Sunday 29 January 2012

Celebrity trainer says we need to understand our dogs more

Victoria Stilwell, star of US TV series It's Me or the Dog, blames poor ownership over inherent aggression in animals

Stilwell says if dogs don't get enough stilumation they can be like a 'ticking bomb'. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Responsible ownership, positive training and a better understanding of man's supposed best friend is the key to reducing the rising number of dog attacks in the UK, according to a celebrity dog trainer.
Victoria Stilwell, the star of hit US TV series It's Me or the Dog, supports a change in the dangerous dogs law to punish irresponsible owners whose pets bite victims on private property.
The current law, which prevents the prosecution of dog owners when the attack takes place on private property, is insufficient and changing it will "show irresponsible owners they have to pull their socks up", Stilwell said.
Stilwell, who is originally from Wimbledon but now lives in Atlanta with her husband and daughter, also supports compulsory microchipping of dogs and education programmes in schools.
"We've had this relationship with dogs for 15,000 years now and yet we still know so little about them and so much of our learning about them has been treating these animals with force and through fear and punishment," said Stilwell, who also served as a judge on Greatest American Dog.
"Now, we are seeing how detrimental that can be for the human-animal relationship and how dangerous it can be too."
Stilwell, who has two dogs herself, promotes a more positive, reward-based approach to dog training and believes this significantly reduces the risk of unpredictable, potentially dangerous, behaviour. "One of the really big contributing factors, in nine times out of 10 cases, the dog is raised without being socialised, abused in some way, neglected and a lot of them chained," she said.
"Not giving a dog enough exercise or mental stimulation can turn a dog towards such frustration and anger – it's like a bomb waiting to explode. It would be exactly the same if you chained a person up, I think that's the very, very root of absolute cruelty and has caused so much horror."
The proliferation of puppy farms is another big contributing factor to the rising number of dog bite cases, Stilwell thinks. "Puppy farms breed with no concern for health and temperament. The formation of your dog's character, how it really sees the world, takes place during the first 16 to 18 weeks of life."
• This article was amended on 20 January 2012. The original said that Victoria Stilwell lives in Atlanta with her husband and two children. This has been corrected.
 
By for The Guardian

Help build that relationship with dog toys!  Fun for everyone, browse dog toys at Canine Shop now.   

Tuesday 24 January 2012

Restraints in the car

As pet travel comes more and more common, it is important that all owners take into account car safety for their travelling pet companions.  So as part of Canine Shop's raising awareness of dogs travelling safely in cars we bring you stats and a video to try convince you why - 


Travelling dogs - restraints in the car

60% of motorists believe that dogs should be restrained in cars, according to GEM Motoring Assist (a breakdown and recovery specialist).  But the truth is, 80% of dog owners who do travel with their pets (according to AAA survey) don't restrain their dog in anyway in the vehicle.

When a simple small box of tissues, which many of us still keep on the back dash of our cars, can become the weighted equivalent of a brick when it comes hurtling forward in the event of an emergency break, imagine what kind of harm an unrestrained dog would do, to you, your family, and to the dog him/herself?

Below is a video example of just what kind of damage an unrestrained dog can do as it goes through the car's front windscreen.





Canine Shop recommends the Clix Car Safe Harness, and here is a video offering why:





Thursday 12 January 2012

Dogs sniff out £9.9m hidden cash


Dogs which are used to fight against smuggling and the movement of drug money have sniffed out nearly £10 million in the last year.
Labrador Retriever Buster with his handler Gavin Edwards at Gatwick Airport

The animals working for the UK Border Agency managed to pick up on the scent of £9.9 million of hidden cash. The money, which was detected by dogs stationed around the UK's airports and ports, was seized by border officials in the last financial year.
Of the detector dogs used by the border force, there are 19 specially trained currency detector dogs which routinely check passengers and cargo and sniff out suspicious quantities of bank notes.
Labrador Retriever Buster has discovered tens of thousands of pounds and is only in the early stages of his career.
Within minutes of being deployed at Gatwick Airport, the two-year-old dog pointed his handler towards a woman who was found to have £8,000 in her hand luggage as she boarded a flight to Vietnam.
His handler Gavin Edwards, who affectionately calls him Buster Crimes, based on the name for American rapper Busta Rhymes, said: "Buster screens the passengers by sniffing their bags. If he finds a scent of money, he sits and indicates to me.
"We ask the passengers how much money they are carrying, depending on what they say, that person is then investigated by another officer. Depending on whether there are any relations to crime, we would then seize the money."
Like other cash detector dogs, Buster has been loaned out to other agencies for raids on properties to locate hidden money.
While working on a house raid with HM Revenue and Customs, Buster discovered £34,000 hidden around the property of a person being investigated for tax fraud.
Currency detector dogs were first used in the UK in 1999. Initially two dogs were based at Heathrow Airport to search passengers' baggage and freight leaving the country.

