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Video Highlights From Meet The Breeds

October 19, 2009 in Breed, Entertainment, News

From USAToday

The video shows many of the sights and sounds from the weekend at Meet the Breeds in New York City. One that will stick with me: the crowds of kids and parents who rushed to meet Uno, one of the most popular dogs in America.

The 2008 Westminster Best in Show winner stood proudly on a table at the Angel on A Leash booth, but was often hard to see because of the crowds several rows deep trying to get close to him. No worries though. When his view was obscured, his voice was not. He howled and howled. The kids giggled. He howled more.

“He’s beloved wherever he goes,” says David Frei, director of communications for The Westminster Kennel Club. “If a dog has charisma and personality, he’s got it.”

Tuesday, Uno will be accompanied by Frei to the Ronald McDonald House in New York City, where the 4-year-old will spend time with children. Westminster’s Angel on a Leash puts therapy pets into many volunteer programs at health care facilities.

Frei calls himself Uno’s foster father when Uno spends time away from his owner Caroline Dowell on her farm in Austin, Texas. Uno spends most of his time on the 200-acre farm, leaving to do therapy work or attend special events.

“He’s got little bug bites now from spending time outside at the farm,” Frei says, ”and a couple little nicks on his ears, like a normal dog. But he’s still perfect in so many ways. His weight is still ideal. He could go right back into the ring.”

Frei enjoyed telling me a story about a flight he took with Uno. Uno gets to sit on a seat beside Frei on Midwest Airlines and gets his own ticket. Security called Uno’s seat number for additional screening.

“They wanded him and patted him down just like they would anyone else,” Frei said. “I told them I was glad to know the world was safe from terrorist Beagles.”

They was no wanding for Uno this weekend, only adoring fans — and lots of howling.

Max And Remy On A Restless Sunday Afternoon

October 18, 2009 in Dog Files News, Fun Videos, News

You’re Spoiling Your Dogs Rotten!

October 18, 2009 in Lifestyle News, News

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We all have opinions about spoiling our dogs. I agree with some points of the article, but not everything. Yes, much of what we do for our dogs, we are really doing for ourselves. But if it means more quality time with the pooches than isn’t it a good thing? And that’s really what our pups want… more time being loved by their hoomans.

Please tell us what you think about the article in the Comments Section. Do you agree? Disagree? Can’t wait to hear what you have to say. This should be interesting.

– Kenn

By Stephen Budiansky For The New York Daily News. Budiansky is the author of “The Truth About Dogs.”

If you’re a dog, you apparently don’t have to worry about recessions. Unemployment is up, foreclosures are up, credit card debt is up, and so is the amount people are forking out cash on their dogs.

Each year the pet product industry does a survey of spending, and this year’s figures just came out. You wouldn’t know there’s any economic trouble looking at these numbers. Spending on dog food, toys, veterinary services, and everything else rose 5% over last year.

If the dogs of the United States were their own country, they’d a have a GDP larger than half the other countries in the world.

New York City has an estimated one to one and a half million dogs. That puts its dog population ahead of the human population of all but the five or ten largest cities in the whole country, more than Boston, San Francisco, Detroit, Atlanta, Baltimore. That also makes New York the leading center of Canine Delusion Disorder: The mistaken belief that the more money we lavish on our pets the happier they’ll be. But in fact by substituting money for common sense, training, and discipline, all we’re doing is creating millions of fat, spoiled, and confused and unhappy dogs.

New York has more than a hundred doggie day care centers ($700 a month for unlimited services). It’s got dog spas and dog gyms, dog boutiques, dog bakeries.

In Manhattan there’s a 24-hour dog emergency hospital with on-call dog oncologists, ophthalmologists, surgeons, cardiologists, behavioral therapists and dermatologists. Of course there’s also pet health insurance ($500 a year and up), and there are pet funeral homes. One New York rabbi advertises dog funeral services. One of the biggest growth areas in the pet product business is organic, and even vegan, dog food.

This is of course nuts.

