Thursday, December 29, 2011

Updated lots on dog food recalls/ petrus feed and seed stores

go to this web site if you buy at Petrus Feed  & Seed stores

http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm285240.htm?source=govdelivery

IF you suspect your dog has eaten any of this see your Vet.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

dog food recalls

The below is quoted from an email I received from the FDA, however when I clicked on the link the page said it had been moved. So I am taking what was directly in my email until I can find out more. Again due to above accepted levels of Aflatoxin.


"Petrus Feed and Seed Stores, Inc. recalls its 21% Dog Food
12/28/2011 11:45 AM EST

Petrus Feed and Seed Stores, Inc. today announced a voluntary recall of its dry dog food – 21% Protein Dog Food in 40 lb Petrus Feed bags. The product is being recalled because the product was manufactured with corn which tested above acceptable levels for Aflatoxin."

The affected dry kibble products were manufactured by Cargill at its manufacturing facility located in LeCompte, Louisiana between December 1, 2010 and December 1, 2011.
The recall only applies to the company’s 21% Dog Food, packaged in 40 lb Petrus Feed bags with the following packaging date codes (lot numbers) 4K1011 through 4K1307.
Updated lot numbers are 4K1011 through 4K1335.

Friday, December 9, 2011

More food recalls

and the beat goes on..,
check your dog food, voluntary recalls  for Advanced Animal Nutrition due to Aflatoxin.

As per their website:
The recall was announced on December 9, 2011 and includes the 50-pound bags of the following three products:
  • Dog Power Hunters Formula 27-14
  • Dog Power Adult Maintenance Formula 21-12
  • Dog Power Hi-Pro Performance Formula 26-18
Site suggests you watch for these symptoms for aflatoxin
If your pet shows any symptoms of illness, including sluggishness or lethargy combined with a reluctance to eat, yellowish tint to the eyes and/or gums, and severe or bloody diarrhea, please consult your veterinarian immediately.”

Keeping you posted, I suspect there may be more to come and will list them as I see them

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

More dog food recalls~ same reason aflatoxin

Cargill Animal Nutrition is doing a voluntary recall of two regional brands of dog food due to aflatoxin levels exceeding the acceptable limit
  • PROFESSIONAL FORMULA RIVER RUN HI-NRG 24-20 Dog Food, 50 pound bags
  • RIVER RUN PROFESSIONAL FORMULA 27-18 Dog Food, 50 pound bags
  • RIVER RUN 21% Protein Dog Food, 40 and 50 pound bags
  • RIVER RUN Hi-Pro No-Soy Dog Food, 40 and 50 pound bags
  • MARKSMAN DOG FOOD 24% Protein 20% Fat, 40 pound bags
  • MARKSMAN DOG FOOD 20% Protein 10% Fat, 40 and 50 pound bags
  • MARKSMAN DOG FOOD 28% Protein 18% Fat, 40 pound bags

The recall only applies to the above products with the following Packaging Date Codes (lot numbers): 4K0335 through 4K0365, LL0335 through LL0365, 4K1001 through 4K1335 and LL1001 through LL1335.
 you can find more here http://www.cargill.com/feed/dog-food-recall/

Again, there may be more to come.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Iam's puppy food recalled!


About a week ago I was notified by another blogger that  a grocery chain (Price Chopper) was recalling food due to a high content of aflatoxin in the Iams dog and cat food. There were some links to the grocery chain mentioned in this article and when I clicked on them  the links were mysteriously missing. I contacted the blogger to ask where she had gotten her info as the links she was directing people to had not appeared. She was as perplexed as I was as they had been working earlier.

Today I opened my email only to find that the FDA is making a recall on Iams puppy food of the below products . The other blogger had also listed cat food in the recall and although I see nothing yet on cats I would suspect there may be problems there as well that maybe the FDA has not yet recognized, so beware if you own cats.

This recall is by Procter & Gamble which you can find here http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm282506.htm



Aflatoxin is a mold found in  grains which if not caught goes into dog foods that use grains. There are grain free dog foods which you may want to consider as Aflatoxin is a fairly common reason for recall (unlike the melamine recall we had a few years ago).

With aflatoxin toxicity you will find symptoms of lethargy, vomiting, anorexia , melena and hematemesiss (blood in stool) and at time death occurs before clinical signs are noted.

Will keep you posted if more Iams is recalled, but when in doubt throw it out!


