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Topics - newflvr

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16
With all of Cowboy's health issues (cluster epilepsy, exercise intolerance, a bad case of hemorraghic gastroenteriti s) we have all taken the attititude that we were going to love and cherish him for as long as we would have him and miracle of miracles:  he's now officially four years old!!!  Here's some pictures of he and Chester waiting for the days festivities. (Cowboy has learned to close his eyes whenever a camera comes around:  he doesn't like the flash!! LOL).  We're have a doggy birthday party with the members of his play group:  two Bernese Mt. dogs, a lab and a golden this afternoon complete with cake and ice cream!!

17
Medical Conditions & Diseases / I've officially gone around the bend!!
« on: October 04, 2006, 11:23:12 am »
Chester was sick last night:  vomiting, diarrhea, and just generally unhappy.  It started at about 2:00 am and I don't know about you but I get the middle of the night scaries:  "he's got bloat"  "he's got gastroenteriti s", "he's got pancreatitis". "Should I take him to the emergency vet???" So, I'm out in my jamies and slippers with a flash light looking for the poop-pile to see if there is any blood (nope) and then for the vomit pile to see what's in it (nothing but slime)!  Of course, he was interested for a few minutes but he went back in to our room and went back to sleep.  I come in, am freezing cold and then have to look up bloat to see what the symptoms are (he had none of them).  I finally got back to sleep at almost 4:00, because of course I had to massage his belly just to be sure it was soft.  AGHHHH! I am a neurotic dog-mom!!!  I confess!!! :P

18
DOGS AND EXERCISE
by Arlee

In raising a canine from a puppy to an adult dog consideration should to be given to the anatomical developmental period. There is awareness and thought given to the emotional and psychological periods of canine development. Consideration of the anatomical aspects of a growing puppy are equally important and merit conscientious attention.

It is a widely believed that a tired puppy is a good puppy! While a tired puppy may be good for the owner, it is not
always good for the puppy. Allowing either a pup or adult to
reach the point of being tired due to excess exercise can have detrimental affects on their anatomy causing injury, particularly to a growing puppy . Occasionally a pup or adult dog may react just the opposite to excessive exercise than what is expected. (A correlation might be a runner's high.) Dogs can become hyperactive and unmanageable! The concept that puppies need to be given a lot of exercise does not take into consideration the dangers of undue physical stress on immature joints, muscles, ligaments and tendons.

Many joint disorders of the canine, such as hip and elbow
dysplasia have a genetic component and are termed polygenic. But, some disorders are latent with what is called a genetic
predisposition - meaning that the potential is there but with careful management of the critical growth period the disease may not develop . Dogs are genetically predisposed to osteochondrosi s, but environmental factors may influence how this disease is manifested. Some disorders, regardless of the animal's physical management, will be overtly manifested. In large breed dogs the typical age at which the bones' growth plates have closed is 14 months; they close in small breeds are 10 months. The growth plates are the locations in each bone where new bone forms. Damage to the
growth plates can result in serious limb abnormalities. How a pup is physically managed through this early growth stage will, in many instances, have an affect on whether or not these disorders actually develop.

World renown expert on canine fitness, Chris Zink, VMD, PhD
states in her bookPeak Performance: Coaching the Canine
Athlete: "Puppies have an increased risk of injury due to their relative lack of coordination, because their bones are immature and softer than those of adult dogs, and because their muscles are not yet fully developed..... . Even after a year of age, young dogs should not be worked strenuously until their muscles have been developed by a program of increasing exercise of a period of several months." She also recommends that there be no forced exercise before six months. In other words, pups can run and play but not be
taken on long walks and hikes. Dogs between six and fourteen months can safely do strength training exercise but not
endurance.

Strength training exercise is appropriate for an immature
puppy body. (Weight lifting is the classical strength exercise for a human.) When a dog does strength training, it is his body that is the weight he moves. Exercises where he moves over short distances are strength training exercises Therefore, a pup gains strength by moving his own body weight at his own speed. He seeks his own level of exercise. Pups benefit from strength training activities such as fetching, swimming short distances, playing with other
pups, chasing games and most other activities a pup normally does. For those who must take their pups for walks, the European dog community has what I consider to be an excellent rule of thumb for young puppies - five minutes of normal walking for each month a pup is old. So, a two month old pup could be walked for ten minutes. This will gradually and safely contribute to age appropriate endurance.

