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Sambuca

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Posts posted by Sambuca

  1. I have no problem with it as long as my dogs don't react. Bu came to me with a huge scab between his shoulder blades and it was suggested it was from frontline, so I've avoided it. He's been on a few different combos since and been fine. My dogs are on flea preventative all year because they go all over the place and socialize with lots of dogs and I don't want anyone sharing with my boys.

  2. Bu HATES all contacts except the table. He gets nervous if they're even on the course and I haven't asked him to do them. We now ask the he puts his front 2 feet on any piece and that's it. And sometimes we let him just run passed them. He'll sometimes pace around and ignore me if it gets to be too much for him. Are there any pieces of equipment that seem to produce the anxiety that you can either avoid altogether or start training from scratch again?

  3. On a lighter note, I used to live in Brighton (which is really just a part of Boston they call Brighton) and the vet I used was Angell Memorial, a major veterinary teaching hospital. It's in a very urban area, and open 24/7, so they get lots of rather unsavory types coming in at all hours. One night I was there with an emergency, and some young fellow with his pants half off, sideways hat, down jacket in the summer came in with his unneutered Pit Bull, and he had a pinch collar--but it was inside/out! In other words, this chucklehead had put the collar on so the prongs were OUT. It was hilarious!

     

    When he found out he needed to show ID to be seen, he left, but I've never forgotten that particular sight.

    People use the collar that way on purpose. Some like the martingale effect of it and many use it as protection for the dog. With the prongs out, any dog attacking it can't get to the neck. The guy was probably trying to protect his dog.

  4. It's being used on a greyhound?!? That's a sure way to rip the skin up. Disgusting.

     

    I don't like them on any breed. I have seen them used with the prongs facing out so that if the dog is attacked the prongs protect it, which I think is fine since it's then a metal martingale.

  5. Bu eats 6-8 cups of food a day and still throws up bile on occasion. As long as his weight is good, it doesn't matter how much you're feeding him. You can start giving him a cup of food 3 times a day. 1 each at his normal times and 1 at bedtime. A big treat works as well.

  6. I asked on this forum about giving split raw calves hooves several years ago. They are plentiful here for use in menudo. I thought "people eat them, why can't dogs"? Oh gee was I admonished by people telling me that todays factory farmed animals basically stand in their poop all day and I'd be insane to feed my dogs poop marinated raw hooves. :dunno if those who said that were correct. My neighbors all seem to be alive and well after consuming lots of menudo. They sell kits her in the meat section with hooves, tripe, etc. all in one handy package like the ones for pot roast.

    That's ridiculous! How many people feed their dogs green tripe, which is basically unprocessed cow manure? What's the big deal?

  7. I had a foster with a horrible skin infection (even the vet was shocked at his condition). He was bright red and missing lots of hair. He was on antibiotics for weeks with no help. I cut chicken out of his diet, and his adopter avoids it, and he's been fine since. He's eating Natures Domain salmon and sweet potato food. It's the Costco version of Taste of the Wild Pacific Stream. Bu is intolerant to chicken and he's on the same food and does well.

     

    Make sure to read all the ingredients on everything you buy for him! They sneak chicken in everywhere!

  8. Sounds like the other dog have him confidence and he's now acting in fear. What type of training does your trainer use? Positive reinforcement? Dominance theory? If it's not positive reinforcement, I would find a trainer who does use it. If people are coming over, make sure he's wearing a muzzle. Have him on leash and give him treats through the muzzle as people come in the house so he has positive associations. Is there any way you could adopt or foster or even borrow a confident dog to help?

  9. I'm a dog walker. My guess is that the new walker is causing the issue. It could be something as minor as not giving a treat when they leave when the old walker did to not giving an adequate walk or even not treating the dog well and peeing is how the dog is showing it. I'd get the 2 walkers to talk and figure out if the routine has changed at all. If so, get the walker to do what worked. If not, get the old walker back.

  10. I feed the dogs when I wake up and before bed. So 8am-1pm and 10pm-1am. Whatever works for me. They adjust and survive. I try to vary it a bit regularly so they don't get to set on time. It keeps them more flexible and they don't have issues if my schedule gets completely off.

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