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You are browsing the archive for 2010 July.

Pampered Pets And Their Owners Going Green

July 23, 2010 in Lifestyle News, News

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By Patricia Reaney for The Washington Post

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) – Whether it is organic coconut chip treats, eco-friendly rope toys, hemp and bamboo collars or beds made from recycled material, pampered pets and their owners are going green.

There are still $3,000 snake-skin and diamond collars, fitness trainers for pudgier pooches and pet hotel suites but more animal lovers are eschewing luxury for green gear.

“In the last year and a half we have seen more eco-friendly products than ever before,” Charlotte Reed, a New York-based pet products expert, said in an interview. “More people are leaning in that direction.”

And they are realizing that their dog, or cat, can help reduce their carbon footprint.

“We see more products that will make your dog fit and healthy, products that will be natural and good for his/her hair and well being,” Reed said.

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Stem Cells For Doggies? Super-Expensive Pet Medical Treatments Revealed

July 23, 2010 in Health & Science News, News

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Cali/Getty. Last year, Americans spent $12 billion to pay their vet bills, according to The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

By Rosemary Black for Daily News

Stem cell transplants, state-of-the-art image-guided radiation, sophisticated diagnostic procedures to pinpoint everything from cancer to lung disease. New and improved health care for the uninsured or underinsured? Nope. Medical treatment for the nation’s pets, some of whom have a better shot at being healed than people living in the same state.

Last year, Americans spent $12 billion to pay their vet bills, according to The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. That’s twice what pet owners spent just 10 years ago.

For many people, investing in an ailing pet’s life “improves the quality of a human life immeasurably more than, say, buying a luxury car,” Dr. Patty Khuly, a vet at Miami’s Sunset Animal Clinic, told the AP.

These days, vets are using increasingly sophisticated medical techniques on the 77 million dogs, 90 million cats, and all the other pets that live in the U.S. The treatments are neck in neck with what humans can expect if they fall ill. The reason for all the high-tech pet care? “The changing role of the pet in our society,” Khuly told the AP.

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At Many Restaurants Now, You Can Take Your Dog To Dinner

July 23, 2010 in Entertainment, Lifestyle News, News

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General manager Tyler Schiedel greets customers of all kinds on the patio at Nosh in Colorado Springs. The upscale eatery opens its patio on Sundays to diners who want to bring their dogs.

By Sharon L. Peters, special for USA TODAY

Alfresco dining is going to the dogs.

From coast to coast, an ever-growing number of eating establishments, many of them high-end, are opening their patios to diners who want to share their eating-out experience with their pets.

“To appreciate food and life is to appreciate animals, too,” says Art Smith, owner/chef of the chic Art and Soul restaurant on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C, which draws scores of Washingtonians to its canine-welcoming patio every week.

Servers offer fresh bowls of water as well as the “puppy patio menu,” which includes a 3-ounce steak ($5) and homemade doggie granola treats ($5).

One reason for his dog-friendly policy is the need “to adjust to changes in society,” says Smith, a judge for TLC’s show BBQ Pitmasters, premiering Aug. 12. But an equal factor is “it’s just who I am,” he adds. Smith has three dogs.

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Boxer Attacks Piece Of Wood: Funny Video

July 22, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

U.S. House Votes To Crack Down On Animal Crush Videos

July 22, 2010 in Endangerment, Government, Inhumane Practices, Legal News, News

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This a letter from Wayne Pacelle, Chief Executive Officer of the Humane Society of the United States.

– Kenn Bell

By Humane Society of the United States

Animal crush videos are back and, next week, The HSUS will release details about their resurgence on the Web. By all appearances, this lurid and sickening commercial activity re-emerged from the shadows after two federal courts, most recently the U.S. Supreme Court in April, struck down as unconstitutional the 1999 federal law criminalizing the sale of these videos.

