Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Puppy Housebreaking Problem

I need potty training help!  My puppy will not use her puppy housebreaking pad consistently if there are any area rugs around for her to use instead. She ruined the rug under my dining room table! We pulled it up and got rid of it and she's using her puppy pad now 99% of the time.  She'll use clothes too if they're left on the floor - bathroom towels too - so I have to be extra vigilant behind the kids when they leave a trail of clothing and towels after showers or else there are 3" piddle spots on clothing.

I sure hope I can eventually have area rugs in my living and dining room again.  I wish she was a little bigger and could go outside with the rest of the dogs but we can't risk a coyote or hawk getting to the little 3 lb. bundle.  She's a bit on the high-maintenance side.

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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Vacation Plans

We're planning a trip to hit the road for a vacation.  We'll be on the road with four kids for hours.  I dread being cramped up that long in a car but I will buy car sickness medication for the kids so nobody will be sick (and hopefully they'll sleep through part of the trip). 

Maybe if I had a luxury car that had seats that felt more like a massage than a ride that will send me looking for the best hemorrhoids treatment instead, it wouldn't be so bad.  Drive in style!  Then again, with my husband's driving, I probably wouldn't even notice a luxury massage because I'm too busy watching his driving every step of the way.  I call him an ADHD driver...something catches his attention and he's looking at that instead of the road - drives me crazy!

Our dogs will go to the kennel.  I'm going to miss my puppy.  It will be sad leaving her, especially knowing that she is going to be quivering the way her breed does when they get nervous, but she'd be a huge handful to take - more of a handful than the kids.  She'll have her doggy siblings with her so I'm sure she'll be adjust and be happy to see us when we get home.

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Monday, March 1, 2010

Pom-Chi Vet Visit

We just came back from getting the baby shots - my five month old canine pomeranian chihuahua mix puppy.  They call her a Pom-Chi or a Chi-Pom.  I call it a little bundle of attitude - all 3.8 pounds of her.  She did ok at the vet.  I was wondering if she'd snip at the vet but she just did her little chihuahua tremor and didn't let out a peep for the shot.  While paying for her bill, they had these cute little promotional calenders on their counter with an adorable little hound puppy. I resisted the impulse to grab one (since I grabbed one last time) and waited somewhat anxiously to see if she'd try to take the receptionist's finger off when she wanted to pet her. She didn't (inward sigh of relief).

She waited to get home to show her displeasure.  She ran under the couch as soon as I put her down to hide.  Then she ran into her kennel to stare at me.  I believe she was plotting her revenge.

She has her attitude but she is also the cuddliest little lapdog I've ever known.  She loves to cuddle as close to possible to you and sleep.  She is also a big puppy kisser.  LOVES KISSES!


How can you resist this face?

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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Piddle Puddles from Toy Poodle


Having two puppies in the house at the same time can be fun and sweet but I'm finding that having two piddle puddles at the same time isn't much fun. I'm glad we don't have carpeting in our house right now!

Isn't she just the cutest? I was always a "big dog" person (huskies, shepards) and thought little dogs were frou frou, frilly, girly dogs but this little toy poodle just melted my heart. At least she makes just little toy puddles too! That's sure a lot easier to clean up than big dog messes!

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Mud and Dog Poop - Oh Yeah!

We have several dogs. One is a little menace. If there is a tiny animal within reach, she will get it and kill it. A few weeks ago, it was three newborn bunnies. Tonight, it was a bat. Yes, a bat!

My son comes running in to tell me the dog has a bat so I go running outside, barefoot after a huge rain. When I see this dog flipping this bat around, I run outside and let loose with the loud swear word (it's the "thou shalt not" kind). I didn't realize my neighbors were outside in their pool until after I'd let loose with the swear word and started chasing the dog around. Great.

There I am yelling at the dog, running around their fenced in area and the dog: 1) won't come to me, 2) won't go in the house, and 3) won't stop torturing this poor bat. I don't think it's because I broke a commandment. The stupid dog just wouldn't leave this bat alone.

After ten minutes of chasing after this one dog, through mud and dog poop...did I mention the bare feet...I get the dog inside and go to check out the bat. It's pretty sad.

The bat is laying there making odd noises and looking pretty roughed up (like in not going to make it). My son goes to get the shovel for me so I can: 1) move it, 2) put it out of its misery, and 3) bury it.

