Archive for the ‘Training’ Category

Caring for pets shaped human evolution

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Dogs, cats, cows and other domesticated animals may have been vital to human evolution, a new theory suggests.

The uniquely human habit of taking in and employing animals — even competitors like wolves — spurred on human tool-making and language, which have both driven humanity’s success, paleoanthropologist Pat Shipman of Penn State University, says.

“Wherever you go in the world, whatever ecosystem, whatever culture, people live with animals,” Discovery News quoted Shipman as saying.

For early humans, taking in and caring for animals would seem like a poor strategy for survival.
“On the face of it, you are wasting your resources. So this is a very weird behavior,” Shipman said.

But it’s not so weird in the context something else humans were doing about 2.6 million years ago: switching from a mostly vegetarian diet to one rich in meat. This happened because humans invented stone hunting tools that enabled them to compete with other top predators. Quite a rapid and bizarre switch for any animal, Shipman said.

“We shortcut the evolutionary process,” said Shipman. “We don’t have the equipment to be carnivores.”

So we invented the equipment, learned how to track and kill, and eventually took in animals who also knew how to hunt — like wolves and other canines. Others, like goats, cows and horses, provided milk, hair and, finally, hides and meat.

Managing all of these animals — or just tracking them — requires technology, knowledge and ways to preserves and convey information. So languages had to develop and evolve to meet the challenges.

Tracking game has even been argued to be the origin of scientific inquiry, said Peter Richerson, professor emeritus in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy at the University of California, Davis.

One of the signs that this happened is in petroglyphs and other rock art left by ancient peoples. At first they were abstract, geometric patterns that are impossible to decipher. Then they converge on one subject: animals.

“Think what isn’t there: people, landscapes, fruit and edible plants,” said Shipman. This implies that animals and information about animals was of great importance.

There have also been genetic changes in both humans and our animals, Shipman argues.

For the animals those changes developed because human bred them for specific traits, like a cow that gives more milk or a hen that lays more eggs.

But this evolutionary influence works both ways. Dogs, for instance, might have have been selectively taken in by humans who shared genes for more compassion. Those humans then prospered — a.k.a. reproduced — with the dogs’ help in hunting and securing their homes.

The theory has been published in the latest issue of Current Anthropology.

Source

Program teaches troubled youths to teach dogs

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Canine companionship is helping some local kids turn around their troubled pasts at the Macomb County Juvenile Justice Center.

A program called Teacher’s Pet has them train dogs taken in by animal control, helping them develop responsibility, empathy and self-esteem — and, eventually, finding homes for the strays.

“The dogs can be frustrating to work with sometimes, but it’s good to have someone to talk to when things aren’t going right,” said Lindsay, 15, who has been in the program for a couple of months. “I like knowing that I helped these dogs find a good home.”

The program was started about 14 months ago with youths and six dogs in hourlong sessions held twice a week for about six weeks.

Since then, the center has expanded it to 20 youths and 14 dogs in sessions held Tuesday through Friday, said Berry Treadwell, the program’s coordinator. The sessions for girls and boys are held separately.

In the 14 months since the program has existed at the center, 46 youths and 73 dogs have gone through it. All but one dog has been adopted, he said.

“It builds self-esteem and self-worth and teaches the kids empathy,” Treadwell said. “And the better you feel about yourself, the better you treat other people.”

For Lindsay, who has been at the center for 3 1/2 months, the program has meant a lot. She said it’s taught her patience and understanding as well as the value of friendship.

“They help you cope,” she said. “They teach you that it’s OK to make mistakes and not know everything.”

Under Teacher’s Pet, the youths at the Juvenile Justice Center teach the strays basic obedience skills and care for them. After the six weeks is over, the dogs “graduate” and are put up for adoption at the county’s animal shelter.

“The dogs that come in with the most problems always leave the best-trained dogs,” said Lisa Rabine, program facilitator and dog trainer with Teacher’s Pet. “The kids here just do a wonderful job.”

