Jump to content

kamuzz

  • Posts

    1,609
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by kamuzz

  1. One of my colleagues is ready to buy her first dog. She looked after a friend's groodle puppy and is smitten.  After a couple of conversations on the topic (thanks for this link), she is willing to look at other dogs.

     

    Her question today was: 'So what pedigree dog is like a standard groodle?'.  

     

    What breed would you suggest?

    - Not as big as a Golden retriever or Labrador 

    - low shedding

    - good with kids (she has one daughter, near the end of primary school)

     

  2. We have the V6 Absolute, and I have no complaints about it. Great for doing the stairs and other "touch up" jobs. We have tiles downstairs and I've never had the sort of issues that animallover99 is reporting.

     

    Oh - unless the dogs have decided to bring in mulch. Neither of the vacuums seem to like sucking up mulch chips very much.  However, it does fine with bird seed; long Setter hair; piles of GSD hair; random mud and grime;  the odd twig...

     

    But I don't think I would want to vacuum the whole house with it. I'm sure that would be slower than using the barrel with its wider heads.

  3. Since the "bags on board" refills have disappeared from Coles, life has not been the same.

     

    The Coles own brand bags are useless in so many ways, and I need an alternative.

     

    What are you using to pick up poop while on your walk?

  4. A wiser DOLer gave me these rules for Separation Anxiety a few years back.

     

    The 3 main things the uni vet told us to do were:

    1. set up a place where the dog would spend time alone (or with the other dogs) even when we were home, with water, toys, kongs, whatever. And we had to put items that strongly had our scent on them there.

    This was so the dog could learn to be confident & happy not having its owner in its presence.

    2. ignore the dog, only give attention when it was quiet & not trying to make demands by screaming, whining, barking, being physically pushy.

    This was so the dog could learn that the 'bad' behaviours did not bring what it wanted...good things from the owners. But 'good' behaviour would.

    3. specially ignore the dog for 5-10 minutes before leaving home....& 5-10 minutes on arriving home.

    This was to hose down the owner's coming & going being a big emotional thing.

    4. teach the dog basic obedience of obeying 'Sit' to get all good things (food, treats, pats etc) & make it stay & wait when a person was going thro' a doorway or gate.

    This was so the dog could learn who was the boss...which helps relieve anxiety. And also learn what the 'good' behaviours were, that would earn good things from its owner.

  5. My vet suggested my oldie should be having fish oil added to his diet, and the only fish oil she trusts is the PAWS brand.

     

    The kind PAWS advice line people helped me calculate the correct dosage for a 30 kg dog:

    Quote

     

    The calculation for the Fish Oil 500 dosage for your dog is as follows –

    30kg (his weight)^0.75 (for metabolic body weight) = 12.8….

    12.8… x 310 (recommended dose rate for osteoarthritis) = 3973mg of EPA+DHA

    3973/250 (each pump of Fish Oil 500 contains 250mg EPA+DHA) = 15 pumps per day

     

     

    When I was telling one of my breeders about this, she laughed at me and suggested getting fish oil capsules when the expensive stuff is finished.

     

    Now I have my fish oil capsules (with both EPA and DHA). Do I give one capsule once a day or twice a day? Or perhaps it doesn't matter?

  6. Is the Yulin festival real

     

    Also see here 
     

    Quote

    The Lychee and Dog Meat Festival, commonly referred to as Yulin Dog Meat Festival, is an annual celebration held in Yulin, Guangxi, China, during the summer solstice in which festival goers eat dog meat and lychees. The festival spans about ten days during which it is estimated that 10,000–15,000 dogs are consumed.

     

  7. We adopted Chocolate in mid December. At first I was a bit hesitant because of her age, but the person recommending her was dead-on with their assessment of how her energy level would fit in with my existing boys. (And that was without having met any of us. She had an teenage GSD for sale and asked many questions.)

     

    There are generally quite a few advertised here. Over three months or so I had lots of conversations with different breeders. They were all very happy to hear about my dogs, what I was looking for, and to offer advice. You must be prepared for the breeder to say 'No, that's not the home I am looking for.' (Personally I think that is a good thing.)

     

    Prices will vary with age.

     

    ETA Chocolate came for a three week trial, and I am sure we could have extended this if it had been necessary.

  8. We used to have Petplan and they were great. Paid out on all Mazda's surgeries and Veli's tummy issues with no fuss. Really easy to deal with in terms of making claims and paperwork. Then their premiums went through the roof.  (And they got a new computer system and their claims department fell apart.)

     

    Nearly all the other policies are underwritten by Hollard, so basically all the same under the covers with different "skins".  We are currently with the one that our people health insurance sells - Bow Wow Meow - and it is worse than useless. 

     

    If you google this forum you will find plenty of threads. To help you google, 'cos I know how much you love computers:

    1. Go to google.com.au
    2. In the search box put in the following text      pet insurance site:dolforums.com.au
    3. Hit enter

    That tells Google to look for "pet insurance" but only on this website.

     

    You'll have to scroll down past all the paid ads, but then you should get to all the DOL threads.

     

    Let me know if you get stuck.

  9. We recently had to let our GSD go. (He had suspected DM.) The vet said to me that sometimes people regretted leaving it too long. But he had never heard anyone saying they did it too soon.

    Coda reached 10 years and 10 months to the day.

    This is my email to the vet on next day:

    Thank you for your kindness yesterday with Coda. Even though I knew the day was coming it is still gut-wrenching to finally make that decision.

    Last night I looked back at my photos. There were some tears, but there were some smiles too.

    Usually on a Sunday morning I lie-in, and Coda would come upstairs to check on me. It was very strange not to have a GSD nose appearing at my pillow. But, and this is the part that gives me comfort, it was also a relief not to listen to him struggling up those stairs. And then waiting to hear if he made it safely back down again. I think his heart kept bringing up long after his body wanted him to stop.

    He was a good dog. He was loved by his people. He was a great ambassador for his breed. And in the end, maybe that is all any of us can ask for.

    post-2393-0-99068300-1473678959_thumb.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...