Shelter Dogs Benefit From Volunteer’s Photographs

Admin: Melody Chen
Categories: Adoption News, News

Click to join our Facebook Fan Page and follow us on Twitter!


Seth Casteel, professional pet photographer

By Sue Manning for Associated Press

Maybe shelter dogs just need a Hollywood moment.

Seth Casteel, a professional pet photographer, volunteers a couple of hours each week at the West Los Angeles Animal Care Center, photographing dogs who need homes. The pictures replace the mug shot-like photos taken by shelter staff when the animals arrive.

“A lot of animals don’t understand what the deal is. They are coming off the truck, chained up, fearful, maybe fighting back. Some may not be healthy. That’s not the moment to take a photo,” said Casteel, 29.

Casteel photographs as many as 30 dogs a week at the shelter with the help of volunteers like Lola McKnight who fetch the dogs and play with them while he shoots. Those “personality shots” become the dogs’ first impressions on Web sites, newspaper ads, fliers, e-mails and social networks.

Shelter manager Capt. Louis Dedeaux said many visitors will come in carrying one of Casteel’s dog photos. There is no way to know how many of the dogs he’s photographed have been adopted or what else figured in a placement, but adoption numbers at the shelter are very high, Dedeaux said.

Casteel doesn’t have to take a lot of puppy pictures. “People want puppies so they go first,” Dedeaux said.

The dogs Casteel shoots are usually older and he works wonders with them, Dedeaux said. “He’ll get happy expressions, sometimes a perfect ‘take me home’ look,” he explained.

The photographer has saved more than one old dog’s life, Dedeaux said. It is a kill shelter so animals can’t stay indefinitely, he said. And Casteel said he hopes the idea spreads.

“We keep them as long as we can,” Dedeaux said, “but the longer a dog is here, the worse his chances are.”

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Michael Vartan Talks Engagement & How His Dog Helped Him Learn To Love

Admin: Melody Chen
Categories: Entertainment, Lifestyle News, News

Click to join our Facebook Fan Page and follow us on Twitter!


From AccessHollywood.com

LOS ANGELES, Calif. –Former “Alias” star Michael Vartan has finally opened up about his recent engagement.

As previously reported on AccessHollywood.com, the actor, 41, recently became engaged to Lauren Skaar.

“We met, fell in love and I proposed,” Michael told Access on the red carpet at the Genesis Awards on Saturday night in Los Angeles, an awards show which honors media and entertainment which helps raise awareness for animal issues.

The star of such films as “Never Been Kissed” and “Monster-In-Law” reportedly met his ladylove in a Whole Foods parking lot in LA last year.

According to her LinkedIn profile, Lauren graduated with a BA in psychology from UC Santa Barbara in 2006 and works in marketing and advertising.

And Michael told Access he is thrilled to have put a ring on it.

“I’m very lucky,” he said of his girlfriend turning into his fiancee.

When asked if the two had set a date yet for their nuptials, Michael said, “No, not yet.”

However, Michael did reveal he has another female competing for his attention – his beloved chocolate lab.

“When my fiancee’s not at home, the dog sleeps on the bed with me,” he revealed. “Don’t tell her because that’s a big no, ‘No,’ but I do treat my dog more like a little princess than a dog… Hey, what are you gonna do?”

In fact, Michael’s dog was a great comfort to him before he found his soon-to-be wife, Lauren.

“They allow you to love them unconditionally,” he said of his beloved canine. “We all have love to give and if you’re a single guy like I was for a long time, you have love to give, but you have nowhere to give it. You have a dog, that dog allows you to love it completely without fearing if she’s gonna cheat on you, so it’s just a wonderful kind of completely selfless, no judgment attached, very easy way to love something and to be loved back.”


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Los Angeles City Council Targets Unlicensed Dogs

Admin: Melody Chen
Categories: Dog Safety, Government, Lifestyle News, News

Click to join our Facebook Fan Page and follow us on Twitter!