Tuesday 10 January 2012

Dog Hygiene

Keeping a dog healthy is very much the job of the dog owner. While it is necessary to take your dog for regular checkups at the veterinarian if you don't take care of the simple things at home then your dog will end up with more serious problems.

Ears: At least once a week it is good to check your dog's ears. This is especially true if you have a breed with either long ears or very hairy ears.

You should check for any unusual odors, redness, or inflammation. 

Should your dog have any of these symptoms, contact your veterinarian and set up an appointment to have your dog checked.To clean out excess dirt from your dog's ears use a cotton ball soaked in alcohol or baby oil. Be careful to not clean too deeply into your dog's ear canal.

Eyes: In general if your dog is healthy its eyes should appear shiny, clean and be completely wide open. It is a good idea to regularly wipe any discharge away from your dog's eyes. A good time to do this is when you are giving your dog its regular grooming. To clean your dog's eyes simply use a warm moist washcloth. Some breeds are much more susceptible to eye problems than others and it is common for some breeds to have an almost constant discharge. Regardless of what breed you have, if you notice that there is yellow or green discharge in your dog's eyes you should talk to your veterinarian about it. Dog breeds with white hair some times develop discoloration around their eyes due to excessive tearing. You can buy some solutions that can reduce this discoloration. Be sure to talk with your dog's veterinarian before buying any health care products for your dog.

Teeth: Unlike cats, dogs need help keeping their teeth clean and healthy. Some breeds are predisposed to having dental problems that can sometimes be very serious and require dental surgery. Because dogs are prone to having problems with cavities, plaque build up and periodontal diseases you will typically want to clean your dog's teeth a couple times a week. And be sure to check your dog's teeth, gums (and breath) for signs of potential problems. To clean your dog's teeth you can either use a normal soft bristled toothbrush or you can buy a specially designed dog toothbrush. Make sure to not use human toothpaste though as it can make your dog sick. It is also a good idea to have your dog's teeth cleaned by its veterinarian on a regular basis.

Article from seefido.com




Canine Shop recommends - 



A 3 sided toothbrush designed to multi task as it brushes both the teeth & the gums at the same time.  








If your dog is prone to ear infections, wax build up or smelly, itchy ears, Ear Aid is the answer. 

Statistics show that ear infections are the number one reason why dog owners go to the vet. It often takes multiple visits to eliminate the problem which is not only expensive but also frustrating for both dog and owner.







Britain Puts Out The "Pets Welcome" Sign


On her return home after helping rescue earthquake victims in Indonesia, British border collie Darcy had to spend six months in a quarantine cell

