Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Canadian Pet Essentials.com - Indoor Dog Potty, Cat Products Toronto

Canadian Pet Essentials.com - Indoor Dog Potty, Cat Products Toronto . We also carry UgoDog Indoor Potty Products and SmartCat Cat Products plus a great line of other quailoty brand names PetSafe, Innotek, Omega Paw, Smart Cat, Duncraft, KittyWalk, Drinkwell, and WizDog.So when looking for that Indoor potty for your dog or SmartCat Cat Products give us a shout in Toronto.To find out more: www.shopintoronto.com

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Monday, December 12, 2011

Toy Poodles - When Barking is Too Much

!±8± Toy Poodles - When Barking is Too Much

Smallest among other Poodle varieties, Toy Poodles are said to be one of the most trainable breeds. Their sensitive yet pleasant, happy and lively personality is what makes them great household pets. They are eager to please people and good with children as well as other dogs and pets. As mentioned, they are highly trainable dogs because of their remarkable intelligent. A person will definitely enjoy having a Toy Poodle around.

Not all seemingly perfect things are in fact perfect. Toy Poodles have their own share of the so-called downside. An untrained Toy Poodle may tend to bark a lot. Barking is a natural behavior of dogs. It is their way of warning their masters of what they perceive as danger. As natural watchdogs, it is expected that they will be barking at some things from time to time. However, barking is not normal anymore when your pet is barking too much, too loudly or at wrong times that it annoys your neighbor living across your house.

The first step to address this problem is to determine what triggers them to bark too much or too loudly. One major reason for this behavior is improper confinement. Leaving a dog alone in a locked room especially without toys, leaving a dog in a dog crate for too long or enclosing a dog in an area unprotected from elements are some examples of improper confinement. A responsible dog owner should know these things. Problems such as loneliness, boredom, fear, playfulness and even separation anxiety can also cause excessive barking.

Keep an eye on your dog's barking. What time of the day or season of the year does the problem takes place? Is it raining or are there thunder and lightning? Are you in the car to see the vet? Is there any strange person or thing or other animal? Has your dog been barking since it was a puppy? Does the barking took place when you're not around and he is left alone in a locked room? These are just some of the questions you need to ask to determine the underlying factors of this dilemma.

If found out that the reason is improper confinement or inappropriate shelter, provide a comfortable place for your dog. It is important that this place can provide warmth during winter and keeps him cool during summer. If this behavior occurs only when you are away, teach your dog to stay home alone. Try to leave the radio on and leave lots of interesting toys to keep his intelligent mind working. Take time to play or walk with your dog. This will relax tense muscles at the same time give your dog something else to think about.


Toy Poodles - When Barking is Too Much

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Friday, December 9, 2011

Help Me Find My Dog

!±8± Help Me Find My Dog

Now, before we go too much farther, let me suggest that before this tragedy occurs, you be sure you have identification information on your dog in the form of ID tags, and that you have a good picture of your dog in your home readily available to share with others. You may not feel you need tags on your dog, but statistics show that a dog with tags is more apt to be helped than one considered "just a stray". The tags make the dog "lost".

Besides pet ID-tags, microchipping helps ensure that Dog (substitute Fido, Fifi, your dog's name) makes it home to you.

Keep a contact list for emergencies by your phone, and perhaps on a card in your wallet. This needs to list important contacts and their phone numbers. Include your Veterinarian, the local animal shelter, breed rescue group, local law enforcement and/or animal control, and so forth.

What you do in the first few minutes after you discover that your dog has been stolen or is lost, may help you get your best friend back.

First, check the house, the yard, your garage, and any place that Dog may have gotten within the confines of the immediate area. This means looking in closets, under beds, behind the entertainment center if it does not fit snugly against the wall. Leave no area unexamined. Sometimes that "lost" baby is just sleeping really soundly in an unlikely place like under the bottom bookshelf in a very narrow space. Dog may have found a spot behind the floor-length curtains that offers a sense of privacy.

After you have determined that Dog truly is not on the premises, reach out to all of your immediate neighbors. Did they happen to see Dog? This is a time I highly recommend enlisting the help or your neighbors and their children if they are willing. Call or visit all the people in the area. Leave your name, number, and a picture of the dog. You might quickly add that picture of Dog on to a business card you print on the computer with your name, contact number (home and cell), and address. Hand the cards out to the neighbors as you go. Ask each for help.

