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Dog Diary

The ride of life with a dog
  • Surf Dog Diaries - dog blog
  • The ride of life with a dog
  • HANG 20 - DOG BEACH, CA
  • HANG 20 - DOG RIVER, OR
  • ABOUT US
  • BarbAyers.com
  • GIVING BACK
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Dogs ride the ups and downs with us. Real life Surf Dog Diaries

Meet writer dogs. Rider dogs. Best dog friends. Surf the couch, the www, or a wave. Wave back at us!

It's all about the ride. The ride of life with a dog.

Adopting a Shelter Pet Saves Two Lives

Rupert Report with M J Sweeney April 27, 2018

We’ve all seen those beautiful videos on the internet when a shelter animal gets adopted that never fail to bring a tear to the eye. The excitement in their eyes coupled with utter disbelief, gratitude, and sincere love they feel towards their new caretakers makes adopting a pooch or a cat one of the happiest moments anyone can experience.

But why adopt if you can simply go buy a puppy from a local breeder? Well, for one, by adopting instead of buying, you will be supporting the shelters instead of the puppy mills that breed the dogs for the sake of profits, and not the well-being of the animal. However, there are numerous other benefits to adopting a shelter animal, benefits that will transform your life for the better in addition to saving the lives of numerous pets waiting to find their perfect family.

woman CUgreen-2597714_1280.jpg

You will be saving more than just one life

The notion of saving a single life is a powerful one, and it should be enough to inspire anyone looking to get a dog to head over to the shelter instead of a local puppy mill. But if you think about how your decision can impact the lives of numerous other animals, then the cause becomes even more important and rewarding.

Adopting a dog or a cat is not just about that one animal – it allows you to improve the chances of other animals finding their families as well. Because shelters often have to make the tough decision of euthanizing animals to make room for new arrivals, you will be helping the next animal in line to take your dog’s place, and find a happy home.

How having a pet can influence your health

Among numerous emotional and psychological benefits an owner can experience by adopting and bonding with their pets, there are also several health benefits that make the entire story that much more appealing.

A few decades ago, it was common sense to believe that keeping a pet indoors increases the chance of developing allergies and respiratory health issues in children. However, studies have confirmed that owning a pet actually lowers the risk of children developing these symptoms, and even boosts their immune system over time.

Along with immune system benefits, pet owners are known to be healthier individuals in general. Dog and cat owners typically benefit from decreased blood pressure, decreased cholesterol and triglyceride levels, and an active lifestyle that further safeguards overall well-being.

Consider how a dog can save You

Numerous physical health benefits notwithstanding, researchers at Harvard University have concluded that owning a dog can have numerous emotional and psychological benefits for all age groups as well, especially children and seniors. So consider how rescuing a sheltered dog can actually be a two-way street, and how your new companion can “save” you as well.

However, in order to reap the benefits of this new friendship, the dog will need to be happy, healthy, and satisfied with its new family and surroundings, so make sure you choose good pet food, take your pooch to the vet regularly, and stick to daily physical activity such as walking and playing fetch. Once you have these areas covered, you will have an easier time bonding with your furry friend.

In fact, researchers suggested that a care-taking role may give older individuals a sense of responsibility and purpose that contributes to their overall well-being, so keep in mind that a pet is not an aesthetic addition to your living environment, but rather a living creature that requires attention and devotion in every sense of the word. This way, the pet will be able to give your life a new meaning as well.

The right way to raise a family

Speaking of devotion and caring for your pet, rescuing a shelter animal and bringing it into your growing family is one of the best ways to raise your children to be good, healthy, stable, and loving adults. Not only can pets positively influence your children’s cardiovascular health, but they can also teach them numerous positive skills and values that will prove to be imperative later in life.

With the help of their furry companions, children can learn empathy, calm and composure, how to be brave, confident, and take on responsibilities in life with pride, joy, and devotion. Caring for an animal teaches your children all the right values, so consider the needs of your family as well when thinking about adopting a shelter animal.