Today, the U.S. House voted 416-3 in favor of a new, more narrowly tailored law to crack down on the commercial trade in these videos. The bill, H.R. 5566 and known as the Prevention of Interstate Commerce in Animal Crush Videos Act, was introduced by Reps. Elton Gallegly (R-Calif.) and Gary Peters (D-Mich.). Gallegly was the author of the original 1999 law and has been an especially tenacious foe of animal cruelty and the crush video industry. The House Judiciary Committee conducted a hearing on the topic, taking testimony from scholars on the First Amendment who argued that a more carefully crafted measure could survive a legal challenge and suggested what the contours of such legislation should be. Gallegly and Peters introduced a bill that took the witnesses’ recommendations into account, and it quickly gained 263 cosponsors, including Democratic and Republican leaders. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-Mich.), Crime Subcommittee Chairman Bobby Scott (D-Va.), and the full committee’s Ranking Member Lamar Smith (R-Texas) worked with all parties to produce a strong bill, which responds to the concerns expressed by the court.

The House action today is a reminder of the near universal view among the American people that individuals who commit malicious and obscene acts of cruelty for commercial gain should not have license to peddle and profit from videos showing these acts. By banning the sale of the videos, the federal government can deter these people from making the videos in the first place. Because it is so hard to catch people in the act of making them, the only practical way to crack down on the activity is to stop the sale of these obscene videos.

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Terrier Bites Buzzing Chainsaw Most Unusual Insurance Claim In June

July 22, 2010 in Endangerment, News

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By Becky Yerak for Chicago Tribune

“Dog bites man” is rarely newsworthy. But a “dog bites chainsaw, chainsaw bites back” incident involving a West Highland terrier from Belleville, Ill., was named the “most unusual” claim received in June by the nation’s biggest pet insurance company.

Barbara Abell’s 2-year-old Westie, Darci, lunged at a buzzing chainsaw recently, getting a little too close and tearing two holes in its upper lip. The accident required surgery, and Abell submitted a $339 claim to Veterinary Pet Insurance, which paid $148.

It was one of more than 80,000 claims received in June by VPI, an arm of Nationwide Insurance.


US Pet Owners Paying For High-Tech Veterinary Care

July 22, 2010 in Lifestyle News, News

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A German Shepherd receives chemotherapy from Dr. Allyson Berent at the Animal Medical Center of New York, Tuesday, June 22, 2010. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

By Verena Dobnik for The Alternative Press

NEW YORK — Brute, a German shepherd, lay anesthetized on an operating table, his hairy chest under a plastic cover and his powerful paws taped immobile.

“Here comes the wire up the artery!” said Dr. Chick Weisse, who infused the dog’s cancerous liver with chemotherapy via a catheter at the century-old Animal Medical Center in Manhattan in an effort to “buy him some time.”

Brute was home in days, the cancer at bay a while longer — perhaps eight months. The cost: $2,000.

Around the nation, veterinarians are practicing ever more advanced medicine on the nation’s 77 million dogs, 90 million cats and a myriad other animals — treatments that vie with the best of human medicine. The driving force is “the changing role of the pet in our society,” said Dr. Patty Khuly, a veterinarian at Miami’s Sunset Animal Clinic.

The bottom line for many people, she said, is that investing in a pet’s life “improves the quality of a human life immeasurably more than, say, buying a luxury car.”

To read the rest click here.


Pit Bull Chases Intruder From Home

July 21, 2010 in Heroics, Law Enforcement, News

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Imagine walking into your bedroom to find a strange man standing in your doorway, how frightening would that be? Well, that was exactly what happened to a Fort Carson, Colorado solider one night.

Fortunately, her pit bull was by her side while the the chaos happened. After the intruder refused to leave, her pit bull promptly chased the intruder out of the residence.

Police officers responded quickly after the incident happened that night. K9 Unit was able to get to the scene as Canine Officer P. Strevett and his partner Cole went to work. It wasn’t long before the male suspect was found hiding under a vehicle parked in a garage, in the 1600 block of E. Bijou Street.