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Leema

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Posts posted by Leema

  1. I had a bitch back for a litter, and she came here 2 weeks before her due date to settle in, and went home 4 weeks after whelping as she had weaned them and had no more interest in them.

    I had planned to keep her until the pups were about 6 weeks old, but didn't see much point keeping her an extra 2 weeks when she wasn't doing anything with her puppies!

    I also had plenty of dogs for the litter to interact with, so they didn't miss out on adult socialisation just because their mother wasn't here.

    EDITED TO ADD: The contract actually said that the bitch may stay with me for up to 12 weeks post whelping, 'just in case'.

  2. I feed a bunch of different dry food to the dogs that come through rescue - pretty much anything donated I will use.

    For my own dogs, I feed raw, but will feed them pretty much any dry food if I forget to defrost. I normally have Advance, ProPlan or Uncle Albers for my own dogs, but these foods are selected with no real thought. I hear Advance and ProPlan are good, while Uncle Albers I've used and have had dogs do well on it (especially dogs that I struggle to put weight on).

  3. A DOLers dog had tetanus a while back and had a very stiff jaw and his eyes were very wide. The vets were stumped as it is very rare. Some DOLers suggested tetanus and they were right .

    I initially thought tetanus, too, but masticatory muscle myositis seems probably from the quick read I have about it.

    I hope the owners can get it sorted. Poor dog. :(

  4. I agree that some people are using the term 'rescue' to simply mean 'a dog I got second hand'. This is not the intended use for the term 'rescue'.

    While there might be a better term, at the moment, the term 'rescue' is used by 'rescue groups' to describe dogs they bring into care. Some of those dogs might be genuinely rescued (from poor conditions or a pound where they are at risk of euthanasia) and some might be privately surrendered but in good condition. To me, it might not be the best term, but it's the term we're using now, and it's unlikely to change soon.

    I am totally in support of rescue groups getting discounted rates. It's good for that rescue group (if prices are cheaper, then they can theoretically help more dogs) and it's good for that vet (dogs go to new homes with advertising [e.g. the desexing certificate and vaccination certificate has their logo on it] and they get more business, and the business they get is somewhat 'easier' [not numpty average joes, but people with some experience]).

    Once a dog is in their forever home, it's weird that any pet owner would expect discounts because of that dog's past... But then it's that vet's prerogative of whether they offer a discount or not. And I'd lean to not.

    I am appreciative of this original article being posted as I enjoyed reading it.

  5. As a small rescue, I 'mark up' dogs that are more desirable - puppies and small-breed purebreds.

    They cover the costs for my less desirables, who routinely see me lose a couple of hundred dollars.

    If people are buying dogs at $600+ then that's prerogative.

  6. Bandit now has his own Facebook page.

    Here: https://www.facebook.com/adoptbanditsa

    Thanks so much! I was wondering where all the FB likes were coming from.

    I keep saying with his PetRescue profile: I change it all the time. Sometimes it's long, sometimes it's short. Sometimes it's more a bio, sometimes it's more wordy, sometimes it's first person, sometimes it's not.

    The current profile is what PetRescue wrote for him, so it's going to stay like that for a while.

  7. Dogs end up in shelters for a variety of reasons. This is only a small percentage of pets compared to the rest of the dogs that stay in homes.

    The media in the past tend to spin dogs in shelters in a very negative way. Promoting the idea that most people are good is a good idea. Good people adopt animals from shelters, or foster, or donate. We don't want to get good people off side because of a few.

    There's enough homes for dogs in Australia. We need to get beyond the overpopulation myth and start being proactive. And being positive is part of being proactive.

    http://leemakennels.com/blog/rescue/are-you-willing-to-be-wrong-about-that/

  8. Thanks for positive comments on the video, and for those who have shared it. It's been seen by something like 200 people, which is cool.

    Bandit's PetRescue profile has gone through a lot of changes. The current one (targeting tradies) was one PetRescue wrote for him and then promoted him on their page and their newsletter.

    I worked out I have spent about $240 on advertising this dog. :( Ads on Facebook, Gumtree, and in the local paper.

    I want to make a flyer for him to put around the place, but I do find lots of places seem to take pet-advertisements really quickly in my local area. But that's the next plan of attack.

  9. Just wondering if there was any way to find what breeds are imported into Australia annually?

    I am particularly interested in a breed breakdown over the past 10 years or so.

    Not just for ANKC breeds, either, but for any dogs (including crossbreed pets).

    Hope someone can point me in the right direction. :)

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