Jump to content

3greytjoys

Members
  • Posts

    2,040
  • Joined

Posts posted by 3greytjoys

  1. I try to set hounds up for positive success naturally. (Caution for new readers: I would not recommend using any physical force with Greyhounds. Some will be so surprised and uncomfortable they may try to bite a human trying to physically "force" them into a position. The hound has no idea what's happening to them. Also, good to allow a little time to build up a trusting relationship with any new dog before focusing on obedience training (positive methods).)

     

    Below is my favorite method that can work well for Greyhounds who have trouble learning to rise up to sit (from a down position) when lifting treat above head.

     

    Watch for hound to walk over to lie down on dog bed or carpet naturally. (This is easy with Greys.)

    Get ready with yummy treat in hand, and quickly move closer to hound.

    Once hound's rear end touches the carpet or dog bed, their trusted person moves over to stand directly in front of dog. Person's body is blocking the hound (into a natural sit) while preventing dog from lying all the way down. Immediately say "sit" when hound's rear touches ground and offer treat, then verbally praise, praise, praise.

     

    Do this whenever the dog goes to lie down naturally. When hound connects the feeling with the word "sit" begin asking for a "sit" a few times daily (i.e., before presenting meals, treats, etc.). Try to keep practice sessions short to 2 or 3 repeats. They get bored very easily.

     

    If desired: A clicker can be used if you want to tell hound to sit, then "click" immediately when the hound's rear end touches the ground (or dog bed), but simply treating with food works fine in most cases. If hound isn't food driven a special squeaky toy can work as a reward.

     

    I use the word "release" to release dogs from an obedience exercise. I prefer that word because it's not often used in everyday language. ("Okay" is not preferred because it's too easy to use inadvertently during human conversations.)

     

    Greyhounds often love tripe, liver, plain cooked meat (chicken, beef, etc.), cut up bits of lowfat string cheese, even sample packages of a smelly kibble (like salmon or whatever is unlike their usual flavor).

     

    BTW, "down" is very easy to teach. Whenever hound goes to lie down naturally, say "down" as they drop into a down position, then immediately offer treat! They love that easy one! :)

     

    Good luck! :)

  2. Hopefully nothing too serious. I suppose it could be arthritis/cold or maybe a pinched nerve.

     

    L.S. popped into mind as a possibility, but such a sudden onset without any previous trouble would seem odd, even for early stages of this diagnosis. http://www.greytheal...umbosacral.html

     

    Hopefully others will have different suggestions. Please let us know what you learn after your veterinary appointment. Good luck.

     

    Edited to add: I would not ask her to take a walk again before your veterinary appointment. I agree that Greyhounds are very stoic and she could be quietly feeling pain.

  3. I agree about flea bites irritating her skin, and possibly weather. A flea comb can help you find (and remove) fleas and/or dark spects of flea excrement left behind.

     

    Innova is a better food, so you might give it a few months. (Natura recommends a slow, one month food transition.) Innova is made with a balanced amount of oil already in the food.

     

    Later, if a change is needed, CA Natural is a simple ingredient food that can work well for sensitive hounds.

  4. I'm so very sorry about Cooper's diagnosis, especially at such a young age. :(

     

    Hopefully peanut butter, Pill Pockets, food suggestions or a liquid oral medication will continue working for Cooper since he's especially shy. One of our hounds caught on to the terrible taste of Tramadol when she eventually bit down on a Pill Pocket. Our second trick was to pull off 1/2 of a "capsule size" Pill Pocket to hide Tramadol in a smaller bite to swallow quickly. Hidden pill was given as 2nd or 3rd treat with a couple more non-pill treats in view/given thereafter. (Beef flavor is Pill Pockets' best seller.) When that finally stopped working, I went to my old stand by for the next 6 months, a pill popper: http://www.entirelyp...om/pillgun.html

    I've used these pill popper tools with excellent success for decades for all my animals (including most difficult cats). This tool can really help, especially if administering many pills per day, and/or if nothing else works to help a hound swallow desperately needed pain medication.

     

    Cooper and your family are in our thoughts...

  5. If you can get it in time, Aminocaproic Acid (trade name Amicar) helps clotting to prevent excessive bleeding in Greyhounds.

    Available from a compounding pharmacy in liquid form (beef flavor) or Costco's pharmacy in generic tablet form. Veterinary prescription required. Greyhound dosage is available in this link, see section "Treatment and Prognosis" (Aminocaproic Acid dose in blue text): https://greyhound.os...ancer/index.cfm

     

    Healing thoughts for poor Tempo...

  6. If dental x-rays help prevent a following (second) dental with full anesthesia for a problem not caught during current dental, it could be well worth it. One of our seniors had approx. a dozen extractions. X-rays ended up saving other questionable teeth.