Essex County Fire and Rescue Service


After a 7.6 earthquake struck Indonesia in 2009, a British search-and-rescue dog named Darcy traveled with her handler to search for survivors in a remote Sumatran village. When she returned to the U.K., instead of a hero's welcome, the perky border collie faced six months in a 3x6.5-foot concrete pen — a prisoner of the U.K.'s strict quarantine rules for pets coming into the country.
It's a bad memory for Darcy's handler, John Ball of the U.K. International Search and Rescue team. "No rescue dog should have to go through the trauma of being locked away simply because they've been part of a rescue effort in a foreign country," says Ball. But come Jan. 1, no dog will ever face Darcy's quarantine ordeal again. After almost two decades of campaigning by animal lovers, the U.K. is easing its notoriously strict rules for pets coming into the country by abolishing quarantine and slashing waiting times for the furry friends scratching at Britain's door.(See the top 10 animal stories of 2011.)
Pet owners hoping to enter the British Isles have long argued that the U.K.'s quarantine laws — introduced in 1897, before vaccines were invented, to protect from the threat of rabies – are unnecessary and cruel. According to the U.K. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, there has been only one recorded case of rabies in British quarantine kennels since the 1970s. Finally, it seems, the British government has agreed. "The U.K.'s quarantine system was designed to combat the threat of rabies in the 19th century and has now been left far behind scientific advances," environment secretary Caroline Spelman acknowledged in a statement announcing the less stringent rulesover the summer. "It's time we changed these outdated rules which have caused hardship to generations of pets and pet owners."
The change is the second of two hard-won victories for pets visiting, returning to or re-locating to the U.K. The first was the abolition, in 2000, of mandatory six-month quarantine upon arrival for dogs, cats and ferrets. Robbed of exercise and contact with their owners, many quarantined animals suffered and several died in conditions their owners likened to "jail" and "solitary confinement." When her healthy 7-year-old beagle Bertie passed away shortly after emerging from his six months, Lady Mary Fretwell — the wife of the then British ambassador to France — launched a campaign in 1994 called Passports for Pets. She attracted fervent supporters in the highest echelons of British society, including the late Harold Harmsworth aka Viscount Rothermere. As owner of the The Daily Mail, Harmsworth offered to throw his influential tabloid's support behind a young candidate for Prime Minister, Tony Blair, if he would change the rules so that Harmsworth could travel with his beloved pup.
By February 2000, Blair was leading the country and the old quarantine rules had been replaced by a passport program (PETS) that allowed pets to travel more easily between the E.U. and other qualifying countries like the U.S., Japan and Australia. It wasn't perfect — pet owners still had to wait six months after a rabies vaccine before bringing their animals into Britain — but at least they weren't forced to put them in quarantine, and could wait with their pets in comfort in another country.(Watch "Rescued Stray Becomes a Therapist.")
For rescue dogs like Darcy, however, there was a hitch. Animals that had been in countries outside the PETS program — including South Africa, Brazil and India — still had to go into quarantine, even if they had been vaccinated against rabies before they went to that country.
The new rules that begin on Jan. 1 will make it easier for all pets, wherever they're traveling from. In the New Year, there will be no more required quarantine for any rabies-vaccinated pets. In addition, waiting times will be shortened from six months to three weeks for vaccinated animals from PETS countries, and to three months from other countries.
The change won't just benefit diplomats' pampered pooches and rescue dogs; it will also help dogs that need rescuing. Chrissy Phillips, a Brit who founded the U.K. non-profit Romania Animal Aid in 2008, says that until now matching stray dogs in Eastern Europe with eager U.K. homes was expensive and difficult. "You have the problem of where to keep them safe for six months out there while they're waiting for their pet passports to become valid," she says. "[The change] is a big relief to people trying to help these animals from overseas."(Watch "How Dogs Help Veterans Cope with PTSD.")
The shorter three-week wait means rescue groups like Romania Animal Aid can afford to house more rescue dogs until they come to the U.K. to find loving families. For families unwilling to consider adopting a pit bull — the breed that now dominates U.K. shelters – an animal from abroad is an attractive alternative to buying a puppy from a breeder. "They're very cute, archetypal, happy little waggy-tailed dogs," Phillips says of the strays wandering the streets of Budapest.
The rule change will save the lives of many stray dogs — and perhaps also the lives of a few humans. Search-and-rescue handler Ball is thrilled to know that he'll be able to take Darcy abroad again. "We always said we'd do [only] one mission as long as we had quarantine, and hopefully it might change in the future," he says. Now that the rule is changing, he and Darcy can do the work they've trained for. "It's a huge step forward."



Article by SONIA VAN GILDER COOKE / LONDON
For Time World

Sunday 8 January 2012

Animal Stars of 2011 (Gallery)


This year has been one for the books. From YouTube sensations to Japan tsunami survivors to animal based blockbuster films, animals have played an enormous role in some of the major events of 2011. Read on for our list of the top animal stars of the past year. — Global Animal

Loyal Tsunami Dogs


Mei Chan, the "loyal tsunami dog," is safe with her guardian. The Brittany spaniel was rescued by her guardian shortly after the "Stay Together Dogs" video captured the world's concern.

Tensions were high between Global Animal co-founder Arthur Jeon and Kenn Sakurai after the March tsunami in Japan. Following the release of a video showing two loyal dogs protecting each other, Mr. Sakurai, the owner of a dog food supply company in Japan, announced on his Facebook page that the dogs had been rescued. What actually happened to the two dogs became a source of controversy, all surrounding Mr. Sakurai, the only person who claimed to know what happened to the dogs in the video footage shot by Fuji TV. While news sources CNN, Fuji Television, NPR, UK Telegraph, and Global Animal, reported based on Mr. Sakurai’s claims, and after he received an untold amount of donations, Mr. Sakurai failed to deliver any credible evidence regarding his story. 
Mr. Sakurai retracted his claims and in November, Nippon SPCA released a video showing one of the dogs safe and sound living with her guardian. 

