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Stressmagnet

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Posts posted by Stressmagnet

  1. I love my dog, love spending time with him BUT I think that allowing dogs into Bunnings is a bad idea. On one hand, for tradies that take their dogs to work and have to run in and grab something, it's cool because they don't need to leave their dogs in the car/ute, and their dogs are usually used to meeting lots of people. But I fear that people will take their dogs to Bunnings just because they can - regardless of whether it's a situation that will bring stress to their dog. I can recognise that taking my dog there would be very exciting to him, it's a new place with lots of people and potentially lots of dogs, and his excitement is very intimidating to people. Also, he has had very little socialisation with kids, so I wouldn't put him in that situation. I think allowing dogs in stores (beyond pet stores) is a disaster waiting to happen.

    ^THIS.

    Ernie loves everyone.

    He's a bundle of goofy giddy silliness with movie star good looks which make folks stop and ask all about him and want a pat.

    He's also 28 kilos of muscle with gleaming white teeth. He's reasonably well behaved around distractions for a young Labrador.

    I don't want to 'test' his arousal levels around kids with shopping trolleys or other less well trained dogs. His teeth could do some damage and he'd definitely knock a toddler over in his enthusiasm.

    I don't want to be the one explaining and apologising. I've noticed our local Bunnings has gotten busier and busier and whilst I'd love to be able to take him in on the way home from his walk for a quick in and out - reading the comments here made me realise that he's not ready and I'm not ready.

  2. Both my children were reading at a year 1 level when they were 4. They were reading Harry Potter at 9, fluently. But that was me not any school, desperate to teach them to read so I'd get some peace. They could probably read a lot better than their comprehension though. It's one thing to 'know' the words, another to fully understand their meaning and context. It's why The Simpsons and South Park are so subversive - adults laugh at things that the kids think they understand, but don't.

    And I have no idea what this has got to do with Bunnings. :D

  3. Continuing Off Topic.,.

    1. I don't censor what my kids read. Yes, I think Miss 15 read Helter Skelter at 12 and it gave her nightmares but she learned that the top shelf of books were serious stuff. Now they read on their Kindles voraciously and I let them buy what they want.

    2. I DID censor their TV viewing until Miss 12 hit 12. Now, they can watch MA +15 with me, but still no to R.

    3. The only censorship of the Internet was FB and other messaging things until they were 12.

    4. I had them on child harnesses when they started walking because as an older mother, I simply did not have the speed to manage a 2 and a 5 year old in busy areas. I (and they) survived the trauma of being leashed and resultant judgey comments just fine.

    5. My kids went to nice (i.e. Tablecloth) restaurants from a very young age. I packed a bag of activities and if they got down from their seats, we left. Only had to do it once. I always had strangers coming up to me and thanking me for such nicely mannered kids.

    6. If they ran around the store, I abandoned my trolley and left. Had to do that twice.

    Despite my moaning, they've turned out to be good kids.

    I dislike badly behaved children with a passion. I prefer well mannered dogs. But like anything, it's up to the parents/owners. Stupid people ruin it for the rest of us.

  4. I have long conversations with them, then occasionally I'll drop a word they know in, like "Hungry" or "Walk" etc.....they don't really pay attention until I drop one of those words in and then I just carry on talking and their face is like "I'm sure you said that word.....wait, did you"? And then I have their attention. :D

    That's wonderfully mean... Gonna try it next time Ernie tries to dog pile me. :laugh:

  5. I talk to Frat Boy all the time. I'm the crazy dog lady, I think. He was at the top of the stairs and came galloping down them to say hi and I poked him in the eye.

    I said sorry for ten minutes. All the time, he's looking at me like 'WTF'?

  6. ^this.

    I also own a nice lab (who happens to be chocolate but that was luck). Stick to breeders who breed for health and temperament NOT for colour. Colour is superficial, character is not.

    Edited to say....

    I was looking for a nice family pet. I ended up with a breeder who bred service dogs. No one can believe my Ernie is a little over a year old, he's so well behaved. He's still a bit giddy but he tries.

  7. How do you store your pets dry food? I was using a pedal bin but apparently ants can get up inside it :mad

    Edit: I'm thinking of asking my OH to make me something like this that I can just put the whole bag of dog/cat food in, our feed bags have a zip close so they'd be sealed from ants that way...

    6b40ead76564edfbce5ef8411038294a.jpg

    I've been storing Ernie's food in a pedal bin but apparently HE can get inside it.

    As I order a large bag every 6 weeks, I'm starting to think about something like you've pictured. I've got a bad back so it needs to be high enough to eliminate constant stooping but his food is kept in the kitchen. Anywhere else (I.e. The laundry or garage) is just a pain as he's fed on our deck (second story). I wish there was an attractive counter space option as Frat Boy has yet to counter surf and he's not bright enough to get up on the counter AND work out how to open a container.

    I was thinking along the lines of those cereal serving things you see at buffet breakfasts.

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