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sandgrubber

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Everything posted by sandgrubber

  1. Human physicians work with only one species, and the variation among dogs is MUCH MUCH greater than the variation among humans.
  2. You gotta be fair to vets and help owners take more responsibility for their dog's health. The vet school curriculum covers many species and I doubt that many schools spend much time on breed specific issues. If you breed collie type dogs, do your genetic testing and if your pups are likely to be ivermectin sensitive, give puppy buyers a BIG warning. If you breed Labs, likewise, warn buyers of the dangers of overfeeding. And so on.... There are loads of breed specific problems with sheep, cattle, and pigs as well. Can't expect anyone to master the whole gamut. Older vets in small animal practices tend to learn this stuff as they go. You're kidding yourself if you expect someone fresh out of vet school to know all the ins and outs of dog health.
  3. I thought you might like this story from The Washington Post. Custom wood kennels and memory foam beds: Welcome to the wild world of modern pet furniture https://wapo.st/2LtOzRB
  4. https://jalostus.kennelliitto.fi/frmEtusivu.aspx?Lang=en I think the Finns have made a useful start in this direction... through their kennel club. One problem with strong emphasis on testing is that search for optimal genes will worsen popular sire syndrome and narrow gene pools. Another problem is the many things, eg., epilepsy, succeptibility to allergies, unstable temperament, bloat, skin problems and cancers, etc. for which genetic testing isn't well developed. IMO it's crazy that most pedigree systems track births, but no death records are kept. I would really like to be able to select a pup... or a sire... knowing that the bloodlines have a high proportion of individuals living to a healthy old age.
  5. Many Frenchies, lagottos, bulldogs, and other pricey breeds are bred for $$ as well. But every breeder is different. Some of them take health seriously, some put higher value on showing, some are sentimental and lack clear priorities. I'd guess some x-breeders put health and temperament first, particularly in x-breeds like puggles (not the baby echidna kind) intended to keep the temperament of a brachy breed but move away from the flat face.
  6. There is no 'they'. All breeders, including cross breeders, are individuals.
  7. Another lesson to be learned is that a few months of feeding trials, probably using beagles, isn't adequate to determine a food is 'nutritionally complete' for long term feeding or for all breeds and mixed breeds. Unfortunately, long term, multi-breed trials would be extremely expensive.
  8. Old style breeders who do not show are often called BYB by some segments of the fancy. This includes people who disagree with prevailing extreme interpretations of breed standards. Not to mention people who choose to have a litter out of a much loved family dog. IMO this is a healthy antidote to the popular sire syndrome. Australian legislation is working against family style dog breeding, whether it be done by owners of grand champions or people who just want to have a pup by a favorite bitch or dog. Animal rights groups tend to vilify them all as BYB's, with the implication that you are somehow unethical if you don't have an institutional style kennel. If you mean scum bag or mercenary or cruel or whatever, say what you mean. Don't slam the back yard as a place to breed dogs.
  9. Small claims isn't a bad option. If you have good veterinary documentation, you should win and can likely get some reimbursement for veterinary costs. From a legal perspective you were sold a defective product. Read up on the process. Please don't vilify back yard breeders, though. The middle ground between back yarders and commercial breeders is being wiped out in Australia. Personally, I prefer the old style small breeder who has an occasional litter, keeps the whelping box in the house, and lets the dogs free in the back yard. Concrete floored kennels and loads of red tape are not improving dog welfare. Sounds like you're dealing with a crooked and unethical breeder. Such are to be found among commercial breeders as well.
  10. No experience with it. Given it's active ingredient is a milk protein, I'd be surprised if dosage needs careful control. I'd do a bit of research... maybe you can get the same effect from some dairy product.
  11. Flea bath and flea powder products are mostly based on synthetic premetherin (sp?). Mostly harmless, I guess, but caused nasty seizures in one of my dogs. Flea products are generally poisons that don't cross the body/brain interface... except for some dogs they do.
  12. I'd guess the problem is worse with dogs cause one mating can produce several pups
  13. They wouldn't sell it if they didn't make money. Overall, buying pet insurance is betting that your pet is considerably less healthy than average.
  14. Haven't seen a flea or a tick since I moved to New Zealand, and there's no heartworm. I do worm for intestinal worms. It seems like the responsible thing to do with so many sheep around... a bit like vaccination. You don't want to get it, and you don't want to spread it.
  15. Scary! Poor guy! Hope there's some way the dogs' owner can be forced to do a lot of restitution. The accompanying video about dangerous breeds is stupid.
  16. It does vary. My old girl had horrible seizures after being dosed with synthetic pyretheroids (flea med, general insecticide) but was fine with Bravecto.
  17. They mean the dry varieties, which are widely used in place of grain in grain free dry (possibly also moist) foods.
  18. For a good critical review of this, written by a vet, see: http://skeptvet.com/Blog/2019/06/fda-update-on-grain-free-diets-and-heart-disease-in-dogs/
  19. A month or so ago there was a flurry of reporting on DCM associated with grainfree dog foods. A more thorough, but still inconclusive, study has come out. For more information on the foods and breeds affected see http://skeptvet.com/Blog/2019/06/fda-update-on-grain-free-diets-and-heart-disease-in-dogs/
  20. Worth adding, in general, RSPCA and like organizations, worldwide, at the top levels, are inclined to spend far more money looking for donations and grinding political axes than helping animals. I do support reducing cruelty. I think many of the popular appeals focus on the wrong targets and push for measures not in the best interest of dogs.
  21. BTW, don't worry about cuddling your pup when she is seizing. I always did so with mine. She took to coming to me and looking for a cuddle when she felt a seizure coming on.
  22. Like most institutions, the RSPCA is a mixed bag. Many/most of the volunteers are true animal lovers, some working under delusion. Local branches vary and I'll bet some do far more good than harm. In some places crazed animal rights people, or high paid executives create sickening problems.
  23. My old girl had similar seizures. My vet said probably epilepsy...which is going to mean a lot of testing to rule out other things and the tests will probably all come back negative. She recommended going right to low dose phenobarbital (with monitoring) to see if it helped. It did. My girl was on phenobarbital for around 3 years. I gradually tapered the dose off to nothing (against veterinary advice). My girl lived another five or six years with a few mild seizures a year and died at 14 yr 10 mo. (ie a couple of years more than average for her breed) Not saying you should do as I did (many people would consider it irresponsible to skip the extensive testing that goes into an epilepsy diagnosis) or that you should call it epilepsy because someone on the internet says it looks like what happened to her dog (you shouldn't). Just that 1. Diagnosis is likely to involve a lot of testing, which may be inconclusive and 2. If it does turn out to be epilepsy, it may be a mild and treatable form, not the dreaded grand mal.
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