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You are browsing the archive for 2009 July.

All-Pet Airline Hits Skies

July 15, 2009 in Lifestyle News, News

NEW YORK (AP) – One trip for their Jack Russell terrier in a plane’s cargo hold was enough to convince Alysa Binder and Dan Wiesel that owners needed a better option to get their pets from one city to another.
On Tuesday, the first flight for the husband-and-wife team’s Pet Airways, the first-ever all-pet airline, took off from Republic Airport in Farmingdale, N.Y.

All commercial airlines allow a limited number of small pets to fly in the cabin. Others must travel as checked bags or in the cargo hold—a dark and sometimes dangerous place where temperatures can vary wildly.

Binder and Wiesel used their consulting backgrounds and business savvy to start Pet Airways in 2005. The last four years have been spent designing their fleet of five planes according to new four-legged requirements, dealing with FAA regulations and setting up airport schedules.

The two say they’re overwhelmed with the response. Flights on Pet Airways are already booked up for the next two months.

Pet Airways will fly a pet between five major cities—New York, Washington, Chicago, Denver, and Los Angeles. The $250 one-way fare is comparable to pet fees at the largest U.S. airlines.

For owners the big difference is service. Dogs and cats will fly in the main cabin of a Suburban Air Freight plane, retooled and lined with carriers in place of seats. Pets (about 50 on each flight) will be escorted to the plane by attendants that will check on the animals every 15 minutes during flight. The pets are also given pre-boarding walks and bathroom breaks. And at each of the five airports it serves, the company has created a “Pet Lounge” for future fliers to wait and sniff before flights.

The company will operate out of smaller, regional airports in the five launch cities, which will mean an extra trip for most owners dropping off their pets if they are flying too. Stops in cities along the way means the pets will take longer to reach a destination than their owners.

A trip from New York to Los Angeles, for example, will take about 24 hours. On that route, pets will stop in Chicago, have a bathroom break, play time, dinner, and bunk for the night before finishing the trip the next day.

Amanda Hickey of Portland, Ore. is one of the new airline’s first customers. Her seven-year-old terrier-pinscher mix Mardi and 2-year-old puggle Penny are taking their first flight soon.

Hickey said the service was a welcome alternative to flying her dogs in cargo when she transplants them from her soon-to-be Denver home to Chicago to stay while she and her fiance travel to Aruba to get married.

“For a little bit more money, I have peace of mind,” she said.

It was a stressful experience in a cargo hold that spurred Binder and Wiesel to start their airline. Their Jack Russell terrier, Zoe, flew once in cargo and Binder said they worried about how the dog was doing, but were unable to check on her or get information. The couple soon started looking for a better solution.

“One time in cargo was enough for us,” Binder said, walking through an airplane hangar as Zoe trotted in front of her. “We wanted to do something better.”

The company, which will begin with one flight in each of its five cities, is looking to add more flights and cities soon. In the next three years, Binder hopes to fly to 25 locations.

Among the big U.S. carriers that offer pet services, AirTran, Spirit, Southwest and JetBlue only allow pets to fly in the cabin. Most U.S. airlines charge between $100 and $125, but Delta and Northwest charge $150 for cabin trips. AirTran is the cheapest among big carriers at $69.

The charge is more to fly in the cargo or check-baggage holds. Delta and Northwest are the most expensive at $275. Alaska Airlines and Midwest charge the least, at $100. Frontier prices its checked pets fees between $100 and $200 and only takes pets as checked baggage.

Anne Banas, executive editor of SmartTravel.com, questions the viability of an airline with such a specific niche.

“I’m not sure how sustainable it is,” she said. “But if people are trying to go for a first-class service, it could make sense.”

She said the service’s popularity could spike in peak summer or winter months when airlines in some areas don’t allow pets to travel.

Betsy Saul, co-founder of Petfinder.com, which has ranked the pet-friendliness of airlines for three years, said she’s excited about the expected impact Pet Airways will have on pet travel across major airlines.

