Dogs.

   / Dogs. #41  
Hi Larry. Sorry to hear about Ella having a tough time. Go fund me is an excellent idea. I am in. You guys are a damn good retired old couple. Looks like a good start. I hope everyone can help if even just a little. Best wishes, Hope Ella does well. Larry
Thanks. I really don't want to carry a credit card balance. It looks like we'll be eating a lot of beans this winter. I thought I had a comfortable cushion for the April 15 tax bill, but the whole wad went to the dog.

Ella is semi-famous, since she started life with John Simpkins in the ghost town of Andrews, Oregon. He's a well known artist, and Oregon Art Beat did a show on him titled "Desert Mystic." He's Buddhist. He went to Hawaii and left Ella with friends and two yappy little dogs. She stressed out and went into an Addison's crisis. She nearly died. John decided she needed to be closer to vet care.

Enter Roz, a friend of my wife. The two of them walked home together through the Columbus Day Storm in 1962. They're still friends. My wife wanted a poodle, so Roz put us in touch. It was no contest. We live in dog heaven, so we got beautiful, intelligent, standard poodle. We've had her for two years. She's big and rangy and intelligent, and is never on lead. I started her on truffles last fall and winter, so this will be her second season.

Ella decided I am her person. My wife gets a poodle if I'm not around. :sneaky:

This mess may be my fault. I didn't mow everywhere last spring. Instead, I left patches of ground to go to seed. If one of those seeds was a foxtail, that may be where she sucked it. Next year to heck with the wildlife, all dog height vegetation is going to go.

The fundraiser is up to $3216, which is giving me some breathing room. I maybe able to afford kechup on the beans. :ROFLMAO:
 
   / Dogs. #42  
As many of you know - I live way out in the Scablands of NE WA state. I've had rescue dogs, dogs dropped along side the road and left, pure breed dogs from local breeders.

Generally speaking - the larger dogs present a larger problem/concern. They tend to not back down from a confrontation with coyotes or a porcupine. I've lost dogs in both situations. I even had a pair of Blue Healers that hunted, killed and partially ate coyotes. That was always a late night - "joy".

So now - it's a brown Cocker Spaniel - Brownie. He stays inside the house and only goes out when I go out. He listens to me when I tell him to "come". I can see coyotes - long before he does. Brownie is a "nose dragger". My last Cocker lived 17 years - that's my goal for Brownie.

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Almost looks like a chocolate lion!
 
   / Dogs. #43  
What breed is this? It must be the neigbor's dog, since it was coming out of his driveway. 😉

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   / Dogs. #44  
Have had dogs since I was in diapers. Assorted breeds and sizes. Only been bit by two dogs Ive owned and they were both black chihuahuas that were possessed by satan himself.
This is the girl I have now. Found her at Mom n Dads next to the mailbox one rainy day. I thought it was a piece of paper trash wadded up next to it. She was little. Checked around and no one was missing a dog. Still dont know how she got there.

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Shes 9 years old. Shadows me from daylight till dark unless the wife is home then she sits on the back porch moochin food.
The lady that picks up our garbage gives her treats. When she hears her truck coming down the road she will run to meet her.
 
   / Dogs. #45  
Heres 3 of my sorta adopted dogs. They belong to my parents neighbor.
I keep dog treats in all of our vehicles because if they see me pull in they come running.
Left to right.
Bosco
Kara
Millie
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   / Dogs.
  • Thread Starter
#46  
On a visit one time to my brother's place, which he had bought a new boat, docked at a community dock, I had never been to before. I had brought my dog, after traveling cross country. This dog had never been there before. I had never been there before. We were to go out on my brother's boat and do some fishing in the bay. There are three finger piers, and his boat is at the end of one of these. Dog jumps out suddenly as The Brother opens the car door and the dog runs off. I'm thinking, "Great a lost dog, in a new place we have to deal with." But that isn't what the dog did. It immediately went up the correct central pier and then ran up and down the various slots of the boats and we lost sight of him. So we finally walk out to the boat, and in my brother's boat was my dog, waiting steadfast, looking at us, with an expression that he had got it right with certainty. I have never underestimated the intelligence of dogs after that.
 