For your safety, please do not go alone. Go by twos or more. Remember the grade school rule of buddies? This is a good idea here also. Help each other and ask if anyone saw anything different or unusual in the area. Dog may have followed someone out of the yard if the gate became unlatched. Who was there?

While you are out, carry a squeaky toy and Dog's favorite treats. Call Dog. Stop and listen often to try to hear Dog. If Dog knows about dog whistles, use one. Use a flashlight to look in culverts, holes, under porches, and places that are not well lit. Keep your safety in mind also. You can not help Dog if something happens to you.

You or someone else needs to stop and call your veterinarian. Remember that list of important contacts. Use it now.

Call your veterinarian. Call the local animal shelter. If you have a pure-bred dog, call the breed rescue group in your area; if you adopted through a rescue group, be sure to alert them and solicit their help. Enlist the help of the local shelter staff to watch for Dog. Call the other area veterinarians, pet groomers, feed stores, your local radio station if they do public service type announcements of lost pets, and just about anyone else you think might be able to help.

Get up flyers as soon as possible. Post these in a 3-mile radius from where Dog was lost right away so that you are ahead of Dog and he/she may be spotted and saved for you. Be sure to include a description along with a good picture of Dog. Put on your phone number(s). Use neon poster board backing and water-proof ink or markers. Make lettering big enough to be read from a passing car. Put posters in sheet protectors so they last longer in wet weather; tape shut.

Often pet groomers, pet supply and feed stores are good sources of help. Post flyers with them. Let them know Dog is lost and ask them to help be on the alert.

Take flyers to the animal shelter, your animal control office, everyone that is involved with animals. This includes the 4-H dog leaders, shelters, area dog trainers. Again, anyone you can contact that might help is a good resource in your quest to get Dog back home again. You can put signs on your car and park so people see the signs with the information on Dog.

Keep in contact with your neighbors and those at shelters, your veterinarian, your groomer and so forth. Personally go to the local animal shelters or pounds and look for Dog. Sometimes people do not "see" what is before them and may miss that Dog just came in through the doors.

Do not give up. Go to the Internet for more help. Use your browser to search for "lost pet". Put out the information on Dog on the sites you find. Look through the found sections for information that might be about Dog. Keep your listings current. There is an "Amber Alert for Pets" that you may find with your browser. They will help you look for Dog. Use the "Find Toto" or "K9Alert". Get the information out there. Some sites will ask for a nominal registration fee. Some are free. Whatever you do, the more information you get out there to find Dog, the more likely you are to get Dog back.

Again, do not give up. Be proactive and keep in touch with those previously "touched".

When you find Dog, remember to thank everyone who helped you and remove all the flyers posted. Let your veterinarian, the shelter, the animal control staff and others know that Dog has been found. Again, thank them for helping.

This is a lot to digest, and it is only the tip of the information available on what you should do if your pet is lost or stolen. Use a little time to search the Internet before you need to know the information and procedures.

Now, to some things that we hope you never need.

Take some current pictures of Dog for identification purposes. Get good, clear shots that will help others be able to identify Dog in a crisis. Most family snapshots do not make Dog stand out from all the other similar family pets. Show Dog's special features and keep the background simple, so Dog is the full focus of the picture. Try taking a "head" shot and a "side" shot so that you have two good views of Dog and show any special markings.

Update the ID-tags on Dog's collar. Be sure that current phone numbers are on the tags. If you travel, put where you are on a temporary tag so that Dog still has a chance to come back to you.

Talk to your veterinarian about microchip implants and tattoos. These are good ways to help Dog get back home after any misadventures.

Go hug Dog and have a safe, wonderful life together.


Help Me Find My Dog

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Cardiacs - Faster Than Snakes with a Ball and a Chain

