WASHINGTON — Dale Haney is the keeper of the White House grounds. In nearly 40 years of keeping the grass green and the flowers blooming, he's also managed to cultivate something just as important: relationships with the presidents' pooches.
Haney is often spotted walking Bo, the Obama family's Portuguese water dog. In fact, he's tended to every White House pup since King Timahoe, Richard Nixon's Irish setter.
Haney, 57, has been a White House fixture since 1972. After getting a degree in horticulture from Sandhills Community College in Pinehurst, N.C., he continued his training in Washington and basically was discovered for his green thumb, as he tells the story.
"They heard about me and they called me to come over here for an interview and I came and here I still am," he said during a tour of the gardens one recent rainy morning when first lady Michelle Obama — Bo's primary walker — was out of town.
That meant Haney would be Bo's handler until she returned.
"I have him a little bit more" when she's traveling, said Haney, who said he's amazed by the public's fascination with White House pets.
"Sometimes I think they're more interested in the pets than the president," he said. "It's real amazing."
Take Bo.
Malia and Sasha Obama, now 11 and 8, long had wanted a dog, but were told they'd have to wait until after the presidential election last year. After Obama told the girls on election night that a puppy was coming with them to the White House, it seemed everyone everywhere wanted details — and had an opinion — on what kind of dog the president-to-be should get and where he should get it from.
Before Bo came along to romp on the South Lawn and roam the White House hallways, Haney spent a lot of time walking and playing with President George W. Bush's Scottish terriers, Barney and Miss Beazley. Haney was most fond of Spot, an English springer spaniel whose mother, Millie, belonged to Bush's father, President George H.W. Bush.
Besides taking care of the now year-old Bo, Haney has 18 1/2 acres of lawns, trees and gardens to care for, including the Rose Garden, the slightly smaller Jacqueline Kennedy Garden (also known as the first lady's garden) and Michelle Obama's bountiful South Lawn produce garden.
The vegetable garden has proved to be more popular than the White House anticipated. The crops are served at the White House and some are donated to a neighborhood soup kitchen.
The Obamas are "very into the grounds," said Haney, who is serving his eighth president.
"They know what's going on because they're always out here walking the dog," he said.
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