Queen City Jacks

Queen City Jacks Queen City Jacks were Cincinnati, Ohio area rescued Jack Russell Terriers that participated in JRTCA

We volunteer for other 501c3 Jack Russell rescues by transporting, fostering, vetting, home visits and any other need the rescues have.

01/16/2025

Day 10 COUNTDOWN to the My Furry Valentine Adoption Event. New Month and New Location! We are just 10 days away from the tri-states larget animal adoption event and we are so excited for our new location! We have been overwhelmed at the gracious welcome by the city of Hamilton and our host location - Spooky Nook Sports Nook Sports. Our event is now in January too, on the 25th and 26th so you can find your Valentine before Valentine's Day and have an excuse to stay home!

12/30/2024

We are happy to announce that we are also going to have a clinic day on January 12th.

Give us a call to schedule! 513-737-7387

12/11/2024

Our Off the Rack sale is live!!! 🎉🎉🎉 all Off the Rack items are automatically 20% off through the website, store, or at our booth in Orlando.

These items ship by next week and will arrive in time for Christmas, so if you need a last minute gift, we got you covered 😉

12/01/2024

NPR's Scott Simon remembers Seuk Kim, a volunteer animal rescue pilot who died in a crash earlier this week, transporting several dogs.

11/28/2024
11/26/2024

HOW TO GO TO THE VET

One of the things every dog owner has to do is go to the vet, but it only takes a few hours of sitting in a waiting room to come to the conclusion that most dog owners do not know how to go the vet, and, as a result, they are paying a lot more money than they need to.

What do you need to know before going to the vet? More than you think!

Here’s a small skein of advice that, if followed, might very well save you thousands of dollars (or pounds) over the life of your dog.
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1. Know why you are going to the vet.
The average dog needs to see a vet two or three times in his first year in order to get a full array of vaccination shots, but does not need to see a vet for a vaccine ever again. Read that sentence again. The fact that core vaccines last a dog’s lifetime is not new information – it is more than 30 years old – but it is information that the veterinary trade associations are not eager to share with the public because vaccines and health check-ups are the primary source of income for most vets. If you are going to a vet every year for a check-up, an annual teeth cleaning, and vaccine boosters (other than for rabies, if you are in the US or mainland Europe) simply because you got a card in the mail saying it is time for these procedure, then you are simply being ripped off. What about leptospirosis – the one vaccine that wears off after a year or so? What about it? This is a “non-core” vaccine that is nearly useless, is more dangerous than any other vaccine offered up by a vet, and which provides only imperfect protection against a very uncommon problem. My own dogs have spent many lifetimes ratting and going in and out of dens of every type, and I do not bother with a lepto vaccine. My advice, if you want something to worry about, is to forget lepto and focus on socks lying about the house, stray pills that have fallen off the medicine cabinet, and antifreeze in puddles. They are far more likely to kill a dog – even a dedicated ratting dog -- than leptospirosis! What about rabies? Get a booster every three years at the local shelter for $10.

2. Be wary of new vet clinics that have just acquired expensive new equipment.
Veterinary clinics are like everyone else – they want the latest and greatest new piece of equipment, regardless of whether they need it or not. The problem for dog owners is that once a vet gets expensive new equipment, the pressure is on to use it – whether it’s necessary or not. A simple country vet is going to be able to handle 98 per cent of all your problems, and for the more complicated stuff, you are going to want to see a specialist anyway.

3. Don’t confuse the relationship.
Your vet is not your friend – he or she is simply a person being paid to do a service. Of course, some vets would like to blur that fact, knowing that if they can position themselves as your friend then you may come to see them more often, you will respond to check-up postcards more often, and you are less likely to push back when medically unnecessary goods and services are suggested.

4. Receptionists and nurses can bill pad.
While a vet may have ethical qualms about pushing unneeded goods and services, they rarely feel any compunction in having the receptionist or nurse do this bit of dirty work. In fact, the job description of these employees may require them to push nail trims, grooming, ‘specialty’ foods, flea and tick medications, and unnecessary medical tests. Do not be shy about being very clear you are not interested in such add-ons, and do not hesitate to pull out a pen and cross out such additions on your prospective bill.

5. Know something about the problem or procedure before you go.
If your dog has a health problem, spend some time on the Internet doing a bit of research. Some problems, such as ringworm, can be fixed with over-the-counter topical medications, while other problems may have multiple solutions and your vet may have a financial incentive only to offer the most expensive. The more you know going in, the better armed you will be as an advocate for your dog and yourself.

6. Avoid junk-billing and upcoding.
What’s junk billing? Annual vaccines are junk billing, and so too are tests for Lyme disease in asymptomatic dogs. What’s upcoding? It’s simply taking a modest health issue or incidence and inflating it into a big bill. For example, after a routine spay-neuter, does your vet want to keep the dog overnight? Why? Is someone going to be at the vet’s surgery all night long? In most cases, the answer is ‘no’. Your dog will do just as well - and get much better monitoring - if he or she simply comes home with you and spends the night in a crate.

7. Every limp and lump is not a cause for panic.
Go to any emergency vet on a weekend, and you are sure to find several people in the waiting room who have come in for expensive care for very minor problems. But every limp and lump is not a cause for panic. Most canine limps are caused by the same thing as most human limps – a pulled or strained muscle that will self-correct with rest and time. As for lumps, most are simple cysts or non-malignant tumours – no reason to rush to an emergency vet on a weekend.

8. Ask for a prescription for a generic medication, and buy that medication at a pharmacy.
Many of the medications we give our dogs were made for humans, many are available in generic form, and most can be acquired for very little cost from your local pharmacy. If your vet will not write a prescription or charges extra for it, change vets and tell them why!