Now in fairness, New Yorkers like all Americans blow their money on all kinds of frivolities. Go to Starbucks every day and you’ve run through $1,000 in a year easy. And I admit that complaints about the self-indulgent spending habits of one’s fellow citizens always do start to sound like they’re going to be followed by words like “come the revolution . . .”

But what’s really objectionable about the way we’re spending tens of billions of dollars on our dogs each year is that most of it is not good for the dogs themselves.

Dogs don’t want to wear little designer outfits, they don’t want spa treatments and acupuncture, they don’t want to be carried around in little bags, they don’t want cute little decorated muffins, and they sure don’t want vegan dog food. The mindset that drives all of this ridiculous spending is all about gratifying human egos-instead of respecting the true needs, and true natures, of dogs.

Everything we know about the evolution and social nature of dogs tells us that dogs are happiest when they have a secure, well-established-and firmly subordinate-place within their social structure.

The wolf social structure that dogs still carry in their genes has room for only one alpha member of the pack. If that’s not you, the owner, you’ve got big trouble. But so does the dog, because spoiled dogs are never happy dogs: they’re always confused about what their real place in the pack is.

The dogs that are making “canine behavioral therapists” rich these days are disproportionately the very dogs who have gotten so used to pushing around their owners (excuse me, their “caregivers” or “pet parents” in the current lingo) that they no longer see themselves as normal members of the pack.

And then instead of getting to the root of problem, and giving their owners a good shake, all too many of these experts compound the problem by prescribing drugs (including, yes, a doggie version of prozac) to treat medical-sounding “disorders” such as “canine separation anxiety” which they have diagnosed.

If we started treating dogs with genuine respect for their real nature, they wouldn’t be having these problems.

Jack Knox, a legendary trainer of herd dogs, a man who truly and unmistakably adores dogs, once told me that he never lets his dogs ride on the seat of his car: they lie on the floor.

“The dog doesn’t know he’s missing anything,” he said. That struck me as amazingly sensible advice. (Meanwhile, close to half of American dogs, according to a recent survey, sleep on their owners’ beds.)

The same ought to obviously go for all of the expensive treats we insist on feeding dogs. Would dogs know they’re missing anything if they didn’t get a hand-made, all-natural, preservative-free doggie cupcake? (And close to half the dogs in the country are overweight, with serious health consequences.)

You want to do something to really make your dog happy? Give him obedience training. Be firm and consistent but gentle. Respect his true nature. Take him for walks and runs every day. And spend a lot less money on him.

How To Train A German Shepherd

October 17, 2009 in News, Training

Berkeley Breathed’s New Book Was Inspired By One Of Michael Vick’s Former Pit Bulls

October 17, 2009 in Dog Safety, Entertainment, Inhumane Practices, News

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By Tony Pierce Of The LA Times

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Beloved cartoonist Berkeley Breathed had an unusual inspiration for his latest children’s book, “Flawed Dogs.” No it wasn’t one of the Santa Barbaran’s many rescued pit bulls, but it was one of Michael Vick’s infamous dogs who was set to be put down.

“The book happened because I came across both a picture and a quote at about the same time — a picture of one of Michael Vick’s fight dogs. It was set to be put down, but a shelter in Utah decided to take the dog and a few others at the same time and try to rehabilitate them,” Breathed told CNN. “This was the first time the dog had ever received any affection in its life…. It’s the most moving picture of a dog I’ve ever seen, having gone through an impossible transition and fallen back to where dogs naturally go, which is just loving people.”

Best known for other animals, most notably the skittish penguin named Opus and utterly bizarre Bill the Cat, the Pulitzer Prize-winner sat down with Hero Complex blogger Geoff Boucher earlier this month and talked about his career so far, his regrets and his plans for the future.

