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Little Gifts

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Everything posted by Little Gifts

  1. Maybe we need another thread on the creative lengths people go to to get their animals to take their medication!
  2. My staffy heart girl will eat anything, including your medications, vaseline, family sized blocks of chocolate, a kilo of almonds, all the things that have your emergency vet on speed dial. The one thing she wont eat is chewable heartworm/worm tablets! I coat them in peanut butter or squish them into a chicken ball or make a yummy sandwich with it in there. It doesn't matter. Whatever I try she gets all the food items off them and spits the tablets out in disgust. It drives me crazy! I've even pretended to eat it myself and 'accidentally' drop it in the hope she thinks it's people food but she still knows!!!!
  3. I am yet to meet a shar pei that can't be trained to do anything with lamb puffs! Thank you T for the advice on that one! The two pei pups I've had here though went beserk for cooked chicken and chicken necks. When one was sick and just on boiled rice and chicken you'd have thought it was a gourmet meal - everybody wanted it!
  4. At the Peiradise Peinic yesterday I got to see Oscar de la Wrinkles and his family and Domino (now Bruno Mars) with his mum and dad. It was a bit iffy with Bruno at first and we were worried about letting him off the leash (he was hyper excited) but Ams made the brave decision to see what happens and he simply spent the rest of the afternoon running around having a ball! No barking or in other dogs faces or anxiety! I was so proud of him! As for Oscar, well he is looking wonderful and he loves the son and the dad showers with him when he needs his malaseb baths and the dad, who seemed the least smitten with this wonderful boy at the time of adoption, privately told me that I am welcome to pop in any time because they consider me part of Oscar's life and they understand now that I love him as they do because he truly needed special people in his life to come as far as he has. It made me all teary. And Dimples surprised me by doing all the agility equipment at the park without batting an eyelid! She spent her time running around amongst so many bigger dogs, saying hello to people she remembered and generally being a very social young girl. So I came home with my heart full of happiness. It must be the same for Ams as she has rescued pretty much every dog that goes to these events. Do many of you get these same opportunities to see the dogs you have rescued or fostered being everything they can be in their forever homes? It makes every minute of lost sleep and every inch of chewed furniture worth it! Here's a pic of Dimples in her Halloween hat taken yesterdday - she has the legs of a supermodel now but is yet to master facial poses!
  5. Sorry I misread your post Eyeopener. We agree desexing has a purpose, as does the continuance of quality breeding lines.
  6. Of course breeders always know what's suitable to be bred from at 8 weeks. NOT Rescue may have decided that breeding another generation of dogs is the greater evil than adverse development caused by juvenile desexing but thank God many breeders have not. AMEN... They whine n bitch about health but have no idea the damage the lack of diverse bloodlines will lead to & that many breed may become so bottle necked they won't be viable at all. Not everyone needs to desex a dog to keep it from breeding until appropriate health checks n maturity has been reached so they can then make a fully informed decision as to whether the dog should b breed or not. Sorry but I take offence to that. The rescue group I work with and the majority of the rescuers who post on DOL are not whining and bitching about the actions of good breeders. They are distressed at the number of healthy dogs that have to be pts because there is nowhere else for them to go. I will stick my neck out and say I think only a very small percentage of those dogs can be traced back to a breeder or be identified as pure bred so their value to bloodlines is irrelevant. Of course rescue contact the breeder where possible to see if they can take the dog back. I agree that informed people who are in the business of breeding to improve the breed (as opposed to BYBs or PFs) may not find desexing necessary but the reason rescue desexes is because most of the dogs that come through their doors are going to simply be pets and the cycle of unwanted dogs of indeterminate heritage is currently far too high. Your average pet owner is not going to be as savvy about breeding cycles and blood lines and health checks as a good breeder so desexing removes the risk. As a foster carer of shar pei I also know that supposedly pure bred dogs of this breed are coming into rescue for serious health reasons. I don't think it is fair to the dog to be suffering from breeding flaws that regularly cause them significant eye, ear and skin issues. I can't speak for other breeds but it is heartbreaking to imagine the suffering they go through, with some ending up blind from their lashes rubbing on their cornea for many years or having ears so infected that you can't even see into them, or bald and malnourished as a result of untreated skin conditions. I also fostered a boy that was so heavily wrinkled that the only option to help him see was a forehead lift. He had a wrinkle at the base of his tail as deep as my fingers so you can imagine how easy skin infections would be. He was supposedly pure bred and probably looked magnificent as a puppy. He walked on the fleshy wrinkles on his back legs until he was over a year old and his legs grew longer. He had enough skin for three shar pei. He coped and was a lovely boy but I wouldn't wish that body burden on any dog. He had to be rehomed to very special and commited people. So desexing even of pure bred dogs who should only ever be pets is also sometimes necessary. Health over beauty.
