hand sewn doggie toys
Rho Dodendron
3 months ago
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Comments (26)Great doggie pics, and related comment. Although I have mentioned Lady's brother Prince some, I have really not shown a picture of him that I remember. It is kinda hard to get them together and still long enough to get a shot of them, without posing them. I caught them while ago while taking some pics. of my composting area and operations. Now is the building time with all them shredded leaves and the greens from the supermarket dumpster. I combined them, along with some active pile and it is really cooking. This morning with an ambient temp of 30*, it did not take but a few seconds for the thermometer with the probe on it to climb to about 170*. That will peak in a day or so and hang in aound 150, then 120 etc. As I continue to add in a combination of shredded leaves and greens it will heat up again etc. etc. untill I quit building and let it sit. Wait awhile and tear it all up with the tiller and repile it, then it will heat up some again untill it is just fine, finished compost to help grow some more good maters. Bill P....See MoreOBF doggie days of summer
Comments (134)Melissa, Don't you worry a bit about getting to the post office in a hurry. I hope Lili is starting to feel better. It is so sad to see them sick when they are so little. You know they can't understand why they feel bad. I'm still waiting to hear from Maryanne. If I don't hear from her by the end of the week I will just mail some doggie things because from what I can remember she got a dog for her granddaughter. Didn't Maryanne just start a new job? I get so confused as to what I've read and who it was about. LOL As for my eye, I went to the specialist again last week on Friday. I think it is coming along like it should. I just had some huge floaters to deal with after the vitreous detached so I am still dealing with them - at least smaller versions of them, now. You are right, Shirley, it is scarey to have something threaten our eyesight. I asked more questions when I saw the doctor and apparently when the vitreous detaches from the retina like this they do not reattach it... that threw me for a loop... I said, you mean you just leave it floating around in there! He said, "yes." My next appointment is in 3 weeks. I must admit I have had various things over the years and become familiar with some conditions, but I know very little about eye problems. Have a good week, everyone. Jeanne...See MoreToy poodle question
Comments (23)I saw this on another blog and it sounded like a simple approach. I don't know why I didn't think of Patricia McConnell. ======= Last year, my husband and I adopted a rescue dog, a hound mix from Tennessee that we named Presley.� She was the sweetest, most placid of dogs - at least until we tried to leave her alone in the house; then she'd howl almost continuously and scratch furiously at the door.� Our neighbors understandably complained; our landlord said we'd have to get rid of her.� I called a dog trainer in tears, and the first thing she did was recommend Patricia McConnell's I'll Be Home Soon, which is a short, exceedingly helpful book on addressing separation anxiety in dogs.�� We didn't follow the book to the letter, but I found one of McConnell's tricks particularly helpful: don't let your dog see you leave.� Apparently "out of sight, out of mind" works for some dogs. We got an extra-tall baby gate and installed it the door to the spare bedroom.� We'd lure Presley in there with a couple of treats, shut the gate, and leave the TV on a soothing, white-noise station, like the Cooking Channel. From inside the spare bedroom, she couldn't see the front door, and for the first time in months we were both able to leave without being followed by her howls.� After a couple of months, we could just throw a treat into the spare bedroom without closing the gate; eventually we took the gate down entirely.� Lately, she doesn't even bother to hop off the couch when I leave....See MoreDesperate - doggy tantrums when I'm gone
Comments (40)We had a Boxer that we rescued when she was 6, she was housetrained and absolutly loved everyone, I caught my 2 year old cousin pulling HARD on the skin on her back one time, she was just wagging her little stump as fast as she could licking the baby all over. I had the same problem with this dog, we would leave she would become the queen of destruction, mini blinds? What mini blinds? We *had* a waterbed.. not after her, she ripped the cord out of the back of the washer (talk about give me a heart attack, and how did she manage that one anyway?) she ripped a toolbox cover off my husbands mac toolbox and then scratched lots of lovely claw marks in it and at some point she decided to do a tap dance all over my husbands 1975 TransAm, guess my idea of putting her in the garage was not such a good one *duh* It was so sad really, as I was 18 and had no clue what training a dog was about, I had gotten a puppy when I was in 5th grade, taught her so many neat tricks she minded so well, so I thought this dog would be a snap (whatever, I can't believe I was so dense) She was a puppy mill breeder before I got her and I had no buisness with that dog, we did end up moving to a farm shortly thereafter and she had a ball on that farm (story ends tragically so I am not telling the rest) On the crate training, my dogs are not crate trained, I don't know how I have kept them safe, I had never heard of crate training until both were well out of the puppy stage. neither of them are chewers, not even when they were puppies, they mostly just sleep on the bed, couch, recliner, whatever fits their mood for the day while we are gone. I do worry about fire (and tornados) I would have to say it would have to be much easier for someone to find a crate then it would be to search every nook and cranny for a terrified animal with a fire raging. my next door neighbor knows my dogs well so I THINK they would run to her if she was hollering for them, but who knows what a terrified animal would do?...See MoreRho Dodendron
3 months agoRho Dodendron
2 months ago
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