9. Know how to say “no” and be prepared to say it.
The more you know about your dog’s health, the better prepared you will be to have a sensible discussion, and the more empowered you will feel when it’s time to say “no”. Of course, pushing back is easier said that done! The trick, I find, is to know how to push back. If the vet is pushing a new round of vaccines on your adult dog, tell him you have read Ron Schulz’s work on vaccines (he is a world authority) and surely the vet knows that vaccines in adult dogs that have gotten all their puppy shots are not needed? You may be surprised at how quickly those vaccine charges wither away after that! Teeth cleaning? Sure, but not every year – once every three or four years after the age of five. An overnight stay? Why does he think his surgery will provide more attentive care than you will at home? Other tests are recommended? Why does he think they are necessary? Really? And what will happen differently based on what he/she finds? Is the test actually more expensive than the treatement which otherwise causes no harm? In fact, that is often the case, especially if the vet is asking you to come for a test for something like worms ($90 or more just for the visit), while treatment is less than a dollar with over-the-counter medications that do the dog no harm.

Of course, all of this advice is predicated on the fact that you have not acquired a dog that is a complete and utter health wreck, requiring constant attention for a chronic problem.

Vets, of course, do not see such animals as problems, but as business opportunities.

In the world of veterinary care, the breathing problems of Bulldogs, the eye problems of Pugs, the cancer problems in Bernese Mountain Dogs, the wrecked hips of German Shepherds, and the collapsing hearts of Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, are what help put a new wing on the house.

No wonder, then, that in half a lifetime of going to vet clinics, I have yet to see a pamphlet on diseased, defective, and deformed breeds to avoid.

Where’s the money in that advice?

11/21/2024

DELAWARE, Ohio (WCMH) – Ohio residents have been reporting more cases of distemper in wildlife, with officials recommending pet owners vaccinate their pets against the highly contagious and dangero…

11/18/2024

Vet bills have risen so much, that some families are giving up their pets. Here's how to lower some of those costs.

11/17/2024

We're thrilled to share that AcutePet Urgent Care is coming to Bellevue, KY! 🐾 Our new location is set to open next week, and we can’t wait to provide your beloved pets with affordable, same-day care. We’ve taken a charming, long-empty building in the heart of Bellevue and turned it into a modern, welcoming urgent care center for pets in Northern Kentucky.

Our fantastic team of doctors and staff is here to make sure your pets receive the attention they need when they have urgent, non-life-threatening issues. We’re so excited to be a part of this community and to care for your furry family members! Don’t forget to follow our new page for all the latest updates. We can’t wait to meet you and your pets! 🐶🐱

https://www.facebook.com/AcutePetBellevue

11/14/2024

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THAT PUP?

About 20 percent of all dogs born in the U.S. every year are abandoned to their death, and over half (yes!) of the living end up being bounced from their first "forever" owner to their second or third owner, without any continuity of care or training.

One of the few writers to ever give an unblinking look at what really happened to a litter that they themselves bred, was J.R. Ackerley, the author of “My Dog Tulip”.

Ackerley starts off breeding his dog with all good intent, but in the end the litter that is produced is whelped by a temperamentally poor bitch (Tulip) to a stud dog of no consequence.

The eight pups that result quickly overwhelm Ackerley and his apartment to the point that, despite all apparent intention of doing the right thing at the front end, on the back end he ends up abandoning the pups to anyone with a fiver who will walk one out the door.

What happens next is predictable: disease, disappearance, abandonment, and death.

And this was J.R. Ackerley! He was not a mean person, a knuckle-dragger, an illiterate, or a person without some means.

This was simply one more person who did not understand the full responsibility that comes when you bring a living thing into this world. When faced with shouldering that responsibility he failed. Yes, he lost a little of his dignity but those pups lost their life.

Responsibility.

It's the R-word no one really wants to talk about too much in the world of dogs.

Instead, people want to talk about property rights and ribbons. But responsibility to the dog? Responsibility to the puppies being whelped? The actual time, hard work, and due diligence to place 8 puppies in loving, stable and knowledgeable homes with the resources to actually care for a dog come what may?

When was the last time anyone said too much about that?.

Ironwater Lily getting the laser treatment today for back pain.  Lily is a scaredy dog so it wasn't obvious that she enj...
11/12/2024

Ironwater Lily getting the laser treatment today for back pain. Lily is a scaredy dog so it wasn't obvious that she enjoyed it like Splash enjoyed his laser treatment last week. 🤞that these laser treatments give them pain relief

11/10/2024

In need of items for your pet?

11/10/2024

SPAY & NEUTER APPOINTMENTS
Must come to the shelter to complete paperwork and pay fee in order to secure a spot. Do not need to bring pet to complete paperwork.
$25 for dogs under 70lbs
$40 for dogs over 70lbs
$8 if vaccinations are needed (if dog is up to date on vaccinations please bring proof when you come to complete paperwork).

Tuesday-Friday 8am-3pm
Saturday 8am-12noon

Must be a Clark County resident.

Ironwater Splash getting laser treatments for the first time at our new veterinarian's office. This is our second visit ...
11/08/2024

Ironwater Splash getting laser treatments for the first time at our new veterinarian's office. This is our second visit and we are extremely happy and impressed with everything about the new place. Wish I would have changed to this vet years ago. If you look through the pictures of Splash he gets happier as the laser treatment progresses 😀 They were super kind to him.

11/07/2024

All our Jackals wear Paco Collars

Address

Camden, OH

Telephone

(513) 461-0809

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