Paws, Claws & Pony Tails

Paws, Claws & Pony Tails Professional Home Pet and Livestock Sitting
(5)

03/07/2023

A must read.
When owning an animal , IMO
No room to be selfish.
If only we were this kind to humans that are ready to cross over.

11/05/2022
10/01/2022
NEW LONGEVITY RESEARCH SAYS BLUEBERRIESšŸ« ARE ONE OF THE MOST BENEFICIAL DOG TREATS YOU CAN EVER FEED YOUR PET!These litt...
09/26/2022

NEW LONGEVITY RESEARCH SAYS BLUEBERRIESšŸ« ARE ONE OF THE MOST BENEFICIAL DOG TREATS YOU CAN EVER FEED YOUR PET!

These little blue bombshells quench free radicals and protect against oxidative damagešŸ§¬, not to mention theyā€™re loaded with longevity-promoting biomolecules, making them one of our top recommendations you can share from your refrigerator right now! (Buy spray-free). šŸ¾

Whether loading them up in your treat pouch fresh or offering them frozen when they aren't in season, blueberries are one the best anti-aging treats in the world! šŸ«āš”ļø

There are dozens of other fresh and easy Grab-n-Go longevity treat suggestions (backed by a ton of science) in our upcoming The Forever Dog Book, but donā€™t want to wait to learn more? Join us this Sunday for "The Forever Dog Learning Lab" Live event! Reserve your spot here: https://foreverdog.com/learning-lab/

I can't take her to the beach for a walk because it bothers you on your vacation, you don't allow me to rent a house if ...
09/25/2022

I can't take her to the beach for a walk because it bothers you on your vacation, you don't allow me to rent a house if I have a dog, nor can I put her on any public transportation.
However, I can take her to the disaster sites to look for you after an earthquake, in the forest after you got lost in the mountain and you had no map or GPS; under the snow, because you did something wrong ; in the water, because despite the red flag, you went swimming when the posted signs said not to. You welcome her when you need her but not when itā€™s not convenient for you. After allā€¦.ā€it is just a dogā€ā€¦.

Think again people. Dogs are better than most humans, theyā€™re kinder, more loyal, love unconditionally and they appreciate you no matter whether you deserve it or not.

09/23/2022

I died today. You got tired of me and took me to the shelter. They were overcrowded and I drew an unlucky number. I am in a black plastic bag in a landfill now. Some other puppy will get the barely used leash you left. My collar was dirty and too small, but the lady took it off before she sent me to the Rainbow Bridge . Would I still be at home if I hadnā€™t chewed your shoe? I didnā€™t know what it was, but it was leather, and it was on the floor. I was just playing. You forgot to get puppy toys. Would I still be at home if I had been housebroken? Rubbing my nose in what I did only made me ashamed that I had to go at all. There are books and obedience teachers that would have taught you how to teach me to go to the door. Would I still be at home if I hadnā€™t brought fleas into the house? Without anti-flea medicine, I couldnā€™t get them off of me after you left me in the yard for days. Would I still be at home if I hadnā€™t barked? I was only saying, ā€œIā€™m scared, Iā€™m lonely, Iā€™m here, Iā€™m here! I want to be your best friend.ā€ Would I still be at home if I had made you happy? Hitting me didnā€™t make me learn how. Would I still be at home if you had taken the time to care for me and to teach manners to me? You didnā€™t pay attention to me after the first week or so, but I spent all my time waiting for you to love me. I died today. Love, Your Puppy Please forward this to everyone, its time to STOP animal abuse !!! Copy and paste if your against animal abuse!

Even Styx is happy to see me!
09/22/2022

Even Styx is happy to see me!

Just a friendly reminder, as weā€™ve notice in an uptick of ā€œAdopt Donā€™t Shopā€ people on our recent posts ā€”ā€¢ We support re...
09/07/2022

Just a friendly reminder, as weā€™ve notice in an uptick of ā€œAdopt Donā€™t Shopā€ people on our recent posts ā€”

ā€¢ We support responsible breeders.
ā€¢ We support purebred preservation breeders.
ā€¢ We support purebreds.
ā€¢ We support the responsible cropping and docking of dogs.
ā€¢ We support the choice to spay or neuter your pet at an older age, or not at all.
ā€¢ We support working dogs.
ā€¢ We support conformation dog shows.
ā€¢ We support show line and working line dogs.
ā€¢ We support responsible dog rescues.
ā€¢ We do NOT support PETA or HSUS.
ā€¢ We do NOT support ā€œAdopt Donā€™t Shop.ā€
ā€¢ We support peopleā€™s right to buy their animals from wherever they choose ā€” whether from a breeder or an animal shelter.

