Dog Training Book

Dog training advice & books

Nice Teach Dog Fetch photos

A few nice teach dog fetch images I found:

Fetch Lesson
4961632130 6599becdd5 Nice Teach Dog Fetch photos

Image by steews4
Our dog does not fetch. Fetch Lesson: still unsuccessful, but a valiant effort. icon wink Nice Teach Dog Fetch photos
1 - Cut slit in ball and insert treat so it smells like something dog wants to pick up.
2 - Show it to dog, let him smell it’s yumminess and repeat the word "ball" alot.
3 - Throw ball and watch as dog continues to sit at your feet waiting for a treat without having to move.
4 - Laugh as dog walks past ball, while trying hard not to even look at it.
5 - Dog: "…WHY is this game fun?"

Good place to teach new dogs to fetch, and get wet
2755781108 c5d49edcc5 Nice Teach Dog Fetch photos

Image by glenngould

Teaching his stuffed dog to fetch
4719739296 b19481f6f0 Nice Teach Dog Fetch photos

Image by Frustrated Writer

Technorati Tags: Fetch, Nice, photos, Teach

Nice Great Pet Web Sites photos

Check out these great pet web sites images:

Barney; Buddy


Image by cliff1066™
George W. Bush and Barney
President George W Bush’s dogs include a Scottish terrier named Barney and an English springer spaniel named Spot. Spot is the only dog to live in the White House during two administrations. Spot was born to Millie, George H.W. Bush’s dog, when George H.W. Bush was President. Spot was given to his son George W. Bush. Barney the Scottish terrier loved to play with his soccer ball, his golf ball and became a fan of playing horseshoes. There are numerous web sites across the Internet devoted to Barney. He has also starred in several "Barney Cam films" available on the White House web site.

Bill Clinton and Buddy
Bill Clinton was a great dog lover. He once quipped, “If you want a friend in Washington you have to get a dog.” As well as a cat named Spot, the Clinton’s had a Chocolate Labrador Retriever named Buddy. Buddy was barely in the White House a month before Newsweek proclaimed, “At last, a friend who can’t testify against him.”

oh thank the lord


Image by emdot
www.furminator.com/

Yesterday I read on Dooce about how she treated Chuck with the Furminator and how it totally fixed the Shed problem they were having. I zipped over to that web site ASAP and today Steve and I bought Chapin a little present.

We only combed him for about 15 minutes. There is still plenty of fur to get rid of, but man… this is a great start. And he LOVED it. The whole time he was purring and purring and purring. But Chapin can only take so much "petting" before he wants to bite you hard when you aren’t looking because he is purring so what is the problem?

It was amazing and very satisfying. If you have a pet hair problem, run do not walk to your local pet supply store.

This advertises for , but we got it for at Tails.

Cody


Image by AkaashMaharaj
Cody is our Amazon parrot. He talks, but not a great deal, which to my mind is a virtue sorely lacking in the world.

He is a bit of a greedy fiend, particularly with cheese, which he defends with much aplomb when the cats come to visit.

I have a modest bit of information about Cody at my personal web site, at www.maharaj.org/diversions.shtml .

Technorati Tags: Great, Nice, photos, Sites

Nice Dog Puppy Train photos

Some cool dog puppy train images:

12a Guide Dogs of America - Puppy Training (E)
3202825972 4314be03d7 Nice Dog Puppy Train photos

Image by Kansas Sebastian

Keys - Black Lab puppy training


Image by SkyWideDesign
Keys is still a puppy.

Technorati Tags: Nice, photos, PUPPY, Train

Walking the dogs in the snow canyons of Branchburg; Send us your winter photos

Walking the dogs in the snow canyons of Branchburg; Send us your winter photos
Courtesy of Christopher HoltWalking the dogs along the snow canyons of Katydid Drive in Branchburg. BRANCHBURG - Walking the dogs along the snow canyons of Katydid Drive in Branchburg — a photograph courtesy of Christopher Holt. The Messenger-Gazette wants pictures…
Read more on The Somerset Messenger-Gazette

Dogs Tortured, Killed In Carroll County
The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office is searching for the person or persons who tortured and killed two chocolate Labrador retrievers.
Read more on CBS 46 News Atlanta

Technorati Tags: Branchburg, canyons, Dogs, photos, Send, Snow, Walking, winter

Nice Remote Dog Training Collar photos

Some cool remote dog training collar images:

Tsee iz fahran ah Subway?
2989131150 41d8b3ba41 Nice Remote Dog Training Collar photos

Image by angus mcdiarmid
Michael Chabon calls it "Probably the saddest book I own", and Ellen got me it for my birthday.