Cyclops Shark

Photo Credit: Pisces Sportfishing
After a fisherman caught a pregnant dusky shark near Cerralvo Island in the Gulf of California earlier this year, the discovery of one of its unborn pups – an albino as well as a cyclops –went viral on the internet. After many people believed that the images were falsified, two scientists in La Paz, Mexico studied the specimen and confirmed that it was in fact a 22-inch-long dusky shark fetus with a single, functioning eye front and center on its head.

Siku

Siku is seen at Skandinavisk Dyrepark in Djursland, Denmark. A Danish zoo says a month-old polar bear cub has been taken into care since its mother failed to produce enough milk to feed him. Photo Credit: Skandinavisk Dyrepark/AP


Siku, the baby polar bear, captured hearts after he was born at the Scandinavian Wildlife Park in November of 2011. Hand-raised by humans since his mother doesn’t produce enough milk to feed him, videos of the adorable cub have become viral on the internet. With over a million YouTube views and over 24-thousand followers on Facebook, this little guy is already a star.

Dog Tease

One of the best dog videos of all time, we think! Photo credit: helablog.com

With over 82-million views, there’s not many people who haven’t seen this YouTube dog star. The video shows a talking shepherd getting teased about food and his unhappy reactions. We’re still waiting on the next installment!

Dolphin Tale

Winter the dolphin with her prosthetic tail. Photo credit: Clearwater Marine Aquarium
When Winter the bottlenose dolphin lost her tail in a crab trap in 2005, her survival did not seem possible. Luckily, she was taken to the Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Florida and after a year of development, was fitted with a prosthetic tail. The film Dolphin Tale, released in September, is based on the touching tale of Winter, and the people who came together to save her. In a Global Animal film review, we felt that Dolphin Tale “dives into the imperfect world where animals and mammals like Winter have such serious human-inflicted injuries that they can not live freely. And it’s up to us to make amends to those we’ve hurt and learn something from the experience.” 


Navy SEAL Hero Dog

Photo credit: U.S. Air Force/Monica Mendoza

Of the Navy SEAL team that was responsible for taking out Osama Bin Ladin, the world’s most notorious terrorist, one was a four-legged commando. Global Animal released the story that one military working dog accompanied the 79-man SEAL Team Six on their mission. The dog’s identity is classified along with the rest of the SEALs involved, the military refusing to release details citing the need to keep operational secrets from falling into the wrong hands. Major Ticer, a spokesperson for United States Special Operations Command, told Global Animal: “The primary functions of the dogs are finding explosives and conducting searches and patrols. Dogs are relied upon to provide early warning for potential hazards, many times, saving the lives of the Special Operations Forces with whom they operate.”

Baby Pandas

Twelve baby pandas, shown here, were recently revealed to the public for the first time. Photo credit: Huffington Post

12 baby pandas born earlier this year were publicly revealed at the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding and Research Center in China in October. The center, which started with six pandas in 1987 and is now home to 108, is hoping to save giant pandas, red pandas, and golden monkeys from extinction. These 12 new editions have certainly helped the cause!

War Horse

War Horse

Created by DreamWorks, Disney, Steven Spielberg, and John Williams, the film War Horse depicts the overlooked role of horses in World War I and the power that animals have of bringing out the humanity in people. Not only did we give the film a great review, but we give the producers and director four paws for making sure the animals acting in the film were cared for. “The thing I emphasized from the outset was that the horses had to be safe,” said Spielberg. “I love horses and I didn’t want them to ever be in harm’s way. Bobby [Lovgren, the horse trainer] did that. Another essential person was Barbara Carr, the American Humane [Association] representative, who was there for every single shot. I gave her full power to pull the plug if she ever felt any of the horses were not up to the challenge or if she thought they could be injured in any way.”

Orangutan

Orangutans who are unable to be reintroduced to the natural habitat would be destined for the new islands. Photo credit: Attila Balazs/Epa/Corbis

From the new orangutan islands, to millions of dollars donated to save Borneo forests, to a new conservation program that will release 40 ex-captive orangutans into the wild, this has been a year for the “man of the forest.” As one of the most critically endangered species in the world, orangutans need a lot of help from us, and it seems that the many efforts of the past year are working to save these relatives of ours. 

Tsunami Akita

Photo: Japan Earthquake Animal Rescue and Support
When the tsunami hit Japan, a man and his Akita, Shane, were separated by rushing floods. Taking shelter on higher ground at a local school, the man had given up hope of ever seeing his canine companion again. The last thing he ever expected was his loyal dog swimming through chest-high, debris-filled water to the school 6 hours later. This heart warming story touched many hearts after the significant loss and devastation the tsunami had brought to Japan. 

Article from Global Animal