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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Bark out the Facts!


Today's awesome fact is...

"Dogs’ sense of hearing is more than ten times more acute than a human’s."

Fact from: http://www.animalsneedhelp.com/2008/04/20/102-interesting-facts-about-dogs/
Pic from: http://www.caninest.com/dog-ear-types/

Bone Appetit!

Today's awesome dog recipe is Red Son's Award Wheat Dog Biscuits!

"Ingredients:
3/4 cup hot water, beef broth or chicken broth
1/3 cup margarine
1/2 cup powdered milk
1/2 teaspoon salt (optional)
1 tbsp minced garlic
1 tbsp parsley flakes
1 egg, beaten
3 cups whole wheat flour

Directions:
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. In large bowl, combine water or broth with margarine. Add powdered milk, salt garlic, parsley and egg. Stir in flour in 1/2 cup increments, mixing well after each addition.
Knead the dough for 3-4 minutes and roll out to 1/2 inch thickness. Cut into desired shapes, place on greased cookie sheet and bake for 50 minutes.

Remove from oven and let dog biscuits cool until dry and hard. (I often leave them in the oven after turning it off.) Makes approx. 1-1/4 pound dry dog biscuits."

Recipe from: http://www.thepoop.com/pooppantry/wheatdogbiscuits.asp
(no pic available)

Monday, January 30, 2012

Crazy Dawgs!


"Hello, hello, it’s a fine morning, isn’t it? But wearing my favorite shirt always puts me in a good mood!"

Pic and quote from: http://critteristic.com/dogs-and-puppies/what-kind-of-face-will-i-make-today/

Sunday, January 29, 2012

New Guinea Singers!


The New Guinea Singing Dog is so cool so why don't you check out some facts about it!

#1. "The NGSD is a small-to-medium-sized dog of fox-like appearance with a wedge-shaped head, pricked ears, obliquely-set triangular eyes, plush coat, and a brushy tail."
#2. "The NGSD is extremely agile and graceful."
#3. "This breed is presented in a completely natural condition with no trimming, even of whiskers."
#4. "The coat is average to long in length. Colors include red or shades of red with or without symmetrical white markings, black and tan. White markings are common, but should not form more than one-third of the body's total color. White markings are permissible only in the following areas and may not form spots or patches on the body: Muzzle, face, neck (may extend onto the shoulders), belly, legs, feet, and tail tip."
#5. "The head is fairly broad and the body duly muscular."
#6. "The hindquarters are lean and the medium-length tail is soft and fluff."
#7. "The New Guinea Singing Dog is not like your average domesticated dog and is not recommended as a house pet for most people as they are closely related to wild dogs."
#8. "If properly socialized, it can be tame enough to tolerate the handling of humans, getting attached to their owners."
#9. "The NGSD's most unique characteristic is its dramatic ability to vary the pitch of its howl. They do not bark repetitively but have a complex vocal behavior including yelps, whines, and single-note howls."
#10. "NGSDs are active, lively, and alert."
#11. "They are constantly exploring everything in their environment, using all five senses, including taste."
#12. "Their incredible structural flexibility allows them to pass their bodies through any opening wide enough to admit their head."
#13. "Their hunting drive is very intense and may overwhelm any training when prey is detected. They use their acute sense of hearing in addition to sight and scent to locate prey."
#14. "Although gentle and affectionate with people they know, they can be aloof with strangers."
#15. "NGSDs can be aggressive toward other dogs, especially of the same gender."
#16. "Its howl has an eerie yet synchronized quality, which gives the breed its name. The howl can be spurred when the dog is disturbed or excited. One tone blends with the next, sending goose bumps up a listener's back. Opera singers have expressed a particular interest in this vocally skillful canine."
#17. "This is a hardy and well-balanced dog. The Singing Dog is similar to the Dingo, although smaller than its near relative. It possesses the erect ears and is a swift hunter with social instincts."
#18. "Unlike the Dingo, the New Guinea female cycles twice a year in captivity."
#19. "This is not a dog for most people. The New Guinea Singing Dog has never been studied in the wild and virtually nothing is known concerning its behavior, social organization or general natural history under free-ranging conditions. In general, New Guinea Singing Dog show all the behaviors described for other Canis species with the exception of the "play bow", typical to most canids but not seen in the New Guinea Singing Dog."
#20. "The captive populations which have been studied were not observed to have form packs. Wild sightings are of single dogs or pairs."
#21. "They have a distinctive howl, and emit a "trill", described as similar to a sound made by the Asiatic Wild Dog."
#22. "As of 2004, there were less than 50 specimens (all highly inbred) in the documented NGSD captive breeding population."
#23. "Height: 14-15 inches (35-38 cm.)"
#24. "Weight: 18-30 pounds (8-14 kg.)'
#25. "The New Guinea Singing Dog is a hardy breed."
#26. "The NGSD is not recommended for most families. They are closely related to wild dogs and are almost extinct. However there are some fanciers who properly socialize this breed and they say, if done right, the New Guinea Singing dog can be a very affectionate dog. The Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney, Australia (along with a few other zoos) have a few of these dogs and are trying to prevent them from becoming totally extinct. It can thrive in cold climates and is versatile and adaptable."
#27. "This breed needs a lot of physical exercise, which includes a daily walk or jog."
#28. "Life Expectancy: About 15-20 years."
#29. "The weather resistant coat of the New Guinea Singing Dog will take care of itself."
#30. "The New Guinea Singing Dog is native to New Guinea. Explorers in the 1800's described the varying popularity of the dogs in the lowland villages of New Guinea. In some they were treated as pets, while in others they were abused. By this century, hybridization with imported dogs had made the native lowland New Guinea Dog almost extinct. However, in the 1950's two pure dogs were captured in the isolated Lavanni Valley in the southern highlands, and eventually sent to Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney, Australia. In the 1970's, another pair was captured in Irian Jaya's Eipomak Valley part of Indonesia. Virtually all Singing Dogs in Europe and North America descended from these pairs. This dingo-type dog is a close relative of ancient dogs that were domesticated from Asian Wolves between 10,000 and 15,000 years ago. The breed acquired its name from its howl, which is an undulating and modulating series of tones that blends into a swelling portamento. The musical quality of the sound is unlike that of any other dog, even the most beautiful voices of the scent hounds. The breed is quite rare in New Guinea today, but can be seen in a number of zoos around the world. Today the New Guinea Singing Dog is kept as pets by some fanciers and is recognized by the UKC, which allows them to compete in competition. Currently the NGSD is classified as a domestic dog subspecies of Canis lupus, Canis lupus dingo."

