Category Archives: animals

Cruiser Champion Irish Wolfhound, Son of Logan Former Champion Irish Wolfhound

Gail Hawksworth with Cruiser

Earlier I had written about Logan, an Irish Wolfhound taller than his master. Now here’s Cruiser, Logan’s son and also first class of his breed.  By the way, Cruiser is bigger than Logan!

Here’s Cruiser’s story as told by his owner Gail Hawksworth ,

“Cruiser is my best friend.  He is much larger than his dad. He will be 5 this June. (Logan is 6 or 7 Yrs. old now) weights 184 lbs. and is 37 in. to his shoulders. Standing on his hind legs he is well over six and a half feet tall.

He is America’s number 1 Irish Wolfhound for 2010 in All Systems and the First Irish Wolfhound to received the title of Grand Champion in America. He also has other titles he has received === International / National Champion, T.D.I (therapy dog international) C.G.C (canine good citizen) and T.T. (temperament tested).

He is retired now and enjoys his therapy work which consist of giving sloppy licks to those who wants them and putting smiles on faces. He goes to hospitals, convalescent homes, schools and all different public events.

Has his dad they give some much love to all that comes in contact with them. They are truly ” Gentle Giants ” He is his father’s son —— : )

By the way, Cruiser’s full name is GCH.CH.MYSHAM OF REDWALL T.D.I, C.G.C, T.T       ” CRUISER ”

 

See also Irish Wolfhound, Logan, A Dog Taller Than Its Master

For all your real estate needs, call or email:

John O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
O’Dell Realty
(530) 263-1091
Email John jodell@nevadacounty.com

How to Protect Your Pets From Predators

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFW4w-61hic
This is a video of a coyote “playing” with a family dog. Notice that the coyote keeps running into the bushes. Coyotes travel in packs and will play with a dog, luring the dog into the bushes where the rest of the pack is. Once in the bushes, the coyotes will kill and devour the dog.

by Lisa J. Lehr

Most of us living in Nevada County moved here because we like the rural environment. Rural environments include wildlife, and that, for the most part, is a plus; however, most of us also share our lives with beloved pets, and clashes between wildlife and pets often end in heartache for the pet owner.

Coyotes are a particularly ubiquitous wild critter here in Nevada County, and pets falling prey to coyotes is a far too common occurrence. The consolation—if there is any—is that, compared to a car accident, dog attack, or abduction by a person with evil intentions, death by coyote is quick and, as far as we know, relatively suffering-free. Coyotes kill to eat, and they do it efficiently.

Still, it is heartbreaking to lose a cherished pet, and it is our responsibility to take care of them.

Coyotes are difficult to eradicate. They are becoming alarmingly unafraid of humans, with daytime sightings becoming more frequent. Trapping and relocating coyotes is not as good an idea as it may sound, as any young coyotes orphaned by this process will seek easy prey—e.g., our pets.

They can be frightened, so if you see one, try shaking a noisemaker (like a can full of hardware) or throwing things at it. Fire a Super Soaker (high-powered toy water gun) filled with water or vinegar.

More often, though, we don’t see them lurking around our property, as they are naturally nocturnal. The key to keeping coyotes away from your home (and your pets, your children, and you) is to eliminate all that attracts coyotes—mainly food. Coyotes are generalists, meaning they’ll eat just about anything.

With that in mind:

  • Keep your cats and small dogs indoors at night; your medium and large dogs, too. Coyotes hunting in packs can take down a fairly big animal.
  • Rabbits, chickens, etc. that are kept outdoors need protection: strong fencing with a top, and/or a small enclosure inside it that they can hide in.
  • Don’t let your pets’ food become coyote bait. Cats are best fed indoors, and dogs should be fed only what they will eat all at once, with no leftovers.
  • Be careful with your bird feeders. Place them close to your house, and clean up spills. Do not feed squirrels, deer, or other wildlife. Any naturalist will tell you that birds are the only wild critters we should feed.
  • Put garden compost in enclosed bins, and gather your ripe fruits and vegetables immediately.
  • If your cats wear bells on their collars, take them off. The same bells that supposedly alert birds to your cats’ presence also betray their whereabouts to coyotes. (Once you’ve cleaned up the birdseed, you’ll have fewer birds within your cats’ reach, anyway.) One final consideration: cats who wear bells learn to be stealthier hunters, which leaves us with no reason that cats should ever wear bells.
  • Besides food, coyotes are attracted to potential partners. An unneutered male dog will be attracted to a female coyote; a male coyote will be attracted to an unspayed female dog; both scenarios spell trouble. Spay and neuter your pets.
  • Mothballs and ammonia around your property may repel coyotes, as will a motion-sensitive light.
  • Consider a fence. The type of fencing will need to be one that deters climbing and is in accordance with the CC&Rs of your neighborhood; at least six feet tall and extending six inches below ground. Some clever person has invented a “roll fence”; it has a rolling piece at the top, which keeps your cats from climbing out, or any uninvited guests from climbing in. As they try to grasp the top bar, it rolls. Wild critters stay out, tame ones in, and you and your pets live happily ever after.