“The entire industry will stretch because of Pet Airways,” she said. “It’s a challenge that says ‘let’s make this (experience) better for pets.’”

More Funny Dog Pics!

July 13, 2009 in Fun Videos, News

First Cancer Drug For Dogs Approved By FDA

July 10, 2009 in Health & Science News, News

by Suzan Gridley, i Love Dogs

The first cancer treatment drug specifically designed for dogs has been approved by the FDA. The drug has been named Palladia, a word which has roots to classical Mythology and the goddess Pallas, who is associated with protection. Palladia, manufactured by Pfizer Animal Health Inc, has been found to successfully treat mast cell tumors by cutting off the blood supply to them, thus preventing metastasis to other parts of the body, including the lymph system, which can occur with this form of canine skin cancer. The drug can be used effectively with or without lymph node involvement.

Mast cell tumors account for about 20% of canine skin cancer. They are usually seen as solitary lumps or masses in or under the skin, but can occur in a wide range of sizes and appearances. Currently, surgical removal has been the primary method of treatment. However, because of their locally invasive behavior, wide margins of what appears to be normal tissue around the tumor need to be removed to increase the likelihood that the tumor has been completely removed.

The Boxer is at an especially high risk for mast cell tumors, as are related breeds like the English Bulldog and Boston Terrier. Also at higher than average risk are the Shar pei, Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever, Schnauzer, and Cocker Spaniel.

Palladia, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, works on individual tumor cells to kill these abnormal cells. It also acts on the blood vessels which supply the mast cell tumor(s). It is meant to be used for dogs with recurrent tumors and those who are staged as grade II or III. Possible side effects include: depressed appetite or refusal to eat, vomiting, diarrhea, fresh blood in vomit or feces, dark, tarry feces, or abnormal or unexplained bruising or bleeding.

Pfizer is scheduled to begin selling Palladia in early 2010, but the price has not yet been announced. If your dog is covered by pet health insurance, you can expect the terms of coverage to be similar to existing treatments. Jennifer Neal, spokesperson for Pets Best Insurance, advises that their policies pay for 80% of the cost after the deductible, up to the per incident limit. Per incident limits vary per policy; Ms. Neal indicated that the cost for existing cancer treatments seldom exceeds $6,000. She also suggested that pet owners purchase insurance when their pets are young since pre-existing conditions are not covered.

Hundreds Of Pit Bulls Rescued In US Dog Fighting Raid

July 9, 2009 in Law Enforcement, News

CHICAGO (AFP) — More than 350 dogs — most of them pit bulls — were rescued Wednesday in what officials said was the largest dog fighting crackdown in US history.

Authorities in six states seized the dogs in coordinated raids which netted the arrests of 26 people accused of forcing the dogs to fight to the death and “routinely and inhumanely” killing them if the dogs were injured too badly to fight again.

Each count of conspiracy to promote and participate in dog fights carries a maximum penalty of five years in jail and a fine of up to 250,000 dollars.

An indictment unsealed against seven of the defendants charges that two dogs were shot in the head and dumped in plastic containers outside the garage where a fight was held because they “did not perform to the handler’s/owner’s expectations.”

Others were shot and then tossed into a river or burned in a barrel, officials said.

Organized dog fighting is illegal in the United States, but the Humane Society estimates that some 25,000 dogs are forced to fight for profit every year.

The animal welfare organization estimates that 40,000 people follow the underground dog fighting circuits and another 100,000 meet in neighborhood streets, alleys and hideaways.

“Dog fighting inflicts serious injuries and death upon dogs that are bred and trained to be dangerously aggressive,” Matt Whitworth, acting US Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, said in a statement.

“Like many dog owners, I am appalled that such a cruel and inhumane activity occurs in our state. We will vigorously prosecute those who illegally practice this so-called sport.”

The operation stemmed from a tip from the Humane Society of Missouri, which has set up a temporary shelter in St. Louis to care for many of the dogs.