The reason for buying "Cardiacs Greatest Hits" ! This was the only tune exclusive to that compilation, you won't find it anywhere else. BTW, it's a beautiful song, and here's the ltrics (thanks Mark!) I am about to bust all my gut to find out what you find in Jumping over bushes howling like a dog wolf at moon time And did they hurt him 'till he got mean mad? It's just like people. So, we're marking up our land with 'x's But look out, here comes cowboy 'o' About a mile of all of us now, dinosaurs and giants. Laying down a-shivering. Lonesome on the ground. Is that belt too tight for it to spurt? Missing collar and ID to help he find it. 'Hello doc, please mend my body, mend my seam' On the ground a-shivering and scared One of the ships hanging in mid air like it was lost And nobody cared. Oh how he died blubbing and whimpering and all Shivering cold and was scared Just like he was lost and nobody cared. Jump he over, bust all gut, all flood lit like I don't know It being one of the biggest doses of Holy Spirit I ever seen And did they hurt him 'till he got mean mad It's just like people. So, we're marking up our land with 'x's But look out, here comes cowboy 'o' Roll 'em Rawhide! Brand 'em in the eye! Alien there. So what if it dies. Y'ain't ever gonna see it again! Hang in air oh far too slow I am faster than snakes with a ball and a chain Faster than snakes with a ball and a chain Faster than snakes with a ball and a chain Faster than snakes with a ball and a chain Your ...

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Friday, November 18, 2011

dog training sit pt3

bit.ly the 3rd of our dog training sit videos click the link above for more free dog training tips

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Saturday, November 12, 2011

Havahart Wireless Radial Shaped Dog Fence System

!±8±Havahart Wireless Radial Shaped Dog Fence System

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Saturday, November 5, 2011

Dog Bark Collar - Uses of Electronic Dog Training Collars

!±8± Dog Bark Collar - Uses of Electronic Dog Training Collars

The Cruelty Myth

There is much evidence in the professional dog training world that bark collars and other types of electronic dog collars offer a much faster and reliable method for gaining the desired results from your dog. Some people may still have the misconception that there is something cruel or inhumane about the electric collars, but this is actually not the case.

Electronic dog collars have come a long way from the early days of training technology, and are not to be confused with "shock collars", which didn't have a very wide range and didn't have any variability in the strength of the pulse that was administered or the duration. With today's modern training systems, this is no longer the case.

There is no evidence at all that there are any adverse effects for the dogs, be it physically, mentally or neurologically.

Barking Control Systems

These no-bark collars are designed with the same reliable electronics found in the popular hunting training collars.

Today's electronic collars come in several varieties, are not nearly as bulky and awkward as early models were, and are ideal for safely and humanely training any dog to stop excessive barking, Today's collars are flexible enough that you can find the type and level of stimulation that works best for your dog in any training situation.

Dogs with excessive barking are a hindrance to neighbors, visitors, as well as family members. Correcting this bad behavior quickly and humanely is the best thing to do. Electric barking collars offer just the solution for your barking problem.

Hunting and Gun Dogs

In the case of hunting or "gun dogs", there is the added benefit of having a remote control for your electronic collar. When you are in the field, there will always be distance between yourself and your dog, so the ability to correct behavior from a distance is important and useful.

Electronic dog collars are capable of transmitting to a range from a quarter of a mile up to two miles, depending on the type you choose to buy. The collar basically works by a battery located within the collar that emits an electronic pulse, carried to the dog by small prongs or nodes inside the collar, and today's models give a wide variety of pulse intensity and duration.

Many electronic dog collars are designed for the outdoor enthusiast and hunter, and are made to withstand the abuse that a rambunctious four legged friend can give it, so they are made for durability. Many models of collars are made to be waterproof, as well as their transmitters to increase their reliability while hunting in the field.

Some electronic collars come with the capability to train more than one dog on one system, and both of these features would be attractive to hunters.

Types and Uses for Dog Training Collars

Some models come with beepers, which use modern radio tracking and cell phone technology to allow you to keep track of the location of your dog.

Some models come with bird launchers; most models will come with a wide range of stimulation so that the hunter or trainer can deliver a very light "nick" to stronger pulses for more stubborn or important situations at will.

Many models of electronic dog collars also come with the ability to either deliver one short nick to more constant stimulation depending upon the need, and this is decided by the trainer and administered from the remote transmitter.

There are even some models of electronic collars that are made especially for training dogs and only emit a vibration without electronic pulses, and other models that can deliver a spray of something the dog really doesn't enjoy such as citronella in order to correct behavior and again, all delivered from the hand held transmitter, and can be sent over a wide range of distance.

Essentially what you end up with from an electronic dog collar is the ability to quickly and effectively communicate your desires and commands to your dog in a way that you can easily manage and ultimately, a well behaved dog, and a well trained hunting companion.


Dog Bark Collar - Uses of Electronic Dog Training Collars

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