Fix Nation.. Do you have homeless cats in your neighborhood that you would like to get fixed?

Posted January 7th, 2010 by Jan

Click the link below
Fix Nation

Do you have homeless cats in your neighborhood that you would like to get fixed? Do you have a friendly stray cat that you are concerned about? Have you noticed litters of kittens springing up left and right? Or are you a responsible pet owner and would like to get your cat spayed or neutered? (Or maybe you want to, but you can’t really afford to?)
FixNation is a non-profit organization providing free spay/neuter services for homeless, stray and feral cats, as well as reduced rate spay/neuter services for tame cats. …


Cats in HEAT

Posted December 18th, 2009 by Jan

Female cats that have not been spayed will come in heat (or estrus) at stages in their lives. This may happen from as young as the age of 4 months and recur seasonally (usually summer seasons with more daylight). The cat stays in heat for normally 4-6 days and during the summer season will come in heat again every 2-3 weeks. These periods may vary widely. The cat will come out of heat and the cycles will end once the cat has mated or the season ends. After giving birth a female cat may come in heat again in as soon as 7 days although this usually happens after about 4 weeks.

Female cats can be spayed almost any time from as young as 4 months. DO IT!!!

catheatun8


How to Check a Pet for Dehydration: Skin Pinch Test

Posted December 15th, 2009 by Jan

* The Skin Pinch Test: Begin by pinching the pet’s skin at the scruff of his neck and pull the skin upwards creating a “tent.” Release the skin and watch to see how long it takes to return to normal. A healthy, hydrated dog’s skin will flatten out immediately, while a dehydrated dog’s skin is less elastic and it will take as long as several seconds to return to normal.

All pets including cats, dogs and horses are at risk for dehydration, especially in the warm months. In the winter it is less likely as they spend time indoors with you, while you watch TV or play something like Foxy bingo www.foxybingo.com. They dislike the cold as much as we do, but once the sun is out it’s a different story. Pets at higher risk include older or very young ones, pregnant, nursing or sick animals. Dogs may overdo it when exercising with you and physically drain themselves, leading to a problem. Keep an eye on the animals to prevent it. If you do suspect dehydration, then try these  suggestions:

Look for visible signs. These symptoms include sunken eyes, exhaustion or dry mouth.

Visit the vet for a quick blood test to check for dehydration. Do this test especially if your pet was without water for a long period of time.

Test your dog or cat’s skin elasticity. Gently pull the skin near the middle of your pet’s back. If he is dehydrated, then the skin won’t have its usual elasticity. It will “tent”.

Give her some food and see if she’ll eat. Another symptom of dehydration is a loss of appetite.

Check the gums. Expose the gums and press them gently and briefly with your thumb. Blood is forced through the gum and should return to its normal color within 2 seconds. If it does not, then it could be a sign.


Zoom-Bak: dog tracker… don’t travel without it

Posted November 17th, 2009 by Jan

$99 and less then $15 a month.. track your pet immediately.. or your kids, husband, luggage!

I would not travel without it.. click the links..

Zoom-Bak: two-months-free promotion

David Pogue of NY TIMES.. Love him..

23pogue2190


Funny minute cat video

Posted October 29th, 2009 by Jan

He did her wrong.. funny minute video

fact:
ten million dogs and cats are put to death in shelters each year

An unspayed female cat, her mate and all of their offspring, producing 2 litters per year, with 2.8 surviving kittens per litter can total:

1 year: 12
2 years: 67
3 years: 376
4 years: 2,107
5 years: 11,801
6 years: 66,088
7 years: 370,092
8 years: 2,072,514
9 years: 11,606,077

An unspayed female dog, her mate and all of their puppies, if none are ever neutered or spayed, add up to:

1 year: 16
2 years: 128
3 years: 512
4 years: 2,048
5 years: 12,288
6 years: 67,000


PurrEver Ranch Sanctuary (hospice for Senior cats)

Posted October 26th, 2009 by Jan

URGENT!!!!!

PurrEver Ranch is in dire need of permanent housing. Our landlord passed and the property has been appraised. Widow has been advised to sell.

We despurrately need to find a new home and soon. Ideally, we would like a farm on at least 50 acres with barns but a country home on 10 acres with a workshop would be a dream come true.

SOMEONE OUT THERE CAN MAKE A DREAM
COME TRUE AND SAVE MANY, MANY LIVES.
PLEASE HELP US FIND A NEW HOME!!

DONATIONS NEEDED TO SECURE PERMANENT HOUSING!!!

We would like to stay in this area but
will relocate should property be donated.

Please remember to include PurrEver Ranch in your will.

I LOVE THIS PLACE!! It is exactly the type of shelter I would like to have..

please donate if you can..    Jan

PurrEver Ranch Sanctuary … link
501c (A Hospice For Senior Kittizens)

“Providing A Hospice For Homeless, Elderly Felines

A Chance To Live Out Their Lives In Peace
With Dignity, Compassion & Love”

PurrEver Ranch rescues senior felines from shelter euthanization.

Providing a safe hospice where the homeless,

senior kittizens live the rest of their lives blanketed in love.

PurrEver Ranch also feeds two feral colonies every day.

Taming feral kittens to avoid shelter euthanization–

returning to shelter to be adopted after they are gentled.

PurrEver Ranch is a place of refuge for cats that would otherwise perish -

the old, the abandoned, the abused, the sick & the suffering.