Name
Version
Code Date
UPC Code
Iams ProActive Health Smart Puppy dry dog food with Use By or Expiration Dates of February 5 or February 6, 2013
7.0 lb bag
12784177I6
1901402305
8.0 lb bag
12794177D2
12794177D3
1901410208
17.5 lb bag
12794177K1
12794177K2
1901401848






Saturday, October 22, 2011

In memory of Chance a store has opened!



In Chance's memory I have started a little shop on Cafe Press and I hope to get many pics up of not only Chance but also his family and the Therapy dog friends we have made over the years.
Since I am just starting out I know not what I do, yet! But hopefully that will soon be under control! So give me some time to upload more stuff over the coming weeks. I hope to capture  many  beautiful breeds and mutts alike from our dog club as long as the owners agree.  If you have a pic of your pooch you would like me to consider putting up  send it over!
  Here is the cafe Press site   http://www.cafepress.com/bitsofchance

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Chance ~ Feb 3, 2003~ Oct.11, 2011~ Rest peacefully ~







There are few words to describe the loss of a best friend, a friend who loved you so much that when you walked into a room their eyes were only for you.  One who brought such joy and peace to those who had no family or friends in their lives to surround them. One who did not discriminate against disabilities,  elderly, youth, color or creed and one who could teach us all how to see the world.  



My friend, when you came to me, limp, lifeless, and breathless, I pleaded with God to help me save you and bargained with the promise that if he would help me save this small precious being, a life that we both fought so hard for, that you would not be just another family dog, but a dog with a stronger purpose.



My friend, you may have come into this world breathless but you ended up being a breath of fresh air to all who came in contact with you. You brought smiles to those who were lonely or ill or just needed a hug and you gave us all inner peace with your calmness. You touched so many lives in different ways and even at the end when you thought I did not notice as I sat stroking you, I saw your tongue brush the doctor’s cheek as the he leaned over you, your last unselfishness act given to a stranger.  And as you lay on the cool tiled floor with just the two of us in the room, I saw your head tilt to hear me whisper the song I sang so many times to you as a baby. “Hush little puppy don’t you cry…”



While this pain in my heart feels suffocating and overwhelming, I know you achieved what you were put on this earth to do, that we kept our promise to God, and although I knew all along that I could not keep you with me forever, I had hoped some miracle would keep you in my life a little longer than normal.  

 

Rest peacefully Chance my friend, there will never be another one like you.



                                                                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 



To my family, friends, and subscribers, I thank you for your kind thoughts and gentle words. This was a devastating blow and one that will take much time for me to get through, so I hope you are not offended when I choose not to talk about it or when I don’t pick up the phone as I know your hearts are well meaning. Grief is an individual thing no matter who or how the loss.   Know that Chance was a precious gift given to me for a purpose, a purpose that he fulfilled with ease and I was lucky to be the tool in his life. He had a big heart but one that in the end weakened and took him from us. I will remember and cherish every moment I had with him as I know you will do the same.  

A brief look into chance’s life:    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32JovcuhfnE  


Thursday, October 6, 2011

It Flooded Our Towns But Not Our Hearts!

Water Street Danville

Tree house in Riverside

10th Street Bloomsburg

SART Shelter
Shelter is closing~Coordinator Larry Smith loads food given
 by the Red Cross. He is taking it to the Espy
Fire hall for residents.

Some of our team members. Erin Akerman (seated) & Linda Anderson (blue shirt) who stayed day and night with her grandaughter Samantha never going home while the shelter was open. I wonder what her dreams were about when she could finally relax in her own bed! Ruff, ruff! Great Job Team!






“This could be the worst possible flooding since Hurricane Agnes in 1972.” Said a voice from the TV. “Due to a stalled front to the left of us, Tropical Storm Lee to the right of us and this weather pattern of rain already over us, you might see the equivalent of three months worth of rain in three days or less. The stream and river levels will continue to rise and overflow their banks causing flash flooding.”   



Wednesday Sept 7, 2011 ~12:30 PM: A forwarded email message is sent via our SART Coordinator from the EMA for our County Animal Response Team to be prepared to open a shelter.



Wednesday Sept 7, 2011 ~8 PM: My work supervisor sends a message that we are closed Thursday.