You can’t put a price on unconditional love

Finally, receiving and thriving together under the unconditional love your new pet is going to give you is at the root of every benefit we mentioned today. Everything stems from the fact that from now on, your life will be enriched by an animal that will love you unconditionally, for as long as they can see you, hear you, and smell your unique scent that has become their everything.

Rescuing a dog means so much more than saving a single life – it means rescuing yourself, and numerous other animals in the process. So say no to commercial breeding practices, and instead opt for a sheltered animal that is healthy, loving, and just waiting for you to give it a home and a lifelong, loving embrace.

Pet pest proofing. Yard safety tips for dog moms and dads

Guest Contributor April 21, 2018

Who doesn't live outside when spring and summer rolls around? 

But lurking in the yard are possible pet hazards.  What are your garden risks?


Pests for pets

  • Ticks live outside - and can carry lyme disease to you and your pet

Ticks rub off the grass or trees onto your dog as they walk by. They go viral in spring, until frost season. Lyme disease is always a concern. It’s an epidemic in many parts of the country - a disease carried by deer ticks to people and pets. Here are the top ten tips for managing your risks of lyme for your human and canine family. This is serious stuff. 

  • Fleas nest in the yard in warm, temperate climates

Make sure you treat the yard, the car (floor mats and wherever the pet sits after a road trip) and dog beds, as well as the dog to prevent flea outbreaks. Pay close attention to flea removal after visiting a public park with other dogs. Watch out for a sand flea infestation - that can occur after visiting places like Dog Beach.  Also, do you have a cat or other furry friend that fleas can jump onto, after a dog carries them inside?

  • Mosquitos live where it’s wet – near rivers, streams, lakes - and your yard

This could be breeding in your bird feeder, bird bath, potted plants, outdoor storage draped with tarps, or buckets that fill up after the sprinklers run, or after it rains. Any small water pool can breed mosquitos. They can carry heartworm, which is deadly to dogs.


Risky Gardens?

A dog-friendly garden means peace of mind for you and a chance for your dog to explore the garden without coming across plants and garden accessories that could make them ill. Be on the look out for:

  • Toxic plants.

Some plants, if ingested can be toxic. And that includes not only blooms and leaves, but seeds, bulbs and tubers too. Using these plants in parts of the garden that your dog can’t reach is one solution or, if this is not possible, not planting them at all. Take a look at the list of toxic plants.

  • Irritating plants

If the canine member of the family seems to be constantly scratching or has a runny nose and eyes, it could be the plants they are brushing up against in the garden. Which plants are irritating your pet?

  • Hazardous chemicals

Most pet owners know the problems that slug pellets can cause but there are other commonly used garden products that could present a concern. Are you sure that what you use is not causing a problem to Fido?

  • Garden design issues

Ponds are great for introducing even more biodiversity into a garden but are you confident that it, along with other garden features, are not dangerous to your dog?

  • Handy dog-friendly garden guide:

This is a great start on yard design from Rattan Direct, based in the U.K. It does have some funny British spelling in it:

pet friendly garden- RattanDirect-your-gardenSMALL.jpg

Be safe. Now, get out there and enjoy the great outdoors!

Tags pet tips, pet safety, pet free yard
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chiweenies doxie head under covers in bed copy.jpg

Sick as a dog. In comes the doxie. For better for worse. In sickness and in health.

Barbara Ayers April 13, 2018

There are those sweet and selfless beings. The only ones so incredibly happy that you’re stuck at home, miserably sick. They aren’t your people. But you are theirs.

I’m not suitable for public consumption. I can’t get out of bed. Can’t talk. Or walk. Or breathe. Bed bound.

The Mount Hood peak of wadded tissues, volcanic overflow up and over the trash can. Wadded papers stacked up like a week’s worth of writer’s block per day.

Only worse – way worse.

Crumpled tissues with parts of me wrapped around them. Not given, but taken. Expelled. Violently removed. Sneezing and coughing and nose blowing. No, not blowing, more like blow torching. Body shaking violent eruptions. Mt Hood going off. Or is it St. Helens?