Chabon talks about it in his essay, "A Yiddish Pale Fire", which I read a few years ago and have ever since felt compelled to mention in practically any discussion that touches in any way on Jews, Israel or language. I was very impressed. It’s the best thing I’ve read by Chabon (better than his novel The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, which is where the train of thought in the essay eventually ended up), and one of the most interesting and moving essays I’ve ever read. I’ve pasted it below, as Chabon has discontinued his website, where it used to live. Print it out and read it later on!

Chabon’s right: there’s something incredibly sad and strange about the phrasebook. It’s part of a genuine series of phrasebooks, all designed to be used by travellers in various countries. But in what particular country would you need to ask, in Yiddish, where to get a social security card? As Chabon says, "At what time in the history of the world was there a place … where not only the doctors and waiters and trolley conductors spoke Yiddish, but also the airline clerks, travel agents, ferry captains, and casino employees?"

Chabon goes on to imagine a few possible worlds in which this phrasebook might be an essential part of a traveller’s luggage, each more heartbreaking than the last. It’s interesting that he chose the second of his imagined worlds — the one in which Jews were settled in Alaska, not Palestine, after the second world war, and the state became "a kind of Jewish Sweden, social-democratic, resource rich, prosperous" — as the setting for The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, rather than the one that he finally thinks of (which I won’t spoil by talking about here).

So, read it, already!

—————————————————————————————————-

A Yiddish Pale Fire
by Michael Chabon

Probably the saddest book that I own is a copy of Say It In Yiddish, edited by Uriel and Beatrice Weinreich, and published by Dover. I got it new, in 1993, but the book was originally brought out in 1958. It’s part of a series, according to the back cover, with which I’m otherwise unfamiliar, the Dover "Say It" books. I’ve never seen Say It In Swahili, Say It In Hindi, or Say It In Serbo-Croatian, nor have I ever been to any of the countries where one of them might come in handy. As for the country in which I’d do well to have a copy of Say It In Yiddish in my pocket, naturally I’ve never been there either. I don’t believe that anyone has.

When I first came across Say It In Yiddish, on a shelf in a big chain store in Orange County, California, I couldn’t quite believe that it was real. There was only one copy of it, buried in the languages section at the bottom of the alphabet. It was like a book in a story by J. L Borges, unique, inexplicable, possibly a hoax. The first thing that really struck me about it was, paradoxically, its unremarkableness, the conventional terms with which Say It In Yiddish advertises itself on its cover. "No other PHRASE BOOK FOR TRAVELLERS," it claims, "contains all these essential features." It boasts of "Over 1,600 up-to-date practical entries" (up-to-date!), "easy pronunciation transcription," and a "sturdy binding-pages will not fall out."

Inside, Say It In Yiddish delivers admirably on all the bland promises made by the cover. Virtually every eventuality, calamity, chance or circumstance, apart from the amorous, that could possibly befall the traveller is covered, under general rubrics like "Shopping," "Barber Shop and Beauty Parlor," "Appetizers," "Difficulties," with each of the over sixteen hundred up-to-date practical entries numbered, from 1, "yes," to 1611, "the zipper," a tongue-twister Say It In Yiddish renders, in roman letters, as BLITS-shleh-s’l. There are words and phrases to get the traveler through a visit to the post office to buy stamps in Yiddish, and through a visit to the doctor to take care of that krahmpf (1317) after one has eaten too much of the LEH-ber mit TSIB-eh-less (620) served at the cheap res-taw-RAHN (495) just down the EH-veh-new (197) from one’s haw-TEL (103).

