Friday, August 14, 2009

Dog Dayz of Summer by Tippy the honorary border collie

Strange things started happening here at the farm last weekend. I heard it was the DogDayzofSummer. I wonder if it had something to do with full moon? See for yourself:

Dogs flying in the air everywhere
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(anyone looking for a good flying dog please consider the talented Miss Peaches)
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Humans got confused and danced with dogs rather than with other humans
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Canines were working sheep AND humans
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Sheep shrank and grew beaks
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Foster dogs (Casey here) suffered from acute tongue-itis
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And everyone giggled non-stop (this is GigglingBrady who is still looking for a home)
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Maybe they all giggled because Santa came early?
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It all made me little tired but I hope DogDayzofSummer comes back soon!
luv, Tippy
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Photos courtesy of NEBCR volunteers and Stacey of Cold Nose Photography

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Check this out

We here at NEBCR are strong proponents of positive training methods. We use them with our personal dogs and we have seen great results using them to rehabilitate some of the 'special' foster dogs we've had in our care over the years. Please check out this piece that nicely summarizes our sentiments regarding some of the new popular training methods and behavior theories out there...

Debunking Dominance Theory

Explain it all away

Throughout the pet business right now, "dominance theory" is a popular explanation for absolutely anything that happens, from a puppy tugging on your trouser leg to birds flying up instead of down. Conquering "dominance" has become justification for absolutely any punishment people can think up, from shocking dogs to stuffing parrots into the toilet. (Yes, seriously.) And the awful thing is that otherwise sensible people believe this nonsense. Apparently the idea that some animal is trying to "dominate" YOU really resonates. Yikes—gotta stop that, right

You may be pleased to learn that some British scientists have blown a hole in the whole dog dominance business. Researchers in companion animal behavior in the University of Bristol veterinary department studied a group of dogs at a re-homing center, and also reanalyzed existing studies on feral dogs. Their conclusion: individual relationships between dogs are learned through experience rather than motivated by a desire to assert "dominance."

According to these specialists in companion animal behavior, training approaches aimed at "dominance reduction" vary from worthless to downright dangerous. Making dogs go through doors or eat their dinners after you, not before, will not shape the dogs' overall view of the relationship, but will only teach them what to expect in those situations. [1]

In other words, that stuff is silly, but harmless.

"Much worse, techniques such as pinning the dog to the floor, grabbing the jowls, or blasting hooters [noise makers] at dogs, will make dogs anxious, often about their owner, and potentially lead to an escalation of aggression." [2]

Consequences

Veterinarians and shelters are seeing the results of this misapplied dominance. As one veterinary behaviorist put it to me at a recent scientific meeting, "A puppy has to submit to whatever the owner does; it has no choice. Then around the age of two comes just one Alpha roll too many, and the dog defends itself at last and tries to take the owner's face off." So now the dog is in the shelter. And these dogs are fearful, unpredictable, and very hard to rehabilitate.

Teaching people the power of clicker training is the benign and much more effective alternative. I'm so glad you all are out there, showing people through your own example and your happy, cooperative, attentive clicker dogs that there is a better way.

Happy clicking,

Karen Pryor
Sunshine Books, Inc.
49 River St., Suite 3
Waltham, MA 02453
1-800-47-CLICK(2-5425)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] If you'd like to read the original paper:
Bradshaw, John W.S., Emily J. Blackwell, and Rachel A. Casey. "Dominance in Domestic Dogs—Useful Construct or Bad Habit?" Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research (May/June 2009), 135-14.
[2] From a nice summary of the research:
"Using 'Dominance' to Explain Dog Behavior Is Old Hat," Science Daily, May 25, 2009.
© 2009, Karen Pryor Clickertraining (KPCT)TM

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Marsh is enjoying the dog days of summer.....


Hi, it's Marsh.
Summer update.... laying around, playing ball, swimming, herding my friends....loving life.





Here I am wrestling with my buddy, Winnie. She will be ready for adoption soon. She is REALLY fun to play with. She's showing me her 'play mad-teeth' here. I look a little freaked, but I'm just pretending. It makes the game more exciting.