Endurance exercises are those in which a dog makes
repetitive movements over a period of time. Long controlled walks, jogging with an owner or running next to a bicycle are endurance exercises. It is important to note that dogs should not be exercised on hard surfaces such as concrete and asphalt. Humans have special shoes designed to absorb the impact of their weight when exercising on hard surfaces, canines do not! Running and hard playing on sand often contributes to injury of the cruciate ligaments. Encouraging serious endurance exercise is not in the anatomical best interests of a dog under 14 months of age.

Canine of all ages benefit from exercise. It is the amount
and kind of exercise given at the appropriate age level of
anatomical development which is of significance in maintaining a healthy, physically fit and sound dog. It is helpful to compare agrowing pup to a child. A six month old pup is commensurate in age to a seven year old human. Would you ask that child to run a 10K race or lift weights? Common sense must guide you!

19
Cowboy is limping...he has arthritis in his front elbows. I completely drawing a blank as to what I can give him to make him more comfortable... .is it aspirin?  Sheesh!!  My brain leaks!!!

20
My daughter, who is a graphic designer in San Francisco has asked if she can do a presentation to her design firm on the Newfs.  I'm going to be in Sacramento tomorrow so it's only an hour drive (fingers crossed) to take them in to her firm for her presentation.  I have no idea what she's doing with them, but I think it will be really fun.  I'm going to try to sneak a camera in....Office Dogs!  It's a whole new concept for them!  Will report in when we get home!!

21
Medical Conditions & Diseases / What do you know
« on: September 13, 2006, 03:56:54 am »
about stys?  Cowboy had one on his lower eyelid about two-three weeks ago and the vet lanced it and gave him antibiotics fof a week.  Now he has one on the upper eyelid!  What causes it?  I think I'm just going to use hot compresses on it (because the thought of lancing it makes ME nauseous!!) Any other ideas??

22
The breeder thinks he died of heat stroke.  He was playing with one of the other Newfs (78 degrees but humid) and hesitated coming in, which he never did.  When the breeder checked on him, he was gone  :'( :'( :'( :'(

It just doesn't seem like it was hot enough, but I really know nothing about heat stroke except we need to avoid it!!!

I'm so sad!!

23
I have walked my Newfs in the early evenings at our local 'alternative' high school...after soccer practice, or whatever event is going on.  This evening we ran in to another magnificent big paw, a fawn dobie who wanted to play with Chester and Cowboy.  We let them off lead and another  woman drives on to the field where they are playing and proceeds to scream at us how frightened she was to go in to her classroom (she's a teacher there) because her little children were with her.  Now the classroom is at least 100 yards away and she had to drive to tell us this.  Of course Cowboy has eased in to a lay down  ::) while she's yelling and Chester is sitting quietly watching her antics and the dobie is sitting with his owner.  I tried to calmly explain that the dogs were playing with each other and she screamed that she heard one growl.  I tried to draw the analogy that many children scream while playing and it's the same with dogs. She started yelling that she was a biology major and look what happened to Steve Irwin. (??)

I even pointed out Cowboy's Therapy Dog tags and that he works with people in hospitals...an d that's what my goal is for Chester....did n't matter.  Dogs are BAD!  Dogs KILL!  Dogs ATTACK!!! 

Why are such stupid people teaching children?  I'm thinking I need to go to the school on Monday and have a word with the principal about perhaps having an "understanding dogs" seminar.

In the meantime, watch out for all attack-Newfoundlands!! >:(

24
Chester's dad and brother are coming for a visit in December!  They have both qualified for a major dog show near us and the breeder and his wife, handler and driver are all going to be with us with the dogs!!!  THREE brown Newfies (and Cowboy, of course!) under our roof at the same time!  I can't wait! We're going to go to the show to cheer them on! 

25
Newfoundland Pictures / This picture makes me giggle
« on: August 16, 2006, 06:08:04 am »
I try to keep Cowboy upstairs (the main floor) at our cabin since the stairs are so steep.  Everytime I go down stairs, that's the face that greets me when I come back up.  He is such a goof!!!

I try not to use the baby gate that you can see in the picture because I'm afraid he'll break through it!!