But most of all, we support responsible dog ownership.

08/25/2022

~TESTAMENT OF A DOG~
My material possessions are few and I leave everything to you.
A collar chewed on one end, a messy puppy bed, and a water bowl with a broken rim...
I'll leave you half a rubber ball, a broken doll that you'll find under the chair, a pile of bones buried under the floor of my little house...
I leave you my little hair scattered all over the houseā€¦.
In addition to that, I leave you my memories which are numerous...
I leave you the memory of two huge and affectionate little brown eyes, a wet muzzle, a wagging tail...
I left a stain on the carpet in the living room, next to the window, when on winter afternoons I appropriated this place...
I left your favorite chair destroyed, I chewed it up when I was a puppy, remember?
I leave just for you, the noise I made while running on the autumn leaves, when we shared walks.
I leave you as a legacy my devotion, my sympathy, my support when things were not going well, my barking when you stood up in an angry voice... And my frustration because you had been angry with me...
ā€¦And without even having spoken a word of all my life, I leave you my example of LOVE, PATIENCE and UNDERSTANDING.
Your life was happierā€¦ Because I was by your side. šŸ’ž

SMART WORDS!!!BEFORE YOU GET A DOG - READ THIS! ... and then think long and hard about how you will adjust your life to ...
07/31/2022

SMART WORDS!!!
BEFORE YOU GET A DOG - READ THIS! ... and then think long and hard about how you will adjust your life to include your new addition ...

ā€œI am a Dobermann, cataloged one of the most intelligent and most feared dogs, I have served the US Navy and I will not narrate my dark past on the German side. They called me the devil's dog, today they ask me to behave like a Poodle, they have gone so far as to wear clothes ...

I am a Malinois:
Gifted among dogs, I shine in all disciplines and I am always ready to work. Today they ask me to relax on the couch all day.

I am an Akita Inu:
My ancestors have been selected to fight with other dogs. Today they ask me to be tolerant of my peers, and they blame me for my reactivity when one of them approaches me.

I am a Beagle:
When I followed my prey, I gave a voice so that the hunters could follow me. I was leading the dance.
Today they put an electric collar on me to silence me, and they want me to return to the call in a snap of fingers.

I am a Yorkshire Terrier:
I was a rat catcher, fearsome in the English mines. Today they think that I can't use my legs and they always hold me in their arms.

I am a Labrador Retriever:
My vision of happiness is a dip in a pond to bring my master the duck he just shot. Today we forget that I am a sports dog, I am fat and I have to babysit the children.

I am a Jack Russell Terrier:
I am capable of facing a fox larger than me in its own den. Today they blame me for my damn character and want to turn me into a parlor dog.

I am a Siberian husky:
I got to know the great spaces of northern Russia, where I could pull sledges at impressive speed. Today I only have the walls of the garden on my horizon, and my only occupation is the holes I dig in the ground.

I am a Border Collie:
I am cut out to work eight hours a day, and I am an incomparable artist of herd labor. Today they blame me because in the absence of sheep, I try to control bicycles, cars, children from home, and everything that is in motion.

I am...
I'm a 19th century dog

I am handsome, I am alert, I am obedient, I can put up with being in a purse ... but I am also an individual who needs to express his instincts, and I am not suitable for the sedentary life that you want me to carry.

Spending eight hours a day alone on the patio, seeing you a little at night when you come back, and being entitled to any activity just a short walk to the bathroom will make me deeply unhappy.

I'll express it by barking all day, turning your garden into a minefield, relieving myself on the inside, being unmanageable the few times I'll find myself on the outside, and sometimes spending my days on my cushion, then you'll think I'm happy to To be able to enjoy all this comfort while you go to work: in reality I will be in full depression, because it is not the preference of the human, but also that of the dog of the XXI century.

If you like me, if you dream of me forever, if my beautiful blue eyes or my athlete look make you want to possess me, but you can't give me a real life of a full dog, a life that is really worth living, and if not you can offer me the job my genes claim ... then quit me.
If you like my rhythm but are not ready to accept my character traits from rigorous genetic selection, and you think you can change them with your only good will ... then quit me.