From cbs2.com

LOS ANGELES (CBS) ― The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to crack down on dog and horse owners who failed to get a license for their animals.

City Council President Eric Garcetti suggested identifying dog owners by using a Department of Water and Power meter database. The database lists households that are believed to have dogs for meter readers’ safety when approaching a home.

“The DWP’s database can be a vital tool in furthering compliance with the city’s dog licensing regulations,” Garcetti said.

The city requires that all dogs — and horses – be licensed by the Department of Animal Services. It costs $15 to get a license for a spayed or neutered dog. Each license comes with a distinct number that would help reunite a lost dog with its owner, city officials said.

Animal Services Assistant General Manager Linda Barth said only one- third of all pet dogs in Los Angeles — about 120,000 — are licensed.

If all pets were licensed, Barth estimated it would add $4-million dollars to the city’s funds.

Councilman Tom LaBonge expressed reservations about the proposal, suggesting that city workers should go to dog parks and ask owners there whether their pets were licensed.

LaBonge said knocking on people’s doors to force them to get a license for their pets is “too aggressive.”

Barth assured him the plan is for DWP to reveal only the addresses — not the names — of suspected dog owners. Animal Services will then check the information against its dog licensing database and send letters to residents who are not in compliance with the law.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Alyssa Milano & Other Celebs Swoop In To Help Two-Legged Dog

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Adoption News, Entertainment, News

Click to join our Facebook Fan Page and follow us on Twitter!

Just about anyone who uses Twitter knows how much good Alyssa Milano does using it. She really is the model for a celebrity using social media for the betterment of society. You can follow her on Twitter here. Thanks for all you do, Alyssa!

– Kenn

From MSNBC.com

LOS ANGELES – Like any good Hollywood transplant, Scooby-Roo went from a troubled past to rehab.

The two-legged dog has celebrity friends like Demi Moore and Alyssa Milano. He has a therapist and a personal trainer and can look forward to a masseuse and acupuncturist.

But it didn’t start out that way. The 11-month-old mutt was born without front legs and dumped in South Central Los Angeles. He and his sister Sophie were found living in a wrecked, abandoned car near a freeway onramp. He was covered in blood from scooting around on the asphalt.

A pair of good Samaritans caught the dogs and took them to Sheila Choi, who runs Fuzzy Dog and Cat Rescue, Inc., in Santa Monica. While some shelters might have euthanized the dogs, Choi sent out a mass e-mail looking for donations and other support.

Demi Moore tweeted about Roo. Shannon Elizabeth sent money and tweeted for more dollars.

Alyssa Milano saw a YouTube video of the dog and fell in love, she said through her publicist. She called Choi, promised to help any way she could and became the dog’s godmother. Their first get-together included a photo shoot.

Choi has also talked to the Jackson family publicist to try to work out a meeting between Roo and Paris and Prince.

The dog, named for his Scooby-Doo! coloring and kangaroo hop, got a therapist for his emotional scars and a personal trainer to help with the wheels. As he progresses, Choi said they are looking at hydrotherapy and massages. Milano thinks he should see an acupuncturist too.

With the celebrity help, Choi collected $2,000 for a set of custom wheels for Roo.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

LAFD Says Saving Dog Was The Right Thing To Do

Admin: Melody Chen
Categories: Heroics, News

If you like The Dog Files please join our Facebook Fan Page at http://www.facebook.com/dogfiles

Also, follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dogfiles

PawLuxury

 By Sue Manning for The Washington Post

LOS ANGELES — Saving a German shepherd stuck in the rising Los Angeles River was the right thing to do, the risks were slight, rescue crews were on standby, extra taxpayer money wasn’t used and the alternatives were unacceptable, authorities said Monday.

The helicopter and swift water rescue crew members that saved the dog on Friday have been hailed as heroes, feted on television and radio and congratulated on the Web and in print. But they have also been vilified by a few in blogs, on social networks and story comment sections.

“You’re not going to please everybody. There’s always 10 percent, they either don’t like animals or think we are wasting taxpayer money,” Capt. Steve Ruda said.

