Showing posts with label pets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pets. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

opt to adopt!

Looking to add a new member to the family??......perhaps a four-legged friend?
well.....you should.
More than 63% of homes have pets and many of them are considered full-fledged family members......if you own a dog and are looking for a play mate or a new baby of your own, check out these places to find the perfect pup for you! 




5500 pets are born each hour. 415 humans are born each hour. Check the math! More than half of those pets end up in shelters and so many never even get the chance to leave!! Please! Please ! don't support breeders and continue to raise these numbers. Breeders are in a business, they produce the most amount of product (puppies and kittens) for the highest dollar. They could care less where these babies end up. Breeders are in it for the $$$, please don't support them---

Many people think breeders are the only place to find a purebred. Hmmmmm....so you want to race your dog?? Is your dog going to be a contestant in the Westminster Dog Show? Do you want to frame your papers? If you answer no, then ask yourself why you are after a purebred.... And if you still decide thats what you want, check the shelters--there are thousands upon thousands of purebred babies waiting for a home. go get them.
Please, please, rescue a dog or cat. They have no idea why they are sitting in that wire cage; they just wan't to go home.
Heres where you find your new best friend: If you wan't to adopt but aren't looking forward to the unsettling trip to the shelter, then go online--adopt your face off without leaving your house! www.petfinder.com at Petfinder, you can type in the breed you want, the size and the age--from pups to grandpa's-they are all there!! Petfinder then sets you up with thousands of pets right in your area ready to go!
Looking for a smaller breed? check out http://lldogrescue.org -
LL Dog Rescue if where I found little Pilot. He was rescued from a puppy mill in Missouri.....he had two sets of upper teeth from in-breeding and was not in good shape, now, he is one hell of a happy puppy and we're pretty happy with him too. 
Other more mainstream shelters in the Kansas City area include www.waysidewaifs.org and www.animalhavenkc.org, also check out your local humane society which desperately needs to adopt out to make room for new intakes, www.hsgkc.org and heartofamericahs.org. also check out www.nmhpkc.org
Good luck! You're saving a life! 
"Dogs are not our whole life, but they make our lives whole."--Roger Caras


Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Picture Me Pretty

Lets get up close and personal................








Monday, March 29, 2010

Dog and Baby

So, I very recently was emailed a "dog in need of home" emails............ I get a lot of those but this one was different. The dog was being given up because he was snapping at their young child--who was admittingly being "rough" with the dog. "A child needs to be taught how to play and handle their puppy or dog. They need to be taught that a dog is not a toy or doll and shouldn’t be handled roughly." (Dogs and Small Children--Advice and Education) I am by no means excusing their dog's behavior! Bad dog! Bad!! .....And I know the owners are heartbroken over this matter, but "Children have to be taught to understand how dogs react in different situations. They must learn that a dog has feelings too and they don’t like to have their tail or ears pulled on. They might get mad and snap or bite." (Dogs and Small Children--Advice and Education)
It is a very sad situation. I feel bad for the owners and the dog. I can only imagine how confused the dog will be when adopted off to a new home (or considering the "urgency" of the email, a shelter....) I hope they can resolve the situation.  I know they are just devastated.
One way to hopefully avoid this situation is to begin with the right breed of dog, check out The Best Family Dogs-10 Breeds For Homes With Children. (cited below) and remember kids: all living things deserve respect.  
Check out what Cesar has to say:
http://www.cesarsway.com/askcesar/phobias-and-fears/Babies-and-Dogs
Sources and links :


To avoid dog bites in the home here is some advice: 

1. Properly socialize your puppy. BEFORE the age of 16 weeks, your puppy must encounter all of the things he'll see in his adult lifetime. If he doesn't, then, in all likelihood, he'll be terrified of those things later when he encounters them. You must introduce him to friendly adults, children, old people, noisy teenagers , disabled people, people with beards, hats, bald heads, abnormal gaits, canes, cars, bicycles, veterinarians, loud noises, other animals, toddlers, stairs, water, noisy kitchen instruments and other strange things. If the dog is not afraid of it, he won't try to attack it to defend himself. A well-adjusted dog is not a biting dog. Dogs must learn to use teeth properly as part of behavior development. Dogs normally learn bite inhibition by 4 and a half months of age.Bite inhibition is a learned response in which the dog consciously inhibits the full force of his biting ability. When pups bite while nursing, the mother dog will train them by standing up and walking away. When pups bite too hard during play with siblings, the bitten pup will yelp and stop playing with the rough pup or knock the rough-housing pup over with a loud bark or growl. This teaches a puppy that playtime ends if he bites too hard. People can use the same idea to teach their puppies bite inhibition. No matter how hard you try to socialize a dog to people or other dogs, there may be times when it is not sufficient. For example, someone shuts the dog's tail in a door, or your dog is attacked by another dog. In these cases, your dog will instinctively respond by biting, whether it's out of provocation or self-defense. Whether or not your dog does damage depends on the level of bite inhibition that was established, usually before he reached age four and a half months. 