Treadwell said Teacher’s Pet has zero recidivism, meaning those who have gone through it have stayed out of trouble.

Funding for the program comes primarily from donations, but the county contributes a nominal amount of money to help cover the cost of supplies for the dogs and the trainers’ time, Treadwell said.

The program is the brainchild of a nonprofit agency with the same name that started in Waterford Township about six years ago.

It works with dogs and kids at the Kingsley Montgomery School in Waterford, Crossroads for Youth in Oxford and Oakland County’s Children’s Village in addition to the Macomb Juvenile Justice Center. The Macomb program, however, is the largest, said Rabine.

“(In the program), they’re helping the animals, but they’re also helping themselves,” said Charles Seidelman, the Juvenile Justice Center’s director.

“They’re learning to be responsible; to give something away when it’s usually been all about them.”

Source

Austrian dog license law sparks debate

Monday, July 5th, 2010

Carolin Fabian jokes that the only thing her American Staffordshire terrier Tobias fights for is a place on the couch.

“He’s very calm — he’s happy when he can sleep, eat … go for a bit of a walk when it’s not too hot or raining,” said the 35-year-old Fabian.

Sounds harmless. But starting Thursday, Fabian and owners of 11 other breeds known as aggressive “fight dogs” will be under stricter scrutiny: a hotly debated new law requires Viennese and longterm visitors who own such dogs to carry a license proving they can keep their pets in check.

Some say the measure will make public spaces safer, critics call it canine profiling.

The dog magazine “Wuff” tried to make that point in a highly controversial manner — by publishing a flyer that showed a young pit bull wearing a yellow star with the word “bad” inscribed in it, seated next to a labrador puppy. A headline above the two asked: “What differentiates us?” The magazine dropped the yellow star from its campaign after protests from the Jewish community.

Months later, emotions are still running high.

Alexander Willer, a spokesman for Vienna’s main animal shelter, said the list of affected dogs — which includes Rottweilers, pit bull terriers, Mastiffs, and others — was compiled “at random” and has made it harder for abandoned breeds of this kind to find new homes.

“The image of these dogs has hit rock bottom,” Willer said, adding that since Christmas, the number of “fight dogs” seeking refuge in the shelter increased from 123 to 170.

“The majority of people who own these kinds of dogs are normal — they aren’t psychopaths,” Willer said.

Maybe not — but dangerous incidents still happen, said Valentina Simic, 21, whose young son narrowly escaped an attack by a Rottweiler.

“Dogs are cute and all but if people can’t handle them properly then they shouldn’t be allowed to own them,” she said as she sat on a park bench on a recent balmy evening.

Officials estimate that about 2,500 dogs will be affected by the new law in a city where man’s best friend is often spotted snoozing in cafes, riding the subway and sitting outside shops.

If owners don’t comply by this time next year and are caught without a permit, they face fines and could even see their pet confiscated by police.

“The animal doesn’t have to know any tricks, fetch the paper or do a double back flip — all the owner has to do is show that he has it under control in a city setting,” city councilor Ulli Sima said.

“This is not about the criminalization of any types of dogs,” added fellow councilor Sandra Frauenberger.

Elsewhere in Europe, the situation varies. Denmark on Thursday added 12 more dog breeds — the American Staffordshire terrier, Brazilian Fila, American bulldog and Dogo Argentino, among others — to an outright ban on dangerous dogs that already included pit bull terriers and tosa inus.

Under a 2007 law in Portugal, owners of seven breeds identified as dangerous must get a license and can only do so if they are over 18, have passed a physical and mental aptitude test and don’t have a criminal record.

In the Slovak capital of Bratislava, regulations for about half a dozen type of “fight dogs” were axed a year after a successful lobbying campaign by owners of such breeds.

Source

Take your dog to work – today!

