Friday, March 27, 2009

PAWZ Dog Boots


Are you looking for a new dog boots or shoe as the one you have your dog doesn't accept? Try the PAWZ Dog Boots. They are boot that does not have zippers, straps, or padding. This allows them to have a very natural feeling that dogs do not mind wearing.


To help you better understand the PAWZ dog boots visit this link- http://www.poochieheaven.com/articleseries.php?article_id=23

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

5 Easy Steps to Teach Your Dog to Crawl

I've always wanted to teach my dog to crawl. Hopefully with this helpful advice I will be able too.

5 Easy Steps to Teach Your Dog to Crawl
by: Andrea Arden, Modern Dog Magazine

Choose a surface that is as smooth as possible so your dog is more likely to feel comfortable while crawling.

Step 1: Start by teaching your dog to follow a lure and lie down. Hold the treat at the tip of Rex's nose while he is standing or sitting. Slide your hand to the ground and slightly towards him so he folds down and back. Say "Yes!" when he does and give him a tiny treat.

Repeat in 3-5 minute sessions until you are confident Rex understands to follow your hand smoothly to the ground. Then you can add the cue "down" right before you move your hand.

Step 2: Hold the treat just in front of Rex's nose when he is lying down and move it slightly forward. Reinforce any movement forward (even a tiny bit) by saying "Yes!" and giving a little treat. If he tried to stand up, don't say anything, simply start again. this way, Rex will learn that getting up makes the chance to earn a reward go away.

Step 3: Add the command "Crawl!" when you are confident Rex understands to follow your hand by staying low to the ground and inching forward. Say the word just before you start to move your hand so he learns to crawl forward on a verbal cue.

Step 4: Drag the treat progressively farther away, but be patient, as Rex, even if he is very fit, will need to gradually build up being able to crawl for more than a few inches.

Step 5: The final step is to teach Rex to respond to the command when you are standing up. Ask him to move forward by placing your hand holding the treat a few inches away from him and towards the floor, rather than right in front of his nose. By this point, Rex probably will understand you are asking him to crawl forward when he hears the command and sees your hand pointing towards the floor and moving away from him.

To ensure the crawl trick doesn't interfere with Rex's understanding of doing a down/stay, be sure to only reinforce crawling forward from a down when you have asked him to do so.

Have you taught your dog to crawl? How did you do it? Do you have any other neat tricks?

Dog Sunglasses



My boyfriend's brother found a pair of sunglasses sitting around and decided to try and have Duke wear them. After about 5 minutes of him trying to take them off, we got him to keep them on. I thought he looked pretty cool.
Sunglasses made for humans easily come off, but you can get dog sunglasses that will stay on your dog's head!

Top 10 Reasons Why Your Dog's Groom Cost More Than Your Haircut

Top Ten Reasons Why It Costs More to Get Your Pet Groomed Than Your Own Hair Cut!


Hope this puts a smile on your face.


10. Your hairdresser doesn't wash and clean your rear end.


9. You don't go eight weeks without washing or brushing your hair.


8. Your hairdresser doesn't give you a sanitary trim.


7. Your hairdresser doesn't clean your ears.


6. Your hairdresser doesn't remove the boogies from your eyes.


5. You sit still for your hairdresser.


4. Your haircut doesn't include a manicure or pedicure.


3. Your hairdresser only washes and cuts the hair on your head.


2. You don't bite or scratch your hairdresser.


1. The likelihood of you pooping on the hairdresser is pretty slim.




Source: Barkleigh Productions


If you have more, leave a comment!

Homemade Liver Brownies Dog Treats

At a recent pet expo I was at I bought some homemade dog treats from the Rock Falls Rocky Start Rescue. My dog really enjoyed them!

Here is the recipe for Liver Brownies:

1 lb beef or chicken liver (chicken doesn't smell as bad)
1 cup plain cornmeal (non-rising)
1 cup plain old fashioned oatmeal
1 can salmon or mackerel (with juice)
1 cup chicken broth or water
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1 egg
dash of salt
1/4 cup parsley flakes

Place liver, egg, fish, broth, garlic, salt, and parsley flakes in a blender or food processor and blend until smooth. Mix corn meal and oatmeal, and then add liver mixture. Mix well. Once mixed batter should be like slightly wet brownie mix. Add more broth/water if necessary. Pour mixture onto well greased cookie sheet and bake at 250 degrees for 1.5-2 hours. Cut into squares while still warm (pizza cutter works well). Cool, then freeze what you won't use in 1 week or less.

Enjoy!

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Peanut Sniffing Dogs

I once worked at a school where they had entire tables that the students who ate on them could not have any peanut butter products. There was also a classroom where the people in there were not allowed to eat peanut butter- even at home, due to the severe peanut allergies of one of the students in the classroom. I could only imagine how hard this would be on the parents and children that are this allergic to a very common food. I had to share this story when I saw it. Just as a seeing eye dog would help someone who is blind, a peanut sniffing dog would greatly improve the lives of someone who is severely allergic to peanuts.

MONUMENT — Eight-year-old Riley Mers still has a scar on her foot from a time when a peanut shell slipped into her sandal at the park, burning her skin like an acid. She's gone into hives and struggled to breathe from inhaling peanut residue too faint to smell. In her short life she's learned enough about emergency rooms to know she doesn't like the "dresses" they make her wear.

But the Monument child with the dangerous food allergy now has a new ally that might restore some sense of normalcy to her life: a Portugese water dog named Rock'O. The dog has been trained to detect the presence of peanuts before she can, potentially saving Riley's life while allowing her to get out in public.

