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Rebanne

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Posts posted by Rebanne

  1. No problem with giving ivermectin liquid but you must get the right sort from your vet. Some will give it out ans some won't. My regular vet did and then they started getting "antsy" as it is off label so I just went to the cheapest monthly tablet. I never had a problem with it and yes it was very cheap when you've got a few big dogs to do. My friend still gets it for her 3 greyhounds from her vet.

  2. All I can say is that it is better to go too early than 1 second too late. I lost my Sam to bone cancer 3 weeks after diagnosis, had a awful last few hours with him when the pain meds stopped working waiting for the vet to come. I will never ever again keep a dog alive once cancer has been diagnosed.

    The dogs don't know what the needle is for, only the people, though I would swear Sam knew and welcomed it. Sam was 8.

    :confused::laugh: It's not an easy decision but one only you can make.

  3. K9: this really isnt true, if you never expose your dog to washing & teach him that it isnt acceptable, you will be forever in management.

    Me:Funny how I can now leave my washing out all day, dangling all over the place without a worry in the world

    K9: there are three stages to training a dog, the learning stage, the correction stage & the distraction stage. If you never expose your dog to washing that he might want, you have missed the most crucial stage of training, the distraction stage.

    Me:See above. It has worked for me with many dogs. No need for a correction stage with my method so far.

    K9: greys have a strong natural prey drive, if you dont teach this breed they cannot chase & bite everything they find prey stimulating you have an out of control dog, management wont work when prey drive is a subconscious reaction to stimuli.

    Me:Thanks I am quite familiar with greys and their prey drive. I have 4 cats :mad

  4. I've always avoided hanging long flapping washing out when I've had a pup. I choose a time that the pup would be supervised then hang out the towels and sheets etc. I belive this is setting up the dog to succeed. If you prevent a problem from starting by a bit of management in the beginning the dog is a whole lot better off. Prevent the problem first rather than play catch up by correcting, has worked well for all my dogs and the fosters I have had, including the current 10 month old greyhound boy who just loves to pick up everything in his mouth, just like a toddler.

  5. Chicken giblets are hearts and livers. My dogs love them. Pet mince depends where you buy it. My butcher has a great mixture of organ meats, chicken carcasses etc. I buy chicken carrcasses for a $1 a kilo and I can get big bags of offal, hearts, tongues, liver etc for about $1.50 a kilo. Ask your butcher what they can do for you, ask around. Here it is cheaper to go through a butcher than a supermarket. 10 kilos of chicken carcasses does my 3 dogs for a week. One greyhound, one GSD and one beagle X.

  6. I know there is soemthing around for cats. I have an 11 yo moggy who was speyed at 7 months. Tilley could be quite nasty to both us and the other cats. She has had two injections of a female hormone when she was younger and the difference they made was amazing. If they could give cats something years ago ( last injection approx 6 years ) surely there must be something for dogs by now.

  7. So do you believe they can distinguish between lure coursing and chasing the cat? Probably a dumb question sorry. She said he'd revert back to race dog Al rather than sleepy, easy going Al. I thought maybe encouraging them to chase the lure would perhaps make them less enclined to chase the cat?

    I'm still semi-keen to give him a shot at it :laugh: Just one go to see if he did get too sore. Cat is still on holidays with my sister.

    It really would depend on the dog of ANY breed. Plus my cats are confined to the house and cattery, not loose in the backyard with the dogs. Sam chased anything that moved, it was movement that would set him off. I could walk him down the street, a cat would run across the road ahead of us, he would be very keen to chase, we would walk past same cat sitting still on the footpath right under his nose and Sam would be looking for the thing that moved quickly. Couldn't care less about cat sitting still.

    Yes Sam would often pull up sore after a run but I would never deny him his basic right to run hard and fast. It was his life. I did was put him back on lead if I thought he had done enough. In his eyes he had never done enough.

    It's a judgement call, may be best to see how Al reacts to the cat first. I've had Earl, my foster for 2 weeks now. He's fine with my cats but I wouldn't let him lure course yet. I would want to know him way better.

  8. No sorry it just Al - he has an old injury to his fetlock which gets aggrevated when he runs alot and his foster carer says its a bad idea to encourage him to chase (I have a cat).

    Poor Al. My Sam had a few old war wounds from his racing days. He'd have loved lure coursing he'd chase paper blowing down the street, he was very keen, but oh so gentle at home with the cats.

    post-9-1124972036.jpg

  9. or I could bring Al the greyhound but he wouldn't be allowed to run.

    Ok I just posted a link to this thread to my greyhound email group, then I read this. Why can't greyhounds compete? Or is it only Al who won't be allowed because you don't want him too? And could someone please post details of where and when, ie what time. If I was in Melbourne I'd bring my lot along :laugh:

  10. I have the complete document if you would like to read it but being new to the forum I am unsure if such a large article coluld be posted however if you wish me to send it to you I will. Thanks

    Thanks Grossco57 for the offer but all my research indicates that man made food is not natural and that is what I prefer to feed my dogs - natural food that they evolved on.

  11. get them some nice natural dog biscuits

    dog biscuits are not natural, they are human made. Dogs fending for themselves in the wild do not find biscuits scattered around for them to eat.

    My dogs are fed raw meaty bones every day and get cut marrow bones about 3 times a week. Never had a problem. They also get the occasional pig ear but they are very fatty so it is a rare treat for them. I have been feeding a raw diet for over 11 years now with no problems related to the diet.

  12. Stormy I was so sorry to hear about Angel. I thank you and your family for wanting to take her and spoil her. I'm sure she knew she was loved even from afar.

    Sweet is the sleep that ends all pain.

    Run free Angel with all who have gone before you and tell Sam I miss him.

  13. Tatum is 10 months old and never had a proper bath. Her coat is beautiful (long coat GSD), no smell and she sleps on my bed most nights at the head! Piper and Emma would have been bathed sometime at the height of summer. Emma is the only dog I have ever owned who has a doggy odour. She has it all the time including straight after her bath LOL

  14. Early desexing is DEFINETLY necessary at shelters because if the animals wern't desexed at adoption, they would be contributing to the large number of unwanted strays. The policy years ago at all shelters was when a puppy was adopted out, it would have to be returned at 6months of age for desexing. Well, guess what? Alot of dogs never came back, but instead, their puppies did!! I have had alot of experience with early desexing and in my opinion, I am all for it. Puppies and kittens have a quick recovery and can even go home the same day of surgery.

    Animals adopted from animal shelters do not automatically contribute to the large amount of unwanted pets. Bad owners do and thye do not adopt from shelters! There were very, very few animals that were not desexed at the required time at the shelter I managed and I was there 10 years. Most pets can come home the same day they are desexed.

    I understand why shelters do the early desexing but I don't agree with it and got my 2 kittens from a "free to good home". Getting a pup or a kitten from a shelter is no longer possible for me because of the early desexing. My vets do all the shelter's desexing but they don't agree with it.

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