26
 I have only three experiences to share with all of you.....first of all, as I MAY have previously mentioned...ju st in passing, of course, my Willie was mostly
a perfect gentleman. However,,,,,,and isn't there ALWAYS a "however?", the one place you never wanted to be when you said..."Do you want to go in the car/for a ride" was between him and the door! My friend Nick knew this perfectly well, but in a relaspe moment of some kind...stood by the kitchen cupboard and the door and asked if I wanted to go see the storm damage, and then said....OMG... Willie, you want to go with us (obviously the dog was smart enuff to translate this
into....go in the car)? Now Nick was - and probably still is....LOL...6'3 and a well muscled 250 and Willie, just trying to get to the door you understand, hit him at the knees and took him right out! In retrospect..it was like watching a slow motion cartoon of some huge giant flying into the air and belly-flopping on the floor not able to catch his breath while this big black bear kept licking him on the face telling him to get up so he could go for the promised ride! sigh.....
>
> Then, yet another friend who had never before met Willie wanted to see my vintage 1964 Dodge, so I brought it over complete with Newf in the back seat. Of course, laying down my darling dog spent most of the back seat and more. His
comment was...."OMG! most people hauling that size of animal use a horse trailer!" Last time I ever talked to him.....lol
 
> Last incident was with a deputy sheriff...."oh yeah"....who when I was still living in Wyoming stopped to tell me that bears (I am totally serious here) that no one could keep pet bears in the city limits - he must have just seen only Wyoming bears with a serious "tail crisis"
>

27
The following story titled "Are Bull Terriers Good With Children?"
by Peggy Arnaud appeared in The Bull Terrier Club Of South Australia
magazine in February 1994

Here goes:-

Haven't we all been asked this question many times? Yes, if raised with children, a bull terrier is a perfect companion; gentle and aware of the child's fragility. Haven't we all watched a great lump of dog playquietly on the floor with babies, then without warning hurl itself upon an unsuspecting adult with sufficient force to practically land him inthe intensive care unit. So I would like to ask this question - Are Bull Terriers Good With Adults? Not one of my dogs has ever laid a tooth on me, but the damage to my person has, over the years been considerable.

One rainy morning I was standing in the driveway watching my husband back out the car when Muffin came flat out around the corner of the house
carrying a length of 2 x 4. What she was intending to do with this piece of lumber has never been determined - it is possible that she was becoming bored with the demolition trade and was about to enter the construction business. Turning at her approach, I received the full impact of the wood on my shinbone and was knocked to the ground by
the force where I lay screaming with pain and fury. Muff observed this odd behaviour for a moment, then deciding that she had heard all those words before (usually directed at her anyway), she retrieved her wooden weapon, and spinning it around with the grace and agility of a baton twirler, connected neatly with the back of my head as I was
attempting to get to my feet. The impact returned me to my previous horizontal position, this time face down. My
husband, who witnessed the entire performance informed me later that the timing was superb - worthy of the best Keystone Cops or Marx Brothers. But he delayed his departure, herded the menace into her kennel and inquired through his merriment if I was hurt. Stating I thought I might live long enough to murder the wretched bitch, I was
helped to my feet but found I could not put any weight on the injured leg and my scalp was cut and bleeding - so a trip to the accident room of the local hospital was
thought advisable.

Being my first visit for emergency treatment, I was not prepared for the volume of information required. Name, address, occupation are routine - but how, when and why!....(I am an obstetrical nurse and our patients are admitted onto the floor with a minimum of questions. We know why they are there, and we know how it happened and we assume the patient knows too, although sometimes one wonders)!

The admitting nurse was efficient and thorough. Vital statistics dealt with came unexpected questions. "Now, how did this accident happen?" "Well," I said, "You see my dog had this big piece of wood in her mouth and she hit me with it."
"Your dog?"
"Yes."
"I see, - and the head wound?"
"Well my dog did that too."
"With a piece of wood?"
"Yes, - it was the same piece of wood actually."
"I see."
"Well," I said, coming quickly to Muffin's defense," of course she didn't mean to, she sort of spun around and she had this piece of wood in her mouth, you see - and, well-she hit me with it - I was sitting in the driveway at the time..."

Our local hospital does not have a psychiatric floor but I could see by the expression on the nurse's face that she was aware of the desperate need for one.

I was X-Rayed, treated amid controlled giggles from the staff, and released.

The next major incident followed swiftly. (Minor ones occur almost daily.) The paddock gate is, of necessity, sturdily built of oak and heavy. It opens inward. Every day I collect each dog after his play period. I call them from whatever act of mayhem they may be committing, push open the gate and bend down ready to snap on the lead. For three hundred
and sixty four days of the year Bloody Mary had galloped to the gate, come around it, and been leashed in the usual fashion. On this particular day, whether due to a whim, or perhaps because the moon was in Aquarius she chose to project herself at approximately the speed of light from the far corner of the paddock, and instead of coming around the gate, she leapt at it with all the force of her fifty pounds of muscle, slamming it shut on my head. I went down
like a pole-axed ox, and remained down and out long enough for the murderous beast to remove and eat the bait-biscuits from my pocket - she also removed and apparently ate the pocket. A small hairpiece I was wearing has never been seen again - presumably it was quickly killed and buried.

