Archive for 2011

Greek protest dog features in Time magazine’s Person of the Year award

Sunday, December 18th, 2011

An Athens stray dog who has become an unofficial mascot of city protests and an online sensation this week reaped another accolade by featuring in Time magazine’s ‘Person of the Year’ award.

Sable-furred Loukanikos — ‘sausage’ in Greek — was granted his own photo gallery in the magazine’s annual honours which this year were dedicated to protesters in the Arab world, the crisis-hit EU, the United States and Russia.

Widely known on the Internet as the Greek capital’s “riot dog,” the central Syntagma Square canine already has his own Facebook page with over 24,000 approval hits.

The Greek capital has many stray dogs and several are drawn to the noisy street protests that have been a fixture of social life even before the country was hit by a crippling debt crisis in 2009.

But protest regulars say only Loukanikos, who appeared around four years ago, actively participates, displaying fearlessness and an apparent dislike of riot police.

“He is always on the side of protesters,” says freelance photographer Alkis Konstantinidis.

“He also recognises photographers and greets them during demonstrations. He stands in front of riot police and barks at them, and when they fire tear gas, he runs after the gas cannisters and bites them,” Konstantinidis said.

Loukanikos is the latest in a line of four-legged Athens celebrities.

A few years previously, protest observers had also singled out Kanellos, a brown-black male who has not been seen recently.

And in the period around the 2004 Olympics, the city’s unofficial protest mascot was Glyka, a black bitch trained by her owner to hold specially-crafted placards between her teeth at the head of demonstrations.

How to groom your dog – the old-fashioned way

Sunday, September 18th, 2011

I have a book called Kennel Secrets by “Ashmont” on my shelves. Published in 1893, it is full of dog care tips from an age before tinned dog food, dog shampoo, Halti harnesses, Furminators and the like. It is by turns baffling, amusing and fascinating.

The section on grooming dogs is clear and straightforward. Though it does involve hair gloves…

Under ordinary circumstances frequent grooming will be quite sufficient to maintain cleanliness and health of the skin and hair, and he who expects to keep his dog in the “pink of condition” must faithfully apply it not less than once a day.

The brushes should be of bristles always, and what is called the “dandy brush” for short-coated dogs, while for the long-coated the bristles must be nearly if not quite an inch and a half in length, in order to pass through the coat and reach the skin.

Instances in which a fine-tooth comb is required are very rare indeed; and this is fortunate, for except in the hands of a most careful person it is sure to irritate the skin as well as seriously endanger the coat. The comb of the kennel, therefore, should be of the coarsest kind – its teeth being widely set and very blunt at the ends.
[....]

The brush will meet all positive requirements, but there are certain accessories which must be resorted to if a fine coat is to be made “cherry ripe,” and these are gloves of woollen yarn or hair – the latter for choice – and the bare hands.

To first brush long and well, then rub diligently with the gloves, and finally with the bare hands are the secrets of the toilet, and by faithfully applying the principles embodied in them cleanliness of the skin can be maintained, the hair stimulated to healthy growth and made to shine like satin if it is naturally fine.

The brush and gloves should be applied the one way always, with, not against, the hair, but in using the bare hands on dogs which ought to have a “bossy muscle”, as bull-dogs, bull terriers and greyhounds, the thighs must be rubbed both ways – up as well as down – and afterward the ruffled hair be made right by brushing one way and hand rubbing one way.  And lest the reader assume that the use of the bare hands is the least important o f these measures the fact is urged that it is of the first importance in putting the coat of a fine-haired dog in prime condition, for buy this means only can it be given the highest finish and lustre.

So, to get your dog in the “pink of condition”, get your hair gloves on…and get rubbing…

Can you buy hair gloves on ebay, do you think?

Remembering the search-and-rescue dogs of 9/11

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

Ten years on from the 9/11 attacks in the USA, our thoughts are with all those caught up in that terrible day – survivors, rescue workers, those who lost their lives, their families and friends.

We have chosen to honour the bravery of all those people, and the memory of those lost, by recalling the role dogs and their handlers played in the rescue attempt post-9/11. The search-and-rescue (SAR) dogs who worked after the 9/11 tragedy deserve to be recognized and remembered.

SAR dog at WTC

New York, 15 September, 2001. A rescue dog is transported out of the debris of the World Trade Center. (Photo US Navy / Preston Keres)

Rescue dogs were on the scene on the day of the attacks on New York and Washington. And in the following days more than 400 dogs were deployed at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, including over 80 dogs from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). It was the largest deployment of dogs in US history, and they stayed there, searching, for a full month.

A surprisingly large number of breeds were involved. Among those deployed in response to the 9/11 attacks were: German Shepherds, Australian Shepherd, Belgian Shepherds, Yellow/Black/Chocolate Labradors, Golden Retrievers, Portuguese Waterdogs, German Shorthair Pointers, Belgian Malinious, Border Collies, Belgian Tervurnes, Doberman Pincers, Giant Schnauzers, Rat Terriers, and several mixed breed dogs and dogs from city pounds.

