Jump to content

PatricksMom

Members
  • Posts

    2,475
  • Joined

Posts posted by PatricksMom

  1. Thought I'd post to give other people with fear aggressive / high anxiety dogs some hope.

     

    Since we moved from an apartment to a house, Leo's stress levels have come way down and his fear aggression has improved a lot. He's gone about a month without any peeing when we leave the house and the neighbors swear he isn't making noise while we're gone. He's getting used to one of the little dogs that was terrifying him on walks--still nervous but he actually wagged his tail yesterday when he saw him. And he went to the M&G at the farmer's market the other week--2 hours with no problems--being literally in the middle of a pack of greyhounds really boosts his confidence levels.

     

    Thanks to everyone here for their advice about helping him. I think he'll always be high anxiety (I can relate to that) and we're still working on his on leash issues, but he is generally a much happier dog than when we adopted him.

  2. My memory (DH concurs) our vet told us 5-7 days to see relief and be worth it, but we usually saw relief within 24 hours and continued improvement for about 2 days. It loads in the blood stream faster than deramax, by quite a bit. I used to use it for 2-3 days at a time for Patrick, no longer as he didn't need it. It also worked a lot better and he didn't need it as long if we jumped on any signs his pain was increasing, paid attention to the weather, etc.

  3. 1) Think about what she can have and try it. Maybe a low sodium broth--chicken, beef, lamb? Maybe something else. If she can't have hamburger, what about skinless chicken breast, boiled? I've heard (not personal experience) that the kidney diets don't taste very appealing. If it's not eat vs. eat something she's not technically supposed to have, I'd go with feed her whatever she'll eat, it's what I've always done.

     

    2) Is there a possibility she's in pain? There are a lot of safe pain killers that you might try. If you're not sure one way or the other, I would personally try pain medications.

     

    3) As hard as it is to hear, Brandi is right--we cannot give you permission to let Snow go nor tell you to keep her alive. These are deeply personal decisions. Many people have offered guidance on this forum about how to make the decision, but we can't do more than that.

  4. The expense is not a big issue as our other three were very expensive due to many serious health issues. In short, we're used to the expense.

    We really do prefer having two dogs.

    These alone are perfectly good reasons for another dog, imo. Sometimes you do end up with greyhounds that don't get along, like with any dog, but I think it's less likely. Does your group permit fostering with the intention to adopt? That way you would make sure you find a second that gets along with Abby.

  5. We adopted Leo because I needed him, after the loss of Murphy. But if we'd had him first, before Henry, I think his anxiety/separation issues would be a lot worse. He really seems to feel much more secure with Henry, there were multiple greys in his foster home, multiple greys at the dog sitters, so he's never been an only dog, but I don't think he would have been happy that way. So yes, I believe a second dog can help with anxiety problems.

×
×
  • Create New...