dog collar


 dog collar
dog clothes
dog food
cat and dog
Golfer Rescues Drowning Dog

ST. LOUIS -- Golfer Jean Kautzman rescued a drowning dog at a suburban St. Louis golf course Tuesday before her first round even began.

Approaching her first hole of the day, Kautzman, 76, passed a pond where a small dog was struggling to keep her head above water.

Kautzman removed her shoes and socks, jumped in the pond, and swam over to Lola the pomeranian. .


Bathing the dog is so much easier with the right tools

The first one I remember was the original Rusty. He was a big beautiful classic sable collie. "Lassie" was big on TV then and we lived on a chicken ranch, so a collie was perfect for us. I was three years old. That dog is part of my earliest childhood memories. I do not remember much else about that time.

I sure do not remember when Mom and Dad washed the dog or how they did it. Fast forward to the next dog I remember: Tiny was a black, tan and white, shorthaired Chihuahua.

I was six years old and we lived in town in Calistoga. Tiny only liked my Mom and made it very clear he would bite anyone else.

I do not remember what happened to Tiny and Dad does not remember either. The next family dog I remember was the first dog that belonged to me, I was 10 years old. She was a small black cocker mix named Suzie Q.


Dogs hone skills to catch poachers

Casey Zolper, of the Delaware Division of Fish & Wildlife, and his 2-year-old black Labrador retriever partner, Warden, search for an ammunition magazine, shotgun shell and a gun holster during an article detection exercise Wednesday in Rising Sun, Md. (Buy photo) The News Journal/CARLA VARISCO .


Rusty's long trip home

SIX months on the road and he's finally made it home. Rusty, the four-year-old bull terrier-cross, was given up for dead after disappearing from his Canberra home half a year ago.

But to everyone's surprise, he has "done a Lassie" and turned up alive and well – just north of Adelaide, 1200km away.

Somehow Rusty travelled across state borders to Two Wells, 40km north of Adelaide, before being picked up as a "stray dog" last weekend by the RSPCA after a call from the public.

So how did the four-year-old bull terrier-cross cover the huge distance – by plane, train or an automobile?

"Well one thing is for sure, he didn't walk," Rusty's owner Shane Gowen, 21, said yesterday as he celebrated the return of his "best friend" after paying $400 for the dog to be flown to Canberra from Adelaide on Friday night.


Golden Retriever Foundation donates to canine cancer campaign

The Golden Retriever Foundation has pledged $500,000 over a five-year period to the Morris Animal Foundation's Canine Cancer Campaign.

In April, the MAF officially kicked off the campaign, a large-scale, $30 million initiative to cure cancer in dogs within the equivalent of a dog's lifetime of 10 to 20 years (see JAVMA, May 1, 2007, page 1287).

The GRF was the first breed foundation or club to pledge a major gift to the campaign.

"Cancer is the leading cause of death among Goldens, as it is among many breeds," said David Kinghorn, president of GRF. "We hope that other breed groups will follow our lead and support this important endeavor."

Established in 1997 by the Golden Retriever Club of America, the GRF supports research, rescue, and education and has awarded more than $1 million in grants.


 
Link to us - Contact us