Coyotes will always be among us, but we don’t have to live in fear for our pets’ lives. Our best bet is to make them feel so unwelcome in civilization that they’ll pack up their families and move back to the wilderness.

Lisa J. Lehr is a writer and copywriter as well as animal lover living in Grass Valley. She can help you promote your business with a full range of online and offline marketing pieces. A member of Empire Toastmasters, she’s available to speak to your business or professional group. Visit her website www.justrightcopy.com for more information, opt in for a message series, and receive a free Marketing Guide.

There’s a Bear Living Under My House!


Picture taken by Jeff Toff’s cousin in Lake Tahoe

A friend of mine has a cousin who lives in Lake Tahoe. This winter a black bear decided to use the cousin’s space under his house to live in. Making it nice and cozy for the bear, the bear dislodged the heating ducts so he could stay warm during the winter. Being warm, the bear did not want to come out, but he got spooked when humans came around and he run up a tree as you can see in the picture.

A little information on the black bear which is also known as the American black bear, they’re the smallest and most common species of bear. They’re omnivores, eating whatever is in season and with a wide variety of food, making them a survivor over other bear species that have become extinct.  However, it’s said that 85% of their diet is vegetarian.  It’s estimated that there are twice as many black bears as all other species of bears.

They range in size from  125 to 550 pounds, can run at speeds from 25 to 30 mph. However, compared to brown bear attacks, violent encounters with black bears rarely lead to serious injury. But the majority of black bear attacks tend to be motivated more by hunger rather than territoriality, and thus victims have a higher probability of surviving by fighting back rather than submitting

By the way, the bear’s OK, he came down and went on his way looking for another warm place to camp out. Hopefully with forced air heat.

Source for information on black bears: Wikipedia
Source for story Jeff Toff

For all your real estate needs Call
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
O’Dell Realty
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE# 006689941

Having Bear Problems? Here are Some Tips

By John J. O’Dell

I’ve lived in Nevada County since 1965. As a licensed land surveyor and civil engineer, I’ve walked many a mile through the woods, and never have encountered a bear, a few rattlesnakes but no bears.  However, as we crowd into their neighborhood, their natural food supplies diminishes and human sources of food becomes attractive.

I remember one of my neighbors waking up in the morning after he had strapped his garbage can lid down, finding his garbage can down the hill with large claw marks on it. His solution, he put the garbage out in the morning on collection date.  No more problems.

Here are some tips on dealing with bear problems if you are really worried about it:

Bear are attracted to anything that is edible or that they associate with food. Take precautions by implementing the following ideas:

Garbage problems can be solved with the purchase and correct use of a bear-proof garbage container. Save money by sharing one with a neighbor! For Approved bear-proof containers and where to buy them. click here.

Wait to put trash out until collection day.

Don’t leave trash, groceries, or animal feed in your car.

Keep garbage cans clean and deodorize them with bleach or ammonia.

Harvest fruit off trees as soon as it is ripe, and promptly collect fruit that falls.

Only provide bird feeders outside during November through March and always hang feeders so they are inaccessible to bears..

Keep barbecue grills clean.

Keep pets inside.

Securely block access to potential hibernation sites such as crawl spaces under decks and buildings.

Don’t leave any scented products outside, even non-food items such as suntan lotion, insect repellent, soap or candles..

Keep doors and windows closed and locked. Scents can lure bears inside.

Source: Tahoe Council for Wild Bears

For all your real estate needs Call

John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
9530) 263-1091

DRE# 00669941

When a Pet Dies, How to Help Your Kids (And Yourself) Heal

by Lisa J. Lehr

Nevada County is a very pet-friendly place. Most of us here have one or more pets. And pets, over the generations, have enjoyed a status upgrade from outdoor animal to family member, albeit one who lies under the table at mealtime rather than sitting in a chair like the other family members. Many people—including me—believe that a family without pets is incomplete, and a childhood without the experience of raising pets is a disadvantaged childhood.