British Cat Catches Local Train to Visit Penguins and Fish

Posted October 22nd, 2009 by Jan

British Cat Catches Local Train to Visit Penguins and Fish


A Dog’s Unending Loyalty

Posted October 4th, 2009 by Jan

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A Dog\’s Unending Loyalty

NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 28, 2009

Lost Dog Gathers Clues to Find its Family

A Hopelessly Lost Rottweiler and the Dedicated Animal Rescue Worker who Found her Family

    By Steve Hartman

    • Play CBS Video Video A Dog’s Unending LoyaltyElla, a Rottweiler, was in a car crash and scavenged for food on the highway for weeks. Ella was reunited with her family but as Steve Hartman tells us, the story doesn’t end there.
    • Ella, a lost Rottweiler, is reunited with her family. PhotoElla, a lost Rottweiler, is reunited with her family. (CBS)

    (CBS)

    Over the last 20 years, the Love Me Tender animal rescue in central Tennessee has rounded up more than 1,000 abandoned dogs. And although most are timid and untrusting, CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman reports, one Rottweiler named Ella was notably different.

    “I could just tell right away she was somebody’s baby. She just didn’t act like a stray dog to me,” said Kathy Wilkes-Myers, who found the dog a few months ago.

    Ella was emaciated and drinking from a drainage ditch along an empty stretch of highway. Kathy says it’s typical for people to dump unwanted pets in the middle of nowhere – but again, the dog’s demeanor convinced her there was more to the story. So she did some detective work, and what she found is a heart-wrenching tale of unending loyalty.

    “She was hoping her family could come back. But they couldn’t. They couldn’t come back. It just breaks your heart,” said Kathy.

    Kathy found the first clues to this mystery – broken glass and tail lights – right near where she found the dog.

    And just down from there, she found a second set of even more intriguing clues: personal items gathered up. By the dog, she assumed.

    “It was like she was sleeping with them – or waiting with them,” Kathy said.

    She took a picture with her cell phone and then gathered the items. They were mostly random, personal things – toothbrush, comb, razor, a candle that said Michelle, but nothing that would explain anything – although now, she did have a hunch.

    Kathy remembered two weeks earlier she’d driven by an accident on the same stretch of highway. She remembered because it was such a horrible crash. A single car had flipped over and landed on the side of the road, at just about the same spot where she found the dog.

    Based on what she saw that day, Kathy figured there was no way a person could have survived, but what about a dog? So she called the highway patrol.

    “She gave me the mom’s name and the dad’s name and the mom’s name was Michelle. And I thought, ‘Oh my God, this is their dog,” she said.

    Thrown from the car, rescue crews never saw the dog. She spent 13 days scavenging for food along the highway – and 13 nights bedding down with whatever she could find that smelled like her lost family.

    “That’s the last spot she saw her family and she was going to stay there,” Kathy said.

    Kathy figured it all out. But fortunately, she got one thing very wrong. Someone did survive the crash. In face, all five family members survived.

    “I’m lucky to be sitting here with my family,” said Joe Kelly, the family’s father.

    After two weeks believing that their dog, Ella, had died, the family of Joe and Michelle Kelly got the most wonderful, slobbery surprise of their lives.

    For the first time since the accident, the Kelly’s had a good reason to cry -all thanks to a dog who refused to forget her family – and the stranger who refused to take lost for answer.

    Unfortunately, it was a bittersweet reunion because of the accident and the medical expenses, the Kelly family has had to temporarily relocate to a place that doesn’t allow dogs.

    The good news is, Kathy has promised to hold onto Ella for as long as the Kelleys need to get back on their feet.



    ©MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.


    TEACH YOUR DOG THE ONLY PLACE HE CAN EVER ENTER AND EXIT THE POOL IS BY THE STEPS

    Posted September 3rd, 2009 by Jan

    TEACH YOUR DOG THE ONLY PLACE HE CAN EVER ENTER AND EXIT THE POOL IS BY THE STEPS. Put a large vertical marker that moves (such as a plant or a flag) by the steps so he can easily orient himself. As you are teaching him to swim, repeat each one of the following stages a gazillion times before moving to the next stage. You can reward your dog at each stage by giving him a treat or his favorite toy.

    Teach him to touch that marker before he enters the water. Show him the steps, ramp, or ladder from the deck and say “steps.” Then take him a short distance away and repeat. Gently place him in the water with his feet on the top step. If you have a helper, you are in the water and your helper is at the top of the steps. If you are by yourself, attach a leash or long line before you put him in the water and stay by the side of the pool. Say “steps” and let him gain his footing up the ramp.

    VERY GRADUALLY increase the distance from the steps/ramp, and let him swim to the steps and exit.
    Stay in the shallow end, and keep the lessons short – no more than ten minutes.
    To help your dog swim, position your hands so his rear end is up so he will use all four legs to swim. He should look like he is running in the water. You may need to help him by moving his rear legs for him. If he just uses his front legs, he will most likely sink. His neck should extend forward and his head should not point up. Use a food lure if necessary to get him in this position.

    Rinse him off or give him a shampoo after your session, and be sure to dry out his ears. Check his eyes because they may become irritated by the chlorine and need to be rinsed.

    After he learns to swim, don’t let him overexert himself. Swimming is a physically taxing exercise, and he can easily become fatigued. Take breaks, and watch for signs of exhaustion.

    Sometimes despite your best efforts, the unthinkable happens, and you find your dog motionless in the water. Get him out of the water. If he is not breathing, hold his rear legs up to let water drain. Put him on his side. Clear any debris from his mouth, close his mouth with your hand, and apply mouth-to-nose resuscitation and chest compressions. Take him to the vet immediately even if he begins to breathe on his own.

    If you have taught him how to swim and taught him where the steps are, you can avoid this tragedy. And you and your dog will have a fantastic time swimming together.


    FUN dog commercial

    Posted September 2nd, 2009 by Jan

    dog commercial




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