   / Dogs.
  • Thread Starter
#48  
I have often wondered if i should explore this as an experiment since I had no opportunity to have created/placed a personal scent to the boat, or on the boat for the dog to follow. This raises a few rather crazy questions. This dog, Henry, was very familiar that when you go to a pier/dock, you are going to a boat: That part isn't too hard to figure. Henry loved going out on the boat. What is hard to figure, is how he knew which new boat was the right one. I had never been on this particular boat or walked on any of these piers. Somehow the dog had done one of two things, or possibly both. It had somehow associated the scent of my brother and his two children, as some sort of different scent, to follow to the boat, or there is some sort of commonality between my scent and the scent of my closest blood relatives, or some combination of the two? Or maybe my brother had just gone fishing and left the most recent fish scent trail the dog could have picked up in the car? The brother fished more than just about anyone else in the community. I'm leaning to a theory that dogs can know if someone is directly related, just by scent. I'm not directly related to anyone on the PNW. So at home, this dog would be distant, and slightly hostile to any guest. How ever, when I first brought the dog to my brother's house, it was immediately friendly with everyone, especially the children. Never seen him act that way before. I think it knew these were relatives,.. to be treated differently than strangers. . :)
 
   / Dogs. #49  
Never underestimate a dog's scenting ability. Humans are blind by comparison.
They take SAR dogs out in boats to find drowning victims. Someplace I've also read about taking them onto Civil War battlefields and finding human remains. There was a case a couple decades ago where a child was kidnapped and they bought a bloodhound in, who traced the car she was in to a freeway. They then stopped at every offramp until the dog told them which one the car used; then they let him out on lead again. Sadly it was a hot day and they had to pull the dog off the trail. They later found the child's remains not far from where they had stopped the dog. A bloodhound is the only breed of dog whose nose is so selective that it can be used in a court of law.
 
   / Dogs. #50  
Never underestimate a dog's scenting ability. Humans are blind by comparison.
We just sold our house and moved. About 3 nights in at the new house, our shepherd started sniffing at the TV stand and alerted to the drawer.

I finally went over and opened it up and let her rummage through it. Well she kept alerting to the back of the drawer.

So.... I removed the drawer and shined a flash light up in the cavity.

One of her balls was wedged in the frame.

We can't fill a Xmas stocking with new toys for her.

She will park her bottom under the stocking and and wine and cry. Then start yipping at you to give her the toys. I actually removed her from the house the next year, wife filled the stocking along with the kids stockings. Then I brought her in an hour or so later with the same results. She went right to the stocking and alerted on it. Then got increasingly demanding
 
   / Dogs. #52  
Aside from when I was very young, and my family had pure bred bull mastiffs and earlier dash-hounds, all my own later dogs have been mixed breed, pound retrieved dogs. These earlier kennel raised pure bred dogs, as I remember, were easy to deal with. Just off the shelf, here is your dog and it will behave. All of these pound dogs I later got, had problems. I would take on the problem dogs as we lived in the country and I thought I knew enough about training dogs that they would come around. Our current dog, is the best of dogs, yet he has his issues. He is getting old and still has his issues. He can't be around other dogs at all. He will immediately attack any dog smaller than him. I believe this now to be the most difficult area of having a pound dog. Some things, you can not train them out of, cause they are sort of fixed.. Especially about them being social to other dogs.
So, for the jury to decide, do I get my last dog, after this one passes, from a breeder/trainer and not the pound? Or does it make any difference?
I have only owned pure bred Australian shepherds. They are extremely easy to train and smart. And every one seems to have similar temperament and habits. They are great companion dogs and I have never met a vicious one.
 
   / Dogs. #53  
Neighbor got what is supposed to be a 4 year old Ausie Sheppard and Newfoundland mix today. Seems Like a great, great dog. I think it looks more like a spaniel cross, but what do I know.
 
   / Dogs. #54  
My neighbor to the south is a big time rancher. Thousands of acres of open range lands - hundreds of head of cattle. He has three dogs - all are pure bred Australian Shepherds. He travels around his land on an ATV. One of his shepherds - Molly - rides on the rear luggage rack.

Here he comes to visit me. Over hill and dale. Molly sitting up real tall - looking up ahead - over his right shoulder. He stops in my yard - Molly stays on the ATV unless he tells here she can get off.

I like Molly. She is friendly and tolerates all the poking, probing, sniffing from a very rambunctious Brownie.
 