I'm a 19th century dog, yes. But, deep there, the one who fought, the one who hunted, the one who pulled sleds, the one who led a herd still sleeps. And sooner or later, you will wake up. For better or worse.ā€

Elsa Weiss Ɖducation Canine / Cynopolis

Soapbox Time. All dogs come from breeders. Dogs don't come from shelters, pet adoption websites, newspaper ads, or surpr...
07/23/2022

Soapbox Time. All dogs come from breeders. Dogs don't come from shelters, pet adoption websites, newspaper ads, or surprised next-door neighbors. Puppies arrive in this world because a person planned - or didn't plan - for the production/prevention of a litter of puppies. The amount of planning and responsibility varies wildly, but a human is behind every puppy that comes into the world. Please think about it.

Fewer than 1 in 5 puppies in America is born under circumstances where the breeder planned for the pregnancy, whelped and raised the puppies, registered them, placed them in responsible homes, and ultimately took responsibility for their welfare. A fraction of these purebred puppies are born to preservation breeders - breeders committed to preserving and improving the qualities of a breed they love.

Purebred dogs are not just a luxury. They are National Heritage. When I see an American Foxhound, I think of president George Washington and his creation of the breed; one of this dog's ancestors sat at George Washington's feet! When I see an Akita, I think of the Japanese values and traditions that have led to the development of such a magnificent dog. How incredibly American is the ingenuity behind the Boston Terrier? Every breed is the living embodiment of a national story of people, times, culture, and values. Losing a breed is a tragic loss.

Preservation breeders look after their puppies for life. If you walk into a shelter, finding a puppy from one is rarer than hens' teeth. Preservation breeders take puppies back if they are not wanted because they were and are loved by the people who put so much effort into their creation.

The purebred dogs that are there - often "pitbulls" and "Chihuahuas" - are commonly misidentified and carelessly brought into the world. Many preservation breeders and their breeds are part of Rescue organizations which make sure dogs of their breed don't go through shelter programs in the event they need to be re-homed.

Purebred dogs, the AKC, and preservation breeders are highly visible and there is a horrible problem with unwanted dogs being euthanized and mistreated. The problem, however, is not caused by breeders who passionately work to preserve breed history, national heritage, and a 15,000 year-old craft. Neither is the problem with clubs and individuals committed to purebred dogs. The problem is with the breeders you don't see who fail to take even a modicum of responsibility for their role in bringing puppies into the world.

It's easy to put a spotlight on the AKC and purebred dog breeders. They are someone we can point to and blame for a problem that lies much deeper in our society and the vindication can feel so good when we blame them. Yes, purebred dogs have some bad actors that need to be addressed. However, the vast, vast majority of dogs born in the United States come from individuals that take almost no responsibility for what they have done as a breeder. I wish we would make efforts to hold them to account for the horror of mass euthanasia of man's best friend.

In the meantime, individuals like you and me can take action. Encourage friends and family not to produce puppies if they don't have a plan that commits to their future well-being. Support rescues and low-cost spay & neuter clinics. Learn and share the magnificent story and national heritage of the breed you love! Volunteer at your local animal shelter. Educate others about responsible dog ownership. Join your local dog club. If everyone takes some small actions, we can make the world a much better place for our four-legged partners in life. Thank you.

Copied from another site.

This is my trainer for Remmi! She is amazing!!!!
07/08/2022

This is my trainer for Remmi! She is amazing!!!!

This is a beautiful letter from Fiona Apple explaining to her fans why she must postpone a concert date. I am impressed ...
06/29/2022