The dog, nicknamed Vernon after the city where he was rescued, remained in quarantine at the Southeast Area Animal Control Authority shelter in Downey, just south of Los Angeles.

Joe St. Georges, 50, the 25-year firefighting veteran who hoisted Vernon to safety, lost a fingernail and fractured a thumb when the dog bit him during the rescue. St. Georges just needs time to heal and he will be back at work, Ruda said. “He’s anxious to get back to work to be with his crew.”

The dog, which appears to be about 4 years old and weighs about 65 pounds, was eating everything given to him, sleeping well and showing no signs of rabies, said Capt. Aaron Reyes, director of operations for the SAACA shelter.

If no owner shows up, “we do have a mile-long list of people who want him,” Reyes said.

On several Internet sites with comments about the rescue, the only people who left their names were those who supported the effort. There were a couple of open critics, but their identities were not easy to decipher.

Friday’s rescue was televised nationally by the major cable channels.

About an eighth of a mile downstream from the rescue site, the water was much deeper and the current much faster, Reyes said.

The dog would have drifted on down and died. Do you just wait at the mouth of the river and wait for the carcass? Any way you slice it, that is unacceptable. They would not have been able to live that down,” Reyes said. “They made a decision and we support that decision.”

Firefighters on the ground said a crew could get the dog and the helicopter pilot, who had been standing by just 45 seconds away from the river, reported he could clear high tension lines in the area, Ruda said.

Swift water teams were on standby because of weeklong storms that had dumped as much as 8 inches of rain on some parts of Los Angeles County, Ruda said. Although as many as 50 firefighters were at the river, no firefighters were called in on overtime to take part in the rescue.

“All life is important,” Ruda said. To prove his point, he pointed out that firefighters carry oxygen masks for cats and dogs that become victims of fire.

In addition, he said, 900 people die every year across the country in water accidents and one-third of them are rescuers. If St. Georges and his crew had failed to get the dog, “civilians, do-gooders and good Samaritans” would have been in the river, Ruda said.

The dog is thoroughly enjoying all the attention, Reyes said. “He’s a big lover” and caters to women at the shelter.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Firefighter Saves Dog From Rushing Floodwater

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Heroics, News

If you like The Dog Files please join our Facebook Fan Page at http://www.facebook.com/dogfiles

Also, follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dogfiles

PawLuxury





Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Linda Blair Connected To Dog Attack On Potbellied Pig

Admin: Melody Chen
Categories: Dog Safety, News

If you like The Dog Files please join our Facebook Fan Page at http://www.facebook.com/dogfiles

Also, follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dogfiles

PawLuxury

By Daelyn Fortney for Ecorazzi

On Sunday, a lab-hound mix that escaped from the Linda Blair WorldHeart Foundation (LBWF) in Los Angeles was shot to death after attacking a miniature potbellied pig.

The owners of the ranch where the incident occurred claim the dog attacked their pig, Gerty. The dog refused to release its grip after warning shots were fired, forcing the ranch owners to shoot the attacker. The dog died but the potbellied pig is expected to make a full recovery. Criminal charges will not be filed against Gerty’s owners.

TMZ reports that Linda Blair is preparing a statement regarding the attack.

The actress, best known for her role in the Exorcist, established LBWF in 2003. The non-profit organization located in Toluca Lake, CA is committed to rescuing and rehabilitating abused and neglected animals in the Los Angeles area.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Flying Chihuahuas: Dogs Change Coast In Big Exodus

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Adoption News, News

If you like The Dog Files please join our Facebook Fan Page at http://www.facebook.com/dogfiles

Also, follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dogfiles


chihuahua_01

LOS ANGELES — Chihuahuas have been flying out of California since other states learned about the glut of little dogs in the Golden State.

A group of 25 dogs has already arrived at the Humane Society for Greater Nashua in New Hampshire, thanks to “Grey’s Anatomy” actress Katherine Heigl, Kinder4Rescue in Studio City and American Airlines.