By the time he gets back with the shovel, the little thing is still. I think it's dead until it starts chittering when I try to move it with the shovel. I back away and it wraps its wings around itself (protecting itself...hiding...whatever it was doing it made me cry). I can't put it out of its misery so I have my son go wake his dad up to take care of it.

He comes out bleary-eyed and takes the bat to the back of the property. We ended up leaving it in a pile of brush and old wood to let nature take its course (on the way there I apologized to the neighbors for the cussing as we walked by their pool where they were swimmming).

I'm not sure if we made the right choice. I feel really bad.

I am so NOT happy with the dog right now.

Edited to add: Checked the dog's rabies record just to make sure and she was due a few weeks ago for her rabies shot. I don't know if a few weeks makes a difference. Then my son told me his puppy stepped on the bat. I don't know if she was bit or not. She's not acting like it but bat bites are hard to find from what I can find online. She was too young to get her rabies shot when we got her a couple weeks ago and she's due for a rabies...about now. Wonderful.

So, I drag hubby back outside, in the dark, while it is raining, to look for the stupid bat. I'd rather them test the bat than quarantine (or test) our dogs. I'm thinking it was hurt and it's still in the same place or it died there. We're out there with a flashlight and shovel looking. The neighbors St. Bernard is growling at us and I am having visions of this mammoth dog coming over the fence to eat us. Nope, can't find the bat.

I don't know what this means but I'm stressing BIG time. We'll look again in the morning.

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Housebreaking Woes About Over?

No, this time I am not talking about my three year old daughter. I am talking about our one year old Sheltie/Beagle mix, Trixie.

Trixie is a cute little dog, very curious and great with our kids. She is kennel trained, but we've had a hard time with the actual housebreaking outside of the kennel. My living room area rug was a favorite spot of hers, much to my dismay.

We realized a couple things recently:

She is very excitable when she is with the kids so when we would take her out of her kennel, we'd put her outside before giving her access to the main living area. We thought that would be enough. It wasn't because she was still piddling a short time after she got her access.

So, we started taking her back out AGAIN about five minutes after we gave her rein of the living area. We figured maybe the excitement got her bladder moving. It helped quite a bit. Made a big difference, but not quite enough.

So what did we finally do? We rolled up my area rug and threw it in the garage a week ago. We took her "smell" of all her previous piddles out of the house (that no amount of cleaner would ever fully rid the carpet of). She's only had one accident since.

I have my fingers crossed this is it. The poor little girl needed her humans to figure it out.

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Thursday, November 6, 2008

Should you breed dogs who can't give birth naturally?


I'm reading a book right now (Night Kill by Ann Littlewood) that mentioned something I'd never heard of before - that some breeders are breeding dogs who can only give birth via c-section. I had no idea! It's actually a murder mystery type of book but this one little snippet caught my attention. I was interested enough that I looked it up online to see what breed this was.

Apparently, most French Bulldogs (most, not all, and most other Bully breeds) can't give birth naturally because of the size of their pups heads and the narrowness of the mother's pelvic area. There is a bit of a controversy surrounding this that I'd never heard of...some people believe these dogs shouldn't be bred because of this.

What do you think? Should dogs who need human intervention to birth safely be bred?

Here's more information: article 1 & article 2

I didn't need to learn this fact, lol, since obtaining a bulldog has never been a passion of mine though after reading what great dogs they are, I wouldn't turn one of the big-headed 'so ugly they are cute' dogs away if it showed up on my doorstep. I wouldn't pay the high fees to get one from a breeder though. Besides being I'm broke, lol, three dogs are enough!

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Sunday, October 26, 2008

Dog Collar Warning from Wal-Mart

This morning I am lying in bed. My husband was already up but I was trying to sleep in (it was about 7:00 a.m...not really sleeping in by much, lol). He'd let our three dogs out into the fenced yard when he got out of bed. So I am laying there hoping to fall back to sleep when I hear the dogs crying and going at it. I thought our oldest (arthritic grouchy husky) was going after our middle dog (Roxi). I go running to the back door and see Roxi and our littlest one (Trixie) going at it (or so I think). They're best buddies! Roxi looks like she has Trixie's throat in her mouth and they're crying/growling and flipping all over the place. I go running out and yell at Roxi to let her go.