One possible explanation of at least part of the absurd poignance of Say It In Yiddish presents itself: that its list of words and phrases is standard throughout the "Say It" series. Once we accept the proposition of a modern Yiddish phrase book, Yiddish versions of such phrases as "Where can I get a social security card?" and "Can you help me jack up the car?", taken in the context of the book’s part of a uniform series, become more understandable. But an examination of the specific examples chosen for inclusion under the various, presumably standard, rubrics reveals that the Weinreichs have indeed served as editors here, considering their supposedly useful phrases with care, selecting, for example, to give Yiddish translations for the English names of the following foods, none of them very likely to be found under "Food" in the Swahili, Japanese, or Malay books in the series: stuffed cabbage, kreplach, blintzes, matzo, lox, corned beef, herring, kugel, tsimmis, and schav. The fact that most of these words do not seem to require much work to get them into Yiddish suggests that Say It In Yiddish has been edited with a particular kind of reader in mind, the reader who is traveling, or plans to travel, to a very particular kind of place, a place where one can expect to find both ahn OON-tehr-bahn (subway) and geh-FIL-teh FISH."

What were they thinking, the Weinreichs? Was the original 1958 Dover edition simply the reprint of some earlier, less heartbreakingly implausible book? At what time in the history of the world was there a place of the kind that the Weinreichs imply, a place where not only the doctors and waiters and trolley conductors spoke Yiddish, but also the airline clerks, travel agents, ferry captains, and casino employees? A place where you could rent a summer home from Yiddish speakers, go to a Yiddish movie, get a finger wave from a Yiddish-speaking hairstylist, a shoeshine from a Yiddish-speaking shineboy, and then have your dental bridge repaired by a Yiddish-speaking dentist? If, as seems likelier, the book first saw light in 1958, a full ten years after the founding of the country that turned its back once and for all on the Yiddish language, condemning it to watch the last of its native speakers die one by one in a headlong race for extinction with the twentieth century itself, then the tragic dimension of the joke looms larger, and makes the Weinreichs’ intention even harder to divine. It seems an entirely futile effort on the part of its authors, a gesture of embittered hope, of valedictory daydreaming, of a utopian impulse turned cruel and ironic.

The Weinreichs have laid out, with numerical precision, the outlines of a world, of a fantastic land in which it would behoove you to know how to say, in Yiddish,

250. What is the flight number?

1372. I need something for a tourniquet.

1379. Here is my identification.

254. Can I go by boat/ferry to—-?

The blank in the last of those phrases, impossible to fill in, tantalizes me. Whither could I sail on that boat/ferry, in the solicitous company of Uriel and Beatrice Weinreich, and from what shore?

I dream of two possible destinations. The first might be a modern independent state very closely analogous to the State of Israel-call it the State of Yisroel-a postwar Jewish homeland created during a time of moral emergency, located presumably, but not necessarily, in Palestine; it could be in Alaska, or on Madagascar. Here, perhaps, that minority faction of the Zionist movement who favored the establishment of Yiddish as the national language of the Jews were able to prevail over their more numerous Hebraist opponents. There is Yiddish on the money, of which the basic unit is the herzl, or the dollar, or even the zloty. There are Yiddish color commentators for soccer games, Yiddish-speaking cash machines, Yiddish tags on the collars of dogs. Public debate, private discourse, joking and lamentation, all are conducted not in a new-old, partly artificial language like Hebrew, a prefabricated skyscraper still under construction, with only the lowermost of its stories as yet inhabited by the generations, but in a tumbledown old palace capable in the smallest of its stones (the word nu) of expressing slyness, tenderness, derision, romance, disputation, hopefulness, skepticism, sorrow, a lascivious impulse, or the confirmation of one’s worst fears.