Thursday Sept 8, 2011, ~9 AM :  I drove to the banks of the Susquehanna river to watch its anger as it  quickly rose carrying with it anything that lay in its path. People were mulling about on the Danville /Riverside Bridge snapping picture after picture. I parked my car in the lot of the English Garden Boutique near the foot of the bridge and headed toward the bridge’s walkway to do the same with my own camera. The river has not yet caused as much damage as we fear it will in just another 24 hours but pictures of minimal damage are already spreading on Face Book like wild fire.



I walked over the bridge toward the Danville tunnel as the muddy water continued to rise and churn just forty feet at the underside of the bridge’s edge. Debris of trees, tires, barrels, and telephone poles made a safe passage under the bridge and moved swiftly down the river. When I reached the tunnel I climbed to the top and took pictures of both the river and of the levy system Danville had put into place years ago. This man made dam of cement blocks and sandbags closed off one side of Route 11 Danville from the other side of Route 11. We are a town closed in now, roads are blocked, and there is little traffic aside from fire trucks, police cars and emergency vehicles.  Volunteers along  the street were packing more sand bags making an assembly line as they tossed the bags from one to another, looking very organized and calm in the midst of possible tragedy.  



I walked down to the end of Mill Street in Danville to River Park. River Park was born when the old bridge was dismembered and a new one erected several years back. The park is maintained by volunteers who live in the Danville and Riverside area and it sits just on the edge of the Susquehanna River. I mingled with other town folk and there was a feel of nervous anticipation in the air. There was caution tape blocking off part of the park which had already been compromised by the river. After snapping a few pictures I walked over to Water Street. Water Street sits near the edge of the Susquehanna and has not yet been totally evacuated but is in the path of the raging river and will probably be evacuated over the next 24 hours.  Other streets further up the Susquehanna River in Danville have been evacuated as the river’s edge had started to make its way over the banks. As I stood near these homes I realized they too will soon be barren. A wooden bench with stone anchors has lost it’s glean as it sits where it has been for years, but now it is halfway under water.



As I looked at the people gathered nearby I saw among them a young familiar face, then another face I recognized emerged from a garage. These brothers had gone to the early educational center where I work. I then see their parents whose home is less than 80 feet of the swollen river and they are watching, hoping, praying that it comes up no further.  Next to the children there is an old tree which harbors a very frightened groundhog who is burying his face into the tree’s trunk hoping the humans around him will do him no harm. On just the other side of that tree trunk under a structure of sticks and leaves sits a mouse and a mole. The children have placed this makeshift home atop of them hoping to avert the river’s swallow.  





Thursday Sept 8, 2011, ~ 2 PM:  Five hours have passed from my first morning’s journey to the river’s edge and I heard that Route 80 is closed from the Buckhorn exit to the Danville exit due to flooding. This main artery’s closing is a first around here, as it has never been closed due to flooding. The river’s statement means business. I strolled down the same streets I did earlier in the morning and snapped a few more pictures. The river’s rise gave way to nothing as the continued onslaught of tree trunks and other debris moved swiftly through the small rapids above the water. The undertow looked immense.  



Upon my return home my phone was ringing.



“Hello?” I ask. I am wondering who is on the other end of the phone, although there is a feeling in the pit of my stomach, anticipating what this call will bring.



“Sally?” Amanda asks. Amanda is the Co-Coordinator of our County Animal Response Team (CART). “The EMA wants you to open a shelter in Danville.”



“I can’t!” I answered. “The trailer with the equipment is sitting at Annie’s place in Bloomsburg and I heard that Route 80 is closed.”



 There is no passage way for me to secure the equipment that I will need to open a shelter. After many discussions and trainings, what our team thought would never happen, happened. The major artery from our town to the town that housed the trailer of supplies was washed out.  



After a discussion with our Coordinator, I realized the best I could do was open my garage as a temporary shelter. I had a few large crates that could house animals , but most would have to bring their own crates and food.



 My garage which had been set up appropriately for a weekly garage sale since my home is on the market, now needed to be divided into sections for potential dogs, cats, and ill animals. In this the first full week of September the air is still hot and stagnant so to insure some comfort for potential guests I moved every available household fan and portable air conditioner I could manage into the garage. I placed a sign with the SART Logo and the words Animal Shelter at the foot of the driveway as well as on the garage itself.



   Once that was done I found myself back at the river’s edge taking pictures and I made my way toward the groundhog’s sanctuary to see if he has been harmed by the water. This time though the scene was a bit different, a bit more surreal as the National Guard has suddenly been stationed at the end of the road. The groundhog is wet but safe with a piece of bread in front of him  and the families I left earlier this morning are still standing outside watching the river which is now just a few feet from their home.



