, and after one more failed adoption attempt, we decided she wasn’t going anywhere else.

Roxy loves to play outside with Mariposa and chase balls – and, of course, tease Nacho. Nacho prefers to relax in a sunny spot but doesn’t get much of a break with the two girls running around. As a family we enjoy taking them on walks in the evening, or my husband will take one of them on a run. They are a part of the family, and we include them in car rides and make time for the dog park.

We lived in base housing for most of our four years at Edwards, where pit bulls where allowed, but this past summer we received orders to Lackland AFB in Texas. We were planning on living on base and were devastated to find out we couldn’t move in with our dogs, as they are on the banned list.

We searched for a possible rental and received the usual, “We don’t allow those kinds of dogs.” I was even scolded by a man with a response of, “This is a family neighborhood, with children!” My husband and I made the decision before we left that the only way to keep everyone together was to buy a home. This was a very big decision for us, but there was no question that our dogs were coming with us.

We spent a whole month in a hotel while our paperwork was being completed, and we finally moved into our house this July. We gave up a lot of the perks of living on base: our daughter having to go to a local elementary school instead of the school on base, a commute to work, the insurance premiums, etc.

These are decisions we wish we didn’t have to make but didn’t think twice about. Friends and family called us crazy for going to such measures, but our dogs are our family, our best friends and our protectors, and we wouldn’t have it any other way.

Many military members don’t think twice about taking their dog to a shelter when they are transferred, but we know we are the lucky ones. By buying our house, we bought ourselves peace of mind for the next four years, but what challenges will we face at the next duty station?

Editor’s note: In the summer of 2011, the Air Force banned pit bulls from all bases, joining bans already in place on Marine and Army bases.

9 comments:

  1. If only more people felt the same way about their pets, pitbulls or otherwise, there would not be so many poor babies living in shelters waiting for a furever home. Bless you and your decision to keep your family together. Your babies are beautiful!!

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  2. It's a shame that America's dog is being taken away from American heroes. I love my pits, and would have done the same thing...makes you feel bad for the people who have serious financial constraints, though.

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  3. If more people stood up for the breed as you have done, the shelters wouldn't be full of them. I thought the armed forces taught LOYALTY? Where's the loyalty in making the enlisted men and families give up there trusted companions? What message does that send to the children also? Thank you for doing what you've done, your're one of the best examples out there!

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  4. I am also a USAF member...we have four dogs, one is a pit bull...same thing, no dogs, or no pit bulls/mix...our entire family will live comfortable and happy TOGETHER or we will find another place to live...btw my pit bull is always being chewed and jumped on by our beagle hound, wired hair terrier and min pin. We had to buy ANOTHER house in order to keep our family together. Good for you, I have respect for you...God bless you and ALL your family members!

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  5. GOOD JOB GUYS!!!! Good job. These dogs are the BEST!! There is NO SENSE for any of this. Shame on the USAF.

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  6. What a heartwarming yet very sad story! Congrats to you for keeping your family together! I feel the same way about my dog. She would much rather cuddle up next to us than anything else. She won't even react to the geese in our backyard. It is just unreal that America's hero dogs are being turned away from bases. How sad the affect the media has on people.

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  7. Hi There! We really appreciate you sharing so many of our articles, however please follow our re-print guidelines when doing so, found here:

    http://stubbydog.org/about-2/guidelines/

    Our volunteer authors and photographers work very hard to create such great stories and we need to make sure they get the credit they deserve.

    Please feel free to contact me if you have questions. laurap@stubbydog.org

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  8. what about pit mixes? or if u dont know what breed they are? even if there not aggressive? im not getting rid of my dog because of that bs

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  9. That would be a scary news if it was to be real. Hope they are not!! I have also found something interesting . That is to find air force bases by spending less time than before. Because in that website all of the information are neatly provided.

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