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You are browsing the archive for 2010 October.

UK Blind Dog Can ‘See’ Again Thanks To A Set Of Extra-Long Plastic Whiskers

October 22, 2010 in Dog Safety, Gadgets, Lifestyle News, News, Products

From dailymail.co.uk

A blind dog can ‘see’ again after being fitted with a set of extra whiskers.

Dolly, a Staffordshire bull terrier, lost her sight after developing cataracts brought on by diabetes.

She was left completely blind and would regularly walk into things.

That was until her vet Joanne McCelland pioneered an innovative idea to fit extra long cable ties to the ten-year-old dog’s collar.

The plastic ties help Dolly feel her way around without walking into objects, in much the same way that her natural whiskers do.

Owner Brian Chadwick, from Arnold, Nottinghamshire, claimed the plastic whiskers have helped Dolly recapture her life.

He said: ‘We could deal with her diabetes, but when she went blind I felt really helpless.

‘The effect of the whiskers was almost immediate. Within a few hours she had learnt how to feel her way around the house with her new plastic whiskers.’

To read the rest click here.

Dog Stops Camouflaged Burglary Attempt

October 22, 2010 in Law Enforcement, News, Working Dogs

From CNN.com

Imagine the police dog handler’s surprise when the canine snapped at the ground, and the ground cried out.

That was how a police dog found a camouflaged burglary suspect, authorities in Washington County, Oregon, said Thursday.

The dog alerted his handler that he smelled something on the ground about a half-mile from the Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals in Hillsboro, Oregon, a Washington County Sheriff’s Department spokesman said.

The movement of the suspect spooked the dog, who bit the ground, which “cried out in pain,” said Sgt. David Thompson.

The ground turned out to be a man dressed in a ghillie suit, made to resemble trees and earth, he said. Military snipers and hunters often wear the camouflaged suit.

Gregory Liascos of nearby Portland, Oregon, was charged with burglary and criminal mischief, Thompson said. Liascos, 36, has no criminal history and was lodged in the Washington County Jail pending a hearing, authorities said. He was treated on the scene for the dog bite on his shoulder blade.

Nothing was taken from the museum, said Thompson. He theorized the suspect was perhaps interested in a collection of gold nuggets.

To read the rest click here.

Halloween Peanut Butter Dog Treat Recipe

October 22, 2010 in Doggie Recipes, Holidays, News

The Dogs Sneak Out

From best-dog-treat-recipes.com

Ingredients for Halloween Peanut Butter Dog Treat

1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
2 tablespoons wheat germ
1 1/2 teaspoons dry yeast
1/4 cup cornmeal
1/3 cup peanut butter
1 cup water
1 ¼ cup white flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1-2 tablespoons tumeric
1-2 tablespoons beet powder

Directions for Peanut Butter Holiday Dog Treats

Place all the ingredients in your bread-maker, according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The tumeric and beet powder are for coloring. You can use more or less, depending on the intensity of color that you want to get. If you combine the yellow tumeric and the red beet powder, you will get a shade of orange.
Coloring Because I use whole wheat flour, I also get brown tones. If you substitute unbleached flour for the whole wheat flour, you can use less tumeric and beet powder to get an orange color. Also, if you are not an absolute purist, you can use yellow and red food coloring to get the color that you want—instead of beet powder and tumeric. Or use a mixture of the two.

When the dough is ready, roll it to a 1/4” thickness.
Cut a circle with the cutter, then press the plunger to emboss each cookie.
Using a spatula or flipper, place the cookies on a lightly greased cookie sheet.
Bake the dog cookies for 1 hour at 300 degrees F.
Turn off the oven and let the cookies dry in the oven overnight. They should be hard and crisp, not soft or giving. Turn them over once to let the underside dry thoroughly.

Step Aside Baywatch, It’s Time For Corgiwatch: Video

October 22, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

Dog Pees On Bride: Funny Video

October 21, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

Kirksville, Missouri Citizens Speak Out Against Pit Bull Ban

October 21, 2010 in Breed-Specific Legislation, Inhumane Practices, News

by Eden Derby for heartlandconnection.com

KIRKSVILLE, MO — The air was thick with emotion in Kirksville Monday night at a public meeting about the city’s proposed Dangerous Animal Ordinance.

The proposal would ban full or mixed breed pit bulls within the Kirksville city limits.