Overflowing trashcans; a four Kleenex box day.

Way worse than textbook virus. Not nose running, or sniffles or coughing. All of that, and more, on steroids. Must be why the doc gave me steroids, to counteract my body’s bizarre over response to a flu bug attack. It's spring - allergy season, too.

Body shaking, rattling, racking, uncontrollable coughs that tear into lungs and passageways. Ripped open, against their will. Bruising cells, now flooding with viral gunk. Disgusting junk. Way worse than baby poo, diarrhea on diapers, normal people call rough stuff.

Profoundly ill. Inhuman conditions. The kind another human can’t tolerate.

The kind a sick human would never ask another human to.

Alone in the house. Sick house - the kind no normal being enters voluntarily. A good friend drops off homemade soup, but understandably leaves it on the porch. This is not a moment of intimacy people like to share.

In comes the doxie.

For better for worse. In sickness and in health.

Nurse doxie Doodle. Photo: (c) Barb Ayers, DogDairy.org

Nurse doxie Doodle. Photo: (c) Barb Ayers, DogDairy.org

Burrowing in, elbowing along, dragging his stomach, inching up the bed, like sneaking up on prey. Pulling himself along the length of my body, from my toes up to my nose.

Jumps up to my head, propped up in bed. Wraps his arms around my neck, paws on skin. Looks deep into my eyes - his, glistening bright. Mine, dull and dim.

One quick lick to my cheek. Not an annoyingly long submissive thing I couldn’t stand, even on a good day. Just a kiss. Not noticing I’m sick as a dog. Or maybe just because?

My doxie noses in, under the tangle of blankets and pillows and body parts. Finding an opening. under covers, through the gunk and the wracked, soggy, disgusting mass of former humanity curled up like a dog. Finds a crevice that he can ooze into that will expand out to let him press full body against mine, between legs and stomach and sharing soft, warm body heat like a doxie hot water bottle, soothing and sweet as if sweet was even an option right now. I’d go for tolerable or even one percent less than inhumane. And then sweet noses in.

My son, my Doodle. Full body contact as if I’m not really a leper. Pressing his cute little shiny orange butt up against my jammies. Curly q tail wrapping around my thigh like even it wants so desperately to embrace me.

And now we’re snoring together. Wow, sweet snoring at last. I can’t sleep, so any catnap will do. Even 10 minutes of rest is a welcome change of fate.

Cutest little nuzzle buddy ever! Doodle. Photo: (c) Barb Ayers, DogDiary.org

Cutest little nuzzle buddy ever! Doodle. Photo: (c) Barb Ayers, DogDiary.org

Why do they call it sick as a dog?

Back in the 1700’s, people would just let homeless dogs die in the street. They were not welcome in neighborhoods or homes – never in beds, not for centuries. Nor were they given medical attention. Outcasts. Bad luck was blamed on dogs, sick and wandering the streets. In misery.

Seems like we’ve come full circle here.

Now I’m the miserable one, the down dog he’s catering to. He’s the one I adopted off the streets. Or is it the other way around? If this isn’t medical attention, I don’t know what is.

I love my dog. So profoundly glad he loves me too.

And when he’s worked his magic on me, that cat takes over baby-sitting duties.

And at some point in the distant future, I’ll be suitable for human interaction.


Related stories:

Elvis is at the vet - is there any more helpless feeling? 

I'm a worried sick dog mom

My majestic blind surf dog is finally better

Coping with pet loss - somewhere over the rainbow  and We lost Dude

Coping with disasters - love, loss and oil train derailments

Eagle Creel Fire - hoping for the best, preparing for the worst

Tags coping with pet loss, recovery from disaster, emergency preparedness, veterinarian, I love my dog, dog blog, surf dog diaries, dog diary, diary by dogs, Doodle the doxie, chiweenie, best dog friend, rescue dog, dog mom Barb Ayers, Barbara Ayers, I luv my dog
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