
In 2004, a Miami friend of mine’s family were out on their porch
giving out Halloween candy when a little black dachshund mix walked up
and sat down with them. It was dirty, covered with fleas and had no
collar. It didn’t seem like it wanted to leave so they fed it, washed it
and let it stay inside the front yard fence. They figured that the
owners would come looking for it, find it and claim it. After a few
days, they realized they had adopted a new dog. They named her Lola. I
was over their house frequently back then and I got to know Lola well. I
noticed that of the three other rescues they had, she ran the roost.
She was a balance of sweet and smart with feisty and tough. I fell in
love with Lola instantly.
I was teaching middle school at the time. My summer break began that
June. It’s nice to have summers off, but most people work 40 hours, so
as a teacher you wind up spending a lot of weekdays by yourself. My
friends knew how much I adored Lola and that I had a lot of time on my
hands, so they let her come over for a play date. The play dates turned
into sleepovers, which turned into days at a time. It got to the point
where it killed me to bring her back. They had mercy on me. I became the
proud owner of Lola and we became inseparable.

I’ve always spent as much time on the water as possible. On her first
trip out, Lola took to the boat immediately. She was so excited and
overtly happy to be there. When we were stopped she would sniff
everything, run around and explore the boat. When we took off she would
jump up next to me and put her head on my lap contently. Needless to
say, I was thrilled about it. She was a bit scared of fishing rods at
first, due to what I figured out was previous trauma regarding brooms.
It didn’t take her too many trips to realize that the sound of a
screaming reel meant incoming flapping, smelly fish to pounce on, bite
and lick. Her fear turned to adoration. Sometimes you’d find her staring
longingly at a rod and reel waiting for it to produce its magic. There
have been many times since where if you take a lot of casts without
hooking a fish, she’ll look at you and give you a frustrated yelp. Like,
“Catch something already!”
Not long after becoming Lola’s dad, I traded teaching for captaining.
Lola and I started spending 24/7 together. She came on almost all of my
fishing trips and seemed to love every minute of them. If I didn’t take
her for some reason (rough seas for example) she would wait anxiously
by the door all day. Upon my return, she would give me the cold shoulder
for a few hours. Just to be sure I knew what she thought of me leaving
her home. Clients got to know and adore her. She became a fixture in
lots of my many photos and Facebook posts. Once I even got a call from a
client saying, “We’d like to know if Lola is free to go fishing on
April 3rd? Oh, and if you’re free you can come too.”
When we are fishing, Lola is on point. When she hears the drag go
out, her excitement boils over. She jumps to and fro, runs over the
where the angler is and will even give high-pitched yelps. As soon as
the fish comes into the boat, she pounces. She leaps on top of it and
starts growling and attacking. Basically she goes from sweet, loving
companion to crazy attack pooch in 0.1 seconds. She reacts differently
towards different species and has preferences and dislikes. Here are
some examples:

Lady fish: Her number one, all time favorite. She even knows one is on
the line before we get it in the boat. She goes ballistic on them. The
only fish that she will out-right eat. After she helps it along its way
to fish heaven, she proceeds to eat it. She’ll hold it in her paws,
start at the face and devour it from head to tail; literally. I’ve seen
her devour a foot-long lady fish, roll on her back and lay around fat and
happy for an hour or more.

Trout, Jack, Snapper, Snook, Grouper, Pompano, Pinfish, Mahi, Tuna,
etc.: They get a pounce, growls, a bite or two and more growls until
they stop moving or taken away from her. At which point she returns to
search for more action.

Redfish: For some reason they make her nervous and she avoids them.
It might have to do with the low-pitch sound they emit from their
throats. They get the name Red Drum from it (not to be confused with
“REDRUM” from the movie,
The Shining).

Sharks and Cobia: She goes especially berserk over them. She will
attack until they are either quickly released or put in the cooler. A
shark is the only species she’s actually leaped from the boat after. She
once jumped on top of one, swam after it and bit it repeatedly. Luckily
it was a small one and in shallow water.

Lizard fish: She doesn’t like them. Neither do I for that matter.

Crabs: She will go to WAR with blue crabs. She becomes out-right
apoplectic when they come on board. She and big blue crabs fight like a
cobra and mongoose. She’s as fast as a mongoose could be, despite the
scar on her ear from one slip-up. I always let the crabs go before she
can hurt them.

Lobsters and Shrimp: Same as the crabs, but since they don’t have any
means to defend themselves; I try to keep her away from them. She snuck
one away from us one time. What I found afterwards looked like a
lobster that had stepped on a land mine.

Mackerel, Bluefish and Wahoo: I keep her as far away from them as
possible on account of their razor-sharp teeth and wicked speed (Much
more so than sharks). I’d like to keep her from getting the nick-names;
Tony Montana or Al Capone.

Salmon (Lake Michigan): She mostly licks them profusely and throws in a couple of growls for good measure.

Sailfish and Tarpon: She’s excited and interested, but gives them wider berth than other species.

Horse Flies and Mosquitoes: Catch, eat, catch, eat; very useful on the boat.

Bottle-nosed Dolphin: We come across pods of them very often in the
back country and Flamingo. When I see them in the distance, I say, “Get
em’ Lola!” She immediately jumps down from her spot next to me, runs to
the bow and gets on point. Her head whips from side to side in a frantic
search. When she locks on to them she begins to bark incessantly. Nine
times out of ten, they zip over to us, get under the bow and swim along
with us. They stare at her the whole time while she barks, yips and
whines at them. It happens so often that I think some of the pods have
gotten to know her. They seem to be as intrigued by her as she is by
them. I know one thing; when she isn’t on-board; they are far less
interested in the boat and hardly pay us any mind.

Lola won the lottery when she went from a street urchin to a sea dog
for sure. I’d like to think that she has the best life a dog could have.
On the other hand she has enriched my life and those who love her
immeasurably. She has hundreds of fans all over the country and world
who ask for her by name. One day that I’ll never forget was when I took a
family out who had a daughter with very severe down’s-syndrome. They
explained to me up front that the longest that they could possibly stay
out was a couple of hours at most. From the moment we boarded the boat,
the girl was completely entranced with Lola and she had her on her lap
for the whole ride out to our first spot. When we started catch fish,
Lola showed some interest, but not nearly as much as normal, instead
focusing more on her new friend.
Somehow Lola knew this child deserved her attention. For the first
and only time, Lola’s favorite past-time on the planet was suddenly
trumped. SIX hours later we pulled back up to the dock. The little
girl’s parents were beside themselves. With tears their eyes they
explained that their daughter had never spent even half as much time
remaining in one place and focusing on one thing in her life. Their
gratitude was palpable. They hugged Lola, each other, me and Lola again.
There wasn’t a dry eye on the dock. It was one most amazing
things I’ve witnessed as a captain and I owe it all to Lola.