This is a beautiful letter from Fiona Apple explaining to her fans why she must postpone a concert date. I am impressed at the way she was instantly able to make the decision to choose love over her career. Indeed, the world needs more of this. Enjoy the story...
It's 6pm on Friday, and I'm writing to a few thousand friends I have not met yet. I'm writing to ask them to change our plans and meet a little while later.
Here's the thing.
I have a dog, Janet, and she's been ill for about 2 years now, as a tumor has been idling in her chest, growing ever so slowly. She's almost 14 years old now. I got her when she was 4 months old. I was 21 then ā€” an adult, officially ā€” and she was my kid.
She is a pitbull, and was found in Echo Park, with a rope around her neck, and bites all over her ears and face.
She was the one the dogfighters use to puff up the confidence of the contenders.
She's almost 14 and I've never seen her start a fight, or bite, or even growl, so I can understand why they chose her for that awful role. She's a pacifist.
Janet has been the most consistent relationship of my adult life, and that is just a fact. We've lived in numerous houses, and joined a few makeshift families, but it's always really been just the two of us.
She slept in bed with me, her head on the pillow, and she accepted my hysterical, tearful face into her chest, with her paws around me, every time I was heartbroken, or spirit-broken, or just lost, and as years went by, she let me take the role of her child, as I fell asleep, with her chin resting above my head.
She was under the piano when I wrote songs, barked any time I tried to record anything, and she was in the studio with me, all the time we recorded the last album.
The last time I came back from tour, she was spry as ever, and she's used to me being gone for a few weeks, every 6 or 7 years.
She has Addison's Disease, which makes it more dangerous for her to travel, since she needs regular injections of Cortisol, because she reacts to stress and excitement without the physiological tools which keep most of us from literally panicking to death.
Despite all this, she's effortlessly joyful & playful, and only stopped acting like a puppy about 3 years ago. She is my best friend, and my mother, and my daughter, my benefactor, and she's the one who taught me what love is.
I can't come to South America. Not now. When I got back from the last leg of the US tour, there was a big, big difference.
She doesn't even want to go for walks anymore.
I know that she's not sad about aging or dying. Animals have a survival instinct, but a sense of mortality and vanity, they do not. That's why they are so much more present than people.
But I know she is coming close to the time where she will stop being a dog, and start instead to be part of everything. She'll be in the wind, and in the soil, and the snow, and in me, wherever I go.
I just can't leave her now, please understand. If I go away again, I'm afraid she'll die and I won't have the honor of singing her to sleep, of escorting her out.
Sometimes it takes me 20 minutes just to decide what socks to wear to bed.
But this decision is instant.
These are the choices we make, which define us. I will not be the woman who puts her career ahead of love & friendship.
I am the woman who stays home, baking Tilapia for my dearest, oldest friend. And helps her be comfortable & comforted & safe & important.
Many of us these days, we dread the death of a loved one. It is the ugly truth of Life that keeps us feeling terrified & alone. I wish we could also appreciate the time that lies right beside the end of time. I know that I will feel the most overwhelming knowledge of her, and of her life and of my love for her, in the last moments.
I need to do my damnedest, to be there for that.
Because it will be the most beautiful, the most intense, the most enriching experience of life I've ever known.
When she dies.
So I am staying home, and I am listening to her snore and wheeze, and I am revelling in the swampiest, most awful breath that ever emanated from an angel. And I'm asking for your blessing.
I'll be seeing you.
Love,
Fiona

06/20/2022

Got this off of a group. No matter how close your dog normally stays do you really want to take that chance?

The number of dogs that wander or get spooked away from their campsites is mind blowing. There is not enough of us in animal rescue to help you so here are some suggestions if you loose your dog.
1)Stay in the area, do not leave.
2)Place your soiled laundry (scent items) and dogs bed around your campsite.
3 Have someone go to town for some poster supplies. Bright poster board. Thick sharpee. Packing tape and staple gun. Get signs up asap.
4 Put a big bowl of water out.
5) Talk to fellow campers and ask them to keep an eye out and put water out.
6) Have ID tags on your dog and microchip them. Consider a GPS device
7) Most importantly.... do not leave. Most dogs will return to where they last saw their owners.

If you are not able or prepared to take these steps. Please do not ever have your dog unsecured.
If you are camping and see a lost pet (currently there are hundreds out in Northern AZ.)
Please put food and water out, do not chase, post on Lost Pets of Northern Arizona.

Please keep your pets safe. They should be treated like todlers. Always secured.

Fonz, believe it or not this guy is a big ham.
06/10/2022

Fonz, believe it or not this guy is a big ham.

Duke is such a ham!!!
05/15/2022

Duke is such a ham!!!

05/02/2022

This is in regard to shaving double coated dog breeds..
Please, yes it's long, but read it through..
I'm sad groomers cater to what humans THINK their dog needs, instead of a discounted, prepaid 2-4 week blow out schedule.
Top coat is so important to regulating and protecting.
*******
For those of you who think shaving your dog is a good idea, here is a very detailed explanation of what happens to the coat when you do.
*******************************
WAIT
by Nancy Bynes, NCMG of Nevada City

With warmer temperatures finally coming to Nevada County, many dog owners are exploring options to help their pets stay comfortable. Shaving off all that hair is probably the most popular option. Indeed, for some coat types, this is an ideal solution. Not for all. With the exception of hard-coated terriers, dogs come in one of two coat types: single coated and double coated.