More Vick: This Sunday, Vick’s Philadelphia Eagles venture to Oakland to play the hapless Raiders. They will also be met by a Bay Area animal rights group, In Defense of Animals, which plans on protesting the game. According to the Associated Press, the IDA doesn’t believe that the quarterback has been repentant enough for abusing his dogs. IDA president Elliot Katz apparently wrote a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell “asking that dogfighting and cockfighting be specifically included in the ‘criminal offense’ section of the league’s Personal Conduct Policy,” the AP said.

Halloween Dog Costumes Go Couture For Two Huntington Beach Pugs

October 17, 2009 in Entertainment, Lifestyle News, News

PugHalloweenOlive and Mochi are pugs with a passion for fashion. No wonder Halloween is their favorite time of year.

From The Associated Press/Photographs by Richard Vogel

They’ve been dressed up as geisha girls, surfer girls and even pieces of sushi over the years. They may not understand the tradition, but “pugs understand positive energy,” explains dog owner, partner and costume designer Lisa Woodruff of Huntington Beach.

Ten years ago, it was hard to find a Halloween costume for a cat, dog or duck. Today they are everywhere, from the dollar stores to Beverly Hills boutiques. Online or off, there are costumes galore.

A little bling or properly draped scrap of fabric can transform your pet into almost any animal, character or celebrity, says Steve Major of All the Same Wild and Tame, an animal sanctuary that sells pet accessories in Sherman Oaks.

The most popular ready-made pet costumes this year are Superdog, bee, jockey rider, hot dog, pirate, devil, prisoner, Yoda, cowboy rider, Batman and groom, according to public relations manager Lori Samsoucie of Wisconsin-based buyseasons.com, the largest online costume retailer in the country.

But the most unusual, most creative costumes — the ones that will win contests — are designed in the imaginations of pet owners, Woodruff says.

Olive and Mochi, stepsisters who are both 5, already have their outfits for the ninth annual Haute Dog Howl’oween Parade and Costume Contest on Oct. 31. The Long Beach event is the largest pet costume contest in the country, according to organizer Justin Rudd.

About 750 pets — mostly dogs — are expected for the hourlong parade, he says. When you add spectator dogs to the six-block parade and contest, there will be more than 1,000 animals on hand. Last year, more than 700 pet owners paid the $15 entry fee.

There also will be a dog treat stacking contest, bobbing for howl-o-weenies, a pumpkin drop, a kissing booth staffed by Rudd’s bulldogs Rosie and Riley, pet adoptions and a children’s costume contest. For Rudd’s group, it’s a fundraiser.

Prizes are given in 13 categories, and four main trophy winners receive dog food for a year. For the first time, roads along the route will be closed this year because the parade has gotten so big.

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Juliet Tomac of Long Beach and her chihuahuas Lola, Roxy, Sophia and Fionna are repeat winners. They won one year as “Grilled Chi’s,” two lobsters and two hot dogs on a grill with attending chefs, and then as “Stinky Chi’s,” four dogs on a Dumpster with spiders and rats and orange jumpsuit-wearing sanitary cleanup workers.

Tomac and the rest of her six-person team have donated their free supplies of dog food to Hearts for Hounds, a Long Beach rescue group for small dogs.

“We do it because it’s a blast,” Tomac says. “We are just a bunch of friends having a great time.”

The dogs — Roxy, 7, and Lola, Sophia and Fionna, all 4 — are not easy to dress. “They don’t enjoy it, but they put up with it for the parade,” Tomac explains.

She is mum on this year’s costumes but says “we have a current event and we are trying some new things.”

They will all march and may bring a few other dogs along too. And everyone will be in costume. “We make everything. There is nothing store-bought. We like the original idea so much that everything is from scratch,” she says.

Woodruff, the owner of the two pugs, says her dogs seem to like the idea of wearing something fun. “People don’t believe they like getting dressed up. But when I show them their clothes, they get all excited. If I put clothes on one, the other twirls and starts sniffing and gets jealous,” she says.

To get your dogs in the mood, “Dog Whisperer” Cesar Millan suggests a pre-dressing trick. “Walk the dog, get him tired, so when you put the outfit on, he is relaxed,” he says.