Walking back over the bridge to  Ave D &H in Riverside where my car is parked I came across a young lady wrapped in a beach towel, her long blonde hair was wet and tied back in a pony tail. I was standing in front of a quaint little house snapping pictures of a swimming pool that is crystal clear blue but surrounded by muddy river waters.



“Is this your house?” I asked.

“No.” she answered. “It’s my aunt’s house. I just moved back in August and my aunt is afraid she will lose her pool in this flood so she asked me to come over for one last swim. She loves her pool.”

“Does your Aunt have any pets?” I asked her.

“She has a cat.” The girl answered.

 I went on to explain who I was and offered my garage as a shelter to the cat if needed.  

“Thank you.” She replied. “I’ll let her know.”







Friday Sept 9, 2011~ 8:15 AM: I had heard all day Thursday that the river would crest about 8 AM Friday morning so again I drove to the river’s edge parked my car and started the walk down Ave D & H. My camera’s eye snapped away as I could not believe how high the river had risen. The lady’s pool which granted her one last swim just the day before was indeed gone and her garage was underwater as well. All that remained around the pool was a white fencing and garden trellis which still stood proudly holding itself up atop the muddy water.



The gentleman on the corner of the bridge whose home suffers with every flood was now fighting furiously to pump out the water that had flowed into his home, back out into the muddy river where it belonged. He did not seem defeated yet as he stood talking to a friend or relative, their backs to onlookers. He has been through this so many times, but I do not believe to this extent.



I put my camera away and headed back to my car as shortly I was to meet with personal from the EMA to go on a call. It was at this time that I found out that the river had not crested at 8 AM as previously announced, but was expected to crest at 2 PM! I could not fathom how much higher it could possibly go.



I made it back from the call and to the river’s edge just at crest time and it was indeed astounding. The water seemed to be churning around the underbelly of the bridge like it was getting ready to swallow it whole.



And then it hit me, this is not just a scene from an awful movie; this river has affected my friends, my neighbors, my co workers.  I began to wonder how do they stay so strong, how do they laugh, how do they get through a day of work, how do they get through the long nights, how do they hold onto their faith and get up everyday to face it again. And I wondered who will help them and for how long will they get that help.
 This is not something I would ever want to see again in this little part of my world.
As for the little groundhog I did not go back to see him as I feared he would be gone, unable to protect himself from the river’s grasp any longer.  I’d like to think he made his way to safety.

By Saturday Sept. 10, 2011, Route 80 was again open. The passageway on route 11 however remained closed for several days.

Sunday Sept 11, 2011 ~ 9:00 AM 

For all Americans, September 11th has a special meaning, a horrific memory of Al-Qaida’s attack on several prominent buildings, specifically the Twin Towers, and the Pentagon, killing thousands of innocent people for the simple reason that they hate America. So while a nation came together in tears and remembrance, in bravery, and in compassion, many in PA and other states were still dealing with the evacuation of their homes and the raging rivers.   

“Go .05 miles then make right.”
“Recalculating.”
“Go 500 feet, then make right”.
“Recalculating.”

By this time my GPS was clearly yelling at me and had no idea where I was headed, but I knew that the route it wanted me to take would be blocked with barricades, police, or the National Guard. 

“Go 2.3 miles then make right on Route 80.”  

That was it! The road to my final destination which was Annie’s Place at the Bloomsburg University just off Lightstreet Road.  Route 80 was the only way to get to our SART shelter from Danville. 


Ugh, just a few short weeks ago we were hit with Hurricane Irene and an earthquake which was felt in several states from Virginia to NY, an occurrence I have never been through, either currently living in PA or having grown up on Long Island NY. When I was a youngin’ it was said by my teacher that Long Island would never feel the effects of an earthquake because it is just a mass of rocks.
            There seem to be many occurrences or coincidences lately that should not be taking place, yet they are!


Since joining the State Animal Response Team (SART) in 2005, this is the first time officially that the Emergency Management Agency had called upon our specific County for shelter to aide in a brutal beating from a natural disaster. We had been put on notice a couple of times in the past but nothing ever came close to this pounding. It was so wide spread that many of our own members spanning two counties were dealing with their own homes and the pumping out of muddy water or the bringing up of their life’s possessions to higher ground.