Examples of single-coated breeds are poodles, shih-tzus, bichons, etc. This type of coat will continue to grow longer and longer, much like human hair, with genetics being the final determination in reference to length. Double-coated or fur-bearing breeds have coats that grow to a predetermined length. They can be further separated into open coats and closed coats. These breeds have a hard, protective outer coat (guard hairs) and a soft, dense undercoat. Examples of open, double-coated breeds are any of the spitz-type breeds, such as Siberian huskies, Pomeranians and chows.

This coat is designed to shed snow or ice and provide maximum protection against freezing weather. Closed, double-coated breeds have noticeably longer guard hairs, which lay down over the undercoat, sort of like a blanket. While the outer, or guard, hairs get wet, the undercoat works to keep the dog's skin dry. Examples include golden retrievers, Australian shepherds and Newfoundlands.

Single-coated breeds can be clipped down to the skin, and the coat will grow back pretty much as it was before. The same is not true for double-coated breeds. For this reason, shaving these dogs down is not a solution to summer heat.

Think of a healthy double coat as an old-growth forest. There is a balance with different parts providing different benefits. If you clear-cut an old growth forest, there will be immediate regrowth of a lot of young trees very soon. Unfortunately, they won't initially be the same kind as those you cut down. Instead, the forest has to start from scratch and spend decades, first growing ground cover and softwoods that provide an environment for slower growing hardwood varieties. It takes generations before the natural balance is restored. While on a much shorter timeline, it's the same thing with a double-coated dog. Guard hairs represent old growth, and undercoat represents ground covering vegetation.

The act of shaving a double coat removes the dog's natural insulation and causes his system to kick into high gear. He'll now produce coat to protect himself from extreme temperatures, sunburn and sharp objects. Since the top coat or guard hairs take a long time to grow, what the dog's body produces first is soft undercoat. That's why we hear people say, ā€œI shaved my dog, and it grew back twice as thick and really fuzzy!ā€ In reality, what happens is that the original coat isn't restored at all. What grows in instead is thick, prolific undercoat mixed with short new guard hairs. We call it false coat or coat funk.

So, why is this bad? Picture this scenario: It's 90 degrees outside. You're getting dressed to go work in your yard. Are you going to put on a light cotton T-shirt and sunblock or thermal underwear and a sweatshirt? A dog's shaved-down false coat is like that sweatshirt. It's dull, soft and soaks up water like a sponge. Burrs and foxtails stick like Velcro. Above all else, it's way too thick for hot weather. By the time that false coat grows out enough to protect the dog from sunburn, scrapes and bites (the usual job of the top coat), it is so thick that the poor dog might as well be wearing thermal underwear and a sweatshirt.

Remember, Mother Nature designed the undercoat to be extremely heat-retentive. Do you take your dog to a grooming salon? You can request a bath and blow-out. Virtually all modern professional grooming salons have high velocity blow dryers in their work areas. These powerhouses can literally blast the dead undercoat out of your dog's hair after a thorough bathing with minimal brushing and combing needed. The benefit to your dog is a healthy, balanced coat you can both live with. Sure, you could opt for the shave-down, but you'll more than likely be back in a month or so for another ā€œshave-downā€ because your dog is cooking in its own hair.

Then, if you're like most owners who fall into this cycle, you'll intentionally let your dog's woolly false coat grow out all winter ā€œfor warmth,ā€ only to have it shaved off again in the spring. In reality, all winter long while you're under the false notion that your dog is staying warm and dry under that thick layer of fuzz, his coat is matting, retaining water and mud and possibly even mildewing. It will stay cold and wet for hours. Do you see the vicious cycle that started?

In some cases, owners really don't have a choice. If there's an underlying skin condition, requiring removal of the hair, obviously shaving is the lesser of two evils. Same applies if the coat is so matted that shaving is truly the most humane option, affording the owner a chance to start over and improve their brushing skills. These are situations to thoroughly discuss with both your veterinarian and your groomer so you can make an informed decision.

However, if your sole motivation for shaving your dog in the spring is to ā€œkeep him cool,ā€ you need to know that you're actually creating a far worse situation than you think. Aside from destroying coat integrity, shaved dogs are susceptible to a multitude of complications, including, but not limited to, alopecia, heat stroke and skin cancer, specifically Solar-induced Squamous Cell Carcinomas and Dermal Hemangiosarcomas. Sometimes, these complications are not reversible.

Nancy Bynes is a certified master groomer with more than 38 years of experience. She lives in Nevada City.

This article was originally published in the Nevada City Union, June, 2011.

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