A group of 43 will leave for New Hampshire Monday or Tuesday, said Kathy Davis, interim general manager of Los Angeles Animal Services, who took part in a news conference Friday to announce Project Flying Chihuahua. They were supposed to leave Saturday morning, but bad weather in the east caused a delay, she said.

The Nashua shelter found homes for the first 25 and had a waiting list of 100 people, Davis said.

Heigl’s foundation has paid the discounted airfare for all 68 dogs so far, she added, and new donors for more flights were being sought.

Virgin America will be flying a group of Chihuahuas to New York City from San Francisco on Tuesday, said Gail Buchwald, senior vice president overseeing the ASPCA adoption center in New York City.

They will be processed and should be available for adoption on Dec. 29, she said.

Buchwald said she didn’t know how many to expect, but each dog will be escorted by a volunteer and Virgin will provide travel for both dogs and humans.
The airline is also expected to offer a week of half price trips to passengers willing to escort an animal to New York, but details have yet to be finalized, Buchwald said.

A call to a Virgin America representative was not immediately returned Friday.

Dozens of dogs have been sent by Oakland Animal Services to nearby states like Washington, Oregon and Arizona, but most of them were delivered by SUV, director Megan Webb said, because there wasn’t enough money to fly the dogs to more distant states.

The Chihuahua crisis in California developed as Hollywood featured the dogs in movies like “Beverly Hills Chihuahua” and “Legally Blonde,” they became constant companions to the rich and famous, backyard breeders saw a chance to make hundreds of dollars a dog and the recession forced some dog owners to abandon their pets.

California shelters soon found that Chihuahuas made up 30 percent or more of their dog populations.

Meanwhile, Buchwald said, there has long been a severe shortage of small dogs in the east.

Officials on both sides of the country are optimistic they can work out the imbalance.

Davis said finding homes for 68 barely made a dent in Los Angeles shelters, but it was a start.

“We have plenty more where those came from and we’re more than happy to send them home for the holidays. If there’s a Santa Claus out there, we’re ready and waiting for you.”

In the last 12 months, animal shelters in the city of Los Angeles have taken in 4,700 Chihuahuas, 1,000 more than the 12 months before that.

Los Angeles has over 300 Chihuahuas in its shelters now, Davis said, and they are taking in about 340 a month.

“The majority of them are healthy. They do need some socialization. Some we’re finding haven’t been well treated in the homes they’ve been in. They need some TLC,” Davis said.

It would seem plenty of people in the east are ready and willing to deliver just that.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

L.A. County Prosecutors To Open 24-Hour Dog-Fighting Tip Line And Reward Program

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Inhumane Practices, Law Enforcement, News


If you like The Dog Files please join our Facebook Fan Page at http://www.facebook.com/dogfiles

By Andrew Blankstein For The Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles County prosecutors are teaming up with the Humane Society of the United States to announce what they say is a first-of-its-kind dog-fighting tip line and reward program. [Updated 2:17 p.m.: An earlier version of this post gave an incorrect name for the Humane Society.]

The 24-hour tip line, staffed by people who speak English and Spanish, will allow county residents to anonymously report dog-fighting incidents and collect up to $5,000 in reward money for information leading to an arrest or conviction.

The new tip-line number will be announced Tuesday at the office of L.A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley at the downtown Criminal Courts building.

Those who are convicted of illegal dog fighting, a felony under state law, can face a maximum prison sentence of three years, prosecutors said. Watching a fight or helping to prepare for such contests is a misdemeanor that carries a sentence of up to six months in county jail.

Dog fighting is widespread in Los Angeles County, according to authorities. In the United States, the American Humane Society estimates that 40,000 people follow organized dog-fighting circuits and more than 250,000 dogs are made to suffer in dog-fighting pits each year.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Rescuer Who Lost Dogs to Fire Finds One, Wounded

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Dog Safety, Environment, News


forestfire

Forest Service worker whose animals burned in fire gets a return visit from wounded dog

By Sue Manning For The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Bobby Wright thought he had buried Smoky.