Staggering into a lawn chair I sat holding my head and considering an early retirement from dog breeding, while Mary amused herself by eating the geraniums.

This pastoral scene continued for awhile until my neighbour drove up, took one look at me, and insisted - yes, you guessed it - on a trip to the Emergency Room.

The last thing I wished to do on this earth was return to the Hospital where, after the Muffin episode, there exists some doubt as to my sanity - I am known locally as "that kook who lives up on the hill with those funny looking white things she says are dogs". But feeling too sick to argue or resist I was firmly placed in the car and hurried off to my fate. And so it came to pass that once again I presented myself at the local Emergency Room. Of course, the admitting nurse was the same asbefore, the staff also. Approaching the desk in embarrassed misery - torn clothing, wild hair, a great lump on my forehead and eyes blackening fast, I
am greeted by an obviously wary nurse - "Goodness, Mrs. Arnaud, sit down. Whatever happened to you now?" I take a deep breath, (Oh God will get you for this Bloody Mary) and with visions of padded cells looming large in my future, "Well," I said "you see - my dog..."

Are Bull Terriers Good With Children?
Oh yes. They are lovely.
Are Bull Terriers Good With Adults?

Well I am an adult and they are not good with me, and I have the scars - my body, my furniture, and my psyche - to prove it.


28
 Having been at our cabin for the last month relaxing and just having fun, I've had to come home to a mess!  The garden is a nightmare and we're having an engagement party here in early Oct ( ;D ;D ;D) for our daughter and her fiance.  I was happily pulling weeds in the lawn, lost in my own world.  Cowboy was snoozing under a tree and I filled Chester's baby pool for him to splash around.  Everybody's happy, right?  Our lawn has a major slope and I was on the lower part, bent over with my rear pointing uphill.  Never heard it coming:  Chester running full speed down the slope and butted me in the butt!  I went F-L-Y-I-N-G;    S  O  A  R  I  N  G!  Glasses went one direction, hat another and me butt-over-tea kettle!!!  Now WHAT am I doing wrong in training that he'd do that??!  Did he sign up for billygoat lessons on-line???!!! :P :P :P

29
Big Dogs with Jobs / dumb question about confirmation and showing
« on: July 24, 2006, 05:00:59 pm »
Chester was meant to be a show dog, but for a lot of different reasons, I didn't follow through.  My question is (and I'm trying to put a salve on my guilty conscience), if a dog doesn't meet the AKC guidelines on size, does that pretty much eliminate him from competition for confirmation?  I know we can do water work and or obedience, but my concern is confirmation.  Chester is very small for a male Newf...the guidelines for males are between 130 - 150 pounds, I think and Chester, at almost a year and a half is 106.  He looks a lot smaller than Cowboy who is 145 pounds.  What do you all think?

30
Newfoundland Discussions / Chester is a TRUE Newf!
« on: July 24, 2006, 08:08:00 am »

Since we've been at the lake, Chester and Cowboy go swimming a couple of times a day just to cool off.  I finally have been able to get both of them in my canoe (to the neighbor's hysterical laughing!!) to go along the shoreline (more on that episode later) and have wondered what was going to happen when Chester's antics would flip us all in to the lake.

Today I got the brilliant idea to jump off the end of the dock to see what dog would come in after me (since Cowboy and Chester are both Newfs, I was sure they'd both come).  Well, WRONG!!  Neither came.  They both stood and watched me swim away.

AH HAH!  Chester remembered that he IS a Newfoundland and he's supposed to save people who are in the water.  And his person who adores him and fixes his favorite breakfast and dinner was in the water!  And swimming away!  Chester sped up the dock, along the rocks (think Superman with cape flying), on to the beach and swam furiously out to me.  Of course, by this time, my swimming is slowing considerably (he was RUNNING not FLYING, for heaven's sake!) but I had just enough strength to turn him back toward the beach and hold on to his coat....AND HE SAVED ME!!  He actually pulled me back in to the beach!  YEA!! He IS a full blooded Newfie!!

.....and Cowboy would really, really miss me.  He was still sitting on the end of the dock.  Oh, well.....at least he's really, really cute!
 *****sigh*******

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