Two city employees were there to speak on behalf of staff, like meter readers who have been threatened by dogs.

16 citizens voiced their concerns with the breed-specific ban.

“Be very careful if you decide to pass something, that you don’t open up a big can of worms because I think if you do this, a lot of people are going to be upset.”

“Why are those people not being punished? Why is it being put on the dog, the innocent dog?”

“Where does it stop if you start with the pit bull? What’s next? Because any dog can bite or be mean.”

“It’s not the dogs, it’s who their owners are and how they’re raised. I’ve seen German Shepherds meaner than a pit bull. My pit bull right now she’s five months old, she’d rather lick you to death then try to bite you.”

“A lot of very responsible pet owners are going to feel like they’ve been unjustly treated by this.”

If passed, the ordinance would be grandfathered in, meaning pit bulls that already live in the city are allowed to stay.

But they would have to be registered with the city and adhere to a number of regulations.

For instance, the pit bull would have to be leashed and muzzled anytime it is outside of the owner’s house or an outside kennel.

“Our dog’s not going to go outside and play in the water, in the winter time he can’t run through the snow like all other dogs just because he’s considered a pit bull,” said one citizen.

Dreaming Puppy: Cute Video

October 21, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

Quite possibly the cutest thing I’ve ever seen.

Trained Dog Sniffs Out E. Coli Sources

October 21, 2010 in Health & Science News, News, Working Dogs

Sable, a rescue dog trained to sniff out human sewage and detergents, checks a storm sewer near Lake Street on Friday morning with Scott Reynolds, of Environmental Canine Services, LLA.

By Sheri McWhirter for record-eagle.com

TRAVERSE CITY, Michigan — Sable, a male German shepherd mix, approached an open manhole with his sensitive nose to the ground, then quickly looked up at his handler and barked.

A positive hit.

Sable and owner Scott Reynolds spent last week in Traverse City to track E. coli contamination sources, part of the Healthy Beaches initiative of the Watershed Center Grand Traverse Bay. The canine team is sniffing out the scent of detergents and human waste in the city’s storm water system that empties into Grand Traverse Bay.

“Usually when you find that in a storm drain it indicates an illicit connection to the storm sewer or a leak in the sanitary sewer system,” said Sarah U’Ren, the Watershed Center’s program director.

Both could lead to elevated E. coli levels at area beaches, especially when the system’s contents are flushed into the bay during heavy rainfalls, she said.

E. coli is a bacteria that indicates human or animal fecal matter contamination.

This week Sable — a shelter rescue dog — detected such contaminates in areas around the intersection of U.S. 31 and Garfield Avenue, as well as some areas along Mitchell Creek near the Traverse City State Park. The dog’s positive hit Friday morning happened at a storm sewer drain at Union and Sixth streets.

City employee Chris Childers accompanied the team and climbed down into the sewer system to take a water sample where Sable reacted.

“We kind of knew a few places where there are problems,” Childers said. “We can now narrow down the areas we need to search.”

The plan is to meet with Traverse City and Grand Traverse County officials when the water sample testing is completed and determine the next steps for pinpointing possible contamination sources, U’Ren said. One possibility is to do a “smoke test,” when the sanitary sewer would be filled with a visible vapor, a way to spot leaks in the system.

Reynolds, training director with Environmental Canine Services in Vermontville, said he doesn’t know of any other canine team doing this type of work. They searched about 70 area manholes last week.

It would have cost about $12,000 to test water samples from that many locations, but the canine team’s efforts cost about $4,000 and were paid for through a grant from the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians.

Tribal Chairman Derek Bailey said it’s a way to work together to protect the environment..

“It’s important to protect and preserve the natural resources that our ancestors enjoyed and our future generations will come to know and love,” Bailey said.

Area beaches are tested weekly for E. coli contamination throughout the summer and the most-frequent problems are at Bryant Park, the city’s West Bay beach near the entrance to Old Mission Peninsula.

Another $250,000 grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is expected to install a storm water filtering system at Bryant Park. The sponge-like filter would reduce sediments and bacterial contamination at the storm drain that often “blows its top” during heavy rains and has the most E. coli contamination problems, U’Ren said.

That federal funding is part of the EPA’s Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. The ultimate goal is to remove Bryant Park from the state’s Impaired Waters list, where it’s been included for several years.