Later we relaxed on the deck holding paws.
I'm still looking for my forever home, but until then ..... Aaaahhhh ..... summer .....

Friday, July 10, 2009

Have you heard?

I am Chip and listen to this... I. AM. FAMOUS.! That's right! This month, my picture appeared in The Bark magazine! How very woofy cool is that?!

Check it out! This is The Bark:

The Bark

And this is me Chip in The Bark:

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Gotta go, I bet the ladies are lining up outside to get my autograph now that I am famous.

luv, Chip

Friday, June 26, 2009

Help advertise for Dog Dayz of Summer!

Help NEBCR out by printing out the flier for the Dog Dayz of Summer event and hang it at pet stores, training facilities, libraries, supermarkets and other places with high visibility in your area.

Click here for a PDF of the flier.


Thanks so much from NEBCR!!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Marsh, Ambassadog

Hi, I'm Marsh the Magnificent.

They started calling me that a few weeks ago. It all started when my foster mom took me to an event at a petstore called Hooked on Dogs in Red Hook, NY. There were TONS of dogs there, of all shapes and sizes. I was the "Ambassa-dog" for the NEBCR booth, which just meant that I got to stand around getting pets and treats from everyone. Sweet deal! I also made lots of new canine friends, including a HUGE Great Pyranees dog who I did lots of play bowing with. I tried to wrestle with many of the dogs that came by. Apparently (they say) I used to come on a little strong, and even be a little bit of a punk! But I not any more. I earned my name, Marsh the Magnificent, by greeting all of the dogs and people magnificently!
Now that I'm not staring at shadows so much, I really like other dogs. I herd the fast ones, play tug with the fun ones, and know to stay away from the ones who don't want to play. I LOVE to wrestle. Here I am wrestling with my foster sister, Winnie. We are doing something we like to call 'bitey face' which is great fun. Sometimes I spin Winnie around and she just LOVES it! Foster mom is working on getting that on video.

I'll share more of my adventures soon!

-MM

Saturday, June 13, 2009

I would really like a home!

Hey folks!
I'm Chip, and I'm the dog of the week. I have had some rather bad luck this past year, but I'm hoping my perfect family is reading this and will help me out.

You see, I lived with my first family for 8 whole years, but they put me up on craigslist when my person went to college. (I hope she never speaks to them again!)

I ended up going to this place where the people had running horses and driving cars, and I thought those were rather fun to chase, especially since the people didn't bother to keep me in a fence. For some reason, the people didn't like that and they said I had to go! So, they put me up on craigslist, too.
After that I came to New England Border Collie Rescue. I fit in ok in my foster home, even if they said I was tooo obsessed with the other dogs, they just made sure I got my own private playtime, which I quite liked.

I spent a week in another foster home when my first one went on vacation, and in that home, I was around cows and horses and I never gave them a second look! I never tried to chase them, not even once! So, since I am such a good dog around people of all shapes and sizes, they thought it was a good idea to have me live on a vegetable farm where lots of people came to visit. I thought it was great too . . . but especially when I found out that some cows also lived at that farm. Since there weren't other dogs for me to chase, I took to harassing the cows. Huh. Little did I know that would land me back at my foster home!

I don't really mind too much because my foster home is ok, but it's not my real forever home, you know? And there are a lot of other dogs there that I am not allowed to chase, because they don't like they way I nip at them. Huh, they are no fun! But I really do enjoy my private playtimes!
What I'd really, really like, is a home where I can get all the attention and playtime my people are willing to give me, and where there aren't any other animals for me to obsess over. (I like to obsess over them, but it seems to end up with the people unhappy.)
I'm really a very easy guy to live with, as long as you will devote some time to walking me, and playing with me. I love toys!!! I will return your love and care 100 fold! I really enjoy riding in the car, too. I walk nicely on a Gentle Leader or East Walk Harness, too.
Please say you are the family for me, and contact my foster home as soon as you can. I really want to go home soon! I am waiting for you to please find me!

Most sincerely,
Chip!
ps - my first family called me Dipstick. What kind of thing is that to do to a dog? I really like my new name better!