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The Dog Blog
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The Story Of Odie The Pekinese
Odie came to me on an odd day, one of those rainy, grey days, when the only thing you want to do is stay at home, listen to good music, watch the fire roaring in the fireplace, hold a hot cup of punch in your hands and feel sorry for yourself. Odie, an ugly duckling of a Pekinese, was awaiting his turn on death row. A twist of fate meant Odie survived his death sentence and, one year later, he had turned into a beautiful wolf.
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Cody and the Chicken
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Patchwork Pups - do we need 'breed'?
We don’t have a pack of dogs – we have a patchwork.
For me there is no such thing as ‘What breed?’ – partly because it takes so long for me to describe the various mixes we own, but also it makes me feel uncomfortable.
By talking about breed, I am somehow defining our dogs in a way I would never do with any other living creature. Let’s use our moggy as an example. Our cat is ‘Button’. He’s just himself (as any cat owner knows, very much himself!). He has his own way, his likes and dislikes. He’s black and white, and sleek, and fit. He leaves Hannibal Lecter-style demonstrations on our front lawn that would be worthy of any modern art installation, leaving you queasy and just a little bit intrigued all at once.
So, I don’t define him as a breed, and it’s the same with my dogs.
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Filming Fido – How to get the shots you need and want
This is the second installment for this series Filming Fido.
I am not a professional photographer or have any legitimate experience with filming or making films. In fact I know so little about it from an actual schooling or practical stand point that I should not even be allowed to write about it. Nonetheless here I go. I mean hell that never stopped a dog trainer before from speaking about things they perhaps did not know all too much about.
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Everyone Benefits from Shelter Play Groups
One of the barriers to improving the welfare of animals in shelters is a lack of resources. This can mean a lack of volunteers, staff, funds or space. For every idea that a shelter has for improving their program there is a list of required resources to make it happen.
Often, this is the main reason that the idea of starting a play group program is put on the back burner. What a lot of people might not be able to see, however, is that the resources put into a shelter play group program can actually result in an increase of overall resources if it’s done right.
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