Then as I look closer, it looks like Roxi's mouth is actually STUCK on Trixie's neck. So, the kids and hubby are out on the deck yelling at Roxi to let Trixie go (they think they're fighting too), I yell up to him on the deck that I think Roxi's tooth is stuck in the collar. He comes running down and is struggling to get the collar off Trixie before it kills her. It's still a bit dark and it's hard to see. By that time, I am talking quietly to Roxi to quiet her down so she stops struggling and hubby is frantically searching for the clasp on Trixie's collar. By that point, Roxi trusts us to fix it (or is just plain petrified as she knows something is wrong with her little dog friend) so Roxi's curled up as still as can be but Trixie has stopped struggling and is no longer crying. She's passed out and her collar is still twisted and stuck in our other dog's tooth. All her oxygen is cut off and she's dying. It was horrible. DH can't get to the clasp the way the dogs are twisted but gets Roxi's tooth out of the collar and he lays Trixie back on the ground, where she lies without movement. Trixie is totally still on the ground. I'm thinking to myself, OMG she's gone and all of our kids are here watching. DH says she's going into shock so I take off for a blanket while DH is trying to get her to move, telling her to breathe, rubbing her chest, moving her a bit trying to revive her. Then I hear him yell, "She's up. Her tail is wagging."

Talk about being so scared and then relieved to hear those words and see her up and breathing. My daughter is crying. She just lost her horse and Trixie is her dog. If she'd lost another pet...OMG. This all happened so quickly.

We bring the dogs in and Trixie immediately runs to her spot and lays down looking a little scared. We offer treats and she takes treats and then eats her breakfast with tail wagging. What a near death experience for our little dog. DH also checked Roxi's mouth to make sure her mouth is ok (she's ok).

The collar Trixie was wearing was one of those nylon collars from Wal-mart called SimplyDog Blue Bones Collar (see pic below). It is brown and blue nylon, but not just the basic nylon. It has a design covering on it (brown with blue bones on it) and there was a small separation where the stitches had come loose between that cloth covering part and the nylon collar - big enough for Roxi's tooth to get caught while they played as they usually do and as the dogs twisted to get away, it got wrapped around her tooth tightening on it, tying the dogs together and choking the life out of the puppy...literally. That collar won't be going on her again.

Of all the things I worry about with the dogs - getting deathly ill, getting out of the fence and getting hit by a car, I never would have thought that something like a another dog's tooth getting stuck in a collar could happen and kill a dog the way it almost did Trixie. She was just a couple seconds away from dying.


It was horrid. I don't know if I'll forget the way Trixie looked on the ground after hubby got her loose. There was no movement from her...she was literally almost dead. Another couple of seconds of her oxygen being cut-off and we would have been having a dog funeral today and consoling heartbroken kids.

I will never buy a collar like this again. Cute is cute but dead is dead. We almost lost a beloved child's pet. All it took was enough room for a tooth to slip into the brown/bones fabric covering of the nylon collar to get them caught and we almost had a tragedy.


SimplyDog Blue Bones Collar from Wal-Mart
Walmart No. 000893440
Company Who Makes This Collar: SimplyShe.com/pets.html


Please send this post to all dog owners that you know. Stumble/Digg, etc. the post. It's important. It's not something I would have ever worried about before but one of those rare things that can happen.
UPDATED 11/8/08: I left two reviews at Wal-Mart's site for this product so other consumers would be aware of this. They have not posted either review as of this date. Funny how other people's reviews are there, including one posted AFTER my initial review, but neither of mine are there. It's a shame Wal-Mart would hide something like this.

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Thursday, July 3, 2008

Grapes Kill Dogs

How many times has a grape or raisin fallen out of your hand or off your child's plate and your dog snatched it away for his own? How many have you offered one of these food items to our dog for a treat? Did you know that grapes/raisins are poison to dogs?

Grapes and raisins cause renal (kidney) failure in dogs. Whether it is a couple grapes/raisins or a pound of them, they can make your dog very ill. Some signs you might notice after the ingestion of one or more grapes/raisins are:


  • vomiting within a few hours of ingestion,

  • dog may stop eating,

  • diarrhea,

  • quiet and lethargic,

  • abdominal pain.

These signs can last for days or weeks. Timely veterinary care is necessary to help prevent fatality. In some cases, that isn't even enough and some dogs are still euthanized.

If you're wondering what other human food can harm your dog - chocolate, cocoa, onions, and macadamia nuts.

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