The U.S. Forest Service worker had watched helplessly as a frenzied, massive forest fire turned toward the trailer where he lived with Smoky, a 6-month-old mutt, 20 other dogs and a rabbit named Bernie.

It was early October, and Wright and his Forest Service boss Jack Kennedy were evacuating residents and campers from the canyons around Lytle Creek. They were headed to the street where Wright and the animals he had rescued lived — and so was the fire.

The winds shifted and the fire exploded ahead of them, torching Wright’s trailer and killing most of the animals in their kennels. The men could do nothing but watch.

Two dogs, Lady and Bubba, escaped with burns, bruises and scratches. The next day, Wright and Kennedy buried the dead animals.

Wright was left with his U.S. Forest Service uniform and the Jeep he’d driven to work that day.

More than two weeks passed before Smoky showed up at what had been Wright’s trailer and waited until he came for her. She was emaciated and the pads on her infected paws were nearly raw. She probably survived off burned animals and lizards, Kennedy said.

“Praise the Lord,” Wright said, using his favorite expression.

The Sheep Fire, as it was called, was controlled on Oct. 10 after it burned more than 11 square miles of brush and timber and destroyed four structures besides Wright’s. The cause of the blaze is still under investigation.

The community of about 1,000 in Lytle Creek, about 75 miles east of Los Angeles, is rallying around Wright, trying to get him a home, furniture, clothes and kennels. A bank account has been set up and there is a furniture drive on Saturday.

In the meantime, Kennedy has taken in Wright, his 23-year-old daughter and the dogs.

Wright, 64, guesses he has rescued close to 600 dogs, cats and other creatures in the canyons in the last 10 years.

The area is a popular dumping ground for pets, because it is so close to heavy population areas. People figure it is a beautiful area and there are streams for water so they will drive by, open the door and kick the dog out, said Steve Boyd, president of the Lytle Creek Volunteer Association.

The dog will usually sit and wait — sometimes for days — for the car to come back, Wright said, or chase cars that remind them of the one they came in. Eventually they will start foraging for food, leaving them in danger as they become a danger to the wild, he explained.

Wright has found homes for the majority of animals he’s rescued, but animal control has had to take some, he said.

And it isn’t the first time Wright has lost his home in Lytle Creek. His cabin burned down in 2003 in another fire, but his animals were spared that time. Still, he wouldn’t live anywhere else now, adding that even when it’s covered in ash, there is a beauty to it.

Wright said he had a promising lead on some rental land near his old home. The place even has a few kennels, he said, adding “Praise the Lord.”

“My whole life, I have done animal rescue. I enjoy doing it. It’s a labor of love. I won’t or can’t give it up now,” Wright said.

As for Smoky, Lady and Bubba, all three should recover from their burns, Wright said. Several of Smoky’s toes are blistered and infected to the nub, Lady has no nails left and probably won’t climb any more fences, and the burn scar on Bubba’s back is there to stay.

But they’re not up for adoption anymore, Wright said: “They are family now.”


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Los Angeles Church Putting Paws in Pews

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Lifestyle News, News, Religion


A Presbyterian church in Los Angeles is trying to boost its connection with the community by offering a 30-minute Sunday service for pet-lovers.


Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

Gone To The Dogs: LA Church Starts Pet Service

Admin: Kenn Bell
Categories: Lifestyle News, News


By Gillian Flaccus For The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — When the Rev. Tom Eggebeen took over as interim pastor at Covenant Presbyterian Church three years ago, he looked around and knew it needed a jump start.

Most of his worshippers, though devoted, were in their 60s, attendance had bottomed out and the once-vibrant church was fading as a community touchstone in its bustling neighborhood.

So Eggebeen came up with a hair-raising idea: He would turn God’s house into a doghouse by offering a 30-minute service complete with individual doggie beds, canine prayers and an offering of dog treats. He hopes it will reinvigorate the church’s connection with the community, provide solace to elderly members and, possibly, attract new worshippers who are as crazy about God as they are about their four-legged friends.