Friday, June 25th, 2010

First celebrated in 1999, Take Your Dog To Work Day was created to celebrate the great companions dogs make and to encourage their adoption from humane societies, animal shelters and breed rescue clubs. This annual event asks pet lovers to celebrate the humane-canine bond and promote pet adoption by encouraging their employers to support TYDTWDay by opening their workplace to employees’ four-legged friends on this one special day.

Visit the official site: Take YOur Dog to Work Day!

1. Having existed since 1999, Take Your Dog to Work Day has clearly proven to lighten everyone’s day in the office one day out of the year.

2. TGIF takes on a whole new meaning when your office goes furry for the day.

3. The day just flies by when you have someone keeping you “busier” at your desk.

4. Employees won’t have to leave the office to run home to let the dog out.

5. Having pets around is proven to lengthen life expectancy, so if everyone brings their dogs to work on the same day, everyone you work with will no doubt live for an extra day.

6. Employers might be more keen to start doggie daycares in the office to keep their employees happy on their lunch break.

7. Your dog will make new playmates.

8. You might talk more about your dog with other employees than usual, and get tips on good dog walkers in the area.

9. As witnessed on YouTube , working with your furry pal beside you will lead to a more creative work environment, no doubt.

10. Most Americans think having pets in their offices decreases absenteeism.

11. Co-workers are happier which leads to a happier work environment, as long as they aren’t allergic.

12. Most people who bring their dogs to work end up staying later and working longer hours, while being even more productive.

American Pit Bull Terrier

Friday, June 25th, 2010

Undoubtedly no dog breed has stirred the same amount of fear and controversy that the American Pit Bull Terrier has.

Indeed, it is difficult to turn on the local news without hearing about a Pit Bull attack. Conversely, Pit Bulls are the most commonly abused breed known to man. Animal shelters are overflowing with unwanted and abused Pit Bulls. These dogs are also the most common breed used in dog fighting. Yet, there is a lot more to the American Pit Bull Terrier than negative stereotypes. Hopefully the following information provides some insight to the Pit Bull’s rich history and characteristics.

Origin

In the nineteenth century, the English developed the Staffordshire Bull Terrier by crossing the Bull Dog with other terriers. The Staffordshire Bull Terrier earned its name due to the region in which it was developed. Breeders brought this dog to the United Sates where American breeders altered it a bit. American breeders increased the dog’s weight and gave it a more powerful head.

Appearance

The Pit Bull maintains a strong, muscular body and is quite agile. It is a medium-sized breed and commonly weighs between 40 and 60 pounds. Its eyes are round and usually black. The Pit Bull maintains semi-erect ears that are usually docked slightly. The tail is rather short and horizontal. Often, man docks the Pit Bull’s tail in addition to the ears. This breed’s coat is usually thick, short and shiny. The coat can also come in nearly any color.

Personality

The Pit Bull is an extremely courageous dog and expresses much vitality. This breed maintains the ability to fight an opponent to the death. However, just a minimum amount of training usually produces a gentle and loving companion. Because this breed is often suspicious of strangers, early socialization and training are absolute requirements.

Uses

This breed makes an excellent guard dog. In modern times, it has also been known as a good companion dog. The Pit Bull’s devotion to its master makes it a good companion breed.

Overall, it should be known that the Pit Bull is far more than a myriad of negative stereotypes. With proper training, this breed makes a good family dog. In fact, the Pit Bull is adaptable to living indoors with the family and often prefers to. Just remember to never leave a child unattended with any dog – regardless of the breed. Hopefully this information had cleared up some of the common misconceptions about the American Pit Bull Terrier.

Source
Kristen Moore

10 steps to calm dogs afraid of thunder, lightning storms

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

By Patty Khuly

It’s the same thing every year. The summer storms … they stress our dogs unduly. We vets call it “storm phobia.” You call it your worst nightmare. (The howling, the hiding, the destruction!)
Either way, we all want the same thing: a calmer dog that doesn’t have to suffer the psychological damage done by booming thunder, wicked lightning and plummeting barometric pressures.

