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Posts Tagged ‘dog’


Have a happy Thanksgiving get together for everyone

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

My own Thanksgiving will probably be spent at home with the dogs while everyone else has a ruckus elsewhere. As with most holidays the presence of lots of people in a house can be extremely stressful to domestic pets. Cats and dogs may need to be cordoned away from the hubbub to prevent them from getting underfoot in their own excitement or stressing out. The dogs that I spend time with aren’t particularly the high-strung type but they still get mixed up in the passage of legs, new smells, loud noises, and considerable amount of cooking food.

If they were taken to a party they would probably have to be shut away in a dimly lit, quiet room away from all the activity in order to help keep their puppy blood pressure down. Of course, this cannot be that fun for them—literally being taken away from the rest of the household activity. So I often end up taking breaks as the life of the party in order to spend time with them, make sure they’re aware we haven’t forgotten them by bringing toys and other distractions.

Cats can also have similar issues with high activity times, although our feline friends are less likely to come check out the excitement as they tend to already have their hiding places mapped out. As with dogs, they also run the risk of getting underfoot, in some cases to greater and lesser degrees because most cats are smaller on average than most dog breeds (trying not to discount out teacup and purse dogs here.)

If you are going to let your pet roam your house during a party, you will want to make sure that they have an escape route if they need it. That way if they become too stressed out and need to get away they won’t feel like they’re trapped in a hypersocial situation. As always, it comes down to knowing the personality of your pet and how they react to numerous people in order to choose how to approach this situation.

Also with Thanksgiving is going to be the table.

Most of us are going to be laying out feasts, and at parties a fair amount of the food goes unattended in the kitchen for a while. Both dogs and cats are very good at getting at things that we’d rather they didn’t—especially food. A table full of good smelling meats and food will be enticing to even the most calm family pet and someone may need to keep a watchful eye on it.

Everyone have a lovely Thanksgiving! We will be thinking of all you pet families here at PETS 911.

Big Black Dog syndrome

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Out in the animal welfare community, especially adoptions, it is well known that black dogs are among the most overlooked and least adopted animals from kennels. There are a number of pressures that seem to run through the public psyche that make them either less desirable or simply invisible to interested families.

In urban folklore black dogs have something of a strange rap a lot like black cats, except far more sinister. We only need look as far as Arthur Conan Doyle who resurrected the Irish pucca dog for The Hound of the Baskervilles, which also seems to play off even older legends. This suggests that there may be a permeating fear in the public psyche about large black dogs that most people are unaware of.

In fact, legends about ghost black dogs literally pepper the countryside from England all the way to the good ole USA. Entire tapestries of both fiction and amazing superstition surround them. [1]

Sometimes people just have bad notions about the color black, which they then apply to the black dog themselves. As if dark fur by some notion carries with them depression, or darkness, or some other malady. Really, the color of a dogs fur doesn’t affect their overall aggression, agreeability, or other personality traits as much as does their breed and general treatment.

This phenomena is known as “Black Dog Syndrome” and it literally afflicts hundreds of thousands of animals a year.

As people in the community of animal lovers we can work to change the perceptions of our friends and family about adopting such noble animals if and when they’re looking for pets to fill out their families. We can educate the public by speaking about how black dogs suffer under this strange stigma and it’s really not by a fault of their own.

Fiction, folklore, and the romanticism in our culture about black dogs certainly make for interesting storytelling but it’s important not to let it cast a pall over an entire group of dogs. Who, tails wagging with excitement, often as not rush to the door to see their family come home—and others wait, bating their own breath, at shelters for someone to take them home.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_dog_(ghost)

Obamas to choose First Dog, hopefully shelter adoption

Friday, November 7th, 2008

In recent news, President-Elect Barak Obama let his children know that he would make good on his promise of getting them a puppy for when they moved into the White House. This little tidbit has set most of cyberspace aflutter with anticipation of exactly what breed of puppy and where it might come from.

Good news is that Michelle Obama has said that they would consider a shelter dog for the office of First Dog and if that comes to pass the message it could send through the animal welfare community would be a powerful one. Getting shelter animals adopted has been the mainstay of shelter life—with pet overpopulation currently still a giant issue, no-kill shelters being overcrowded, having a beacon like the President adopting a dog would create a watershed event for this cause.

One of the obstacles the Obamas face to getting a puppy is that their daughter Malia, 10, has allergies—if I recall correctly, like me, she’s asthmatic. Allergens, especially animal dander, can be a huge risk for an asthma attack. This makes getting an animal for the family something of a risk and the responsibility is to find an animal that won’t set off an attack. Thus, hypoallergenic dog breeds come into play.

Firstly, I should point out that there are no truly hypoallergenic dog breeds—with perhaps the exception of shaved dogs and eventually genetically engineered dogs—but there are dogs which have certain attributes to reduce the allergens associated like less dander, less shedding. Also, people can do a lot to reduce their own allergies to their pets through regular bathing, proper use of shampoos without scents and dyes, and keeping their pets healthy.

Here’s a short list of possible hypoallergenic breeds from the AKC:

  • Bedlington Terrier
  • Bichon Frise
  • Chinese Crested
  • Irish Water Spaniel
  • Kerry Blue Terrier
  • Maltese
  • Poodles (Toy, Miniature or Standard)
  • Portuguese Water Dog
  • Schnauzer (Miniature, Standard or Giant)
  • Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier
  • Xoloitzcuintli

We wish the Obama family good luck in finding a shelter dog who fits their needs. There are probably numerous shelters from all across the country with wonderful dogs just looking for their day.

If anyone else has suggestions on what they know to be good low-allergy dog breeds. We’d welcome the input.