Archive for the 'Training' Category

Dog Care for Mans Best Friend!


Dogs do not only need food and water. Like humans they need proper care and a healthy lifestyle. There are a few things you need to know to give your dog proper care. A shiny coat is the sign of a healthy dog. So if your dog does not have a shiny coat, look to his diet and exercise.

 

A dog should have proper nutrition. This does not mean that you pile him up with proteins and fats but that you should stick up to the prescribed diet chart for different ages and breeds. Check his fur regularly. Is it smooth or is it coarse?

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To have a lustrous coat, you can also use a tearless conditioner. Bet you hadn’t thought of that before! You need to bathe him properly and regularly. However, bathing needs will vary according to your dog’s breed and age. For instance, a breed from a cold region will need frequent bathing when it is placed in a hot region. A very important aspect of dog care is grooming.

 

You should use a brush for grooming. There are special brushes available for exclusive grooming of dogs. If even after trying all these things, his coat does not show luster, take him to the vet. He might be having genuine problems.

 

Changes that affect a dog’s being are extreme cold or hot weather. In dog care, it is fundamental that you know what to do when. A dog’s fur is not enough to protect it against cold weather. You should also make sure that he does more exercises and stays in proper shelter. He should be in warm places so that he does not freeze.

 

Please don’t feed your dog chocolates or junk food! I know a lot of us love eating these but just because we can spoil our life doesn’t give us the right to spoil our dog’s life too. Chocolates are toxic to a dog’s health. A dog should always drink fresh water. In the hot regions, you need to bathe your dog regularly.

 

However, if your dog is a local breed, it might not suffer too much under the sun. All the same, during hot summer months, damp a cloth with cold water and brush it against his body gently. This should some what take care of his temperature needs.

 

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A puppy needs a lot of care during the initial months. It needs a food content that will contain 28% protein and 10% fat. You should select puppy food according to your dog’s age and breed. Cutting the nails of a dog is another important part of dog care. Get a groomer to do the job for you or be trained by a vet. All these are important facets of dog care.

Enjoy….

Angela Schulz

http://www.myeasydogs.com

http://www.services4all.biz/dogCareSite

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admin on March 20th 2009 in Allergy, Fun, Puppies, Training, Health

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http://www.power-tester.de/info/fordoglovers

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admin on November 2nd 2008 in Allergy, Fun, Puppies, Training, Health

Caring For Your Dog


Much will depend on the time of year whether the dog is allowed out to relieve himself or not. If possible, house-trained dogs should always be taken out for this purpose (if necessary wearing a coat and on a lead to prevent undue excitement or exertion) as a very clean dog will suffer if forced to “misbehave” indoors.

 

In hot summer weather the dog is probably better outdoors for part of the time provided he is not allowed to run about much (he could be kept in a small run) and is protected from strong sunlight. Ask your veterinary surgeon and be guided by what he says.

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If the dog is not allowed out the floor of the room must be protected. If possible, carpets should be removed but if this is impracticable two thick layers of newspaper with a thin sprinkling of sawdust in between is usually sufficient.

Of course a kennel is much more practical, but it should be a large one of the shed type, in which there is room for a table, a good light, and ample space for handling. A cramped kennel in which it is impossible to stand upright is obviously not a suitable sick-room! House dogs will usually be nursed in a spare room, to which reference has already been made.

Whichever is used, good ventilation without a draught must be ensured. Stuffy sick-rooms are an abomination. In winter the temperature should be kept to about 60°F. A room thermometer is useful. Whatever form of heating is arranged, it must be absolutely safe. If it is impossible to arrange this, the dog can be kept perfectly warm with light rugs and hot water-bottles and, if necessary, he can wear a woolly coat. The hot water-bottle should be regularly refilled. If the dog is well enough to be out of his bed most of the time artificial heating will be necessary only in cold weather. Fresh air is essential and provided.

 

 

If the dog is warm, and in lung cases wears a pneumonia jacket, he will come to no harm.

Cleanliness of both the patient and his surroundings is essential. The room itself should be kept spotless and any excreta removed immediately. The dog should be groomed daily if well enough, and even if he cannot be moved from his bed it is usually possible to brush him gently with a soft brush or massage his skin with your fingers. If the dog is very ill he must not be disturbed for anything but essentials, but in the ordinary way the average well-cared-for dog, especially in the long-coated breeds, will appreciate this gentle grooming, just as a human patient will feel better for the refreshing daily wash.