Info from: http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/newguineasingingdog.htm
Pic from: http://www.free-pet-wallpapers.com/Free-pet-wallpapers/Dog/New-Guinea-singing-dog.html

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Extreme K9s 101!

Today's extreme K9 is Fala President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Scottish Terrier!
(Check out this cool vid too: http://www.whha.org/whha_tours/whitehouse_war/05.swf)

"Fala was born on April 7, 1940, and was given as an early Christmas gift to Roosevelt from Mrs. Augustus G. Kellog of Westport, Connecticut, through Roosevelt's cousin, Margaret "Daisy" Suckley. Asa puppy, Fala was given obedience training by Suckley, who taught him to sit,
roll over, and jump. His original name was
Big Boy; Franklin renamed him Murray the Outlaw of Falahill after John Murray of Falahill, a famous Scottish ancestor. This was later shortened to "Fala".Fala's silver-and-leather collar, engraved with the words "Fala, the White House."
Fala moved into
An MGM film about a typical day in the White House featured Fala. Fala also became an honorary private in the U.S. Army by "contributing" $1 to the war effort for every day of the year and setting an example for others on the home front. During the Battle of the Bulge, American soldiers asked othe White House on November 10, 1940. He spent most of his time there until Roosevelt died and was succeeded by Harry S.
Truman in April 1945. Fala also tr
aveled with Roosevelt to his home (Springwood) in Hyde Park, New York and Warm Springs, Georgia (Roosevelt's favorite spa town).
ne another the name of the President's dog, expecting the answer "Fala," as a supplementary safeguard against German soldiers attempting to infiltrate American ranks.
Fala was often with Roosevelt on the scene of important events;
he traveled on Sacred Cow, the president's airplane,
and the Ferdinand Magellan,
Roosevelt's custom-made
In 1943, Fala was the subject of a short series of political cartoons by Alan Foster entitled "Mr. Fala of the White House." In the 1943 romantic comedy Princess O'Rourke, Fala was played by Whiskers.train car, as well as by ship. Fala was with Roosevelt at the
Atlantic Charter Conference, Quebec, and the meeting with President Manuel Ávila Camacho of Mexico in Monterrey.
At the time, Fala was the second most famous terrier in the U.S. next to Terry, the dog who played Toto in the Wizard Of Oz.
Fala attended Roosevelt's funeral and went to live with the widowed Eleanor Roosevelt at Val-Kill. Roosevelt often mentioned Fala in her newspaper column, "My Day."
"It was Fala, my husband's little dog, who never really readjusted. Once, in 1945, when General Eisenhower came to lay a wreath on Franklin's grave, the gates of the regular driveway were opened and his automobile approached the house accompanied by the wailing of the sirens of a police escort. When Fala heard the sirens, his legs straightened out, his ears pricked up and I knew that he expected to see his master coming down the drive as he had co
me so many times. Later, when we were living in the cottage, Fala always lay near the dining-room door where he could watch both entrances just as he did when his master was there. Franklin would often decide suddenly to go somewhere and Fala had to watch both entrances in order to be ready to spring up and join the party on short notice. Fala accepted me after my husband's death, but I was just someone to put up with until the master should return."
—Eleanor Roosevelt."

