September 2011

What To Do When You Find A Stray Dog

There is nothing like the moment when a microchip ID is located in a dog.

I don’t know a single dog owner who hasn’t, at some point (or quite frequently), spent an inordinate amount of time trying to capture a stray or lost dog. I know I’ve caught more than my share in the small town, or its rural surroundings, where I’ve lived for the past five years. I’ve caught burr-covered, obviously lost hunting dogs; dogs whose injuries suggested they’d tumbled from the back of a truck; as well as some fluffy little lap-escapees who looked like they were just out for an adventure.

Autism Assistive Dogs can be Life Changers for Children with Autism

Six-year-old Prudence snuggles with her service dog, Kaiya, a graduate of Blessings Unleashed, of Bowling Green, Kentucky, an organization that trains and places autism assistance dogs.

Subscribers Only Kids and dogs. Everyone agrees they go together, but for children with autism, dogs can be far more than best friends. They can be therapists, comforters, mood stabilizers, and conversation starters. They can help wandering children stay home, help distracted children stay focused, improve a child’s communication and social skills, and help everyone in the family relax.

What Is Autism?

Subscribers Only The term Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASDs) describes a group of complex developmental brain disorders whose symptoms may appear in infancy or later in childhood, affecting speech and behavior. ASDs affects an estimated one out of every 110 children, with boys outnumbering girls three or four to one. In the United States, an estimated one out of every 70 boys is diagnosed with autism.

Building Your Dog's Confidence Up

This Aussie – hiding behind his owner, ears back, worried expression on his face – could benefit from some confidence-building. Giving him something easy and fun to do would help distract him from what’s making him anxious.

Subscribers Only There are a lot of things in our world that have the potential to frighten our dogs. How is it that some dogs deal with these stimuli without batting an eye, while others cower behind their owners with little or no apparent provocation? The Cowardly Lion in the Wizard of Oz seems to say it all in one simple word: “Courage!” But it’s really not so simple. Why do some dogs seem to be consistently brave, while others are timid? Even more important, absent Dorothy and a wizard, how does one go about helping their timid dog get brave?

Has Your Dog Training Program Hit a Wall?

If your dog looks or acts as if he may be afraid of you, you need to take a break – and maybe think about finding a trainer (or a new trainer).

If training on your own, consider enrolling in a class or booking a private lesson for one-on-one attention. You aren’t expected to have all the answers yourself. All dogs are different. Even if you’ve trained previous dogs on your own, a little professional guidance might be just what you need to jumpstart success.

Frustrated With How Your Dog’s Training is Going? We Can Help!

Keep in mind that our dogs can get very frustrated with us, too! Especially when we fail to give clear directions or when we put them in a stressful situation with no way out.

Training a dog, regardless of the method used, is bound to bring about moments of frustration. Addressing unwanted behavior can take time, and today’s modern family often finds spare time to be in limited supply. In the midst of juggling busy personal and professional lives, it’s easy to suddenly find yourself at the end of your rope when it comes to dog training. The problem with frustration is that, when left unchecked, it can lead to an emotional outburst. Ever lash out with harsh words directed at your kids or spouse after a particularly challenging day at work? We are only human. It happens. In dog training, these emotional outbursts often manifest in strong verbal reprimands, leash pops, and other physical corrections. Interacting with your dog in an angry or physically forceful way carries the substantial risk of damaging the dog-owner relationship.

Diagnosing and Treatment Options for Symmetrical Lupoid Onychodystrophy or SLO

“My nails could do what?!” SLO is a painful condition that can cause your dog to limp, or to resist having to exercise at all, especially on hard surfaces.

Subscribers Only Dog nails aren’t supposed to fall off, thought first-time dog owner Terrie Huberman some 18 months ago. That’s when she first realized that finding one of her Pug-Poodle mix’s nails on the floor of her Sherman Oaks, California, apartment wasn’t an isolated incident. It all started when, after coming in from a walk, Terrie picked up what would turn out to be the keratin shell from one of Bonzo’s claws. At the time she thought it was something he’d tracked in from outside. Only later did she learn the shell was a telltale sign of Symmetrical Lupoid Onychodystrophy, SLO for short.

A Case History of Slo from a Whole Dog Journal Subscriber

Subscribers Only I adopted my greyhounds, Cleo and Ramses, from Personalized Greyhounds in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania on April 11, 2009. In May of 2009 Ramses was running in the backyard and tore one of his toenails off in the grass. The quick was exposed and it was bleeding profusely. The vet sedated him and then trimmed and wrapped his foot and prescribed an antibiotic. After several months the nail cap began to grow back, but as soon as it did it was scaly and immediately sloughed off. The quick was no longer raw so it didn’t bother him.

Heartworm Resistance Update September 2011

Don’t stop using those heartworm preventives in the face of resistant strains; that’s the time to step it up!

Subscribers Only In “Time to Step It Up” (WDJ July 2011), we described one small study that showed only Advantage Multi was 100 percent effective against the MP3 strain of resistant heartworms after a single dose. The report was true as far as it went, but new points have emerged that make this a more complex story and one for which we do not have all the answers yet.

Breed Discrimination, Guilty Dogs, Funky Noses, and More

“My pit bulls are monsters only on Halloween!” says Lori Zimmer, president of badpress.org.

Thank you for Lisa Rodier’s excellent article on breed discrimination in the insurance industry (“No Insurance,” June 2011). I am fortunate to live in Pennsylvania, one of the states that forbid such discrimination, but it still exists here due to ignorance and some shady maneuvering on the part of the insurance industry.

Finally Fall

Subscribers Only I think I may make this announcement every fall: I’m sorry that some of the articles that we’ve been promising (seen in the “What’s Ahead” column on the back cover) have not yet appeared. And other, unheralded ones have popped up. Even after nearly 50 years on earth, I can’t seem to manage my summer schedules properly.

Reader Questionnaire

What is your favorite way of spending quality time with your dog?
Going on a Nice Long Walk. (886 votes)

42%

Taking Him to the Dog Park. (139 votes)

7%

Playing his Favorite Game with Him. (384 votes)

18%

Cuddling up on the Couch and Watching TV. (623 votes)

30%

None of the Above. (73 votes)

3%