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November 2008

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X - Dog training& X - Uncategorized29 Nov 2008 05:48 pm

Pups6



Pups6

Originally uploaded by Laura & the pack.


Aron when she was about a day old is in the SAR vest. I like to tell people that the time to start training their puppy is as soon as it is hatched. The truth of the matter is that it is much easier to teach it right the first time then to correct bad habits once they are developed later. Along those lines if you are seeing some behaviors you are not pleased with the time to fix the problem is before it becomes an established behavior. Not that you can not teach an old dog new tricks just that you need to put a little more effort into teaching the old dogs than the new pups.

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X - Dog training27 Nov 2008 03:29 am

Tune up your dogs good manners before holiday company arrives.

The first challenge is getting people into the house. We want our dogs to greet nicely that would be four feet attached to the floor, not enthusiastically jumping on and off your guests.

  • Manage your dog with a leash attached to the collar before you open the door until your dog is picture perfect every time.
  • If your dog goes nuts when the door bell rings or someone knocks stand at the open door with your dog on a leash and ring the door bell a few hundred times, or until your dog stops reacting because nothing happens when the door bell rings.)
  • Practice sit
  • Practice sit at the front door (If you prefer the dog is not at the front door practice sit where you want your dog to be when guests arrive.)
  • Practice the dog sitting while you open and close the front door
  • Practice the dog sitting while you open the front door and remain seated while you step outside and step back inside.
  • Practice the dog sitting while you open the door ring the doorbell or knock then close the door.
  • Practice the dog sitting while you have someone else in the foyer with you.
  • Practice the dog sitting while you have someone else open and close the front door
  • Practice the dog sitting while you have someone else outside
  • Practice the dog sitting while you have someone else outside the door ring the doorbell and come inside.
  • Now practice this with about a hundred different people. Ok it probably will not take that many but for some hard headed hounds it might.

The other biggie is getting through the day or the meal with out the dogs head on your table shopping for goodies or the dog in someone’s lap who might not appreciate lap-o-pooch.

Teach the dog to lay in a specific place while you have guests and / or meals.

Get a nice dog bed or rug or towel something to target your dog to. Place it in the dining or parlor where you would like your dog to be near the action but not underfoot.

  • Teach your dog to lay down on the bed
  • Teach your dog to stay on the bed until you tell him he is done.
  • Give your dog a chewy and have him lay on the bed for a half-hour or so. If he gets up just put him back nice and calm if he gets up a hundred times just put him back on it a hundred and one times. Initially you will probably need to sit right there with him. Find something entertaining to do while you are there.
  • When your dog will stay on the bed for the half hour or so.
  • Add distractions you moving around in and out of the room etc.
  • Add the eating while the dog is on the bed. Don’t get upset if your big time chow hound has you up and down just be patient and insist until he understands that nothing happens until you tell him he can get off the bed.
  • Reinforce him with praise, attention, and or chewies when he stays calmly on the bed.
  • Add other people sitting on the couch or eating at the table.

Respect your dog some dogs do not like company in their house they are stressed afraid or bully the guests. Get your dog used to a special place away from company where he gets chewyies etc. Get him used to being in that place without you before the guests arrive so that going into the crate or special room or outside is not a punishment it is a good place.

Have a nice holiday season and don’t forget to get that dog out and about even when our scheduls are going crazy.

 

 

 

 

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H - EMERGENCY! LOST PET!14 Nov 2008 07:43 am

Take Home Messages From Lost Pet Searches 08

This has been quite a year for lost pet recoveries. I still feel like our expectations for “walk up” finds with a dog run about ten percent. However I was speaking with Sam the other day and I think that perhaps we should review our record for successful recoveries this last year. I suspect it is running closer to ninety percent. I have said before that I believe there is no magic involved that in fact it is primarily that the people we work with all ready put themselves into a category that will likely recover their pet because they are doing everything they can. The successful recoveries should be credited to the owners not the “pet detectives”. Having said that the pet detectives have done a great job gathering researching, testing, and disseminating information to pet owners that helps people know sooner what to do and how to do it in order to increase their chances of success.

Looking over some of our searches I’m always trying to find “take home messages” that I can use for other searches. Some from this year. I saw more evidence of predator activity indoor/outdoor cats that disappeared from their yards we always say there probably is a reason, otherwise the cat would just come home. We had one cat with an invisible fence collar the dog found the collar and the remains only a little fur the long bones and the skull in a neighbors yard under a large tree in some brush. It looks like a large bird of prey actually grabbed the cat out of her yard carried her the short distance to where we found her. The other predator activity all we found were some tufts of fur and a tail matching the distinct color of the cat, very near a fox den area. I usually tell people that I don’t see foxes being much of a threat to a healthy adult cat. In fact when talking to another lady attempting to recover her neighbors cat she started feeding feral cats in her neighborhood. She said the fox visited the feeders but were usually chased off by the cats. I still think that urban cats greatest risk is the automobile. We recovered a cat in PA that appeared to be hit by a car and a case I was going to help with next weekend sounds like her cat was hit by a car. These cats are usually in their territory or very near it. They take refuge close to the accident location and they usually do not respond to calls for them. One lady said she found her cat because other cats in the neighborhood were sitting around the shed he was under “just looking at it”. Watch the other animals in your neighborhood for unusual activity and check it out. I had another search in Boston where the dog found a significant pile of cat hair. At first I was concerned but then realized it was just fur. We followed up with feeding stations in that area the owner did not feed the cat the night it rained the next night she put his food in a trap and caught her cat! My happy take home message is that even if it looks like there is evidence that something happened there if it is just fur don’t always assume the worst. He was a very plush longhair cat the owner said he sometimes shed that much fur at home just regular grooming. Yet another take home message the REAL expert on the individual animal is always the owner.