Pics from : http://fdr-fala.tumblr.com/
Info from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fala_(dog)

Bark out the Facts!


Today's cool fact is...

"Female dogs bear their young for 60 days before they’re born."

Fact from: http://www.animalsneedhelp.com/2008/04/20/102-interesting-facts-about-dogs/
Pic from: http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_care_of_the_pregnant_dog.html

Monday, January 23, 2012

Bone Appetit!


Today's awesome recipe is the Dachshund Noodle Jumble!

"Ingredients:
2 cups of macaroni
2 cup of mixed vegetables (peas, carrots, corn, etc.)
3/4 to 1 lb. of meat (ground beef or chicken)
3 cups water
1 1/2 tbs. corn starch
2 tbs. olive oil
3 large cloves of garlic (pressed)

Directions:
Add meat and water to pot and boil bring to boil. Let simmer for 15 minutes and strain off meat. Save 1 3/4 cups of boiled stock. Now add water and boil macaroni until it begins to feel soft. Add frozen vegetables and let sit in water for a couple of minutes. Strain noodles/vegetables and turn heat to medium. Dissolve corn starch in 1/4 cup of cold water. Add meat, noodles, vegetable, olive oil, garlic and stock to pot. Stir until mixture begins to bubble. Turn heat to medium low and stir in water/corn starch mixture. Stir on element for a few minutes until it thickens (add more corn starch mixture if contents are still thin). Remove from element and let it cool to room temperature.
Take 1 cup dry measuring cup and scoop out increments onto pieces of plastic wrap. Wrap up and freeze. We will usually thaw one out the night before and split it up into two servings (we add some kibble).

Makes approximately 6 servings."

Recipe from: http://www.thepoop.com/pooppantry/noodlejumble.asp
Pic from: http://www.drycreekminidachshunds.com/

Crazy Dawgs!


"Say that you're sorry!"

Pic and quote from: http://critteristic.com/dogs-and-puppies/say-that-youre-sorry/

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Extreme K9s 101!



Today's extreme K9 is Hachiko!

"Each year on April 8th at a solemn ceremony in Tokyo's Shibuya railroad station, hundreds of dog lovers do homage to the loyalty and devotion of an Akita dog, Hachiko, faithful pet of Dr. Eisaburo Ueno, a professor at Tokyo University.

Hachiko was born in Odate, Japan in November 1923, a white male Akita dog. At the age of two months, he was sent to the home of Professor Ueno of the Agricultural Department of the Tokyo University. The professor's home was in the Shibuya district of Tokyo. The professor commuted to the agricultural department in Komaba and the agricultural experimental station in Nishihara.

Tragedy struck on May 21, 1925, when Dr. Ueno did not return because he had suffered a stroke and died at the university. Hachiko was eighteen months old. The next day and for the next nine years, Hachiko returned to the station and waited for his beloved master before walking home, alone. Nothing and no one could discourage Hachiko from maintaining his nightly vigil. It was not until he followed his master in death, in March l934, that Hachiko failed to appear in his place at the railroad station.

Hachiko was sent to homes of relatives or friends, but he always continued to await his master, who was never to return, at the train station.

The fidelity of Hachiko was known throughout Japan, owing to an article, "Faithful Old Dog Awaits Return of Master Dead for Seven Years" in the October 4, 1933 issue of Aashi Shinbun (Asahi News). Upon his death, newspaper stories led to the suggestion that a statue be erected in the station. Contributions the from the United States and other countries were received. Today, the statue of the Akita, Hachiko, pays silent tribute to the breed's faithfulness and loyalty. A bronze statue of Hachiko was put up at his waiting spot outside the Shibuya railroad station, which is now probably the most popular rendezvous point in Shibuya. Hachiko was mounted and stuffed and is on now on display at the Tokyo Museum of Art."

Article from: http://www.nylana.org/RRACI/hachiko.htm
Statue pic from: http://www.japaneselifestyle.com.au/tokyo/shibuya_station.htm
Hachiko museum pic from: http://route246.sotobori.com/?p=491

Bark out the Facts!


Today's cool fact is...

"Cerberus was the tri-headed dog that guarded the underworld in Greek mythology."

Fact from: http://www.animalsneedhelp.com/2008/04/20/102-interesting-facts-about-dogs/
Pic from: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Herakles/cerberus.html

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Bone Appetit!

Today's awesome dog recipe is Chicken and Kibble!

