Good Old Dog

Wednesday, November 24, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: | 0 comments


Good Old Dog: Expert Advice for Keeping Your Aging Dog Happy, Healthy and Comfortable

While driving yesterday I was listening to NPR's Fresh Air and was delighted to hear an interview with veterinary behaviorist Nicholas Dodman about his new book The Good Old Dog. You can listen to it now by clicking here.

Nicholas Dodman is the head of the Animal Behavior department at Tufts Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine and has worked with aging dogs for decades. He says that old age isn't a disease, but a stage of life for pets and owners to navigate.

Good Old Dog is an essential guide to anyone with a dog five years or older, this book covers subjects from nutritional advice to how to manage the costs of an older dog to determining when “it’s time,” all information to help ensure that your dog is happy and healthy through his golden years.

Nicholas Dodman is also the author of The Dog That Love Too Much, Dogs Behaving Badly and The Cat Who Cried for Help

I just picked up my copy of The Good Old Dog last night at The Book Passage in Corte Madera, I highly suggest everyone do the same.


















Louie Needs A Home!

Thursday, October 21, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , , | 0 comments


Louie was originally adopted from The Marin Humane Society and is believed to have started his life as a laboratory dog due to the tattoo in his left ear. Louie's former owner was a close family friend of mine who recently passed away and now Louie is in need of a new loving home. Louie is seven years young, neutered and current on vaccines. Louie is being fostered in my multi-dog household and loves to play with the other resident beagles, Cora and Splash. He gets along great with dogs and loves people! He's a very good boy; he is not a barker, has not been destructive in our home, rides excellently in the car, has great leash manners and has not shown any signs of food aggression or resource guarding.
Needing to shed some pounds due to slight neglect since Ruth’s death, Louie is currently on a diet and exercise program. He has been on several Urban Escapes and has gotten along wonderfully with every dog he's met!
If you can find a place for in your heart and home for this very loving boy please contact Elaine at info@aroostudio.com to fill out an adoption application and learn more about this wonderful beagle. To see more pictures and videos of Louie playing visit his facebook page ~
Foster Beagle Louie

Homemade Dog Biscuits

Saturday, August 14, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , , | 0 comments

Why buy dog biscuits at the store
when you can make them at home!

"PeaMutt Butter" Dog Biscuits

Ingredients:
2 tablespoons corn oil
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 cup water
1 cup whole wheat flour
2 cups white flour

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Combine oil, peanut butter, and water.
Add flour, one cup at a time, then knead into firm dough.
Roll dough to 1/4" thickness and cut with cookie cutter.
Place on an ungreased cookie sheet.
Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes.
Makes 2 1/2 dozen.


From the Doggy Bone Cookbook
by Michele Bledsoe

POOR LITTLE RICH DOG

Saturday, June 12, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , , | 0 comments

Ernie is Healthy, Wealthy, and Abused.
by Jon Katz

Ernie, a fluffy, 10-week-old Golden Retriever with heart-
melting eyes, was originally a birthday present. The lucky recipient was Danielle, a pony-tailed 11-year-old living in an affluent Westchester, N.Y., suburb.

Danielle’s passions for some time had been soccer, Justin Timberlake, and instant messaging, but her parents wanted to give her a different kind of birthday gift, “something that you didn’t plug in or watch, something that would give her a sense of responsibility.” She’d often said she’d love a puppy and vowed to take care of it.
Girl and dog, growing up together—what parent hasn’t pictured it? Her folks envisioned long family walks around the neighborhood, Ernie frolicking on the lawn while they gardened. They could see him riding along to soccer games.

Acquiring a dog completed the portrait that had been taking shape for several years, beginning with the family’s move to the suburbs from Brooklyn. The package included a four-bedroom colonial, a lawn edged with flowering shrubs, a busy sports schedule, a Volvo wagon and a Subaru Outback to ferry the kids around. A dog—a big, beautiful hunting breed—came with the rest of it, increasingly as much a part of the American dream as the picket fence or the car with high safety ratings.

So Danielle’s parents found a breeder online with lots of awards, cooed over the adorable pictures, and mailed off a deposit on a pup. They drove to Connecticut and returned to surprise Danielle on her birthday, just hours before her friends were due for a celebratory sleepover.

It was love at first sight. Danielle and her friends spent hours passing the adorable puppy from one lap to another. Ernie slept with her that night. Over the next two or three weeks, she spent hours cuddling with him, playing tug of war, and tossing balls while her parents took photos.

But the dog did not spark greater love of the outdoors or diminish her interest in television, iPod, computer, and cell phone. Nor did his arrival slow down Danielle’s demanding athletic schedule; with practices, games, and victory celebrations, soccer season took up three or four afternoons a week. Anyway, she didn’t find the shedding, slobbering, chewing, and maturing Ernie quite as cute as the new-puppy version.

Both of Danielle’s parents worked in the city and rarely got home before 7:00PM on weekdays. The household relied on a nanny/housekeeper from Nicaragua who wasn’t especially drawn to dogs and viewed Ernie as stupid, messy, and, as he grew larger and more restive, mildly frightening.
Because nobody was home during the day, he wasn’t housebroken for nearly two months and even then, not completely. No single person was responsible for him; nobody had the time, will, or skill to train him.

