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Leah82

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Posts posted by Leah82

  1. There are some good points raised in this thread but ultimately asking questions in a public forum and repeating that you are concerned for the welfare of the dog without making any steps to find out the full story or help this girls situation is a waste of everyone's time.

    I agree with Melzawelza that legitimate questions should be answered upfront and honestly by welfare organisations but sars didn't ask the people involved in this girls care, she sought opinions from a public forum

    I've seen this FB post shared a few times, a few things to think about next time you are concerned...

    Been wanting to write this post all day. It occurred to me that some people don't have the full understanding on how a rescue works or the inner workings of saving an animal on the pts list. Recently my beloved cousin tagged me in a post and it made me think back to when i only knew bits and pieces of the rescue game. And i thought id share some advice and info that i have learned along the way.

    So here goes.

    Many of you may see a dog on the pts list and want to save it. With absolutely all great intentions. Sharing a post is a great way of doing that. Many try contacting a rescue to tag the animal to try and save it. Generally speaking most rescues are already aware of the animal as they monitor pounds. And I'm sure most rescues get a bulk lot of emails asking to save this dog or this cat etc.

    But take a moment if you will to think of what that involves. Here is by no means a complete list of things a rescue must think of before tagging an animal.

    1. Finances. Consider each dog costs minimum 300 dollars (c5, microchip, desex, heartworm, worming, tick control, flea control. ) and that is if its healthy. Many require additional vet work done, surgeries, pregnancy etc etc. Which can cost into the thousands. And lets face it most pound dogs are not in great condition.

    2.housing since foster carers are far and few most dogs will require kenneling. Costing roughly 150 per week per dog. Consider that some rescues have over 40 dogs. Do the maths. Somehow they have to come up with that kind of money EACH WEEK. Not once or twice.

    3. Transportation has to be arranged by volunteers or has to be paid costing up to 300 and more to transport them to vets, kennels etc

    All registered rescue charities are run by volunteers . It means they all have full time jobs and volunteer their free time to transport pets, do property inspections, answer emails, put up profiles, contact pounds, deal with surrenders, and yes look through unsuitable adoption forms that state they love wolves or always wanted a dog like demon from snow dogs. (We have plenty of those here but im.sure the real.demon came with free chewed up furniture, broken phones, pulled clothes from the lines, high prey drive. sadly none of our dogs as of yet sunbake on sun lounges drinking Margheritas )

    So my advice for when you see a dog you want saved .

    • Try and get incontact with a rescue and offer a pledge or sponsor the dog or some assistance of some kind.. Organise a fundraiser using any free fundraising website and add up all the fees it costs to save a dog.
    • Cant afford it then offer to foster care. You do not have to foster that particular dog, but one out of the kennel leaves a free spot for another to come in.
    • Share posts and follow up. Many times i see people rallying behind a dog while its in the pound, but forgotten once its safe in rescue. Does he no longer deserve your support simply because he is safe.
    • Offer yourself as a volunteer for transport, property inspections etc.
    • Share existing dogs available for adoption. Put up signs, get a coin jar and raise funds at work, doing fundraisers or.morning teas or make up parties etc to raise funds. So the next dog on the pts list has a chance.
    • Donate food beds blankets old towels balls clam pools leads collars harnnesses etc

    There are many ways of assisting to save a dog.

    I am saddened by the amount of times i see people going on about a dog in the pound on the day its due to be put to sleep and putting rescues down yet never once dig into their own pockets. When most rescues are completely strung up right now and at full capacity.

    Caring for so many dogs is costly. Thats the bottom line. Ongoing vet checks, constant worming, tick preventions, kenneling etc its an ongoing weight on rescues pockets and some dogs have been in rescues for over 2 years with no adoption offers. Yet rescues still pay for all their necessities, but sadly they are now forgotten by the same people who rallied behind them when they were on the pts list. .

    I mean to offend no one and please understand I am fully behind getting together to save an animal. But sadly i have also come to the opinion that talk is cheap and action speaks louder than words.

    Please act to save a poundie. I hope this helps give you a greater understanding of just a tad of the work that goes behind saving a dog.

    re your criticism of my involvement: See #17. I did go to the pound to find out what was happening and I did speak with one of the rangers and I have reported here what I was told. This issue had already been raised and asked about in the Urgent forum where it went unanswered but that is the norm for those threads. Questions are never answered. People even offered donations to help this girl but from memory they were not acknowledged. I started this thread to draw attention to that girl's situation and to try to help her and other dogs in similar situations. I am not sure exactly how else I am to find out if that dog is safe.

    eta If reading this thread was a waste of time no-one asked you to read it.

    I wouldn't say that post 17 was particularly clear with regards to your actions, I can't tell if you called to check if she was in yard 1 or just walked past the yard yourself.

    either way how this goes to helping her predicament I don't know.