That experience, though, almost invariably includes the death of a pet. It’s a fact that most people outlive most types of pets; almost all children who have a pet will, at some point, lose one. As difficult as it is for the kids—not to mention for the parents who must explain death—it’s an important life experience.

Sadly, some parents try to spare their kids the pain of losing a pet with some type of coverup—by offering another explanation for the pet’s disappearance, or by concealing the death entirely. The first scenario, mostly used with dogs and cats, usually involves saying it “ran away.” The “ran away” story is offered either when the pet is known to be dead, and the parents have discreetly disposed of the body; or when a pet has disappeared, its fate unknown. Bad things sometimes happen when pets go outdoors, and sometimes old or ill pets will go away to die alone.

The second coverup method is most often used with small pets—fish, turtles, reptiles, perhaps rodents. In these cases, the parent removes the deceased pet while the kids are at school or asleep, replacing it with a similar one and hoping the kids won’t notice.

While beliefs about the afterlife and where pets “go” when they die may differ, and parents are entitled to some leeway when it comes to this subject, saying that the pet “ran away” does more harm than good. Death, as difficult as it is, is final. It offers closure. It’s part of the denial, anger, acceptance cycle that the experts agree we go through in loss. “The pet ran away” leaves kids vulnerable to false hopes and endless, unresolved speculation about what might have happened to the pet.

Why doesn’t he come home? Doesn’t she love us anymore? Is he hurt? Cold? Hungry? Is someone holding her prisoner? Did he find someone else he likes better? Why? Is my doggy or kitty ever coming home? Shouldn’t we be trying to find him? Why aren’t Mom and Dad as anxious to find her as I am?

Eventually, the child will be old enough to figure it out. Or enough years will have gone by that the pet couldn’t possibly be still alive, and the child gives up hope. But there’s no real closure. And that spoils the memory of the relationship they had.

That’s cruel.

If you know what has happened to the pet, and it’s something upsetting—e.g., it was hit by a car or attacked by another animal, and you have found the remains—the truth can be somewhat softened for younger kids. You don’t have to tell the whole truth. If your pet has simply disappeared, however, make every effort to find it! It’s amazing how often a lost pet will turn up just a few doors down, simply because the owner never bothered to put up “lost pet” signs. And if your pet has been taken in by some kind person, her or she will happily stay in the new home and forget about you. Your child, however, doesn’t forget.

Swapping dead pets for new ones is an insult to the child’s intelligence. Parents may get away with it for a while, but doing so simply postpones the inevitable and difficult “death” question. If a child experiences the death of a pet before that of an important person (a grandparent, for example), he or she is better prepared for this bigger loss. Interfering with this natural life lesson will only make the harder lessons…harder.

Here are some ideas for helping kids cope with the death of a pet:

  • Hold a funeral. If it’s a small pet, bury it in your yard. If it’s a large pet (or if it’s deep winter and the ground is frozen), you may need to have him or her “cared for” by your veterinarian. If the pet has gone missing and there is no body, have a service anyway. Place a memorial marker in your yard. Let each child say something about the pet. Pray if it’s appropriate to your belief system.
  • Make a memory book. Include pictures of the pet, her tags and other mementos. Let the children contribute drawings, poems, or stories about the pet’s life.
  • Display pictures of the pet around the house to assure the kids that the pet hasn’t been forgotten.
  • Encourage children to talk about the deceased pet. Never suggest that they “get over it” or forget about it.
  • Wait a while before getting a new pet. The child may not be ready to transfer his or her affections, and may even resent the new pet for not “being” the old pet.
  • Strenuously resist any temptation to “fool” the kids by rushing out and getting a new lookalike turtle, fish, mouse, etc.

So when your family experiences the loss of a pet, take the opportunity to teach your children or grandchildren how to deal with death. Deep-six the “ran away” story. Fido or Fluffy or Buddy or Tinkerbell died. Went to doggy or kitty Heaven, crossed the Rainbow Bridge, returned to Mother Earth—whatever fits with your beliefs. But never say it ran away, unless you know for certain that it did. And never pull the pet-switch trick.