  7. The rescue I work with desexes from 3 months. Some are done a little older dependent on if they come with health problems that need treating first. I didn't get my heart girl (a rescue) desexed till she was 6 months and she has some incontinence issues that I think resulted from early desex but it is manageable. Mind you, I once got asked to care for an SBT a few days short of her first birthday with what was supposedly a phantom pregnancy. The owner was hardly gone before she started to whelp. She had a terrible time with it and needed a cesarean (two stuck dead pups) and two days later all the internal stitches gave way and her innards become outards so she had more emergency surgery. That poor girl was sick, in pain, dealing with all these puppies that suddenly appeared and missing her owner terribly. I remember sleeping upright on the floor of my laundry with her leaning against me so she could sleep upright because lying down hurt her too much. Her owner turned up several months later and she would not give him the time of day. I had that lovely girl in my life for another 16 years and I had one of her pups return to me at 6 months (for health reasons) and he lived till he was 12.5. The worst part was that because I didn't actually own her I couldn't get her desexed until her ar*sewipe owner turned up again. No young dog should go through what she did.
  8. Our little town has apparently recently got CCTV's installed in the streets. I haven't noticed them but also didn't notice a need for them. My feeling on all this is that if you are not doing anything wrong then why worry about any cameras? Shops probably only ever view their footage if there has been an incident and the people monitoring street cameras probably have more to be interested in than us pulling out wedged underpants when we think no-one is looking. The only people I could imagine being concerned are those in hiding - witness protection, people who have escaped DV. I do feel for them but again a lot would need to happen for the wrong person to get that footage.
  9. I generally only have one on the bed and she sticks fairly close so I can either feel her beside some part of my body or I can move my arm around until my hand finds her not too far away. I let the foster girl on the bed in the mornings if I have a sleep in and she likes her own discreet space but also likes to go outside and bring sticks in to share with me for a bonding chew session. Throughout the day she will bring and leave more sticks on the bed so preparing for bed at night involves collecting all my presents!
  10. Toasty sounds like she was a very special girl. Big hugs to you KKDD.
  11. My sister has 2 maremma that stay at all times with the goats and 2 maremma that have ended up becoming yard dogs (protecting her and the house). I must admit I didn't ask about feeding arrangements for the ones that stay with the goats but there are other koolie mixes stationed around the property and I know they get fed so I'm assume it is all done on the same run. One of the maremma that is now a yard dog used to be with sheep but had a habit of collecting stillborn lambs and looking after them and mothering them for a few days before deciding it was a lost cause, and then eating them! She now does excellent guard duty of the chook pen though if it isn't closed before dusk!
  12. After having had 2 pups here (one having gone to his forever home) I don't know how you do it! Never again for me - oh the demands they make (but oh the cuddles they give which makes you forgive them anything!)!
  13. I foster dogs and the majority of them come to me quite mouthy. Firstly as a pup consider teething issues so make sure you get him some appropriate chew toys and keep them on hand to replace body parts he might be trying to bite (distract method). Other things to try is to squeal in a high pitched voice when he bites you (just as another puppy would do to indicate he is hurting you). I tend to use this when I am attacked from behind unexpectedly. A firm "Uh" command is also worth trying if you are playing and he starts to get rough. With older foster dogs I have turned mouthing into a 'touch' command. Whenever I go up to the dog I don't wait for him to grab my hand or clothes in his mouth to make contact. I hold a loose fist down low but to the side of his head and say 'Domino touch' and when he does he gets praised. It is hard to latch onto a loose fist so they tend to learn to nose it fairly quickly and of course getting the contact and praise is far more rewarding than what they get by mouthing. I know it's hard but don't roll around with your pup letting him bite you or your clothing thinking it is cute one minute but then reprimand them for doing the same thing when you are not in the same kind of mood. Consistency is important - no chewing on furniture or curtains or their bedding either.