“We are committed to giving dogs who have come from such horrible abuse the absolute best chance for a good life,” said Debbie Hill, director of the temporary shelter.

“It is a tragedy that because of mistreatment by humans for financial gain and so-called sport, many dogs used in animal fighting may not ever be able to be placed in a home situation.”

Pug Pushes Stroller

July 8, 2009 in Fun Videos, News

To get you through the week.

Mast Cell Tumors In Dogs

July 6, 2009 in Health & Science News, News

Mast cell tumors account for 20% of all skin tumors in dogs. They often appear small and insignificant but can be a very serious form of cancer for your dog.


Check out this important video about Mast Cell Tumors in Dogs. What you learn can save your dog’s life.


Happy 4th Of July From The Dog Files!

July 4, 2009 in Dog Files News, News

maxthepatriot

New Flu Vaccine Approved — for Dogs

July 3, 2009 in Health & Science News, News

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Published: June 29, 2009 in The New York Times

There is a new flu virus going around. It initially looked quite lethal, and caused panic. Now it is clear that it has killed relatively few victims — and many of those have underlying conditions. It is particularly dangerous to be the possessor of a pushed-in nose — that is, to be a Pekingese, a pug or a Shi-Tzu.

It is the H3N8 dog flu. The virus, scientists believe, jumped from horses to dogs at least five years ago, but it has never infected a human.

Last week, the United States Department of Agriculture announced that it had approved the first vaccine for it.

pugs

While fears of a flu pandemic among humans have shifted fromthe lethal H5N1 avian flu to the relatively mild H1N1 swine flu, the H3N8 canine flu has been a quiet undercurrent in the United States, rarely discussed except among veterinarians and dog owners in the few areas where it has struck hard: Florida, New York City’s northern suburbs, Philadelphia and Denver.

In line with the virologists’ adage that the only predictable thing about flu viruses is that they are unpredictable, the dog flu has baffled those following it.

“I don’t think we know what this virus is going to do yet,” said one of its discoverers, Dr. Cynda Crawford of the University of Florida veterinary school.

When Dr. Crawford began studying it in January 2004, it had come to her notice as a mysterious cough and pneumonia that killed a third of the greyhounds at a Florida dog track. By the next year, she had found it in seven states and had shown that it could be passed by dogs who just rubbed noses on the street or shared a water dish, and that humans could carry it on their clothes. There was a brief flurry of fear that it would kill 1 percent to 10 percent of the country’s 70 million dogs.

It has proved about as deadly as Dr. Crawford predicted. She estimates that by itself, it kills 5 percent of the dogs that catch it. Add the deaths at shelters that eliminate the virus by killing all their dogs and disinfecting their cages, and the total mortality rate is 8 percent.

(By contrast, the mortality rate of the 1918 Spanish flu in humans was about 2 percent.)

But it has not spread nearly as vigorously as she expected. It has now been found in 30 states, but almost exclusively in settings where dogs live closely together: shelters, pet stores, kennels and dog schools. Because the owners of these establishments have learned to turn away sick dogs just as school principals facing swine flu send home sick children, the disease’s progress has been slowed.

“Probably over 10,000 dogs have been infected,” Dr. Crawford said, “but I can’t say whether it’s 20,000 or 30,000. In a population of 70 million, that’s a drop in the bucket.”

Dr. Edward J. Dubovi of the veterinary school at Cornell University, another discoverer of the virus, said it is “probably not as well adapted to dogs as it could be.” It took five mutations to let it jump to dogs from horses, where it had circulated for 40 years.

Another mutation or two “could make it a very serious issue,” he said, but at the moment, “it takes a certain density of dogs to keep it going.”

Some veterinarians have found that the dogs that tend to die from it are the “brachycephalics” — dogs with short snub noses.

Just as obesity has proved dangerous to human flu victims because of the weight on their chests, being bred to have a short, bent respiratory tract is dangerous for dogs.

“It really puts a strain on their ability to breathe,” Dr. Crawford said. “They can’t move air in and out of their lungs.