     

    We prefer liquid Aminocaproic Acid (beef flavor) because it's fast-acting and tastes like a yummy treat to hounds. (Nice to avoid administering extra pills when hound's mouth is sore.) Amicar (trade name for Aminocaproic Acid/EACA) compounded into liquid has one month shelf life. We place the order with a compounding pharmacy about one week prior to surgery. (Can take a few business days for pharmacy to order stock.) Three of our hounds are known excessive bleeders, so we begin their treatment a day or two before surgery day, especially for a more serious surgery.

     

    Dry form Aminocaproic Acid (one year shelf life) is usually much more expensive at retail pharmacies than liquid form; however, I found that Costco Pharmacy will sell Aminocaproic Acid dry tablets for a very affordable price (a generic to Amicar). I keep tablets stocked at home for a very rare emergency for my excessive bleeder with cancer.

     

    Re: your overheating comment: One of the best things you can do is request the first surgery slot of the day, or drop hound off immediately before surgery. That way your hound isn't beginning to overheat from stress while waiting in the kennel too long before surgery. Many overheating cases begin long before the hounds are placed under anesthesia.

     

    Just a little caution: Xanax can have the opposite affect on certain dogs. It makes our severe separation anxiety hound more tense and nervous. If Xanax is desired, I'd suggest testing it's affect on your hound a week or so in advance of surgery.

  7. I consider squawkers one (of two) most important tools available to potentially capture a lost/loose Greyhound. We would not squawk ours on purpose to tease our hounds because we want them to respond just as seriously in an emergency as they did during their racing life.

     

    In lieu of using a squawker for more casual recalls, we use a whistle to practice recalls inside house/fenced enclosures. Whistles are smaller, easily worn around human's neck, and sound carries well. Food treats coupled with positive verbal rewards are important throughout life for dogs who respond to coming when called. :)

    So are you saying that one should not "keep them keen" on the squawker every month or two with a high reward treat? I suppose it would make me nervous to just assume that after say, a year of not hearing it once that it would work in an emergency situation. But i suppose then i would be testing the response to ease my own nerves (haha) which could then ironically de-sensitize them to it? Perhaps the whistle training would work for us too - mainly so i can feel like i am doing something proactively to help their recall in case of emergency. Do you just use a standard dog whistle? Could you recommend any?

     

    I happen to be in the camp of not sounding squawkers unless an emergency. As mentioned, rewards from pet owners are often not high enough (from hound's perspective) to warrant hound's repeated peak reactions. Peak reaction is needed for an escaped/lost hound in an outside environment full of distractions. Most racing Greyhounds arrive into retirement already trained with a squawker sound perpetually imprinted on their brain.

     

    One example: If I'm heading out on a lost Greyhound search, and move a large squawker to the car accidently making even a hint of a squawk sound, ALL our hounds jump to their paws rushing flying towards that sound, including our long retired (many years) seniors. Many hounds never forget that sound. (IMO, large squawkers are much more effective than small ones.)

     

    I'll add that not every Greyhound raced and some may not respond to a squawker, especially small squawkers (some extremely shy hounds might be scared), but if your hound is highly squawker reactive like most retired racers, they are an inexpensive tool that can help lure a loose hound back to safety.

     

    Our whistles are like a coach or physical education teacher would use. We keep one next to a treat container to give a short double whistle to call hounds over for an extra special treat. (We only give these high value treats once every few of weeks.) We keep whistles in cars for an emergency, and take on leashed hound hikes.

  8. I consider squawkers one (of two) most important tools available to potentially capture a lost/loose Greyhound. We would not squawk ours on purpose to tease our hounds because we want them to respond just as seriously in an emergency as they did during their racing life. (The other most important tool (that we hope to never need) is a large live trap.)

     

    Here's a copy of my previous reply about predator calls/squawkers. Posted 12 October 2012

     

    I agree with keeping squawkers available for emergencies only, not for play. Retired racing Greyhounds were extremely highly trained with squawkers during schooling/racing. Most pet owners aren't able to keep rewards HIGH enough without desensitizing some Greyhounds over time.

     

    We keep several squawkers in house and car (different sizes) for emergency use only for escaped hounds. We take both small/large sizes when traveling. Long retired Greyhounds remember that sound. I dropped one in garage while packing for a trip, awakening a pack of hounds suddenly ready to break through a closed door.

     

    In lieu of using a squawker for more casual recalls, we use a whistle to practice recalls inside house/fenced enclosures. Whistles are smaller, easily worn around human's neck, and sound carries well. Food treats coupled with positive verbal rewards are important throughout life for dogs who respond to coming when called. :)

  9. I was taught to not leave a muzzle with a stool guard on when hound is not supervised. Worst case scenario: Hound could potentially choke/drown to death from fluid getting caught in stool guard. Even more risky if hound happens to vomit food + fluid while standing up and hanging head towards floor (typical dog vomiting position) which could create full blockage of tiny holes in stool guard. Sometimes, the plastic muzzle blocks stool guard holes. (Can be seen by looking inside stool guard if guard is placed on inside of turnout muzzle.)