  14. At the Gold Coast Pet Expo recently I couldn't believe the massive stalls set up by more major canine accessory companies and also by new designer style ones. Obviously there is a market out there or they wouldn't bother. Any business has to look at their local market and determine what products will sell to their clientele. The little pet shop in my local shopping centre recently closed down after 5 years. They sold puppies, kittens, fish and birds from a tiny family run shop and the quality of all the live animals was poor. They also seemed to only stock old fashioned and cheap products for those types of pets on dodgy old shelving. Right next door to them was the coolest florist with designer type homeware gear. Across from them were other interesting looking shops. If the pet shop owner had run with a more designer type of product and open looking shop I think they'd still be in business (without needing to sell animals). Now a Zaraffas coffee shop is in their spot. I'm not going to jump up and down and say hurray another business has bit the dust because I agree it is sad, but I am certainly happy that at one more location there is no 'for profit' supply and sale of companion animals. How else will the whole BYB and PF issue change?
  15. When I volunteered with the RSPCAs biggest Queensland shelter dogs were black tagged (ie identified as going to be pts) the minute they were sorted from their surrender cages and put into pens. That included puppies, small fluffy dogs, cats and kittens. I don't know what criteria was used other than it seemed to be based on age, health and capacity to house the animals. They certainly weren't behavioured assessed at that point. In the front door, a decision was made and their fate was sealed all in a matter of a morning. I saw this many times with my own eyes. I even took a 3 week pup with a broken leg home to foster because I was told by staff if I didn't take it it would just be pts. She ended up being what appeared to be a well bred SBT and was rehomed to someone I knew and grew to be the most obedient and beautiful natured dog. I would hope things have changed over the last couple of years regarding how dogs are assessed.
  16. Good on you for checking the rules! I'm pretty sure we've had a link on here before to a dog for sale but with a clear injury in the picture. It may have later been removed but it assisted in the dog's rescue at that time. And in this case at least the dog is desexed. Certainly don't email if you're not comfortable. There are lots of pug lovers out there so hopefully she finds a proper new home.
  17. I've had a migraine most of last night and today. I let the foster pup out of her crate at 5am this morn and she and my girl have played bitey face on top on me on the bed alllllll day. I'll swap you a couple of unrobken ones with some broken ones for a bit!
  18. Why isn't it ok to link? We've had Gumtree links on here before in rescue. What I tend to do is email the person who has placed the ad advising that it might be worth seeing if the original breeder will take the dog back. If it is FTGH I might advise them to contact a breed rescue (if it exists) or local rescue group that might be able to assist them, especially if they are giving away an undesexed animal or seem to be in desperate circs. If they say in their ad that the dog has behavioural problems but they love it I might suggest they contact a good behaviouralist rather than give a dog away they do care for. Some people have no clue what to do when it comes to issues for their pets.
  19. Oh I forgot about the toilets at Nudgee Beach (or lack thereof). I usually have a long drive home so need to stop at one of those a la natural toilets at the boat ramp just down the road. My eyes water and I have to hold my breath for the duration of my piddling. There is just no oxygen! It's awful!
  20. Pers that is just the most amazing photo - it is so full of life and really tells a story about the bush to me - the dry growth at the front and the green trees at the back, so full of contradiction just like the real thing!
  21. Peiradise has Peinics at an off leash park at Nudgee Beach because people are coming from all over as well. It is not a huge park but it does have a covered area if it is rainy. People without pei who just happen to turn up at the same time must be very shocked to see so many of us there at the same time taking over the place but there have never been any complaints and no dog fights that I have ever seen. So I would suggest an off leash dog park that has lots of shade trees and probably some covered tables for the humans to leave their gear out of reach of doggy mouths if needed. Search 'off leash areas south east queensland' and you might come up with something nice. Maybe also consider parking if there will be a lot of cars and dogs - I'd be wanting off road parking just in case.
  22. What is it with puppies and chicken? Or even bland old boiled chicken and boiled rice glug? You can lose a finger!
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