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Two Steps Forward, Ten Steps Back: Jim Beam’s Puppy Commercial = Epic Fail!

October 28, 2009 in Adoption News, Dog Safety, Inhumane Practices, News

Once again I have to report on a company that just doesn’t get. This time it’s Jim Beam.

With all of us out there trying to spread the word about how important it is to be an educated, knowledgeable dog owner, Jim Beam has thrown it all out the door for a quick buck and a laugh!

For this, Jim Beam, you get The Dog Files Epic Fail Awardâ„¢ of the month.

Feel free to tell Jim Beam what you think of their “puppy” ad. Just be courteous, smart and to the point. Let’s see if they get the message.

Snail Mail: Jim Beam Brands Co. 510 Lake Cook Rd., Deerfield, IL 60015-4964

Email: http://www.jimbeam.com/contactus.aspx (Just put in your birthday and you’re there.)

Experts Blame Owners For Merced, CA. Dog Attacks

October 28, 2009 in Breed-Specific Legislation, Law Enforcement, Legal News, News

By Jonah Owen Lamb For The Merced Sun-Star

Maulings have run across a mix of breeds, statistics reveal.

Is it the dog?

Or is it the breed?

Two vicious pit bull maulings this month in Delhi — one which killed a toddler — have raised those questions yet again.

Are dog attacks specific to certain breeds? Or individual animals? The controversy rages across the nation and now in Merced County.

Colton Smith, 17 months old, was fatally mauled Friday by a pit bull named Max in the backyard of his babysitter’s house in Delhi. The dog hadn’t been neutered. The other case involved a woman mauled on the streets of Delhi on Oct. 1.

The two attacks add to the already ruinous reputation sported by pit bulls. They may be the most maligned dogs in America. They’re known for horrendous attacks, such as the case of a San Francisco woman fatally mauled by her neighbor’s dogs in 2001.

And they’re notorious as a dog prized by illegal dog fighters — most notably by pro football player Michael Vick.

In recent years, the breed has gained a reputation for violence.

Whether that reputation is deserved is another issue.

While attacks often prompt knee-jerk reactions against specific breeds, dog advocacy groups say most fatal maulings don’t stem from one breed alone. More often than not, attacks are caused by owner neglect or abuse, rather than traits tied to a certain breed, advocates say.

Since 1965 there have been 62 fatal dog attacks in the state, according to the National Canine Research Council. Forty-six of those attacks were on children.

In all, 15 separate breeds were involved in those attacks.

Merced County statistics on dog attacks show a similar mixture of breeding. From 2007 to 2009 there were 309 reported dog attacks, and 76 were pit bulls, according to the county.

While one breed hasn’t been at fault for the majority of attacks in the county or state, the circumstances surrounding most attacks are similar. According to Rick Blackwell, the county’s animal service manager, the dogs are un-neutered, kept outside and, when a child is involved, the child has been left alone with an unknown dog.

Overall, dog bite reports have decreased in California over the past four decades — despite a growing dog population, according to the Animal Legal Defense Fund Web site.

Nationally, more than 4 million people are bit each year by dogs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Even so, recent dog attacks have prompted cities and states to pass legislation banning pit bulls. According to the NCRC, hundreds of cities have passed such laws. One example is the city of Denver, which banned pit bull variations in 1989.

In 2009, similar statewide legislation was introduced in Montana, Hawaii and Oregon.

Meanwhile, 12 states have passed their own contradictory legislation prohibiting the banning of any certain breed of dog.

California is one of those states, according to ALDF. State law does require certain dog breeds to be fixed.

These countervailing trends have pitted animal advocates at odds with one another. Some argue that such legislation is wrongheaded, while others support it.

Adam Goldfarb, director of the Pets at Risk Program with the American Humane Society, said much of the fault in attacks rests with humans — not canines. “The vast majority of dog attacks can be blamed on reckless owner behavior, not the dogs themselves,” he said.

Unfortunately, he added, the pit bull is popular with reckless and irresponsible owners. He cited a statistic from the NCRC: 70 percent of all dog bite incidents involved un-neutered male dogs.

But other groups dispute the Humane Society’s findings.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals supports pit bull bans. While the group says pit bulls can be family pets, they’re also some of the most abused dogs in America. More often than not, the people who seek them out are not typical caring owners. “The vast majority of people who want pit bulls are attracted to the ‘macho’ image of the breed as a living weapon and seek to play up this image by putting the animals in heavy chains; kicking, beating, and otherwise abusing them into aggression; and leaving them outside in all weather extremes in order to ‘toughen’ them up,’” said a PETA policy statement.