Before the first Canines@Covenant service last Sunday, Eggebeen said many Christians love their pets as much as human family members and grieve just as deeply when they suffer — but churches have been slow to recognize that love as the work of God.

“The Bible says of God only two things in terms of an ‘is’: That God is light and God is love. And wherever there’s love, there’s God in some fashion,” said Eggebeen, himself a dog lover. “And when we love a dog and a dog loves us, that’s a part of God and God is a part of that. So we honor that.”

The weekly dog service at Covenant Presbyterian is part of a growing trend among churches nationwide to address the spirituality of pets and the deeply felt bonds that owners form with their animals.

Traditionally, conventional Christians believe that only humans have redeemable souls, said Laura Hobgood-Oster, a religion professor at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas.

But a growing number of congregations from Massachusetts to Texas to California are challenging that assertion with regular pet blessings and, increasingly, pet-centric services, said Hobgood-Oster, who studies the role of animals in Christian tradition.

She recently did a survey that found more than 500 blessings for animals at churches nationwide and has heard of a half-dozen congregations holding worship services like Eggebeen’s, including one in a Boston suburb called Woof ‘n Worship.

“It’s the changing family structure, where pets are really central and religious communities are starting to recognize that people need various kinds of rituals that include their pets,” she said. “More and more people in mainline Christianity are considering them to have some kind of soul.”

The pooches who showed up at Covenant Presbyterian on Sunday didn’t seem very interested in dogma.

Animals big and small, from pit bulls to miniature Dachshunds to bichon frises, piled into the church’s chapel to worship in an area specially outfitted for canine comfort with doggie beds, water bowls and a pile of irresistible biscuits in an offering bowl. There were a lot of humans too — about 30 — and three-quarters of them were new faces.

The service started amid a riot of tail-sniffing, barking, whining and playful roughhousing.

But as Eggebeen stepped to the front and the piano struck up the hymn “GoD and DoG,” one by one the pooches lay down, chins on paws, and listened. Eggebeen took prayer requests for Mr. Boobie (healing of the knees) and Hunter (had a stroke) and then called out the names of beloved pets past and present (Quiche, Tiger, Timmy,

Baby Angel and Spunky) before launching into the Lord’s Prayer.

At the offering, ushers stepped over tangled leashes and yawning canines to collect donations and hand out doggie treats shaped like miniature bones in a rainbow of colors.

Donna Lee Merz, a Presbyterian pastor at another Southern California church, stopped in with Gracie, her 14-month-old long-haired miniature Dachshund. The puppy with ears soft as silk was overcome by the other dogs and wriggled across the floor on her belly, quivering with excitement. She finally calmed down when Merz held her in her lap.

“She knew it was a safe place and a good place to be, a place to be loved,” Merz said, gently petting Gracie after the service. “I’ll be back.”
Emma Sczesniak came to Covenant for the first time, lured by the promise that she could worship with her black Lab, Midnight, and her wire-haired Dachshund-terrier mix, Marley.

Marley sat on her lap during the service, while Midnight checked out the other big dogs and sat patiently waiting for his biscuit. Sczesniak said the dog-friendly service came at the perfect time for her: she’s been thinking about getting back to church, but wasn’t sure how or where to go.

“I don’t have any kids, so my pets have always been my children, so it does mean a lot,” she said of the dog-inclusive service. “I haven’t been to church in a long time and this may push me into it. I’m getting older and I’ve been thinking about those things again.” But Midnight, Marley, Gracie and the other pups probably had something more important on their minds as Eggebeen intoned his benediction and the service drew to a close: Just where could they find more of those delicious treats?

For Eggebeen, the night was a spiritual success — and the rest is out of his hands.

“It’s important for a church like us just to do good things. The results, we’ll just have to see,” he said. “Ultimately, that belongs to God.”


Related Posts with Thumbnails

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

The Dog Files are TM & © 2010 GraphicPlanet Creative