     

    Even when stool guard is dry and hound is lying down resting, the stool guard/muzzle is sometimes pushed up against the nose, making it hard to breathe normally.

  10. I agree with keeping squawkers available for emergencies only, not for play. Retired racing Greyhounds were extremely highly trained with squawkers during schooling/racing. Most pet owners aren't able to keep rewards HIGH enough without desensitizing some Greyhounds over time.

     

    We keep several squawkers in house and car (different sizes) for emergency use only for escaped hounds. We take both small/large sizes when traveling. Long retired Greyhounds remember that sound. I dropped one in garage while packing for a trip, awakening a pack of hounds suddenly ready to break through a closed door.

     

    In lieu of using a squawker for more casual recalls, we use a whistle to practice recalls inside house/fenced enclosures. Whistles are smaller, easily worn around human's neck, and sound carries well. Food treats coupled with positive verbal rewards are important throughout life for dogs who respond to coming when called. :)

  11. We feed three times a day: breakfast, dinner, and a before bed snack. We were finding that if Starbuck didn't have anything in her stomach overnight, she'd start throwing up bile in the morning. By giving her half her dinner portion just before bed, she can make it through the night without getting ill. One time a day would not work well with her.

     

    We do the same for our hounds. :)

  12. Eesh! I just now saw this. I bought a jar of Market Pantry peanut butter at Target (it's a Target brand, but it's not Archer Farms) a couple days ago, ate a couple spoonfuls, and have been using it to get Eli to take his pills. The expiration date is 21 August 2013. I can't for the life of me figure out how to read the recall information. Can anyone tell me if we're safe or if I should take the jar back and be on the lookout for salmonella symptoms?

     

    "Currently" it appears "Market Pantry" brand peanut butter NOT affected by this recall. (Archer Farms IS affected.)

     

    FDA is still adding new peanut butter recalls daily (including peanut butter ice creams, cookies, bakery items, etc.) with nut butter ingredients distributed from same plant in New Mexico, USA. If you're concerned about "Market Pantry", I'd suggest calling Target/Market Pantry's corporate offices to learn their manufacturing source for your item#.

     

    (Initially, Costco said our store areas' Kirkland peanut butter was not included in this recall, but when I asked which plant made my product, Costco confirmed it was manufactured at same plant in New Mexico (different equipment line). A few days later, I received FDA's revised notice of same plant's massive recall expansion going back to 2010. This includes our recent purchase of Costco's Kirkland peanut butter.)

     

    "Pill Pockets" or ground canned dog food are good alternatives (of many) if needed to medicate hounds.

    A pill popper tool, aka: "pill gun" works great. Entirely Pets (on-line) sells them for about $2 to $3. Works well for dogs and cats.

     

     

  13. I agree that many hounds are gulpers; however, some hounds are kibble chewers. If chewers are toothless (or feeling gum pain from tooth infection) they often refuse kibble meals if not soft enough.

     

    BTW, our nearly toothless senior hound mentioned in previous post also has laryngeal paralysis requiring softened kibble, but periodically we need to soften kibble for our other hounds too.

     

    (New readers: Gum/tooth infection requires veterinary care ASAP to eliminate infection, pain, and to prevent dangerous bacteria from invading other body organs that can shorten hound's lifespan. Refusing food can be a sign of gum discomfort, as well as many other reasons.)

  14. Long shot, but you might consider checking Seal carefully for any tiny ticks. Dogs can develop partial paralysis from ticks.

     

    One of our hounds had a TMI mini-stroke but it involved one entire side of her body, legs and head. She fully recovered within about 10-15 minutes. Seal's facial paralysis is clearly very different.

     

    Possible deep ear or deep gum infection comes to mind too.

    http://www.veterinarypartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&S=0&C=0&A=632

     

    Hopefully others will jump in to help.

  15. We also feed our nearly toothless senior hound kibble soaked in water to a mushy consistency. Some kibble brands will soften enough within 30-45 minutes. (Room temperature for that length of time is okay.) Other kibble brands take longer to soften, so we prepare our hound's breakfast bowl the night before, store it in the refrigerator, then warm to lukewarm temperature in the microwave before serving. Dinner is prepped at breakfast time (same routine). Good quality kibble usually offers higher calories per cup than many canned foods so that should help keep healthy weight. (Example: Our kibble is 500+ calories per cup.) (Healthy Greyhound weight is usually being able to see last 2 ribs.)