As a group, our county SART (Columbia/ Montour) had been through much training, had many meetings and participated in events to raise public awareness of who we were and what our purpose was.  But was it enough?


The public over the years began to realize that we were not a shelter to find homes for their unwanted pets but a shelter called out only by our county EMA to house pets during a disaster. Yet like most volunteer organizations, over the years people take an interest and join, but when nothing happens they begin to lose interest and new volunteers are sought out. 

This pounding by the Susquehanna River hit an already sparse team square in the stomach with a punch so hard it sometimes left us breathless.  That being said, with the few who were able to remain I have to say I am very proud of the way they performed. We have regulars in our group that I call the “Core Team” who attend every meeting and shelter training to ready themselves for just such an occasion and it was these core people and the leadership of our Coordinator and Co-coordinator that made everything run so smoothly.   To all of them I take off my hat for a job well done!

As well, let me not forget the public volunteers especially from the Bloomsburg University. If not for them we may have gotten a bit bogged down or overwhelmed. Their spirit was always bright and cheery to do such daunting tasks as to clean a pen or walk a dog. They came back four and five times a day to help with the animals and they always came in with smiles and a fresh outlook. Many became foster parents to these animals they cared for daily when the shelter had to close and the owners were not yet ready or capable to bring their pet’s home.  I give a big “Four Paws Up, Way Up” to this group of caring dedicated people as well.  I am hoping they will sign on and become lasting members of our team.  www.pasart.us
A big thank you also to the Red Cross for keeping the food coming, not only for the people but also the animals!

 I will be forever amazed at the public who came together for their fellow townspeople, and I am amazed at the people who are still dealing with the aftermath that are standing strong and undivided.  It is said that people are given only what they are able to carry on their shoulders and I find the people who are still carrying this load are strong in spirit and united, and on the occasion when the load gets too heavy and one may fall, the others are there to pick them back up.

This blog article is not just about a horrible disaster or the tragedies as seen both in the moment and in the aftermath, it is about people who worked with what little they had to make the task run as smoothly as possible and to help each other during disastrous times. Surely this disaster will be remembered by many, but let it not be remembered for the destruction of property,  let it be remembered for the humanity that rose above the mighty Susquehanna River. 

At my youtube site you will find some of the pictures taken by not only myself but others all connected as a community.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSLk0qEbrgI








Sunday, September 25, 2011

Thundershirts for dogs, do they work?






Marjean's dog Rosie

Marjean's dog Punkin

Thunder phobia  is always an interesting topic and I have to say that my dogs seem to handle thunder a bit differently than the dogs whose owners send in questions. My guys become irritated and bark which is annoying, and if I let them out they will continue to bark and run the yard, exactly what I don’t want. I may be wrong, but I don’t see them as fearing the thunderstorm but more like they are annoyed at it. If they are ignored or given commands they stop acting out and eventually settle down. But in case I am wrong and this is another form anxiety type quirk, going on a friend’s recommendation I have ordered a Thundershirt for Crazy Benny. After all he’s the one in the group that gets my other dogs all riled up.     



With thunder fear I equate the dog’s fear as humans perceive it, such as hiding or shaking which can be seen in many dogs with thunder phobia.  I wrote about this subject a while back but have never had the pleasure of a dog that just wanted to jump into a bathtub and hide quietly upon the arrival of a storm. To me that would be a welcome site over the crazy barking, but I am happy to admit there have been some peaceful middle of the night thunderstorms without a peep from Bentley, but it is a continuous process.  I notice he’ll be really good if I allow him to sleep in the bed with me, but surely that is a bad habit to get him into.



When people complain that their dog acts terrified, I suspect they are talking about the shaking, hiding, and pacing, a fear of either the sound or the static in the air.

I do believe that as humans we foster the behavior by acknowledging it with pets or soft words and make it worse over time, but when it becomes worse what do you do about it?



Melatonin or Benadryl can take away some of the nervousness and are better than the meds prescribed by your vet only because with the prescribed meds you have to give them to your dog one hour before a storm’s arrival and basically it’s too late, your dog already knows its coming and has gotten too worked up for them to take notice of that tiny tranquilizer.



Enter the Thundershirt. I had heard about these before and I heard both good and not so good. The Thundershirt is designed to put continuous deep pressure on the nervous system of the dog.
After giving it some thought, I equate it similar to giving a deep pressure massage to an autistic child who is suddenly overwhelmed and beginning to stress out. Temple Grandin had cows being soothed in this similar manner many years ago, so why not give it a try?