The bed should be sufficiently roomy for the dog to turn and stretch in comfort. For small dogs, a tea-chest on its side with a three- to four-inch board nailed.

 

Across the bottom of the opening will be found very useful. It keeps out draughts and the dog will feel cosy and private. The front can have a wired door if the patient is a restless puppy, running a high temperature, and determined to commit suicide by leaving his box and lying in an icy draught from the room door.

 

The bedding can be straw, pine-shavings or blan­kets. The latter should be used only for clean cases, and it is a useful idea to have the blankets covered by a small linen sheet or light flannelette cot blanket which can be easily washed and frequently renewed.

The tea-chest plan is useful when the dog is suffering from a nervous disease, as it is possible to arrange a sack or blanket to shade the front opening and keep the patient inside sleeping in the dark without having the whole room darkened.

Whatever bedding is used, it must be kept clean and often renewed. If straw is used, shake it up frequently as it can become packed into a hard lump. When changing the bedding of a very sick dog have another box beside you lined with a thick blanket and place him gently in this while you see to his bed.

 

Have a nice day…

Angela

 

http://www.myeasydogs.com

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admin on September 7th 2008 in Allergy, Puppies, Training, Health

Dealing With Bites


Dogs are most commonly bitten by another dog, a cat or a rat.

 

1.         Dog bites

There is invariably some degree of penetration with this injury, and it is important that a close watch be kept on such injuries until they have completely healed, as abscess formation is a constant danger if healing of the skin wound is too rapid. Immediately the bite is found the hair should be clipped away from the wound. This is very necessary with the longhaired breeds. A thorough search should be made for other wounds; these often have only small skin openings and may be easily overlooked. The wounds should then be thoroughly cleansed with cotton wool soaked in warm water containing a suitable antiseptic.

 

Any injury near the eyes should be swabbed with warm water only. This should be done twice daily for at least 5 days, and in the event of any heat or hardness developing in the injured region a veterinary surgeon should be informed.

If larger than about half an inch, any tear in the skin alone, or skin and muscle, should be seen at once by a veterinary surgeon in order that any stitching that may be necessary can be carried out promptly. It is important that such wounds are not left many hours as once secondary infection occurs and granulation tissue form, a wound cannot be stitched satisfactorily.

 

Bites on the head, limbs or genitalia should be regarded with especial caution, and veterinary advice sought if in doubt. Bites by dogs with powerful jaws may result in fracture, or puncture, of a bone or a joint, and such wounds can only be satisfactorily treated systemically, as well as locally, by a veterinary surgeon. Small centres of infection are left embedded deeply in the tissue, and these centres may, and usually do, form abscesses at a later stage.

 

2.     Cat bites

Cat bites, fortunately, are not very common in dogs as cats generally prefer to scratch and run. However, when they do occur they should be thoroughly cleansed, hair being clipped away from the points of entry, and then swabbed. Usually it is advisable to have the animal injected with penicillin or some other anti-infective agent. Gat bites are notoriously dirty, and the wound is of the puncture variety, i.e., deep, with a small point of entry, and therefore provides inadequate drainage. This is true also of:

 

3.         Rat bites

Here again local treatment should be carried out, but systemic treatment is more or less essential to avoid complications. Rats carry an infection called leptospiral jaundice, which can easily be fatal to dogs who have no protection against the disease.

 

It is wise, therefore, following a local dressing and cleansing of the wound (which the owner can usually do quite satisfactorily) to have the animal given a dose of antiserum, and/or suitable antibiotic. This will prevent the much more dangerous complication of leptospiral infection. All dogs should be immunised against this disease if they are employed as ratters, or are likely to be in contact in any way with these vermin.

Details of vaccination:

Vaccination against leptospira icterrohaemorrhagia infection is a simple process, which is carried out in the healthy dog and which will protect him for the rest of his life. The vaccination consists of two small injections, each of 1 ex. only, given subcutaneously at an interval of one week. There are no ill effects after these injections and the dog will be immune to the disease within a few days of the second injection.