As he went through the normal stages of retriever development—teething, mouthing, racing frantically around the house, peeing when excited, offering items the family didn’t want retrieved, eating strange objects and then vomiting them up—the casualties mounted. Rugs got stained, shoes chewed, mail devoured, table legs gnawed. The family rejected the use of a crate or kennel—a valuable calming tool for young and energetic dogs—as cruel. Instead, they let the puppy get into all sorts of trouble, then scolded and resented him for it. He was “hyper,” they complained, “wild,” “rambunctious.” The notion of him as annoying and difficult became fixed in their minds; perhaps in his as well.

A practiced trainer would have seen, instead, a Golden Retriever that was confused, under-exercised, and untrained—an ironic fate for a dog bred for centuries to be calm and responsive to humans.

Ernie did not attach to anybody in particular—an essential element in training a dog. Because he never quite understood the rules, he became increasingly anxious. He was reprimanded constantly for jumping on residents and visitors, for pulling and jerking on the leash when walked. Increasingly, he was isolated when company came or the family was gathered. He was big enough to drag Danielle into the street by now, so her parents and the housekeeper reluctantly took over. His walks grew brief: outside, down the block until he did his business, then home. He never got to run much.

Complaining that he was out of control, the family tried fencing the back yard and putting Ernie outside during meals to keep him from bothering them. The nanny stuck him there most of the day as well, because he messed up the house. Allowed inside at night, he was largely confined to the kitchen, sealed off by child gates.

The abandonment and abuse of dogs is an enormous issue in the animal rights movement, and quite properly. There are, by U.S. Humane Society estimates, as many as 10 million dogs languishing in shelters; the majority will be euthanized. But Ernie is an abused dog, too.

Nobody is likely to talk much about Ernie, the kind of dog I saw frequently while researching several books. His abusers aren’t lowlifes who mercilessly beat, starve, or tether animals. Quite the opposite: His owners are affluent, educated people who consider themselves humanistic and moral. But they’ve been cruel nonetheless, through their lack of responsibility, their neglect, their poor training, and their inattention.

I’ve seen Ernie numerous times over the past two years. I’ve watched him become more detached, neurotic, and unresponsive. I’ve seen the soul drain from the dog’s eyes.

He’s affectionate and unthreatening, but he doesn’t really know how to behave—not around his family or other people, not around other animals, not around me or my dogs. He lunges and barks almost continuously when anyone comes near, so few of us do. Increasingly, he gets confined to his back yard, out of sight and mind.

This family was shocked and outraged when I suggested that the dog was suffering from a kind of abuse and might be better off in a different home. “Nobody hits that dog,” sputtered Danielle’s father. “He gets the best dog food, he gets all his shots.” All true.

But he lacks what is perhaps the most essential ingredient in a dog’s life: a human who will take emotional responsibility for him.

Sadly, I see dogs like Ernie all the time, victims of a new, uniquely American kind of abuse, animals without advocates. Dogs like Flash, a Westchester border collie who spent her days chasing invisible sheep beyond a chain link fence, and Reg, an enormous black Lab in Atlanta who, like Ernie, was untrained, grew neurotic and rambunctious, and eventually was confined to the family playroom day and night. He leaves that room for several brief walks each day.

Who knows how many Ernies and Regs there are in urban apartments and suburban backyards? Few media outlets or animals rights groups would classify a $1,200 purebred as a candidate for rescue. In fact, I’ve contacted rescue groups to see if they could help; they were sympathetic, but they felt more comfortable with traditional kinds of abuse. A situation like this—emotional mistreatment is not illegal—was beyond their purview.

I understand, but Ernie haunts me. He may be the most abused dog I know.

Source,BellaDOG Magazine, Inc.

Dog Years

Friday, June 11, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , , , , , , | 1 comments

Living with a dog can be full of wonderful experiences and laughter. Dogs have a uncanny knack for finding a place to live and fit into in our lives, families, friendships, homes and hearts. They do it so well that it's hard to imagine life without them.

Although it's not something I like to dwell on the truth is every dog owner will have to be faced with the loss of their dear friend and companion. Over the years as a dog walker I have shared with clients the experience of life and loss of their beloved dogs, all were lost to cancer. I am always comforted by knowing how loved and cared for each dog had been. All dogs should be so lucky.

Last week my dog a nine year old boxer mix, Justice, was diagnosed with three mast cell (cancerous) tumors. I am now faced with the cold reality that he may not live for much longer.
Though not at all glamorous, I always pictured him in old age white faced, lumpy from fatty tumors, stiff with arthritis and bluish gray eyes from cataracts. It saddens me that I might not get to experience that with him.

Today I am going to have a consultation with his awesome veterinarians to find out what out treatment options are. I'm keeping in mind that a cancer diagnosis isn't always terminal, Renna, Jessica's nine year old black lab has been cancer free for four years now.

To learn more about canine cancer and to join the Canine Cancer Campaign please visit the Morris Animal Foundation.

Pictured below are the great dogs Jessica and I have been lucky to have known.


In Loving Memory Of ~

Sammy


Jake


Logan


Sanger

“Dogs' lives are too short. Their only fault, really.”
~Carlotta Monterey O'Neill

Oh So Pretty!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , | 0 comments

Our hike in the headlands took us through some gorgeous scenery. Above, Fletch and Roxy are ready to start their hike. Bella was with us too, but she was camera shy today.

This is little miss Roxy, today was her first Urban Escape. She's as sweet as can be, Fletch seemed really taken by her. They are good pals now!

Let's Play

Thursday, June 3, 2010 | by Elaine | Labels: , , , , | 0 comments

Sage and Annie take a breather after running around.

Run Kiko, run!

Annie gets Kiko to play chase with her.

Murphy and Henry are pretty tired after romping and playing with their pals! Time for a water break!