The implications of this change in the official language of the "Jewish homeland," a change which, depending on your view of human character and its underpinnings, is either minor or fundamental, are difficult to sort out. I can’t help thinking that such a nation, speaking its essentially European tongue, would, in the Middle East, stick out among its neighbors to an even greater degree than Israel does now. But would the Jews of a Mediterranean Yisroel be impugned and admired for having the same kind of character that Israelis, rightly or wrongly, are widely taken to have, the classic sabra personality: rude, scrappy, loud, tough, secular, hard-headed, cagey, pushy? Is it living in a near-permanent state of war, or is it the Hebrew language, or something else, that has made Israeli humor so dark, so barbed, so cynical, so untranslatable? Perhaps this Yisroel, like its cognate in our own world, has the potential to seem a frightening, even a harrowing place, as the following sequence, from the section on "Difficulties," seems to imply:

109. What is the matter here?

110. What am I to do?

112. They are bothering me.

113. Go away.

114. I will call a policeman.

I can imagine another Yisroel, the youngest nation on the North American continent, founded in the former Alaska Territory during World War II as a resettlement zone for the Jews of Europe. (For a brief while, I once read, Franklin Roosevelt was nearly sold on such a plan.) Perhaps after the war, in this Yisroel, the millions of immigrant Polish, Rumanian, Hungarian, Lithuanian, Austrian, Czech and German Jews held a referendum, and chose independence over proferred statehood in the U.S. The resulting country is obviously a far different place than Israel. It is a cold, northern land of furs, paprika, samovars and one long, glorious day of summer. The portraits on those postage stamps we buy are of Walter Benjamin, Simon Dubnow, Janusz Korczak, and of a hundred Jews unknown to us, whose greatness was allowed to flower only here, in this world. It would be absurd to speak Hebrew, that tongue of spikenard and almonds, in such a place. This Yisroel-or maybe it would be called Alyeska-is a kind of Jewish Sweden, social-democratic, resource rich, prosperous, organizationally and temperamentally far more akin to its immediate neighbor, Canada, then to its more freewheeling benefactor far to the south. Perhaps, indeed, there has been some conflict, in the years since independence, between the United States and Alyeska. Perhaps oilfields have been seized, fishing vessels boarded. Perhaps not all of the native peoples were happy with the outcome of Roosevelt’s humanitarian policies and the treaty of 1948." Lately there may have been a few problems assimilating the Jews of Quebec, in flight from the ongoing separatist battles there.

This country of the Weinreichs is in the nature of a wistful fantasyland, a toy theater with miniature sets and furnishings to arrange and rearrange, painted backdrops on which the gleaming lineaments of a snowy Jewish Onhava can be glimpsed, all its grief concealed behind the scrim, hidden in the machinery of the loft, sealed up beneath trap doors in the floorboards. But grief haunts every mile of that other destination to which the Weinreichs beckon, unwittingly perhaps but in all the awful detail that Dover’s "Say It" series requires. Grief hand-colors all the postcards, stamps the passports, sours the cooking, fills the luggage. It keens all night in the pipes of old hotels. The Weinreichs are taking us home, to the "old country." To Europe.

In this Europe the millions of Jews who were never killed produced grand-children, and great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren. The countryside retains large pockets of country people whose first language is still Yiddish, and in the cities there are many more for whom Yiddish is the language of kitchen and family, of theater and poetry and scholarship. A surprisingly large number of these people are my relations. I can go visit them, the way Irish Americans I know are always visiting second and third cousins in Galway or Cork, sleeping in their strange beds, eating their strange food, and looking just like them. Imagine. Perhaps one of my cousins might take me to visit the house where my father’s mother was born, or to the school in Vilna that my grandfather’s grandfather attended with the boy Abraham Cahan. For my relatives, though they will doubtless know at least some English, I will want to trot out a few appropriate Yiddish phrases, more than anything as a way of reestablishing the tenuous connection between us; in this world Yiddish is not, as it is in ours, a tin can with no tin can on the other end of the string. Here, though I can get by without them, I will be glad to have the Weinreichs along. Who knows but that visting some remote Polish backwater I may be compelled to visit a dentist to whom I will want to cry out, having found the appropriate number (1447), eer TOOT meer VAY!

What is this Europe like, with its twenty-five, thirty, or thirty-five million Jews? Are they tolerated, despised, ignored by, or merely indistinguishable from their fellow modern Europeans? What is the world like, never having felt the need to create an Israel, that hard bit of grit in the socket that hinges Africa to Asia?