 

Great Day

Angela

 

http://www.myeasydogs.com

 

 

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admin on September 4th 2008 in Fun, Puppies, Training, Health

Deaths In New Born Puppies

Sometimes puppies within the first few days of birth begin to whimper continually, lose interest in suckling and do not thrive. If left untreated, they die. This condition is sometimes erroneously ascribed to so-called “acid milk” in the dam; actually, it is normal for all bitches to have acid milk. Although baby puppies may die from many causes—cold, lack of milk, injury at birth, too long “on the way”, amongst others—when the above symptoms occur they are probably due to a streptococcal or staphylococcal infection.

puppy2

Only immediate measures will be of avail. This naturally requires the attention of the veterinary surgeon as antibiotics may be required.

In addition, many puppies are lost through lack of warmth at whelping time or during the first week or two, so keep the kennel or whelping room very warm, supplying a covered hot water-bottle in the whelping bed in winter.

Every puppy is born in a kind of bag and if this is not broken quickly at the head of the puppy it will die.

When a bitch invariably produces her young very slowly, and the puppies die as a result, parturition can often be “speeded up” with specific injections.

Best Greetings

Angela

http://www.myeasydogs.com

http://www.dogs-allergy.com

http://www.my-dog-training.biz

 

 

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admin on March 23rd 2008 in Allergy, Puppies, Training, Health

How to handle Your Dog in an Emergency (2)

Few dogs pass through life without at least one illness during which the owner must give nursing care, and very often the animal’s recovery or the reverse depends to a large extent on the quality of the attention he receives. Canine patients differ from humans in that they cannot be kept in bed unless they are too weak to get out, and their co-operation has to be obtained by persuasion rather than by request.

A human patient will submit to the unpleasantness of constant intramuscular injections of penicillin, for instance, because he knows it is for his own good, but a dog cannot be expected to reason in this way, and as some treatments given to sick dogs (inhalations, for example) are not welcomed by the patient the attendant may have a difficult time. On the whole, however, dogs- even very young ones-make good patients provided they have confidence in their nurse and, not less important, in the veterinary surgeon. If a dog trusts his attendant he submits with quite good grace and often astonishing resignation and stoicism to many unpleasant measures, and even shows gratitude in a touching fashion.

vet 

When an animal is sufficiently ill to require nursing he should be put in a separate room or kennel, even if the malady is not infectious. The general hubbub of the kitchen or living-room is not restful, and every sick animal needs plenty of sleep and peace. This is particularly the case with distemper and hard-pad- some dogs spend most of their time sleeping during the early stages of the former-and, in addition, the nervous system is often affected in both diseases and a
noisy, restless environment may result in the dreaded distemper or hard-pad fits.

Best greetings

Angela

http://www.myeasydogs.com

http://www.dogs-allergy.com

http://www.my-dog-training.biz

 

 

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admin on January 21st 2008 in Allergy, Puppies, Training, Health

How to Handle your Dog in an Emergency (1)

THE handling of a dog should start when he is a puppy, and simple lessons in obedience are good for the daily management of a dog, just as some degree of discipline is good for his owner. The properly trained and handled dog is not a cowed dog, but one who is a credit to his owner, and not a constant nuisance and irritation to others. Therefore simple obedience training, which the animal enjoys learning, is an important part of his education. Answering to plain commands such as coming when called, sitting when told, and coming to heel at a word, are simple orders which should be impressed upon every dog. To own a dog is not only to care for it but to control it as well. If this truth were more widely recognised dogs would be less frequently subjected to criticism that should properly fall upon the owner. More important, accidents would be reduced, as it is usually the undisciplined dog which causes, or is involved in, accidents.

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Control of a dog in an emergency is even more important than in the daily run of life. Control is essential; the ability to apply any first-aid measures rapidly depends upon it. Many dogs, especially when in pain or shocked, resent efforts to help them. It is therefore important to be able to apply, quickly, efficiently and firmly, methods of control as and when required. These measures are best carried out by the owner, as even the most frightened dog will usually heed a person he knows. Obviously any restraint should be carried out with minimum disturbance of

 

Even the most disciplined dog will, if in pain, be inclined to snap, often unintentionally if Some control of the biting end can be obtained with a lead, tape, or bandage.

Hope this helps….

Next part will be posted in a few days!

Angela

http://www.myeasydogs.com

http://www.dogs-allergy.com

http://www.my-dog-training.biz

 

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admin on January 7th 2008 in Allergy, Puppies, Training, Health