Lisa J. Lehr is a writer and copywriter as well as animal lover living in Grass Valley. She can help you promote your business with a full range of online and offline marketing pieces. A member of Empire Toastmasters, she’s available to speak to your business or professional group. Visit her website www.justrightcopy.com for more information, opt in for a message series, and receive a free Marketing Guide.


Lisa J. Lehr
I write words that make you money–just ask me how.
www.justrightcopy.com
Visit my website and sign up for my fr~ee marketing tips.
New! No~cost Marketing Guide now available at my website.

Hoof Trimming for Barefoot Performance Horses

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMZqB5qiyfU

Note: if you cannot view this video, you need to Click here to download Adobe Flash

Michelle Smith of Nevada City, California, trims three horses in Penn Valley… they are being trimmed for barefoot riding. If you’d like more information about this subject, feel free to contact them at horsedesigns@gmail.com.

Have a Pet Business? Add an Online Channel to Multiply Your Sales

by Lisa J. Lehr

If you own a small business in the Grass Valley-Nevada City area, you may already feel that your livelihood is precarious. Small business are getting shoved out by large chains, and in “this economy,” customers set aside some of their loyalty to locally-owned businesses in favor of stretching their own purchasing power.

If you own a pet-related business in this area, you may be worried about what’s happening in the local economy. But don’t give up hope! By adding an online channel to your business, you’ll be able to reach outside the local area to bring in customers (and their money) from all over the country.

America is a nation of animal lovers. We provide homes for pets in greater numbers than any other country on earth; most households in America have at least one pet, and those pets are cherished family members. And most people in the pet products and services business do what they do for the love of animals—not for the love of money.

Yet the money is there for the taking. Pets are the new status symbols; a well cared-for pet is a sign of achievement. Check out these figures from the AAHA’s 2004 (US and Canadian) Pet Owner Survey:

* 94% think their pet has human like personality traits.
* 93% would risk their own life for their pet.
* 87% include pets in their holiday celebrations.
* 84% consider themselves Mom or Dad to the pet.
* 82% think of their pets at least once a day when they’re away.
* 80% said “companionship” is the major reason for having a pet.
* 78% greet their pet at the door before they greet their spouse.
* 67% of pet-containing households recognize pet birthdays.
* 62% sign letters or cards as being from their pets as well as themselves.
* 57% would rather have a pet than a person with them if stranded on a deserted island.
* 55% have an emergency preparedness plan that includes their pet.
* 43% of pets (not including fish and snakes) share beds with their people.
* 36% say their pet enjoys watching TV.
* 33% talk to their pets on the phone or through the answering machine.
* 25% say they brush their pet’s teeth.
* 24% of dog owners sometimes dress their pets.
* 18% have attended a birthday party for someone else’s pet.

Now, as you look at this list of statistics, you may notice a theme: pet owners increasingly treat their pets like people. As the number of children per household declines, the number of pets is increasing. Baby boomers, a powerful segment of today’s market, are quickly becoming empty-nesters and replacing their grown two-legged children with four-legged ones. Indeed, many people now call themselves pet parents or guardians rather than “owners.” Thus we have a hugely profitable strategy for entrepreneurs in the pet business: position pets as members of the family. With this in mind, you can create human-like products for pets:

  • ·         Gourmet and specialty pet foods.
  • ·         Doggy and kitty treat cookbooks.
  • ·         Pet clothing.
  • ·         Human-type pet furniture.
  • ·         Coordinating “Mommy and pet” jewelry.
  • ·         Designer pet carriers, buggies, and strollers.
  • ·         High-end grooming products, such as aromatherapy baths.
  • ·         Pet birthday party supplies.

All of these can shipped to online buyers, and you can probably locate drop-shippers to streamline the process.

So if you’re a pet-business owner in Nevada County who’s struggling with the economy and the encroachment of big-box stores, you may be able to give your business a boost by offering your products to a national customer base. Get a website. Set it up to sell. Create a system to capture your site visitors, keep in touch with them, and keep them coming back.

If you don’t know how to do this, get help from someone who does.

Lisa J. Lehr is a writer and copywriter as well as animal lover living in Grass Valley. She can help you promote your business with a full range of online and offline marketing pieces. A member of Empire Toastmasters, she’s available to speak to your business or professional group. Visit her website www.justrightcopy.com for more information, opt in for a message series, and receive a free Marketing Guide.


Lisa J. Lehr
I write words that make you money–just ask me how.
www.justrightcopy.com
Visit my website and sign up for my fr~ee marketing tips.
New! No~cost Marketing Guide now available at my website.