 The people who swear by them really stand by them and others say they worked at first then stopped working, which made me wonder why it would work the first few times and then suddenly stop.  Going just by my customer base, I would say that the majority of them look for fast fixes to their dog’s problems and if there is no fast fix, then it is considered not to be working.  With the Thundershirt there are a few steps to take before you just put the shirt on the dog, some may skip those critical steps.



Thankfully I am surrounded by wonderful patient people and associated with a great dog training club, the Susquehanna Trail Dog Training Club, and among us are some superb trainers as well as some very patient owners who know to give things a try before they look for that quick fix. As luck would have it Marjean Krech one of my fellow trainers, happened to buy a couple of the Dog ‘Thundershirts’ as she has two fearful gals herself.  Rosie a Springer Spaniel who is an older gal, been around the block in many situations and Punkin a 9 year old Pekingese.  Quite a breed difference and size difference between them which I like to see when trying a product.



Here is what Marjean had to say about these shirts to me in an email.



“I got the shirt from Thundershirt.com, it was $36 - I searched for a coupon first and got free shipping. It comes with pictured instructions for putting it on, it's very easy. The one thing they don't mention is that after you've had it on your dog, just undo the body wrapping and slip it over their head instead of undoing the chest Velcro also. They tell you to pair it with food by putting really good stuff right on the shirt and letting the dog eat it off. I used chicken. They do warn that you should not only put it on during storms, and at first I did let Punkin wear it for 20 minutes for a couple of times when nothing was going on. But now when she's scared and she sees me with the shirt she gets a big grin on her face (stressful grin?) and comes running for me to put it on. I think she knows it will make her feel better.  Rosie is just sort of a ‘whatever’ type of dog. It calms her during thunderstorms, but usually if the neighbor decides to target shoot, she's behind the couch before I can get it on. She trusts me, too to help her.


One reason I didn't put it on and let them wear it more on a normal day is that it was too hot. They are very nice material, but having a double wrap around their chest and belly would just be too much. The other night when we had thunderstorms during the evening we had 2 floor fans and a ceiling fan in the living room - which also helped with the noise.”



To me, in Marjean’s short paragraph above, I can see the training involved to use the shirt whereas many people looking for the 'Quick Fix' probably did not take the time to train the dog to the shirt or even read the instructions. What they probably did was to put the shirt on when there was a storm approaching and not at any other time, which would explain why the shirt only worked for a short time. When you do that, then the dog associates the shirt with the storms and becomes afraid of the shirt! That was one complaint I did hear via customers, that the dog would run from the owner because it was afraid of the shirt.



From what I  see in the ads, this shirt can also help with many anxieties such as riding in the car, fireworks, staying in strange places such as hotels, kennels etc. It gives you a money back guarantee so you can’t really lose in that situationJ



Read the recommendations of use of the product. If your dog is afraid to go in the car and you only use it for car rides then the fear of not only the car will grow but also fear of the shirt.


Since ordering a Thundershirt for crazy Benny we have not had any storms but I did put it on him a few times to get him used to it, this way I am ready when the time comes, assuming of course I don’t put it in that special spot for easy access then forget where that special spot is!


 As always you need to see your dog as an individual and we know that not every product works the same for every dog, but with this product you get a guarantee so if it does not work you send it back for a refund. I think it’s pretty neat that the company donates the used shirts to shelter dogs. So either way it’s a good investment!


Here are a couple of sites regarding the Thundershirt
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X86nP4HYRbQ&feature=pyv


9. 27 .2011.  update,
 Since receiving my Thundershirt I was lucky enough to get a couple of storms:)  Here is my finding for my own situation.


After hearing a crackle of thunder or two this morning before morning coffee and while Bentley (or as we lovingly call him, crazy Benny) lay sleeping I thought, hmmm, I have to leave for work soon, so I grabbed the Thundershirt  and quickly put it on him.

Many days have passed  since I began to get Bentley used to the Thundershirt  via the instructions. Bentley is also used to wearing dog coats and some of my tee shirts so clothing was not new to him as it is not new to any of my dogs, especially after they have been shaved down.