We had two cats disappear from one neighborhood even though we often say multiple missing animals is a symptom of predator activity I did not feel that was the case. My take home point here was do not just plug information into the formulas. Both cats were subsequently recovered alive and well inspite of their adventure. Interestingly it was immediately after a rainstorm, people saw the cats on their porches. I suspect their hiding places may have been flooded out so they went to dry areas. My additional note to self is make sure people are putting fliers out before the rain and following up with looking after especially if it has been dry since the cat left. By the way this was a hard rain as opposed to a gentle misting so that may also have been significant.

We often recommend feeding and security stations, and we have been recommending nice smelly high value food stuffs. The lady called something was eating the food on the back porch. When she told me the something had bypassed the canned food and sardines for the special diet dry cat food I told her she did not need the dog to put that special diet cat food in a humane trap instead. Sure enough she caught her cat. I remember when I did marketing for a major pet food company they said that cats especially liked their food to be a certain shape. And that it is especially difficult to change a cats food even if the new stuff is much better if the cat has only eaten one shape food. My take home message use the cats regular food it can be in addition to the “good stuff” but both should be offered. If you get results from the less desirable food it is a good bet you are feeding your cat. (Now that does not hold true for all cats my own cat River will eat anything off the plate even salad with dressing if he can.)

We have some take home messages for dogs as well first it appears we do a lot less work for dogs in fact the majority of my phone calls are for lost dogs. The bottom line though is that dogs are most often recovered using posters, postcards, phone trees, public media, and getting the message to other people that it is your dog. Usually we talk to the owner make any suggestions to fill holes they may have in their search plan set a date to come search for their dog and get called off because the dog was sighted before we got there.

Very rarely does the trailing dog even get close to a lost dog. Either the dog is skittery and runs away when we start chasing it through the woods. Like the six-month-old cane corsa puppy. We were on a nice track through the woods in the dark chewy was pulling hard chasing something. The track was good I suspected we were chasing the pup towards a busy road. So I pulled her off the track and sent the owners and helpers in to grid search the woods. Sure enough the pup was found very near where we pulled out the previous night. Her sister also ran it was an awful story a lady ran into two people and their two six month old pups and a trailer the people were taken to the hospital the pups ran two different directions. The area was relatively urban with lots of woods surrounding the developments. The general feeling was that someone probably had the second pup that we could not find that night. In spite of that we decided to continue searching wood lots and putting up posters and getting the message out. The second pup was recovered a couple of miles away she apparently chewed her leash off and managed to hide in those woods for several days. Both pups are home safe the take home message is to keep looking even if all evidence points to the possibility that someone took your dog.

Tracking dogs is like tracking outdoor cats we usually get a track but it may just be your dogs regular walking ritual. Especially areas where dogs are not kept leashed or in fenced yards. On the other hand our trailing dogs have often been successful pointing owners into places they should post fliers.

The other take home message is to keep ID on your dog at all times. Microchips are much more common these days and the system for reading them is getting more efficient. Organizations are routinely checking for microchips as we learned in the past with a valuable dog that the person found and was going to keep the nice thing with microchips is that you have some proof that the dog was yours.

The other take home message regarding dogs is that we have several recoveries where dogs were near the home usually elderly and/or physically compromised dogs that we were able to recover because they got themselves stuck. In a drainage or ravine. Although we did have one elderly blind dog that the trailing dog got a great track from the back yard right down to the woods then it ended in the woods. We searched those woods from top to bottom. Later on the way home she got a second track by the road. This was confirmed by a sighting up the street the next day. It turned out that family members had walked our original path but did not go into the woods. The trailing dog is only as good as the start article. There are two take home messages the first is that the subject characteristics are helpful but not written in stone. I usually urge people to use a shotgun approach when searching for their dog. Even if I run a great trail don’t discount other possibilities. The other take home message is to get a start article that smells like the animal we are searching for and not everyone else in the household. Impossible unless the owner plans ahead and has a start article set aside. At demos we have a little kit for the pet owners a sterile gauze and baggie we ask the owner to place some of the dogs hair in the baggie, and to swab the inside of the dogs mouth etc. Put that into the baggie then store it in a cool place out of direct sunlight for emergencies.

So in short my take home messages include but are not limited to:

  • Cats that are hit by cars are usually in their territory or very near it.
  • Watch the other animals in your neighborhood for unusual activity and check it out.
  • Even if it looks like there is evidence that something happened there if it is just fur don’t always assume the worst.
  • The REAL expert on the individual animal is always the owner.
  • Make sure people are putting fliers out before the rain and following up with looking after especially if it has been dry since the cat left.
  • My take home message use the cats regular food it can be in addition to the “good stuff” but both should be offered.
  • Dogs are most often recovered using posters, postcards, phone trees, public media, and getting the message to other people that it is your dog.
  • Very rarely does the trailing dog even get close to a lost dog.
  • Keep looking even if all evidence points to the possibility that someone took your dog.
  • Keep ID on your dog at all times.

Get a start article that smells like the animal we are searching for and not everyone else in the household.

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