And it’s not just their psyche (and ours!) at risk. We all know that dogs are capable of doing serious damage to themselves during stormy times of the year. Fractured claws, lacerations, broken teeth and bruises are but a few consequences.

So how do you handle thunderstorm phobia? Here are my suggestions:

•Handle it early on in your dog’s life.

Does your dog merely quake and quiver under the bed when it storms outside? Just because he doesn’t absolutely freak doesn’t mean he’s not suffering. Since storm phobia is considered a progressive behavioral disease, signs like this should not be ignored. Each successive thunderstorm season is likely to bring out ever-worsening signs of fear. It’s time to take action — NOW.

•Don’t heed advice to let her “sweat it out” or not to “baby” her.

I’ve heard many pet owners explain that they don’t offer any consolation to their pets because they don’t want to reinforce the “negative behavior” brought on by a thunderstorm. But a severe thunderstorm is no time to tell your dog to “buck up and get strong.” Fears like this are irrational (after all, she’s safe indoors). Your dog won’t get it when you punish her for freaking out. Indeed, it’ll likely make her anxiety worse. Providing a positive or distracting stimulus is more likely to calm her down.

•Offer treats, cuddlings and other good stuff when storms happen.

This method is best employed before the phobia sets in –– as pups. Associating loud booms with treats is never a bad thing, right?

•Let him hide — in a crate.

Hiding (as in a cave) is a natural psychological defense for dogs. Getting them used to a crate as pups has a tremendous influence on how comfortable they are when things scare them. Having a go-to place for relaxing or hiding away is an excellent approach, no matter what the fear. Another approach to try, whether he’s a pup or not:

•Get him away from the noise, and compete with it.

Creating a comfy place (for the crate or elsewhere) in a room that’s enclosed (like a closet or bathroom) may help a great deal. Adding in a loud radio or white noise machine can help, too. Or how about soothing, dog-calming music?

•Counter the effects of electromagnetism.

Though it may sound like voodoo, your dog can also become sensitized to the electromagnetic radiation caused by lightning strikes. One great way to shield your dog from these potentially fear-provoking waves is to cover her crate with a double layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Another method involves clothing her in a commercially available “Storm Defender” cape that does the same work. If she hides under the bed, consider slipping a layer of aluminum foil between the box-spring and mattress.

•Desensitize him.

Sometimes it’s possible to allay the fears by using thunderstorm sound CDs when it’s not raging outside. Play it at a low volume while plying him with positive stimuli (like treats and pettings). Increase the volume all the while, getting to those uncomfortable booming sounds over a period of weeks. It works well for some.

•Ask your veterinarian about drugs.

Sure, there’s nothing so unsavory as the need for drugs to relieve dogs of their fears, but recognize that some fears will not be amenable to any of these other ministrations without drugs. If that’s the case, talk to your vet about it –– please. There are plenty of new approaches to drugs that don’t result in a zonked-out dog, so please ask!

•Natural therapies can work.

For severe sufferers, there’s no doubt it’ll be hard to ask a simple flower essence to do all the heavy lifting, but for milder cases, Bach flower extracts (as in Rescue Remedy), lavender oil (in a diffuser is best) and/or “Dog Appeasing Pheromone” (marketed as D.A.P. in a diffuser, spray or collar) can help.

•Consider seeing a board-certified veterinary behaviorist.

If nothing else works, your dog should not have to suffer. Seek out the advice of your veterinarian, and, if you’ve gone as far as you can with him/her, consider someone with unique training in these areas –– perhaps a board-certified veterinary behaviorist.

Patty Khuly, a small-animal veterinarian in Miami, is author of FullyVetted, a blog on pet health at PetMD.com. She also writes weekly for the Miami Herald and monthly for Veterinary Practice News. Her USA TODAY guest column appears each Friday.

Khuly lives in South Miami with her son, Max, dogs Vincent and Slumdog, goats Poppy and Tulip, and a backyard flock of chickens.

Source

On the iPad, nobody knows you’re a dog. Or a cat.