As for Smith, the preliminary autopsy said the cause of his death in the fatal mauling was from loss of blood because an artery in his neck had been punctured, according to a press release from the Merced County Sheriff’s Department.

The circumstances around his death align with similar factors in most fatal mauling deaths cited by animal advocates. Attacks often include children left alone with a strange, un-neutered dogs that are kept outside — often as guard dogs rather than pets.

Sgt. Jason Goins with the Merced County Sheriff’s Department said the dog, Max, had been left in the backyard and was sometimes tethered. He also said the dog had only been at the residence for about a week.

The dog’s owners, Gustavo Garcia and Martha Carrera — future in-laws of Smith’s babysitter — had left the dog at the house while they were in the process of moving.

No charges have yet been filed in the case.

Ben Stein Raises Awareness About Puppy Mills

October 28, 2009 in Adoption News, Charity, Dog Safety, Inhumane Practices, News

Assistance Dogs Give Help to Hearing Impaired

October 28, 2009 in Lifestyle News, News, Service Dogs

assistance_dog

By Linda Lombardi For The Associated Press

Ray Dobson and the dog he now calls Goblin both had a problem.

The little mixed-breed who was rescued from the streets of Puerto Rico needed a home. Dobson, of Orleans, Mass., was losing his hearing.

“My wife saw me kind of dropping out,” he says. “As people get deafer they get more anti-social.”

Both problems were solved when man and dog were brought together by the National Education for Assistance Dog Service, which trains dogs from shelters to assist the hearing impaired. Based in Princeton, Mass., NEADS has placed more than 1,300 hearing dogs all over the country since 1976.

Goblin does for Dobson what his digital hearing aid can’t.

“What the dog does for me is hears what I can’t hear,” he says. “She can hear the phone ringing, alarms, knocking on the door, when people call my name.”

The dogs chosen for this job have to have special qualities — often exactly the qualities that land them in shelters.

“The hearing dog is usually the dog no one wants,” says Brian Jennings, who’s been a trainer at NEADS for 20 years. “It’s usually hyperactive, willful, compulsive. They have to be. If the dog wakes you in the middle of the night because the smoke alarm’s going off and you push them away, they have to not give up.”

What’s unique about hearing dogs, says Kathy Foreman of NEADS, is that they work without being given commands. A guide dog for the blind, for instance, is given a command to go forward, and while it knows to disobey if there’s danger, it’s still initially responding to the handler’s direction. Hearing dogs, by definition, need to do their work when their owner doesn’t know there’s a job to be done.

So trainers look for dogs who are curious about sounds, but also very confident. These may be exactly the dogs that drove their original owners crazy because they were bouncing off the walls, but as Jennings observes, “sometimes a dog’s weakness is its strength.”

The dogs are trained to touch the owner and lead him physically to the source of certain sounds. So that they’ll do this on their own initiative, says Foreman, the secret of training is to make the dog think “it’s a big game, and we are happy to play it with you any time.”

New owners are taught how to keep the dog’s skills sharp, such as praising it for responding to sounds even in cases that turn out to be unimportant.

NEADS has no physical requirement for hearing dogs. “We’ve had everything from Chihuahuas to German shepherds,” says Jennings, and most of them are mixed breeds.

Hearing dogs not only let their handlers know that they’ve dropped their car keys, but also help in less tangible ways. Social interactions are often affected by the fact that deafness is not a visible disability. Foreman says that not hearing when your name is called is a big issue for the clients: “People say, people at work thought I was the biggest snob because I ignored them.”

The dog not only helps make the handler aware of sounds, but makes observers aware of the handler’s situation.

“When they see the dog, it helps people understand that they need to take extra time to communicate with that person,” says Jeanine Konopelski of Canine Companions for Independence.

For the hearing impaired, the dogs allow more freedom and independence, says Robin Dickson of Dogs for the Deaf in Oregon. One client told her that before she had a dog, “I never had time to think, because I was always trying so hard to listen.”

Dobson’s wife Joanne says that Ray, like many who are losing their hearing, was reluctant to admit the problem, and was coping by withdrawing from social interactions. “Now he’s back in the mainstream,” she says.

Plus there’s one benefit she didn’t expect.

“My friends are very jealous,” she says. “When I call my husband, the dog jumps on him till he comes.”