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If a dog relates getting dressed with fun, it will work. The more you laugh while getting the dog dressed, the more he or she will clown around, he says.

Without the fun, some dogs will seize up or slip into a corner and just cower in a daze.

Woodruff’s pugs haven’t been spooked at the parade. Three years ago, she and her husband made a rickshaw and called it “Memoirs of a Geisha Pug.” The dogs’ kimonos were custom-made in Japan and Woodruff made the wigs. “My husband finished that float 20 minutes before we were supposed to leave. We didn’t practice. We had no idea if they would sit in that thing.”

They got to the parade and “they sat there like little princesses. They loved it. They seemed to do much better because they didn’t have to walk.”

The next year, Olive and Mochi went as sushi (one shrimp, one tuna), complete with wasabi, ginger and chopsticks. Woodruff was a giant soy sauce bottle and her husband was a sushi chef.

Though the pugs have yet to win a free dog food prize, pictures of them have made it onto blogs and websites. A Japanese variety show came and filmed the parade. Her relatives in Japan taped the show and sent it to her. They made it onto cuteoverload.com, a site dedicated to documenting adorable critters.

The crowd makes it all worth it, she says. “I will never forget this one lady. She took a picture of the pugs on her cellphone and told me she was sending them to her son in Iraq right then.”

Puppy Luv!

October 16, 2009 in Fun Videos, News

Dog Files Fact: English Springer Spaniel

October 16, 2009 in Breed, Dog Files Fact, News

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The Origins of the Spaniel:

Although most dog books insist that spaniel is a corruption “espagnol”, meaning Spanish or Spain, there are other authorities that believe the word may be a corruption of “espanir”, French for flatten out. The Italian name of the Piedmontese Spaniel is the Spinone, a continental hunter that points and retrieves.

Colonel David Hancock, in The Heritage of the Dog, feels that the Roman empire played a major role in bringing the Spaniels to England, by way of the trade routes to the far east. His belief is that the “sporting spaniel originated in China, from the short-faced ancestors of modern day Pekingese, pugs, and Shih Tsus, as well as Japanese Chins, Tibetan Spaniels, and Llasa Apsos.” These dogs were introduced into South Europe and were then bred into the small sporting spaniels and water dogs of the 1300 -1600 AD period. Theys were the ancestors of Blenheim Spaniels, Canne Chiens, and Espagneul Nains, and then cocking and setting spaniels. If there is any question as to how a short nosed breed could be bred into dogs having the current muzzles of our present dogs, look into the recent history of the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, a breed that was lost, but selected for out of breedings of the English Toy Spaniel.

The English Springer Spaniel is an older breed, appearing in paintings as early as the 1600s. It is possibly the ancestor of most modern spaniels; Springer Spaniels and Cocker Spaniels were not recognized as separate breeds until the 1800s.

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The purpose of the breed was to serve as a hunting dog. Before guns were used to shoot game, the land spaniel would “spring”—or flush—the gamebird into the air where a trained falcon or hawk would bring it to the handler.

As the shotgun replaced the bird of prey for the hunter, the English Springer Spaniel continued to serve as a hunting companion. Although most are hunted on traditional upland game, the springer spaniel is adept at hunting waterfowl and small game, as well. They are excellent rabbit hunting dogs.[3] The spaniel is trained to “hup”—or sit—until the hunter casts the dog off to start hunting. A good spaniel is bold to cover, has an excellent “wet” or “dry” nose, works within gun range in an efficient, merry fashion and has a strong flush. The dog should mark the fall of the bird – or accept minimal handling to the area of the fall, where its nose can locate the downed bird’s scent. After finding dead or wounded game, the spaniel should have a quick pick up, return to the hunter and deliver the prize with a soft mouth.

The springer is an affectionate and easy-going family dog, and it’s alertness and attentiveness make it the ideal hunting companion. An intelligent dog, and eager to please, a Springer is easily incorporated into a family setting. It’s long-legged build puts it in the front of the spaniels for speed.

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