Until now, every encounter with strangers or even friends has been a rare and nerve-racking experience.

"It's just so life-changing you wouldn't believe it," she said, calling the black, curly haired dog her "guardian angel."

The girl received her dog Sunday after he underwent six months of training. Rock'O will go wherever she does, alerting her to the presence of peanuts.

Peanuts are used in far more ways than providing spread for a sandwich or a salty snack, and her allergy is sensitive enough for the most minuscule exposures to cause problems. Some potting soils, for example, contain peanut shells as filler.

Riley's parents learned that the hard way when the girl, as a toddler, had an allergic reaction as they were potting plants.

That's meant a life where going to a friend's house requires an extensive sweep of the home and a crash course for the parents.

She attends a few classes at Kilmer Elementary School, in Lewis-Palmer School District 38, but gets most of her education online. The school does not serve peanut butter, but a child bringing a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to school could create a danger for Riley.

Such situations won't change, but Rock'O will provide "long-range radar" for Riley, said her dad, Brett Mers.

The dog might stop her from going into a room if it smells peanuts. If a parent or someone is with her, they can enter the room with Rock'O and, like a bomb or drug dog, sniff out the source and remove it.

Rock'O was trained at the Florida Canine Academy under Master Trainer Bill Whitstine, who donated his services to the family. Although Whitstine has long trained dogs to detect bombs, narcotics, flammable materials and bed bugs, this was his first for peanut allergies.

"This really is a bomb dog for this child," said Whitstine, "because the peanut is a bomb for her."
While the new use of canines holds promise, it is not without potential problems. Chief among them is cost. The labor to train a dog to detect peanuts drives the price to about $10,000. And if a dog has an off day or is not properly trained, the consequences can be severe.

"It has to be done right, because somebody's life depends on this dog," said Sharon L. Perry, who claims to have trained the first peanut-detecting dog three years ago and is director of training at the Southern Star Ranch Boarding Kennel, in Florence, Texas.

"If these dogs miss a peanut, the child is dead."

Perry spent a year training the first dog and two weeks training the family in using the dog.
The idea came from a narcotics officer who knew the family and suggested that they get a narcotics dog trained in peanuts.

Since then, Perry's delivered five dogs to families and has nine still undergoing training. Perry was contacted by the Mers, she said, and did not know until interviewed by The Gazette that other trainers were doing peanut detection.

Her worry, she said, was that people in a rush to deliver dogs won't do it right.

"If it is not perfect, you've just made a child sick."

Riley's parents, Brett and Sherry, are hoping to provide more kids than just their daughter with such a dog. At the same time Rock'O was being trained, they were organizing Angel Service Dogs Inc.

Formed on Feb. 6, according to the Colorado Secretary of State's Office, the business would like to provide allergy-detecting and seizure-detecting dogs at reduced costs and eventually for free.
For Riley, Rock'O means a chance to go to birthday parties and the mall with a little less fear.

"I could do a back flip," she said about her excitement. "My friends - it's not their fault that they eat peanut butter."

Source: Denver Post

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

My New Cat!


I've been looking for a cat for a while now, but waiting for the right one to come along.


I finally found one and picked him up tonight! I don't have any pictures yet, so I'll add the one from Petfinder. Petfinder is a great way to find dogs, cats, and many other animals for adoption!
He is about 6 months old and is good with dogs! The husband trains German Shepherds, so I knew that he would not be scared of Duke.

They say he is a Himalayan/ Siamese mix. I am thinking ragdoll and something, what do you think?

He does not have a name yet, so I will keep you posted.

Here is a link to the rescue I got him from- http://arafs.com/

Friday, March 06, 2009

Oprah's New Puppy- Sadie

Oprah has a new puppy in her life! A blong cocker spaniel puppy. She showed her off her Friday show. Thank you Oprah for adopting!

She showed off Sadie, her new blonde cocker spaniel puppy. The audience let out a collective "aww" when the dog was brought out on stage wearing an orange and pink polka-dotted jacket. "The dog chose me," Winfrey said when pal Gayle King asked how she selected the adorable pup at a Chicago shelter on Sunday.

"She was on my shoulder, nuzzling." The talk show host showed a variety of photos of her new pup – including ones of her eating, wearing a pink Ralph Lauren sweater and napping with a stuffed bunny. Winfrey and her longtime steady, Stedman Graham, adopted Sadie at the PAWS shelter, a no-kill facility where the animal-rights advocate has sponsored a room in honor of her dog Sophie, who passed on last year. "Thank you for my new love PAWS," Winfrey said as she cuddled Sadie. She urged viewers to consider adopting from a shelter where many people are giving up pets in these tough economic times.

This past week has been a sleepless one for Winfrey, who said that the puppy’s crate was actually in her bed during Sadie's first night in her new home. "We've had a rough week, I haven't slept," she said.

After introducing the puppy to the world, Winfrey brought out Sadie's three brothers who are all available for adoption at PAWS. Co-host Ali Wentworth held a pup and pleaded on camera to her husband George Stephanopoulos, begging to take one puppy home.

Sadie joins the other members of Winfrey's menagerie, golden retrievers, Luke and Layla. Winfrey's other beloved cocker spaniel, Solomon, also passed away last year.

Source: People

Thursday, March 05, 2009

February Dog Contest Winner

Congratulation to Lori and her two mastiff mixes, Millie Rose and Milo, as they are the February Dog Contest Winner!

They will be getting lots of new chew toys are they love to chew!

Congrats!

Don't forget to sign up for your chance to win- http://www.poochieheaven.com/contest_form.php
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