What does it mean to originate from a place, from a world, from a culture that no longer exists, and from a language that may die in this generation? What phrases would I need to know in order to speak to those millions of unborn phantoms to whom I belong?

Just what am I supposed to do with this book?

(c) Michael Chabon

Technorati Tags: COLLAR, Nice, photos, Remote, Training

Nice Dog Training Hand Signal photos

Check out these dog training hand signal images:

Dog training
202287712 945e68eadb Nice Dog Training Hand Signal photos

Image by elyob
This woman hid a fake bone on one side of the bank and then ran with the dog to the other side. She used hand signals and the dog jumped in, located it and then returned it. The dog was in training for something I guess, but what? Maybe a Canine Lifeboat team?

My wild ones.
438290969 167a16386e Nice Dog Training Hand Signal photos

Image by This Year’s Love
Judah adores people and other dogs. She pays attention to and acts on other dog’s body language. If they don’t want to play, she won’t bother them. But if they do want to play, bring it on! Strangers are met with a wagging tail and a lowered head, showing her eagerness to be petted and loved by everyone. She NEVER barks out of turn. The only time she barks is when she’s playing with Israel, Ruger or Arai, if I tell her "speak" (or sign it) or if she hears something untoward in the backyard at night.
I’ve heard Israel’s playful bark ONCE about a week ago when Judah was playing with a knuckle bone. She stretched out on her side when he walked up and he wanted the knuckle bone-she offered it by backing off. He then yapped at her and I nearly jumped out of my skin at the high pitched bark that came out of him. He did it only one more time and then took the knuckle bone. If someone comes to the door or comes home (except for me) he’ll growl and let out a very low, scary rumbling bark (like Judah’s protective bark). Otherwise he’s a very silent dog.

Israel, as we know, is an American Pit Bull Terrier. He now weighs 53lbs, up 17lbs since I first got him. He’s not very tall, but APBT’s usually aren’t. I think he will reach 60lbs full grown and I have no intention of neutering him before July, when he should turn 1. Before I was terrified of ever owning an unaltered MALE dog, especially a pit bull. But he’s no more vicious or aggressive than other dogs I’ve seen, including those that are altered.

From the moment Judah and Israel met they got along. Judah has amazing energy and is a very balanced, calm dog. Like I said, she reads other dogs and actually pays attention to the signals-whereas most dogs don’t know what’s going on OR how to react. Israel doesn’t feel threatened by Judah and vice versa. If Israel gets out of hand, Judah knows how to make him submit. If Israel is feeling frisky, he can make Judah submit as well. Interestingly enough, neither dog has humped the other.

Together they weigh 126lbs and I had to control both of them while out today in the stores. Other people let their little raggedy dogs go free on RETRACTABLE leashes. I didn’t let them get to the end of the 6-ft leashes except when there weren’t other people or dogs around. Even then I could reel them in to 3-ft within a second. My hands are raw from them pulling in opposite directions and wanting to smell all of the other dog piss in the stores. Seriously, neither of my dogs have ever pee’d anywhere but in the backyard (or with Israel on the back porch a few times). Judah has gone to the bathroom ONCE on a walk-she almost always waits to get home in her environment.
Anyway. My point is that other people couldn’t care less if their dog is running all around and harassing other dogs. But if my dogs even LOOK at other people they are terrified. They’re both commanding individuals. Judah is a decent size-73lbs-and tall enough, but nothing extreme. If she isn’t wagging her tail, she’s smiling at people. She has NEVER growled, snapped, or lunged at any dog or person and I doubt she has it in her.

Today there was a small victory with Israel. He went up to a PetsMart employee and actually sought out to be petted-and leaned against her and wagged his tail. She couldn’t believe that he used to hide behind me and avoid people like the plague. To see him then I wouldn’t have believed it either.
Now he knows that if he sits and is polite, that usually means he gets a treat-from a person. Food is a big motivator for this dog.