"Ingredients:
3 to 4 chicken breasts (no bone, no skin)
1 1/2 cups non-sticky rice (we use basmati)

Directions:
Microwave the chicken breasts until fully cooked. Cut into tip of the finger size pieces. Reserve the juice for the first meal. Steam the rice until fully cooked. Combine the chicken and rice. Add a pinch of salt if you didn't already salt the rice. Add any other seasoning your dog likes. (Ours have severe allergies, so we season with Feverfew.)
When ready to feed the dogs, combine half their recommended kibble with sufficient chicken/rice mixture to make up about 1/3 their ration. Make up the rest with fat free cottage cheese.

This makes a very low fat diet, typically less than 10%. You can add vegetable fats or fish oil to improve vitamin absorption, but do be sparing. In the first batch of food, add the cooking juices from the chicken to the kibble.

This recipe makes enough food for several feedings, so don't put the chicken drippings in the storage container: it will only hasten spoilage. Also, don't leave the mix down: it will spoil very fast.

We make a batch of chicken/rice every other day. Our two dogs combined weigh over 200 pounds. If you have one or smaller dogs, you can reduce the recipe. The vets say they have never seen healthier dogs."

Recipe from: http://www.thepoop.com/pooppantry/chickenandkibble.asp
(sorry no pic available)

Monday, January 16, 2012

Crazy Dawgs!


"Dog, meet bird."

Pic from: http://critteristic.com/dogs-and-puppies/a-nose-to-beak-encounter/

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Extreme K9s 101!


Today's extreme K9s today are the pooches who find true love and forever hold their peace.

"Flowers: $1,000. Satin bridal gown: $500. "Pup cakes:" $100. Watching two dogs get "married" at a fancy wedding? Priceless. At least that's what some owners think when they cough up major cash for a pet wedding. "It's a way to honor the puppy love and have fun," says pet party planner Alma Rose Middleton, who has "married" dogs such as Boo Boo and Mimi after they "feel in love" at a birthday party. The cost of a to-drool-for wedding? Up to $8,000!"

Article from: National Geographic Kids Aug. 2009 issue, p.25
Pic from: http://www.doglovergiftbaskets.com/page/15814196

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Bark out the Facts!


Today's awesome fact is...

"Female wolves have been known to travel great distances to regurgitate full meals for their hungry pups."

Fact from: http://www.animalsneedhelp.com/2008/04/20/102-interesting-facts-about-dogs/
Pic from: http://www.123rf.com/photo_9030600_female-wolf-with-pup.html

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Bone Appetit!


Today's awesome dog recipe are Soft Banana Strips!

"Ingredients:
1 egg
1c fast-cook oats
1/2 banana
1/3c milk
1/2c all-purpose flour
1/8c rice.

Directions:
Squash bananas, and beat the egg. then spread evenly on a plate.
Next, heat in microwave for 3 and 1/2 minutes. when done, let them cool.
Then cut and serve."

Recipe from: http://www.thepoop.com/pooppantry/softbananastrips.asp
Pic from: http://media.photobucket.com/image/dog%20soft%20banana%20strips/mouseeyuns/dog%20treats/SoftBananaStrips2.jpg

Monday, January 9, 2012

Crazy Dawgs!


"What up."

Pic from: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2040461/Boo-Pomeranian-Worlds-cutest-dog-millions-Facebook-fans-book.html

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Extreme K9s 101!



Today's extreme K9 is a 30-foot-tall beagle known as Sweet Willy!

"Where: Cottonwood, Idaho
How Much: 92$ a night
This doghouse isn't just for the family pet. Sweet Willy is a 30-foot-tall beagle with guest rooms in his belly. Climb the wooden stairs behind his hint leg to enter the door to his side. You can relax in the main bedroom, go up a few steps to the loft in Willy's head, or hang out inside his nose. Gotta "go?" Although you have a full private bathroom in your quarters, there's also a toilet in the 12-foot-tail fire hydrant outside."

Article from: National Geographic Kids Feb. 2010 issue, p.30
Pic from: http://www.dogbarkparkinn.com/

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Bark out the Facts!


Today's awesome fact is...

"Dogs are all direct descendants of wolves."

Fact from: http://www.animalsneedhelp.com/2008/04/20/102-interesting-facts-about-dogs/
Pic from: http://www.nwcreation.net/dogsandwolves.html

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Bone Appetit!

Today's awesome dog recipe are Woofys!

"Ingredients:
1/2 cup milk
1 egg
2 spoons of penutbutter
a dash of water
a dash of salt
1 1/4 cup flour

Directions:
Mix the egg, peanutbutter, water, and the milk in to a large bowl.
Then pour the flour and salt in.
Stirr well and heat the oven to 350'F. ENJOY!"

Recipe from: http://www.thepoop.com/pooppantry/woofys.asp
(Sorry no image!)