Animals Of YouTube Sing “Jingle Bells”
December 23, 2010 in Fun Videos, Holidays, News
December 23, 2010 in Health & Science Files, News, World

![]()
Tiffany Kaiser For DailyTech.com
Border collie “Chaser” can understand the names of 1,022 toys
Cats rule, dogs drool, right? Not this time. It looks like the dogs have won this round thanks to a border collie named Chaser, who has the largest vocabulary seen in any animal.
Alliston Reid and John Pilley, psychologists at Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina, have been working with Chaser to see if there is a limit to the number of words a border collie can learn. So far, Chaser knows 1,022 words.
While Chaser has the broadest vocabulary in animal history, she isn’t the first to border collie to be trained to learn the English language. Rico, a border collie who was trained at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, knew a total of 200 words. In addition, Rico was capable of using the process of elimination to distinguish new objects within a group of familiar objects.
But Chaser has surpassed Rico by leaps and bounds. Not only does Chaser know 822 more words than Rico, but she can also categorize words of items according to shape and function. According to the study, this is something human children learn around the age of three.
December 22, 2010 in Dog Files News, Holidays, News
Just thought I’d share a photo of Max’s first Christmas with me. It was a “Take your dog’s picture with Santa” event, set up by St. Hubert’s Animal Welfare at a local mall. All money went to the shelter.
Max is 2 years old and a very happy boy in the picture. Ahh, memories! The Dog Files was just a glint in his eyes back then. But, oh, what a glint it was!

December 21, 2010 in Health & Science News, News, World
A dog in Germany has given birth to 17 puppies.
Etana, the Rhodesian Ridgeback from Ebereschenhof, north of Berlin had nine males and eight females.
The litter is unusual in that all were born naturally with no need for a Caesarian section and all have survived.
The Rhodesian Ridgeback is a hunting dog originating from Zimbabwe and it was originally bred to help hunt lions.
December 21, 2010 in Adoption News, News, World

![]()
By Sylvia Strojek For The Canadian Press
EDMONTON, Canada – She was a young, homeless single mom trying to raise a family of five, but true to the spirit of the season there was room for one more.
Esperanza had been badly injured when she was hit by a car, but the young shepherd-cross with the thick white coat was still managing to care for her newborn puppies — and a kitten — when she was found on a central Alberta reserve.
Criss Gerwing, who runs a small animal rescue group, discovered the dog earlier this month and couldn’t believe it when the canine led her to her blended brood.
“I cried because she was in such bad condition with her leg, but she was obviously nursing her puppies and this kitten,” Gerwing told a media outlet.
Gerwing took the entire family to the Edmonton Humane Society, where veterinarians thought they’d have to amputate the mother dog’s bad leg.
But local vet, Dr. Milton Ness, volunteered to do a special surgery that saved Esperanza’s hind quarter.
He calls her a “special soul.” Shawna Randolph at the humane society couldn’t agree more.
“She is such a sweet, sweet dog. She has such a wonderful personality,” Randoph said.
“It’s amazing when you think about it. You have this dog who is just so giving of herself, caring for these newborn puppies and the kitten, making sure they were cared for even though she was obviously in a lot of pain.”
Jacob the cat was already four months old and shouldn’t have been nursing at all, so humane society vets weaned him and he’s now being cared for by a staff member.
But he’s brought to the shelter every day to visit his adoptive mom and her babies. His canine step-siblings are too young to pay much attention to him — their eyes are barely open — but Esperanza is always excited to see Jacob and gives him lots of baths.
“He’s actually acting more like a dog than a cat,” Randolph said. “Kittens are very rambunctious and playful, but he just wants to hang out. As soon as he gets to the dog family he’s … cuddling. And even with his (human) foster mom, he follows her around like a dog does.”
Esperanza’s background is a mystery. No one has come forward to claim her, yet she’s well socialized. She’s only about one, but has had a definite taste of freedom — she loves to be outside and run around. It’s not clear how long she may have been on her own or when Jacob came onto the scene and turned on his feline charm.
The devoted mother is recovering well. She and her pups will go into foster care after the holidays until permanent homes can be found for them. But the humane society ideally would like Esperanza and Jacob to be adopted together.
Randolph said their story is especially heart-warming at this time of year.
“It’s all about family, isn’t it, at Christmas time, and here you have the ultimate family.”
And Esperanza’s name bodes well for her and her furry family’s future — it means “hope” in Spanish.