  Once I got Bentley up from his light slumber and put the Thundershirt on him he almost immediately had the same reaction he had when wearing it on those days when there was no thunder, slightly calm with a bit more panting than normal.  Realizing that leaving the shirt on him while I went to work might not be a great idea given his history of chewing off harnesses; I took the shirt off him and instead tried putting it on Emma who had been out in the yard lying in the rain. Granted Emma had not worn this garb before, but she too is used to wearing tee shirts, sweat shirts and dog jackets that fit snug around the chest and abdomen.  Emma’s reaction of panting was similar to Bentley’s even after she had been in the house long enough to become semi calm. However, while the panting continued she did finally sit down and relax a bit. It’s hard to tell if it was the Thundershirt or the mere fact that my usual training of not acknowledging anxious behaviors at this time was the factor. Maybe it was a combination of both. When I came home from work 3 hours later Emma was lying on the floor with her head in the corner, like she was in a Doggie time out.



 To be fair and honest just  minutes after pulling out of the driveway and heading  down the road toward work, as I listened to the radio forecast heavy downpours and more thunderstorms, I turned the car around and headed back home to  give everyone melatonin which has worked for me in the past. (Yes Deb, this is why I was late to work!) I was not quite ready to depend totally on only the Thundershirt in my absence.



.



My opinion on the Thundershirt?



Though I fully respect that it does work for some dogs without additional treatment such as melatonin or training, I did not really see a huge change in my dogs as the movies suggested. As the day progressed downpours continued, more storms erupted and Emma was as antsy as ever trying to get out of the kitchen barricade, while Bentley whom I had worked the hardest with for the last year, was pretty much the same, giving a bark now and then until I interjected.



As for the make of this product, it is fairly strong and stretchy but I found that the Velcro around the neck grasped and pulled at the hair of Emma so maybe on a breed such as a Newfoundland it may not be that comfortable and extra precaution should be taken when fastening.



I have watched both commercials I listed above on the Thundershirt and I have heard from my fellow trainer who still to this day has success with it.  There’s no dispute that it does work, I am simply stating like every other training tool, it does not work for every dog, but oh how I wish it did because that would be an easy fix to a nation wide problem!



I do take pleasure in the knowledge that I can send it back to the company if I choose to and since I have used it, it may help a pup in a shelter somewhere.



When it comes to training tools I don’t usually say “don’t waste your money”, well, maybe that’s not entirely true as I did say that about ‘Air in a Can’, so to this product I say waste your money because I do believe that phobias in dogs are as different as they are in people and this may be just the fix  you need. There’s nothing to loose! 



As for me, I suspect I just have a bunch of whacky dogs whose quirks I played into over the years so it will take years to “un-Quirk” them!  Only three of the six act like this and to be honest, this behavior with Bentley and storms formed over time. He did not always get riled up like this nor did the girls. This is why as I sit here in my mud splattered nightshirt having just rounded up 3 crazy Newfoundlands from the pouring rain I suspect I played a major role in their dysfunction!

 Oh sure, they always blame the mother! 

If you are interested in seeing how this shirt worked for me check out my youtube video.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Sadly, The Disaster That Made Me Stop and Think

The night before Irene came to town. Makes
you wonder how safe that spider felt!

This is a different type of story than what you might be used to reading on this blog and although I am somewhat stressing the importance of being prepared for a disaster not only for yourself but for your companion animals, it is also a story of awakening, for me, somewhat of a sad awakening really.  



Friday Aug 26, 2011, I was getting ready for the moving sale we would be having on Saturday. I was also preparing for hurricane Irene by stocking up on dog food, barrels of water, and getting copies of shot records for all of my dogs in case they had to go to a shelter. We had never needed to be evacuated from Riverside before but the way Irene was being described on the news made me feel like I was in the Stephen King movie, ‘Storm of the Century’ only it was not snow. Given the recent earthquake felt in PA just days prior to Irene made me think that for sure anything was possible! Better to be prepared to move out with the family pets. Oh, and mother of course! I got candles, batteries, and flashlights out as well as made a list of medications that my hubby, mom, and I take on a daily basis in case we were knocked unconscious suddenly during the storm. Hey, ya never know! It’s not like a tree never fell in this yard before! 



By Saturday, feeling prepared for Irene I set out to get my sale started. Oh sure people coming to the garage sale had to walk around the two huge tubs of water I put aside for dogs, but I was secure in the knowledge that I was prepared for disaster.   



Saturday night the rain started, the wind was blowing but it was not a treacherous wind that you would normally associate with a hurricane, more like a bad thunderstorm wind.