   / Dogs. #55  
A couple of years ago I joined a project called https://dogagingproject.org/about-project/ It it is coordinated by 28 major universities and research centers around the world. They are studying 10,000 dogs throughout their lifetime to get information on health, longevity and how it related to the human species.

My dog is Kali who is a rescue and now about 12 to 13 years old. I have submitted all her health records from my vet, answered a multiple page survey regarding her living conditions, a sample of her mouth saliva for genetic testing and a myriad of other information. Kali is dog 2750 in the study.

Yesterday I received a copy of her genomic report which shows the following. Looks like her and her ancestors got around. Others is the second pic.

Since the cost is totally free and provides an abundance of info regarding your dogs health, possible future health issues and other lifestyle issues, consider joining the program.
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KALI 1.jpg
 
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   / Dogs. #56  
We just sold our house and moved. About 3 nights in at the new house, our shepherd started sniffing at the TV stand and alerted to the drawer.

I finally went over and opened it up and let her rummage through it. Well she kept alerting to the back of the drawer.

So.... I removed the drawer and shined a flash light up in the cavity.

One of her balls was wedged in the frame.

We can't fill a Xmas stocking with new toys for her.

She will park her bottom under the stocking and and wine and cry. Then start yipping at you to give her the toys. I actually removed her from the house the next year, wife filled the stocking along with the kids stockings. Then I brought her in an hour or so later with the same results. She went right to the stocking and alerted on it. Then got increasingly demanding
One of our lab (mix) dogs is similar. He can smell one of his favorite red rubber balls if it's sitting in a desk or kitchen drawer. He can also smell one if it's sitting in the sink if he walks by. The other 2 not so much, but this little mutt has an amazing nose.
 
   / Dogs. #57  
Congratulations! As an adult, German shepherds are the only breed that I have owned. We have been lucky to get washouts from police K-9 training.

We buy the Costco lamb and rice formula, but have used Royal Canine in the past before it was reformulated (and then caused problems), but I have heard that the Royal Canine has been reformulated.

A few tips from someone that has had a few, and fostered a few more; German shepherds love having jobs to do, so daily training / job will help their mental outlook, and despite the fact that they are used as police dogs, they respond much much better to positive reinforcement than negative. I know of a couple that had bad scares in the wrong hands and were never the same.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Dogs. #58  
Dogs are without question .... The best love money can buy.
The picture shows Maggie & Barnaby. They have the same parents 18 months apart. Mom is pure Bernese and Dad is a Bernadoodle.
 

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   / Dogs. #59  
Thank you for the detailed reply! I appreciate it.
What brands of food are considered to be good?
I buy Blue Buffalo but I am not married to it. Seems to be a good brand as far as I know. Speaking of the protein source in the food, I have never tried lamb as some mention. I guess because I don't like it (too fatty for me) but I probably should not let that be the reason. When I got my last rescue, the adoption place her on Costco salmon and I switched to chicken. Anyone researched this much?
 
   / Dogs. #60  
I was presented with a german shepherd. A very cute and great dog! But I'm clueless about her nutrition. Does anyone have this breed? Any advice is appreciated.
Dogs are opportunistic omnivores, so can eat the same thing you eat. Don't spare the table scraps, including vegetables. We make our own dog food, which starts with 10 lbs. of chicken hindquarters that are still $0.69/lb, add berries, fruits and vegetables in season, sweet potatoes for carbs, and steel cut oats for carbs and fiber. Pumpkins and other squash helps with digestion. We do a 30 quart stock pot full, then freeze it in leftover plastic containers, mostly cottage cheese containers with tight fitting lids. This is WAY cheaper than canned dog food, and we know exactly what is going into it. It's a healthful stew. Plop some in a bowl, add some salt, and it's perfectly good people food too. It tastes pretty good, which the dogs appreciate. Dogs and people have spent the last 30,000 years eating at the same table.

EDIT: be sure to avoid human foods that are poisonous to dogs, like chocolate, garlic, onions, grapes/raisins.

The advantage of kibbles is the chewing is good for the teeth and gums. A feeding at my house, for a large dog, is a cup of kibbles and a cup of warmed doggie stew, mixed together and served. Last night they also got leftover broccoli, cauliflower, and steak fat table scraps.

Whatever dog food you buy, look for the aafco label.

 
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