    Also the urgent forum is not for people to ask questions it's to alert rescues or adopters to dog pending PTS or needing critical care in case anyone can help, these lists are not always put together by people who work in the pound. If you want your questions answered you need to go to the source

  2. There are some good points raised in this thread but ultimately asking questions in a public forum and repeating that you are concerned for the welfare of the dog without making any steps to find out the full story or help this girls situation is a waste of everyone's time.

    I agree with Melzawelza that legitimate questions should be answered upfront and honestly by welfare organisations but sars didn't ask the people involved in this girls care, she sought opinions from a public forum

    I've seen this FB post shared a few times, a few things to think about next time you are concerned...

    Been wanting to write this post all day. It occurred to me that some people don't have the full understanding on how a rescue works or the inner workings of saving an animal on the pts list. Recently my beloved cousin tagged me in a post and it made me think back to when i only knew bits and pieces of the rescue game. And i thought id share some advice and info that i have learned along the way.

    So here goes.

    Many of you may see a dog on the pts list and want to save it. With absolutely all great intentions. Sharing a post is a great way of doing that. Many try contacting a rescue to tag the animal to try and save it. Generally speaking most rescues are already aware of the animal as they monitor pounds. And I'm sure most rescues get a bulk lot of emails asking to save this dog or this cat etc.

    But take a moment if you will to think of what that involves. Here is by no means a complete list of things a rescue must think of before tagging an animal.

    1. Finances. Consider each dog costs minimum 300 dollars (c5, microchip, desex, heartworm, worming, tick control, flea control. ) and that is if its healthy. Many require additional vet work done, surgeries, pregnancy etc etc. Which can cost into the thousands. And lets face it most pound dogs are not in great condition.

    2.housing since foster carers are far and few most dogs will require kenneling. Costing roughly 150 per week per dog. Consider that some rescues have over 40 dogs. Do the maths. Somehow they have to come up with that kind of money EACH WEEK. Not once or twice.

    3. Transportation has to be arranged by volunteers or has to be paid costing up to 300 and more to transport them to vets, kennels etc

    All registered rescue charities are run by volunteers . It means they all have full time jobs and volunteer their free time to transport pets, do property inspections, answer emails, put up profiles, contact pounds, deal with surrenders, and yes look through unsuitable adoption forms that state they love wolves or always wanted a dog like demon from snow dogs. (We have plenty of those here but im.sure the real.demon came with free chewed up furniture, broken phones, pulled clothes from the lines, high prey drive. sadly none of our dogs as of yet sunbake on sun lounges drinking Margheritas )

    So my advice for when you see a dog you want saved .

    • Try and get incontact with a rescue and offer a pledge or sponsor the dog or some assistance of some kind.. Organise a fundraiser using any free fundraising website and add up all the fees it costs to save a dog.
    • Cant afford it then offer to foster care. You do not have to foster that particular dog, but one out of the kennel leaves a free spot for another to come in.
    • Share posts and follow up. Many times i see people rallying behind a dog while its in the pound, but forgotten once its safe in rescue. Does he no longer deserve your support simply because he is safe.
    • Offer yourself as a volunteer for transport, property inspections etc.
    • Share existing dogs available for adoption. Put up signs, get a coin jar and raise funds at work, doing fundraisers or.morning teas or make up parties etc to raise funds. So the next dog on the pts list has a chance.
    • Donate food beds blankets old towels balls clam pools leads collars harnnesses etc

    There are many ways of assisting to save a dog.

    I am saddened by the amount of times i see people going on about a dog in the pound on the day its due to be put to sleep and putting rescues down yet never once dig into their own pockets. When most rescues are completely strung up right now and at full capacity.

    Caring for so many dogs is costly. Thats the bottom line. Ongoing vet checks, constant worming, tick preventions, kenneling etc its an ongoing weight on rescues pockets and some dogs have been in rescues for over 2 years with no adoption offers. Yet rescues still pay for all their necessities, but sadly they are now forgotten by the same people who rallied behind them when they were on the pts list. .

    I mean to offend no one and please understand I am fully behind getting together to save an animal. But sadly i have also come to the opinion that talk is cheap and action speaks louder than words.

    Please act to save a poundie. I hope this helps give you a greater understanding of just a tad of the work that goes behind saving a dog.

  3. OMG Neko Puppies!

    That's so friggen exciting :thumbsup:

    Had to lol at week 3, what gave her such a fright?

    Edit: if she's got 6 weeks to go we're due about the same time :eek:

    It was a different person stacking her and she went to the front. Neko seems to prefer them standing behind her.

    Week 4 and 5 I just had to do it myself though. She wasn't so good in week 4 but week 5 I think she's getting the hang of it.

    She is due 31st Jan/1st Feb so she'll beat you.

    lol I read that last bit as 6 weeks to come, not week 6 to come :p

    can't wait for puppy pics

  4. Cockers can get 'protective' of their people, especially if they're an only dog.

    As well as dealing with the resource guarding when it happens I'd also be encouraging your dog to have alone time while you're in the house to reduce changes to her routine when the baby comes.