In training class he is the best behaved, hands down. The other dogs bark at each other, at their owners, and have a very hard time paying attention to their owners. Israel rarely gets distracted and focuses entirely on me. I love the recall exercise because he’s held back by the trainer and I walk to the end of a long line and then call him to me. He RACES at me and then sits as soon as he gets in front of me, body tense with excitement at being reunited. But he isn’t at the end of the line whining or barking. He’s just watching and waiting for his cue.

While the other dogs strain at their leashes and bark madly at each other, Israel lays or sits at my feet, waiting for his next task. Annie, the worst of the group, desperately tries to get Israel riled up. Straining, two feet away from him, eyes bulging, barking in his face as aggressively as her spaniel throat can manage. And Israel just lays there, head turned the other way, leash loose so that he could easily get up and attack her if he wanted to-but he doesn’t.

There’s no getting around that he’s an APBT and they were bred to fight other dogs. I won’t ever force him to play with strange dogs or even like them. My goal is to get him to ignore them from the start and he does that very well on his own. Our only issue arises when *I* move toward that dog and Israel decides that if I’m going at the dog, then he should, too. So he lunges and it’s never with wild, maniacal barking. It’s always lunge-snarl-snap. It’s controlled, it’s an instinctive REACTION, but it is NOT his default behavior and I’m sure very few people would know the difference or even care. All they see is a pit bull acting out aggressively. No one would think that it’s the 20lb spaniel starting it, or the 12lb Schnauzer mix instigating. It’s unfair to expect Israel to not defend himself and react, but at the same time in this society with people having dogs they shouldn’t regardless of size because they have no clue when it comes to what makes a dog tick, all they see is a vicious beast who wants to kill, kill, kill. They would never think that dear Fluffy or Trixie is the one starting the whole thing to begin with. You don’t see Israel spoiling for a fight, egging the other dogs on. EVER.

The trainer is all about positive reinforcement. My method of controlling my dog involves very firm verbal commands usually followed with equally firm physical reprimands. I don’t hit my dogs. I don’t need to. With just a change of tone I can have Israel crawling on the ground and hiding behind Judah if he’s done something wrong. I fight the knee-jerk reaction to make him come to me and then punish him, but so far I’ve been successful because I want a reliable recall. So even when he’s been bad and I need him to come over to me, I’ll praise him for coming to me. And oooh is that hard. And, too, my dogs know I am their source of food and shelter. If I want their food, they have to give it back to me.
I’m tempted to get a leather prong collar-the spikes on the inside-for Israel in class because choke and pinch collars are not allowed. But if I’m going to properly correct him for attacking another dog I need more than a stupid nylon buckle collar to do that.

Technorati Tags: Hand, Nice, photos, Signal, Training

Nice Chewing Dog From Stop photos

Check out these chewing dog from stop images:

Lights on stairs (from other side)
287283513 a7d4666ecd Nice Chewing Dog From Stop photos

Image by Gene Hunt
Taken from the stairs. The "baby gate" is there to stop our dog Candy from coming upstairs especially during the night or while we were out

IMG00001-20101001-0811
5045848865 72b101fe39 Nice Chewing Dog From Stop photos

Image by aaron_anderer
dog chew marks…

used tobasco to stop them from being interested.

Technorati Tags: Chewing, from, Nice, photos, Stop

Nice Dog Training Chewing photos

Check out these dog training chewing images:

What’s up, Alligator Lips?
5247905450 0c4a8f4fe4 Nice Dog Training Chewing photos

Image by Awesome Joolie
She started biting early. She has not stopped.

Maggie Mae
1581827819 63fec76fd9 Nice Dog Training Chewing photos

Image by Loves_TaiShan
10/15 My sister’s new family member. She is 2 yrs. old, AKC registered. Tonight is Maggie’s first night in her new home. Her previous owners were moving and were heartbroken to give her up, but I know she is in a good home and will be cared for and loved for many, many years to come.

Update 10/16
I think I may have spoke too soon about Maggie Mae. She is beautiful, yes, but I just got a call from my sister, who took the day off to help her get aclimated with the house, cats, etc. She was practically in tears!!