2. Teach your children to respect life. Show them how to properly pet, and handle a dog. Young children should not be allowed to carry puppies. They want to, because they see you doing it, but they don't know how to yet, and they lack the coordination to properly support the dog and keep him from falling. This terrifies the puppy, and if you want the puppy to grow up thinking, "When I get my adult teeth, kid , you’re MINE!" You must teach the child that handling the puppy in this way is not comfortable for the puppy, and the child must not try to hurt the puppy. 

3. NEVER leave a young child alone with your puppy: No matter how good you think your child is, when you're not looking, the child wants to do all of the things you won't let him do when you're around. The child is usually "low man on the totem pole" in the household, and if he can have control over the dog, it makes him feel less powerless. This means poking pens into him, pulling his tail etc. You may not realize your child is pestering the dog until the day he comes running to you, dripping blood, saying, "Doggie BITE!" At this point somebody's in trouble, and its usually the dog. He can't defend himself and he didn't have witnesses. 

4. If you have toddlers, create a safe "haven" for your dog. Create a place where the dog can escape to when the dog does not want to be bothered with the child. If the dog is not able to get away from the thing that terrifies him he will try to make the child go away by lip lifting, growling, snapping, or biting, all of which are proper social signals to avoid REAL aggression, by communicating that the dog wants to be left alone. However, children do not understand this language, so it's important to give the dog a place to go where the child absolutely cannot follow. 

5. Don't tie your dog out. Tied dogs are frustrated dogs. This tends to make them hyper and testy. A child entering the area where a dog is chained could be easily knocked down or bitten. If one or more of your neighbor’s ties a dog out, don't let your children go near these dogs. They are an accident waiting to happen. 

6. Some people think it's cute to tease dogs by pretending to beat up another family member in front of them, or by playing "games" like "slap-boxing" ,wrestling or tug-if –war with the dog. These mindless ways cause the dog to become aggressive, or at the very least, teach him to snap at hands. He won't always understand the difference between play and real-life situations. 

7. Establish yourself as the leader and teach the dog a few commands. You can have him "go away” or "lie down" when company arrives, so that he doesn't go into a barking frenzy at the door. Stop your puppy from chewing your hands and teach him that gnawing on your body parts is "off limits." Do not allow guarding behavior to develop. Resource guarding means the dog might growl at someone walking near his food dish, or might not let you take a bone away from him politely, or might even guard YOU so that other family members can't get near. Start looking for a trainer where you will desensitize your dog to the things that are "triggering" his behavior now. 

8.Get your dog used to having you touch, groom and restrain him at an early age. If your dog does not allow you to touch him in certain ways or in certain places, this problem must be addressed. He may only be warning you with a growl, now, but if you let it be, there will come a time he's liable to bite. From an early age , accustom him to having you hold and touch his paws, stroke him and hold him on his side. By teaching him that this contact is not-threatening and not harmful, he will accept it without a second thought. 

9. DON'T pass on your fears to a child. Don’t gasp, cry out, or shriek when you see a dog; children learn by example, and these behaviors can startle or frighten a dog into snapping or biting. DON'T ever allow your child to tease, hurt, confine, challenge, growl at, bark at, or otherwise confuse, frighten, or threaten any dog, including your own. Many "unprovoked" attacks on children are in fact provoked by the cruel or at least ignorant and behavior of children to dogs. Do not allow children visiting your home to treat your dog this way, even if your dog will tolerate it; the next dog the child meets may not. DO teach your child to approach a dog in a calm and friendly manner. Children and dogs are naturally friends, and letting them get to know each other in a quiet, gradual way is best
When do the stray dogs bite? When the females are on heat and the male dogs stray outside their own territories and into other territories following the smell of the female. In the excitement of their frustration and the heat generated by the fear they have by stepping into unknown territory, a dog may (and even then its very rare) bite a human being that threatens it. 

The second reason is when the female dog has had puppies and is scared of people killing them. Anyone who comes near , specially children , whom she knows from experience , will harm her or her puppies will first be warned by her snarling. If they get closer she will bite.
Sterilisation does two things -- 
a) a sterilized animal has been seen to live a longer and healthier life. 
b) spaying prevents male animals from getting into fights with each other. Sterilized animals show no aggressive behavior due to frustration either to female animals or to humans. Local administration of a city and the colony associations must understand that the solution is not killing them because more will come, but in sterilisation. 

Spay or neuter your dog. Dogs who have NOT been spayed or neutered are three times more likely to bite than are dogs who HAVE been spayed or neutered




Maneka Gandhi
Gandhi, Maneka. "Living With Street Dogs--To Avoid Dog Bites in the Home." Web Log post.People For Animals PTA. Web. 29 Mar. 2010. 