     

    Brushing their remaining teeth daily becomes even more important when eating any type of wet food. We use CET pet toothpaste. (Poultry flavor is all our hounds' favorite.) If I'm too tired to brush hounds' teeth one night, I squirt CET Oral Hygiene Rinse on hounds' teeth to inhibit plaque and calculus build-up (which otherwise begins building within 24 hours). Helps breath too.

     

    Good luck with whatever you decide to do.

  16. 2010? Peanut butter doesn't last that long in this household! I have 1/2 of one jar of Kirkland PB that's on this list - obviously there isn't a problem with this particular jar or the other jar in the package :blink: Thanks for the update. Scary to realize that one plant can produce so many products.

     

    Same here re: current Kirkland peanut butter jars, but we'll return ours. Just because some healthy people (or healthy dogs) are not symptomatic for Salmonella doesn't mean the food is safe for everyone (or our dogs) to consume. It's still recommended to return (or discard) items listed in this recall. FDA and Sunland recognize that by expanding this recall some older products are nearing (or past) "Best by" dates, but some people may still have affected products on their kitchen shelves.

     

    Per FDA's news release: "Older adults, infants and those with impaired immune systems are more likely to have a severe illness from Salmonella infection." This statement could include sensitive/elderly dogs.

     

    Like Pam mentioned, over time dog food recalls were widely expanded from one plant. Also, recalls often expand by manufacture dates as FDA continues plant and food inspections. (I was informed this peanut butter plant does food safety testing every 30 minutes. It's unsettling their testing process repeatedly missed Salmonella. Seems Trader Joe's initially discovered this Salmonella problem.)

  17. This recall includes products sold through COSTCO, TARGET, TRADER JOE'S, WHOLE FOODS, and MANY other stores. These products were distributed nationwide (from one plant) under many names including grocery or chain store private label names. Please see recall list below, and do not give these recalled peanut butter products (or other nut products) to your hounds.

     

    This new October 2012 recall now includes ALL products made from this plant since March 2010.

     

    FDA's Recall List October 4, 2012:

    http://www.fda.gov/S...rce=govdelivery

  18. Oh Jan,

    This is beyond devastating... I am so deeply sorry for all of your terribly sad losses of your hound family. Our hearts and warm hugs are with you during this most difficult time.

     

    Rest painfree Pal and Mi Mi Sizzle Pants...

     

    :f_red :f_red :f_white :f_white :f_white

  19. Amy, I agree with GreytNut re: reading the cake ingredient list for Xylitol. Xylitol is used in many food, vitamin, drug, chewing gum products and can be highly toxic to dogs in certain amounts.

     

    Usually very soft things (like cake) are okay to induce vomiting, but best to "call" an e-vet (even from afar), or poison hot-line if in question. (Poison hot-line charges a fee.)

     

    Please read full source link below (includes poison hot-line #):

     

    "HOW MUCH XYLITOL IS DANGEROUS?

    The hypoglycemic dose of xylitol for dogs is considered to be approximately 0.1 grams per kilogram of body weight (about 0.45 gram per pound). A typical stick of gum contains 0.3 to 0.4 grams of xylitol which means that a 10 lb dog could be poisoned by as little as a stick and a half of gum.

    The dose to cause hepatic necrosis is 1 gram per kilogram of body weight, about ten times more than the above dose. In the example above, the 10 lb dog would have to find an unopened package of gum and eat it for liver destruction to occur.

    TREATMENT

    Ideally, the patient can be seen quickly (within 30 minutes) and can be made to vomit the gum or candy. Beyond this, a sugar IV drip is prudent for a good 24 hours. Liver enzyme and blood clotting tests are monitored for 2-3 days. Blood levels of potassium are ideally monitored as well. Elevated blood phosphorus levels often bode poorly."

     

    Full Source Link: http://www.marvistavet.com/html/xylitol_toxicity.html

  20. Lindsay,

    Thank you for Rogan's update with video! Seeing Rogan walking as well as he is (with boots) helps me look forward to our girl's eventual recovery. :)

     

    Our girl is 16 days post toe amputation surgery. Her recovery is very slow, but I am delighted with her surgeon's job. (As Lindsay knows, I painted the correct toenail bright pink after Rogan's nightmare.) I alerted my vet to please ensure the digit was amputated high enough, and with rounded bone/joint that would not break through skin later. She's still not putting weight on that front leg or doing a full staircase yet, but I'm so relieved we completed this surgery so she's well into her recovery now (and in nice dry weather). I'm confident she'll be walking pain free after nearly 5 months of other unsuccessful treatments.

     

    Like Jennifer (JJNG) mentioned, my vet also used standard (non-dissolvable) sutures for our girl's toe amputation. I was told sutures can be removed this week, but after Rogan's experiences, I prefer to await my vet's return to the office next week. Our girl does have dissolvable sutures for her tooth extractions.

     

    Continued positive thoughts for Rogan's full recovery. Looking forward to seeing his progress updates.

×
×
  • Create New...