Monday, April 19th, 2010

iggy investigates an ipad

A Dog Tests the iPad – Tested.com

A pair of domestic animals put Apple’s latest creation to the test

The first, featuring Eric Rautio’s cat Iggy (3 million YouTube hits and counting), is the most interesting, especially when Iggy starts fiddling around with Smule’s Magic Piano. You never know when you start playing Magic Piano duets with strangers in cyberspace who’s banging on the other keyboard.

Will Smith’s Corgi Chloe (just under 1 million hits) isn’t quite as much fun, perhaps because, like so many Apple (AAPL) skeptics, she doesn’t see the use case.

The videos, via Geek System, are available on YouTube here and above.

Source

Dog Dynamics in Spring

Monday, April 12th, 2010

An abundance of telltale signs signal the wonderful advance of spring. We probably all have our favorites. One sure sign for me is the increasing number of dogs out and about the city.

I truly love seeing dogs outside getting exercise and stimulation after a long winter. It’s what the dogs and owners sometimes do or don’t do that can turn a delightful spring walk into a stressful or unpleasant event.

Here are a few of my spring peeves and possible solutions for owners and dogs:

- Too much stray dog poop where it doesn’t belong. Poop bags are provided at some trail heads and other places in the city. Owners: if you are caught out without a poop bag, please return with one later and do your duty. Please clean up after your dogs no matter where they go.

- Getting ambushed by a dog in a parked car. Inside a parked car or truck with tinted windows may lurk a dog you cannot see that literally goes crazy barking and banging against the car when you pass closely with your dogs on leash. This can be a shock to the nervous systems of both dogs and owners. It’s also not good for the ambushing dog. Owners: don’t leave your dogs in parked cars if they freak out at passing dogs and people. Hire a trainer to help you modify the behavior

- Aggressive barking from dogs riding in the back of pickup trucks. This is a safety issue and it’s also a matter of courtesy if your dog barks at other dogs and humans out walking. Owners: have your dogs safely restrained if riding in the truck bed and keep them in the cab if they go overboard expressing their excitement or anger at pedestrians and other dogs.

- Dogs going ballistic from behind a fence. Ear-splitting artillery barks and aggressive behavior at passing people out for a stroll can spoil a pleasant walk. Many times owners do or say nothing to the barking dog. Owners: put a visual barrier on the fence that blocks the dog’s view, intervene and bring the dog inside, or train the dog not to bark. Consider hiring a trainer for help. This canine behavior may also disturb neighbors.

- Off-leash dogs running up and bothering leashed dogs in a natural park. Helena’s leash law requires an owner to have immediate voice control over his dogs in any natural park such as Mount Helena, Mount Ascension Park or Davis Gulch. It’s traumatic for leashed dogs to get jumped by off-leashed dogs with poor dog-dog social skills and a rude approach. Owners: leash up your dogs if you can’t call them back or stop them immediately.

- Assuming other owners want their dogs to greet your dogs. Some dogs are very reactive on leash and their owners may not want them to greet your off-leash dogs. Owners: ask the other dog owner if the dogs can greet, whether you’re in city limits or hiking in a natural park.

- Failure to apologize. Owners: a sincere apology can go a long way in eliminating anger if your dogs rudely do any of the above.

I truly hope we can work together to keep outdoor activities with our dogs more pleasant. I would love to hear if you have additional annoyances you want to share, or you disagree with mine.

In the meantime, enjoy the spring.

Tom Kandt is shelter trainer and behavioral consultant at the LCHS. He is a certified professional dog trainer and graduate of the San Francisco SPCA Academy for Dog Trainers. Reach him at tkandt@yahoo.com.

Source

Court Denies Food Stamps to Service Dog

Friday, April 9th, 2010

An unemployed, wheelchair-bound veteran can’t get food stamps for his service dog a Pennsylvania court ruled Tuesday.