Seems that everything the previous owners said the dog does NOT do, she DOES do! up on the furniture, peed on the floor, chews on anything she can get her mouth on, chases the cats, hates the harness, barks incessantly while in the crate.. . . . (why a 2 year old is still being crated is beyond me!) They said ‘oh, she LOVES the crate’. "Loves wearing the harness". " Loves cats". NOT!!

I don’t think dear Maggie Mae will be staying with my sister much longer.. . . The reason they want an older dog is because they don’t have the time to spend on training from scratch as in a puppy. I don’t think the previous owner has done much with this dog. It’s really sad, she is so beautiful!

Update 10/17
Mags is still with them. She has settled a very little bit but still cannot be trusted around the cats alone, but in the next week or so just may turn out to be the doggie we hope she can be. My BIL is working with her (and bonding, I might add . . .) they are sloooowly beginning to see a more aggreeable pooch. With excercise, work and perserverance! Gotta find that calm, submissive mind in there somewhere!! Oh, where is Cesar Milan when you need him?

10/19 Update:
Yesterday morning the dog went after the black and white kittie and the poor cat was shaking so bad that they both decided it was in the best interests of the cat, and peace in the house if they found another home for her (and before they bonded with her anymore than they already have)..

So, Maggie is now the proud owner of a home in the country with 4 doggie fenced acres to run safely on with her other doggie companion who she met last night and instantly became friends with. Her new mommy is a veterinarian with no children, just lots and lots of naminals. The woman’s husband fell in love with Mags on sight. I guess he’s even a strong enough man he was able to actually pick her up! A good strong man, that’s what she needs.

So, goodbye Mags! It was nice to meet you (as you ran past me, swatted me with your wagging tail and slobbered on my pant leg. . . )

MWD
5240864509 2910077bf0 Nice Dog Training Chewing photos

Image by U.S. Embassy Montevideo
-U.S. Navy Military Working Dog (MWD) Handler Chief Master-At-Arms (EXW) Nick Estrada from Orange, Calif. rewards a Uruguayan police narcotics sniffing dog with a chew toy after correctly tracking a scent and identifying it by scratching, Nov. 9, 2010. Estrada and other expert naval MWD handlers taught various Uruguayan forces dog handlers basic obedience, drug searching and patrol techniques during a three-week training mission coordinated by the Maritime Civil Affairs and Security Training Command (MCAST).
MCAST delivers teams of highly skilled Sailors with a wide variety of expertise to partner nations to share their experience and strengthen international relationships as an integral part of the Navy’s maritime strategy.

[U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class (SW) Peter D. Lawlor]

Technorati Tags: Chewing, Nice, photos, Training

Nice Attack Dog Training photos

A few nice attack dog training images I found:

Trained Attack Dogs


Image by swanksalot
West Loop

Attack Dog Training


Image by Phae

Technorati Tags: Attack, Nice, photos, Training

Nice Service Dogs photos

A few nice service dogs images I found:

Service Dogs of Hawaii Fi-Do, Training Session, Working Dogs, Job, Group Photo
3574742620 6c65635459 Nice Service Dogs photos

Image by Beverly & Pack
WAHIAWA, Hawaii - Donated and specially bred service dogs of Hawaii Fi-Do pause for a photograph during a training session. The specially trained dogs provide physical, psychological and therapeutic support for people who face the daily challenges of life with a disability other than blindness. Photo Credit: Molly Hayden, U.S. Army Garrison-Hawaii Public Affairs

Friendly service dog


Image by slambo_42
At the pet fair today there were several dogs there that were in training or in a position of service of some kind.

This dog has got to be the friendliest dog I have ever met. Whenever you got down to her level she would come right up with a kiss and sit right in front of you in the perfect position for you to give her a big hug. This dog will make someone very happy.

41/365

Billy The Service Dog Plays In Wilson Lake
4760685887 e757d9fb9c Nice Service Dogs photos

Image by pmarkham
Billy is my friend Jenny’s Helping Paws service dog. When they are at the cabin, Billy gets time off to be just a dog too. We played fetch with him in the lake. Unlike most Goldens, Billy is not much of a swimmer, so it is pretty entertaining to watch.

Technorati Tags: Dogs, Nice, photos, Service