San Jose To Tackle Issue Of Bicyclists With Leashed Dogs

October 28, 2009 in Dog Safety, Environment, Government, Legal News, News

bicycle_dog

By Lisa Fernandez For MercuryNews.com

On the heels of a deadly freak accident, San Jose is exploring a law to make the city the first in California — and possibly the country — to address the issue of bicyclists riding with leashed dogs.

Councilwoman Nancy Pyle is convening a meeting Wednesday night to gauge public opinion on whether the city should clamp down in some way to prevent what happened to Beverly Head on Sept. 16. The retired 62-year-old San Jose phlebotomist died after she hit her head when she got tangled up in a dog leash while walking along a popular South San Jose trail. The dog in question was one of two pets being pulled alongside a bicyclist.

Her death has raised a passionate debate among trail users. And, urged by Head’s grief-stricken husband, Pyle’s office is studying whether the current laws regarding the safety of the city’s trails are enough. Current code mandates that owners must keep their dogs “under control” at all times, and kept on leashes of up to 20 feet in city parks.

“I’d like them to prohibit bicycles on pathways that pull dogs,” Bob Head said on Monday, moments before he took off on a bike ride himself. “For the safety of walkers, and for the safety of small dogs that get pulled along and can’t keep up.”

Pyle’s office has been getting calls and e-mails with “lots of interesting ideas,” said Kathy Sullivan, Pyle’s chief of staff. “And this is such an emotional issue, we just want to hear from people.”

Jon Cicirelli, deputy director of the city’s Animal Care and Services, researched all over the state, from San Francisco to Venice Beach in Los Angeles, to see if there is anything on the books that speaks to banning bicyclists from riding alongside leashed pets.

“There’s nothing,” he said. “Nobody’s ever heard of this happening before. Whatever we do, we’ll be breaking ground on this issue.”

Cicirelli said his first thought is not to ban bicyclists from riding with their pets, per se.

Rather, he says it might be better to beef up the current leash laws mandating that owners must not only keep their dog under control, but extend that responsibility to the leash, too.

He quickly added, though, that because there is no law that he can find on the topic, he’s open to all ideas.

And there are plenty of ideas percolating out there — especially from the Los Alamitos Creek trail where a white memorial cross now marks the spot where Head hit her head. She was bleeding but conscious after the fall, and even spoke with the bicyclist who stayed until paramedics came. But she died at the hospital the next day, and the bicyclist, whose name is unknown, isn’t considered a suspect because police have ruled the death an accident.

“No little doggies should be tied up to bicycles,” said Marilyn Holmes, 60, who walks the trails and plans to attend the meeting. “I want designated lanes for bicycles only. No doggies. Anyone who is caught should be fined.”

But while fines and enforcement may sound good, would they really be effective?

Cliff Reyda, 65, who was out walking on the trail recently, isn’t so sure.

“People who walk their dogs on leashes can have this happen, too,” he said. “There’s no real solution. If you enact a law, then all of a sudden, it becomes an anti-dog position.”

Al Nolan, 59, isn’t anti-anything, but he does want stricter separation on the path between slower walkers like himself and speedy bicyclists.

“They need a dedicated bike run, like a carpool lane,” he said, just as a mountain biker whizzed by him and his dog, Indi.

Then there’s trail users like Terri Gong, who is out often enough with her mutt, Coco, that she could recognize both Beverly Head and the cyclist in question.

She usually doesn’t like when government intervenes in the lives of ordinary citizens. But in this case, she said, there’s a need for it.

“I’m darn near a Libertarian,” Gong said. “But at the very least, bikers should have their dogs on the right.”

Dog Attends Party, Wakes up With Hangover

October 28, 2009 in Health & Science News, Holidays, News

By Dr. Eric Barchas, DVM For Dogster.com
Cody_Lab

Cody is an adorable two-year-old Lab/Beagle cross who saw me at the emergency clinic on Sunday. He clearly is a very well loved family pet.

Friday was Cody’s second birthday and on that night the family threw him a birthday party. Twenty-five people attended. Many of them were children. All of them brought gifts for Cody. Most of the gifts were edible.

During the party Cody received and immediately devoured several rawhides, pig’s ears, and sundry other dog treats. He also took the opportunity to hoover up any human food that was dropped during the party. His owner mentioned that one partygoer accidentally dropped an entire hamburger on the floor. Cody wolfed it down as the crowd sang Happy Birthday.

