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Cheryl2

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Posts posted by Cheryl2

  1. It wouldn't hurt to find out if she was injured on track and what those injuries were.  She has a couple of gaps in her racing history that could signify injury.  Took several hits on the turns at the end of her career.   Running to a lure is a lot different from just running around for fun, no matter how fast it looks like she's going.  

  2. 51 minutes ago, dmdsmoxie said:

    Cheryl,

    Does the G-D page you trace back to Niger say Wilby as the 1st generation sire or it says Niger?  Interesting if it says Niger.

     

    51 minutes ago, dmdsmoxie said:

    Cheryl,

    Does the G-D page you trace back to Niger say Wilby as the 1st generation sire or it says Niger?  Interesting if it says Niger.

    I don't remember which line I followed to get back to Niger,  I just picked randomly among ancestors

     

  3. I've looked at 3 of mine so far, one goes back to Niger in 178?, one back to Smoker in the 1790s and one to Tiger in the 1780s.   Been a long time since i traced all their lines all the way back, so I just followed one line on each of those three.  One of them also goes back to this dog, which I think is hilarious.

    Mr Pickering's Yellow Bitch  178?,    
                                                 
     
  4. Dick is right.  They are gone over after every race.  A lot of trainers will rub them down with liniment just to ease any minor muscle soreness.  Everything from ultrasound massages to whirlpools are used.  Most will go over the dog the day of the race also, just to make sure and if there's a problem you can scratch them out of the race.  They don't just sit for several days between races, that's just asking for major problems.  Usually they're sprinted or walked several times between race days to keep them loose.  There are times too when you just pull a dog and put him through some morning schooling just to get him on the lure without 7 other dogs getting in his way to re-hone his focus.  

  5. Some have names that are part of their racing name, others have no connection at all.  Depends if the owner sent a separate kennel name along with the official name.  First kennel I was in had very few dogs whose name were related to their kennel name.  We had two brothers, Homey and Step Off, call names were Honda and Honky.  Best one was one who came in with the call name Damn It. no relation to his racing name but oh so appropriate. He was a trip.  Some of the old trainers were adamant that no crate had a racing name on it, just kennel names.  Always fun to come into a new kennel and have to learn all their names and kennel names if those were different.

  6. Warts aren't so bad comparatively. Viral warts, you take a pill. Seed warts, you can pop like a pimple after they get kinda big. A little gross :puke:puke:puke . Other warts, just a little electricity. I admit, I was never the one who popped the seed warts, unless I really felt like throwing up. I was the one who soaked them and let the dog run until they popped themselves. :lol

  7. Could be a wart. If it gets bigger and bothers him, depending on what kind of wart it is, it can be treated by a vet with azithromycin or can be cauterized. If it's a seed wart, it will get bigger and will cause him some discomfort. Then you can soak it and pop out the seed or get him to run around after soaking. Seed warts will often pop out themselves at that point.

  8.  

     

    Of course, few GTers actually know firsthand what goes on in the track kennels digestivewise and what the trainers do to cure/avoid them. IMO adopters who want "the very best for their dog' feed food that is expensive and too rich for their dog. My longtime trainer friend fed his dogs Purina Hi-Pro, 4-D meat, vegetables, pasta and a supplement called(I think) Clovalite. To the best of my knowledge until Purina discontinued it a great many trainers fed Hi-Pro.

     

    There is one trainer still fairly active on here. I'll PM her to chime in.

    Hi Pam :wave

     

    Yep, the dreaded 4 D meat, whichever kibble you liked. That ranged from Purina brands to Diamond, I know one who fed nutro, another fed that science diet crap. :sick Figure for a kennel of 60-70 greys, you used about 100 lbs of meat, Then you had add ins, Fish meal, bone meal, flax, veggies, fruits, stews, There were also a variety of vitamins and supplements to add in. Bones, some fed raw bones, some cooked. Some used marrow bones like femurs, others used knuckle bones. I'm afraid that a lot of the broken fangs come from the bones, not from crate chewing.

     

    You really had to know your individual dogs. When they first come to the kennel, you clean them up, worm them, sometimes use antibiotics like tf 15 (a powder) if they're coming from far away. Sometimes they get sick from changes in water and food and the different bacterias in a given area. Then you had to figure out their optimum weight by body style and form. You adjust their feed according to that and if they are easy keepers or hard keepers. Some dogs hold their weight very well, (the easy ones), Others weight fluctuates up and down so you really have to keep an eye on intake.

     

    Cookies of some sort are readity available. Everything from actual dog biscuits to Nilla wafers or vanilla sandwich cookies. I used to give them all Yogurt (active cultures) about once a month, or if they had to be wormed. Probiotics are favorites of some trainers. Pre race snack could be anything, from a little portion of regular feed to a mackerel noodle concoction to honey based snacks. That said, I feed all my greyhounds at home straight out of the kennel feed tub and they all did very well until age related stuff started hitting them around age 10. Except for Bernie who dies at 7 with some bizarre form of leukemia. My vet was very surprised, he had never seen that in a grey before. He was very experienced with greys, we all took our track dogs to him and our pets. Sometimes it's just a crap shoot.

  9. I post this before but this is my favorite Dun:

     

    speckledgreyhound.jpg

     

    Here's some more:

     

    dungreyhounds.jpg

    The bottom picture is one I took of Elvis and some of his brothers shortly after they arrived at the track from the training farm. The rest of the littermates were more normally colored. Officially, his color is dark red, there is no dun, liver or chocolate category to choose from :)

  10. 1. Ethics I'm an ethical vegan, because I want to do NO harm to my fellow animals. That's a high goal, and impossible to achieve, but it's a goal worth coming as close to as possible. Having companion animals for whom I'm responsible who eat meat makes me responsible for the meat they eat. In MY case, and for MY pets, that means that getting closer to the No Harm goal is to feed them no animals.

     

    Haven't been online since Thurs. or you know I would have been in here sooner. :lol This statement is the thing that has always bothered me. If you wanted vegan pets, why not adopt those that are naturally vegan. You impose your ethics on a pet that doesn't share them. Isn't that unethical in it's own way?

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