Phillyburbs.com reported that James Douris lost a yearlong court case after a three-judge panel determined food stamps are for humans only.

Douris wanted to have his male boxer listed as a dependent in calculating benefits. In February 2009, he appealed a Bucks County welfare office decision that granted him $176 a month in food stamps, saying the amount was not enough to feed himself and the dog. Douris later testified that he feeds the animal human and pet food, but argued the animal pulls his wheelchair around, thus requiring supplemental nutrition.

“I was pretty disappointed,” Douris, 55, told Phillyburbs.com after the ruling. “He’s my right hand. I can’t live without him, really.” The dog, which Douris has had for four years, also fetches items for the Newton resident.

In the Commonwealth Court’s decision , Judge Renee Cohn Jubelirer wrote: “This Court is sympathetic to Petitioner’s argument that his service dog is a necessity for him due to his disability, and that he lacks the funds to properly feed his service dog. We hope that there is some other state or federal program that might provide for the maintenance and upkeep of Petitioner’s service dog.”

However, extending benefits to the dog would fundamentally change the food stamp program, Jubelirer wrote.

The court’s ruling upheld the state welfare department’s decision.

Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare spokesman Mike Race said the agency is sympathetic but “as the court noted, federal law is ‘unambiguously clear’ that food stamp benefits are intended for humans only.”

Douris said that he plans to appeal.

Source

Should dogs be allowed to enter places of business?

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Guest Post from Seattle:

For the record, please understand that I am an animal lover. Although I do not have a dog, I love dogs, cats, fish, monkeys, zebras, frogs, and any other kind of animal you can think of. However, I do not respect people who harm animals and/or neglect their pets. See my past blog concerning animal abuse in Belltown here.

Recently, I was standing in line at a local drug store waiting to purchase my goods. The line was not moving fast due to the lack of cashiers and delays in the transaction. A couple spots in front of me was a woman who had her quiet dog on a leash. Suddenly, a puddle started to appear around the dog, the woman looked down and completely ignored that her dog was urinating and moved up to the cashier to make her purchase. A customer behind me then brought the urine to the dog-owner’s attention, and she acted in complete disbelief that her dog did that. She was unprepared to clean her dog urine; and I believe that if the gentleman didn’t bring it to her attention, she would not have cleaned it.

One more story.

A couple months ago, I saw two dog owners pass each other in the aisle of a grocery store with their dogs on their leash. The dogs smelled each other in typical dog-fashion, then suddenly started fighting each other. The dog owners, completely embarrassed and shocked, started pulling on their growling dogs to separate the two dogs, apologized to each other, and went on their shopping way. Luckily nobody was hurt in this playful battle of the canines.

I’m starting to notice more signs posted on doors in Belltown and downtown businesses that prohibit animals, other than service dogs, from entering their business. After noticing a sign on one of these businesses, I asked the business owner why he posted the sign and he told me that although dogs are unpredictable, some dog owners don’t watch over their dogs and the dogs urinate on the floor from time to time and ignore their mess.

Unfortunately, this type of dog owner, which is probably 1 in a 1000, is ruining the reputation of all responsible dog owners.

Not cleaning up your animal’s fecal matter is in violation of Seattle Municipal Code (SMC) 9.25.082:

It is unlawful for an owner to: Fail to remove the fecal matter deposited by his/her animal on public property or private property of another before the owner leaves the immediate area where the fecal matter was deposited.

Also, not having the materials to clean up your animal’s mess is in violation of SMC 9.25.082:

It is unlawful for an owner to: Fail to have in his/her possession the equipment necessary to remove his/her animal’s fecal matter when accompanied by said animal on public property or public easement.

You can see all the SMCs referring to animals here.

Dogs will be dogs. Dogs will urinate. Dogs will sniff other dogs. Dogs will also aggressively play with other dogs.

Dog owners, if you can’t control your dog, please keep it out of places of business until you can control your dog.

David can be found on Facebook at facebook.com/missingsonics.
Follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/missingsonics.

Source