"Dogs and Small Children--Advice and Education." Web Log post. Pets Education Online. Web. 29 Mar. 2010. .
"The Best Family Dogs-10 Breeds for Homes with Children." Web Log post. Dog Reflections. 5 May 2008. Web. 29 Mar. 2010. 

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Behind the Wheel With Baxter

Driving tips from Baxter:
Tip # 1:  Keep your hands (paws) on the wheel at all times
Tip 2: Check your mirrors, scan your surroundings












                                 Tip #3:  Keep your eyes on the road










  
                                                               and remember kids............don't text and drive!

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Dog Food vs. Dog "Food"

Have you ever read the label on that bag of Kibbles N' Bites you feed your four-legged friend? Better yet, can you understand it? you should. Sparky can't read and so you have gotta do it for him! Pet food standards are crap. What goes into our beloved friend's food would shock most people. Sometimes shock power is what's needed to make a change.

FOOD LABELS: Does your bag O kibble read "by-product meal?" For example: Ingredients: Chicken, Chicken by-product meal, corn, etc............according to the AAFCO, 
"Chicken by-product meal consists of the ground, rendered, clean parts of the carcass of slaughtered chicken, such as necks, feet, undeveloped eggs and intestines, exclusive of feathers, except in such amounts as might occur unavoidable in good processing practice." YUCK! So you are feeding Sparky the crap of crap.

It gets more disturbing........According to the article, What's Really in Pet Food,                   

"What most consumers don’t know is that the pet food industry is an extension of the human food and agriculture industries. Pet food provides a convenient way for slaughterhouse offal, grains considered “unfit for human consumption,” and similar waste products to be turned into profit. This waste includes intestines, udders, heads, hooves, and possibly diseased and cancerous animal parts."
  Not only is that disturbing that Sparky is woofing down un-edible "food" but it's harmful to him. Cancer is on the rise in canines and food is to blame.
So what should they eat? Lettuce???
A good ole' motto I remember helps me stick to my plan, "pay now or pay later!" Pay for the right nutrition now or pay the vet bills later. Here is what I feed my three smaller dogs, (and no, I have NO ties to this company) It's called Freshpet Select. It's $10.87/6 pounds and lasts a little over a week for three mouths. Not too shabby.


The ingredients are simple:





The food is refrigerated, which makes it more like, well food. The dogs really seem to enjoy it and as I cut it up into pieces I actually see whole chunks of carrot, beef, chicken and veggies which is what I paid for. I feed Charley (lab mix) Kirkland Dog Food from Costco-the ingredients are good and it costs approx $20.00/ 40 pound bag. I mix in frsh veggies and or meat to buff up the nutrition! I also switch things up on weekends and scramble or boil organic, local eggs for everyone. Don't get me wrong, these pups aren't always eating like they should, some of our favorite snacks are mac and cheese spirals and ramen noodles.

It's always fun to cook for an audience.
Today's menu: shredded carrots, veggie burgers and whole grain rice.


A few things you will NOT see in their food dishes: 
  • rawhide bones -they are white because they are bleached. that's a no no.
  • almost all brands of dog food stocked on grocery store shelves (I said almost all)--specialty stores is where to shop :) 
  • any treats in shapes resembling human food -the shape is the only resemblance
  • any treats that are colorful, ex: christmas tree rawhide-I'll pass on the dyes, thanks.
  • any dog food with corn in first ten ingredients, Hanna is not a hen.
  • any treats from the dollar store-think about it
What I remember:

Cheap food=cheap ingredients

More to come..........

Helpful Links:

"people food" for dogs
The Truth......

"The King," Cesar Millan 

Note:  This is a blog, thus reflecting my opinions based on related research so if you don't like my opinions, bite me :)

Works Cited:
 Dell, Kristina. "Unraveling the Pet- Food Mystery." Time Magazine. 5 Apr. 2007. Web. 27 Feb. 2010. .
"What's Really In Pet Food." Born Free USA (2007): 1-18. Web. 27 Feb. 2010.

Friday, February 26, 2010

DIRT-y Boy

Face it, the winter months have just about gotten to us all around here.  






Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Cherry Colored Floral Panties

Don't suck at life, get your pet fixed.
As Bob Barker used to say, "Don't forget to spay and neuter your pets!"


Spay and Neuter Kansas City
1116 E. 59th Street
(NE Corner 59th and Troost)
PO Box 410303, Kansas City, MO 64141
Ph: 816-353-0940 | Fx: 816-523-0887
spayandneuterkc@aol.com

Monday, February 22, 2010

Battle: Hanna vs. Charley

A day of fun in the snow.........turns into a death
battle!!!!!!!












Hanna takes a hard hit............

..............But ends up dominating!