    So things like putting her outside for a bit during the day, I'd be preventing her from access to the couch and bed as well.

    removing yourself from the situation is a good thing regardless of what you're doing because you're giving an immediate response to her behaviour without giving her any attention in the process, so if watching TV, get up and go to the kitchen for a few minutes, when you come back make sure she goes to her bed, crate or a spot in lounge away from you.

    I'm pregnant as well and due in about 6 weeks, I know our dogs are going to love having me home all the time but so they don't become too dependent on that we'll be keeping their routine kinda similar. Currently they go outside when we leave for work, so that will continue to happen when hubby leaves for work, I'll just bring them inside at different times of the day

  5. ...If you want a low shedding cocker spaniel just desex it before it's adult coat comes in and you get a fluff ball...

    ...desexing for fashion?... :mad ...worse than docking IMO....

    Yep should totally wait until a dog is fully grown before docking :doh:

    and a fluffy cocker isn't particularly fashionable although it does help with my allergies by keeping the dust bunnies down

  6. Collie and Sarah aren't particularly noisy but they have their own noises for different reasons.

    Sarah has her demanding bark which is either hurry with dinner or hurry up and throw the damn ball

    then she has her "I've been left outside all alone bark' which is kind of apologetic in tone as if to say, I don't wish to bother you but I'm not sure if you've noticed that Collie is inside and I'm out. I just thought I'd let you know

    Collie being a cocker spaniel is a bit more vocal, he had his "You've come home I'm so excited!" bark, his "Someone is at the door or in the front yard so I need to sound all tough and manly" bark.

    And then his "I'm really enjoying this scratch" yodel and other times he'll just start talking to you.

    Weirdly the only time Collie howls is when he's fast asleep, he'll let off 2 long howls with his face half muffled by the dog bed

  7. I wouldn't imagine eye issues were to blame, you'd be seeing a lot more obvious signs before toileting inside. Our 8 year old cocker is blind from PRA and with no doggie door he manages just fine (unless we leave them inside for too long).

    For whatever reason your girl is toileting inside, you may never know why but start focusing on getting her out of the habit asap before it gets too ingrained.

    Leave the dogs outside when you aren't home and take them out regularly when you are with lots of rewards and praise when they go in the right spot

  8. So back from the specialist last night and I guess we got the best news we could. Eyes aren't swelling up yet, just a little bit red so we have a high dose of the eye drops for a couple of weeks (2-3 times a day) and then hopefully after that we can cut back to once a day.

    So no need for drastic measures just yet, although I do wonder whether or not the ongoing costs of the drops are worth it when the end result will probably be the same.

    Either way with a baby on the way and an move to WA soon after we can't really afford surgery so this will have to be the road we take for the mean time.

  9. Also not a vet but if was me I'd give him another dose of telfast and keep an eye on him. I'd say there's not much the vet can do unless he becomes compromised in anyway

    also find whatever is attracting bees in your backyard and get rid of it

  10. Yeah I don't expect Sarah to be interested in the snuffle mat when we get around to making it, she puts a lot of things in the too hard basket.

    Collie however is already a big snuffler. He snuffles the lawn, the floorboards, even me :p. You won't even find a crumb where he's been snufflin

  11. bugger just realised that getting a costco bed to country WA would be pretty impossible, unless someone wants to drive one over from SA for you

    How do you get it delivered and order online??

    no idea, you need to be a costco member to shop there which is a $60 annual fee, as far as I'm aware they don't do online orders in Australia. I haven't been a member for the last year so not sure if that's changed

  12. the OH has been putting this one off for awhile which is understandable because Collie is his baby and he's not in any immediate discomfort

    I managed to convince him to finally make an appointment by suggesting maybe we get the vet's opinion on removing his cataracts, which is not as crazy as it sounds as his eye sight hadn't deteriorated in a very long time before the cataracts. So we'll be seeing the specialist on the 22nd.

  13. I'm stumped for Ernie too.

    I bought him a gel cooling mat (thanks DOLers) but he will destroy most cheap doggie stocking stuffer toys and food will be gone in a flash.

    I love the snuffle mat idea - it might just be simple enough for me to try it. Where would you buy the rubber mat with holes? What's it's proper name?

    Bunnings have a few of those rubber mats, here one option...

    http://www.bunnings.com.au/bayliss-40-x-70cm-black-rubber-circle-mat_p4491916

  14. So for Christmas this year we'll be making Collie a snuffle mat - can't think of anything more perfect for a blind gun dog, plus maybe then he'll stop snuffling me :p

    with Sarah I'm a little more stumped, she doesn't tend to remain interested in new things for very long

    So hit me up with some suggestions, and what are you getting your furries this Christmas?

  15. I only have the two softies but even I was impressed by my dog's ability to share a bone the other week. We cut the flap off a lamb roast and gave it to Collie for 10 mins, then took it off Collie and gave it to Sarah for about the same amount of time then back to Collie. After awhile with most of the meat gone and the tendons taking a bit more effort one dog would get bored and wander off and the other one would have a go.

    I was watching from inside and both dogs were completely respectful of the other when they had the bone. I love my low management pair

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