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samoyedman

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Posts posted by samoyedman

  1. Thanks for the feedback, he is 10 years old.

    Appreciate the contact info. I am a bit reluctant to go to a different vet until I talk to my regular one. They know his history and have his x-ray.

    The limp is the back left leg. He already has arthritis in one of his front legs and gets a series of cartrophen shots around every 9 months.

    I want to make sure this is fixed because from what I read if it isn't fixed properly arthritis can set-in the knee joint.

  2. I came home a week ago to find my dog limping. Off to the vet and after being sedated & x-rayed i was told it's his cruciate ligament and was given some pain killers for him and that was that.

    A week later he is still limping occasionally, though sometimes he seems normal and runs around like his usual self. The limping comes and goes. Should I rest him or walk him?

    Is there a timeframe on this before you would ask questions or go back to the vet? Does CL ever heal itself? From what I've read it doesn't - which is puzzling because my vet didn't say anything at all about any further treatment.

    A good link here: http://www.sydneyanimalhospitals.com.au/Emergency-Care/Cruciate-ligament-injury-in-dogs/

  3. I give my dog one of these per month as a special treat. He loves them.

    I popped into Pet Barn to buy a large bag of them today -perhaps around one dozen in a bag.

    $64.95!!

    Have we got a nationwide shortage of pigs ears? :laugh:

  4. When my dog was on anti-biotics a few months back he was peeing like a fountain and had an accident or two on a hall runner inside my house. I soaked and scrubbed it with boiling water. Recently, he has peed again on the same spot twice so there must be some scent still there.

    Today I chucked away the peed-on hall runner, mopped the floor with disinfectant and laid down a brand new identical hall runner. So the scent should be gone.

    Is there anything else I can do that will ensure he doesn't pee there again or is there a chance he will identify the area as an okay-to-pee zone?

    Bloody dog. :mad

  5. Humans may have domesticated dogs two separate times, taming wolves both in Europe and Asia thousands of years ago, according to new research.

    A major international research project may have cleared some of the controversy surrounding the origins of man's best friend, which has until now remained a mystery with two primary hypotheses.

    The first holds that humans domesticated dogs for the first time in Europe more than 15,000 years ago.

    Opposing researchers believe the domestication happened approximately 12,500 years ago in Central Asia or China.

    The new study, published in the American journal Science, suggests both claims might carry weight.

    "Maybe the reason there hasn't been a consensus about where dogs were domesticated is because everyone has been a little bit right," Oxford University Greg Larson said.

    Researchers used ancient DNA evidence and the archaeological record of early dog species in their research.

    The project involved sequencing for the first time the genome of a 4,800-year-old dog at Trinity College in Dublin.

    That dog's bones came from the Neolithic Passage Tomb of Newgrange, Ireland, a contemporary of Stonehenge in England.

    The team also used mitochondrial DNA from 59 ancient dogs who lived between 14,000 and 3,000 years ago, comparing the samples to genetic traits of more than 2,500 modern dogs.

    Theory could prove domesticating animals 'easier than thought'

    Their findings suggested dogs were separately domesticated both in Europe and in Asia, and later mixed as humans migrated across the continent, meaning most dogs today were a genetic mix of their Asian and European ancestors.

    The new hypothesis would explain in part why scientists have had a hard time interpreting previous genetic studies.

    The double-origin theory could also suggest that cats and pigs were domesticated multiple times, said Peter Savolainen, a geneticist at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.

    "If domestication only happened in one place, it was probably a very hard thing to do," he said.

    "But if it happened twice, maybe it wasn't as hard as we thought."

  6. This is incredible. :rainbowbridge:

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-04-20/goodbye-maggie-australian-kelpie-may-be-world's-oldest-dog-dies/7341720

    An Australian kelpie called Maggie has passed away this week, and her owner thinks she may just be the world's oldest dog.

    Maggie had lived on Brian McLaren's dairy farm in Woolsthorpe, southern Victoria, since she was just eight weeks old.

    "We got her when she was only a little pup. We believe she was pretty close to 30 years old, if not she was at least 29-and-a-half," Mr McLaren said.

    According to the Guinness World Records, the oldest age recorded for a dog is 29 years and five months — for another Australian working dog named Bluey.

    The McLaren family brought Maggie home before their son, who is now 34, had started attending school.

    "When the kids were growing up they'd get off the bus at 4:10pm and if they weren't, she'd be there barking at 4:15," Mr McLaren said.

    Maggie worked on the farm rounding up cows until about 12 years ago.

    "She wasn't pampered but she was well looked after. She always had milk — not too much of it, but she loved her milk — and anything else she'd wanted," Mr McLaren said.

    "She loved chasing the motorbike. When she was up and going she would want to run along beside it, so the faster you went, the quicker she would run.

    "She had the greatest life."

    Mr McLaren said Maggie passed away peacefully, curled up in her bed, on Sunday night.

    "The best thing about it is the last couple of weeks I was petrified I was going to have to put her down, and that was going to break my heart," he said.

    "I'm so pleased she went the way she went."

  7. My dog has been swarmed this summer by flies. His nose had pools of blood on it the other day from fly bites.

    Vet has given me a paste to treat the fly-bitten area and on top of that he instructed me to mix a slither of zinc cream mixed with Aerogard.

    The trick is to apply it so it keeps the flies away and to make sure it's out of tongue-licking range.

    Not sure why the flies are so bad this year and why they are biting. Never had this problem before!

  8. Dog tails tend to have tricky coarse hair (especially on long-haired breeds) when it comes to grooming. My samoyed's tail is like a magnet for loose leaves, burrs and an assortment of other foliage.

    When I use a comb or slicker on his tail to remove bits and pieces or just to brush his tail he hates it and half the time I end up picking out foreign object with my fingertips or not grooming his tail at all.

    Does anyone use a particular grooming tool for the different type of hair on their dog's tail or do you have any tips in general for keeping a tail clean and looking good?

  9. I guess it varies between short haired breeds and those of us with thick woolly mutts?

    My rule used to be anything above 25 degrees = no walk.

    Yesterday, in 32 degrees, my samoyed was nudging the gate and barking, busting to go for a walk! He'd never done that before.

    Such perplexing animals. The older he gets the more energy he seems to have.

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