As the owner recounted this story I thought to myself that this massive amount of dietary indiscretion sounded like a good way for a dog to contract pancreatitis. Pancreatitis is a life-threatening inflammation of an organ (the pancreas) that is involved in the digestion of food. I began to get worried about Cody.

The owner’s story continued. The party ended uneventfully and everyone went to bed. The next morning (Saturday) Cody woke up feeling awful. He could barely move. He had no appetite (which, the owner assured me, was most extraordinary for Cody).

The owner was not very worried initially. But by Sunday afternoon Cody’s condition still had not improved. He refused to eat, and he still was extremely lethargic. He therefore wound up in my office.

When I examined Cody I was troubled. He was very lethargic. His abdomen was bloated and painful. He was extremely dehydrated. I recommended hospitalization and tests to rule out a serious problem such as pancreatitis or a foreign object (such as an undigested fragment of food) in his intestines.

Cody seemed to feel better after he was re-hydrated. And I was happy to see his test results. He tested negative for pancreatitis and other serious metabolic disturbances. His X-rays were not consistent with a foreign object in his intestinal tract.

However, the X-rays did show a very large amount of food in Cody’s stomach. This was most extraordinary in a dog who hadn’t eaten for two days. And it led to a diagnosis in the case–the best possible diagnosis considering the circumstances. Cody appeared to be suffering from a resolving case of glutton’s remorse (term coined by my friend Reading Maley).

Canine glutton’s remorse occurs when a dog overeats in the extreme. The stomach becomes massively and painfully distended, and the dog feels markedly ill for several days as the food slowly passes out of the stomach and through the intestines. The condition is painful and rarely triggers a life-threatening condition called bloat. However, most young dogs make it through episodes of glutton’s remorse unscathed. In my experience the condition is most common in Labs and Beagles (remember that Cody is a Lab/Beagle cross).

The nursing staff administered an enema to Cody in order to help keep everything moving through his system. I expect him to make a complete recovery. And I imagine that he never again will party as hard as he did on Friday night.

Schwarzenegger Vetoes Puppy Mill Bill

October 27, 2009 in Government, News

schwarzenegger

By Jill Rosen For The Baltimore Sun

Photo By Rich Pedroncelli For AP

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed legislation to crack down on puppy mills by limiting them to 50 adult dogs, becoming the only governor in the six states where puppy mill legislation passed this year to override it with a veto.

In his veto message, Schwarzenegger said he feared the bill would criminalize the lawful activities of pet shops, kennels and groups that raise assistance dogs, the Associated Press reports.

“This measure would make it a crime for any person or entity to own or control more than 50 unsterilized adult dogs or cats for breeding or raising for sale as pets,” Schwarzenegger wrote in his veto message. “I support measures designed to prevent animal cruelty and that punish persons engaged in the abuse of animals. However, this measure simply goes too far in an attempt to address the serious problem of puppy mills.”

Don’t Let Halloween Spook Your Critter

October 27, 2009 in Dog Safety, Holidays, News

Halloween_weinerdog

By Jacques Von Lunen For OregonLive.com

Halloween’s a lot of fun, at least for people. For pets, not so much.

The last day of October is one of the busiest of the year at Portland’s Dove Lewis Emergency Animal Hospital, as it is at other pet services.

Al Holzer, local dog behavioral therapist with Bark Busters USA, said, “Throughout our network of 250 offices nationwide, we hear about more dogs dying or straying during Halloween than any other holiday.”

Here are some tips to prevent a pet emergency, courtesy of DoveLewis and Holzer:

Keep all candy out of reach, not just chocolate. All sugary candy can cause gastrointestinal problems in pets. Lollipop sticks, plastic parts and wrappers can cause obstructions and rupture a pet’s intestines.

Keep candles out of reach of swooshing tails, patting paws and curious noses.

Keep decorative lights away from puppies and kittens. Chewing the wires can be deadly.

Keep your pets locked indoors and away from trick-or-treaters. Dogs may growl or possibly bite the noisy visitors. Cats will most likely be frightened by the costumes, the noise and the constant knocking or doorbell-ringing. Keep pets in a room away from the front door.

If your dog seems anxious, don’t overly reassure it. Giving it extra attention can communicate that there must be something to worry about.

Make sure your pets have current and readable identification tags. Micro-chipping is even better.

Does your pet really enjoy wearing a costume? Probably not. If it seems like it does, don’t leave it alone while it’s wearing the outfit. It may chew the costume and ingest it.

Take care of your pet and make sure that everyone’s having fun that night.