Sunday morning, 5 AM:  I am awakened to sweat rolling off of me in buckets and this was more than the normal nighttime hot flashes!



What? No fan? No Air-conditioning?  But there is a soft light in the bedroom that I would associate with the night light I leave on for the stepping over of dogs during my night sprints to the bathroom. As the fog slowly lifted from my brain I opened my eyes to scour the room. Hmm, the light is coming from a candle! 



Slowly I rise and head for the kitchen to grab that first cup of “slap me silly and wake me up Cup O~Joe.” 



“No power.” I hear hubby say as he lies on the couch looking at the TV that is not working. “It went off at 4:20.”



Hmm, 4:20? How precise!  No power means no Joe!  I stumble back to bed to lie down until my head fully sweeps away the cobwebs.



It’s HOT! My mind screams at me. I am not a person who enjoys the heat, nor do I like the cold, but when you’re cold you can always add more clothes, when you’re hot, well, there’s a limit to what you can take off and not be arrested for! 



 The sun which is hiding beneath the clouds of Irene, is bringing some light to the day’s break and with it a semi cool breeze.



OMG! Open the windows and get some cool air in this house! My mind screams with delight as if it’s a new idea worthy of a Pulitzer Prize!



Whish, whish, whish, whish! Every window shouts as they are sprung upward  as far as they can stretch. Outside, the only sound came from the wind and the rain. Everyone is hunkered down and awaiting the ride that might befall us.



The day is long and illness is making it even longer and more boring. Hubby has already called the electric company about twenty times and cannot get through. Finally we call our neighbor to make sure the power is actually out in the neighborhood and not just at our house. Wally’s World as we used to call our home, has been known to have strange happenings but usually these happenings were after hubby decided to try fixing something or improve things in the home. Like the time he cut all those pesky wires hanging down from the basement rafters. He made it look very neat I must say. He has a knack for organizing things for sure. Too bad those wires were our link to the outside world also known as a telephone line! Yes, it did take a week of no calls before we figured it out!



Sunday was a restful day. The rain had stopped by late afternoon, but my illness lingered and kept me sleeping most of the day. By bedtime, which is about 8 pm for me, through my opened windows I could hear people chatting and laughing in the street. I could hear children giggling and dogs barking! Every now and then my own dogs would chime in and give a bark or two. They too must have noticed the voices coming from outside.





Sadly it was amazing to me. A sound I had not heard in a long, long time! Normally the windows are closed leaving only the hum of the air conditioner and the panting of dogs.   It was nice actually, those sounds, they brought me back to my youth in my hometown where kids stayed out late on summer nights and played on  tree lined streets with  little traffic to worry about. Balls being thrown, bikes doing wheelies, and jump ropes going round and round.



Monday morning came quickly and again I heard awesome sounds coming through my bedroom window. Birds of all kinds were chirping and cooing. Serious things were already happening in the critter’s world while I was just opening my eyes.

Still no power to the house, and it was nice to hear the hustle and bustle of the goings on outside through my bedroom window.



Nature.  So much of it I have missed over the years, but I had to wonder was it only me?  Was everyone else around me up and moving outside while I wedged myself in my home shut in like I was in some airtight cocoon?  



By Monday afternoon, with hurricane Irene having left us no worse for the wear, the power was once again restored. The windows were closed and the hum of the air conditioner again became the familiar sound. I snuggled into my bed turned on the electric blanket to take away my chills as Bentley lay beside me in all his glory that he had been allowed on the bed. He was warm after all, and warmth is what I needed.



At 8 PM, I let the pups out for one last time before bed and as I walked out onto the deck with them, I stood there and listened. I listened for the chatter, the laughter, the kids, the dogs that I had heard so clearly just the night before. I looked around at the houses nearby. All the windows were aglow, and I am sure the hustle and bustle was still going on, only each of us was doing it alone, and to me that is not only very sad but also a sign of the times.



Without power there are no electronic games, computers, televisions, DVDs, or movie streaming. Without power eventually we are forced as a species to come together, just like the birds, the squirrels and the chipmunks that gather in the morning. Without power we become united again as humans, as family, and as neighbors. 



I hope this experience gives many of us pause for thought, brings us together  even if it’s only once a month, a neighborhood meeting, a barbeque, a covered dish, or end of Summer party.   


I wonder how much this experience will change me and those around me. Only time will tell I guess.