“If these dogs only knew what a difference they make. Certainly, there’s nothing that can replace the precision of a dog’s nose—and absolutely nothing that can replace a dog’s heart.”
— Bob Sessions, rescue worker, Federal Emergency Management Agency

9/11 search dog

New York, September 21, 2001. Kent Olson and his dog, Thunder, from Lakewood, Washington search through the rubble for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks. (Photo by Andrea Booher/ FEMA News Photo)

The majority of the dogs were ‘live find’ dogs, trained to find people alive. Dogs were on call for 12-hour shifts, as were all task force team members. These shifts sometimes extended to 16 hours of non-stop searching. In the first days after the attacks, canine SAR teams did help to find injured survivors. The dogs would crawl on their bellies, squeeze through holes, and dig to find survivors.

SAR dog searching WTC

New York, September 25, 2001. Colorado Task Force One member Ann Wickman works with her dog, Jenner, to search for victims in the collapsed World Trade Center. (Photo by Michael Rieger/ FEMA News Photo)

But it was reported that, as the weeks passed, some dogs grew depressed when they could no longer find living people.  The dogs grew stressed and disheartened, as if they were unsuccessful. To counter this, rescue workers started hiding among the twisted wreckage, staging mock rescues where the dogs would be thrilled again to find a living human.

“Morale is important … So it’s my job as handler to remove her from the pile [the rescuers' name for the WTC search site] … and then what we do is we set up a scenario for her that she can win at.  We used a New York firefighter.  He actually hid amongst a little bit of rubble … and we sent her on a search.  She finds the firefighter.  He plays with her real good.  She’s real happy, and she’s ready to go to work again.”
— Mark Bogush, Tampa Fire Rescue, speaking about his partner “Marley”

Another unit of dogs were brought in after the 9/11 attacks.  These dogs were sent specifically to provide emotional support to rescue workers suffering from trauma at the disaster site. Handlers, police, and firemen were under great stress.  They felt able to reach out to these dogs in ways they couldn’t to those around them. One rescue worker commented,

“These dogs have been trained to pick up on trauma and go towards it. So they pursue people they perceive as being in a state of trauma … We’ve been visiting a lot of firemen, police, and cleanup detail.”

SAR dog resting

New York, September 18, 2001. Dog and handler resting. (Photo: Reuters)

Special canine medical teams worked hard to  care for the dogs. They treated as many as 100 injured dogs per day in the first few days of searching. SAR dogs suffered minor burns, and cuts on their paws from jagged glass or sharp steel wreckage that the dogs climbed over and dug into, in order to find survivors. None received a serious injury and no SAR dogs lost their lives in the rescue operation, although fears have subsequently been expressed about the long-term impact on their health.  One month after starting work at the World Trade Center site, the SAR dogs were stood down.

We are now ten years on from the events of 9/11. Ten years is a long time in a dog’s life, and many of these dogs have since passed away, or reached old age.  Photographer Charlotte Dumas was inspired by the story of the 9/11 dogs and recently published a moving photographic tribute, photographing some of the surviving dogs as they are now. A slideshow of her photographs can be seen here on the NY Times website.

In these dogs’ wise, grey-whiskered faces we see the surprisingly sudden passage of time, but also a calmness, patience and reassuring warmth. Dogs’ willingness to trust us in the most unlikely situations, their enthusiasm to work for us, and their ‘dogged’ persistence are traits that many dog-owners will have valued in their own pet. But in the case of the SAR dogs these qualities create a particular, special bond not only with their owners, but with each and every person they have been, or might have been, sent out to rescue.

Moxie, retired SAR dog

Moxie, age 13, Winthrop, Mass. She arrived at the World Trade Center site on Sept. 11 and began working the next morning. Though she is trained to find survivors, she identified six bodies and many body parts during the eight days she worked there. Since her owner retired her at age 7, she has hunted and spent time on the waterfront.

Notes:

Sources for this article include: FEMA, Dogs in the News, Environmental Graffiti.  The Dogs in the News site at this link is a contemporary account of dogs’ work at the World Trade Center.

Merry Dogs supports Nowzad’s dogs and their soldiers

Monday, August 29th, 2011

Supporting dog charities is central to Merry Dogs’ business.  We regularly support charities throughout the year, and towards Christmas we choose one product in particular, to raise money for one charity in particular.

This year, from today until 25 December, we are raising money for Nowzad by donating a proportion of all profits from our Union Jack dog beds.

ABOUT NOWZAD

Pen Farthing set up Nowzad Dogs after his 2006 tour of Afghanistan with the Royal Marines, where he rescued a dog from a fight that Afghan men were arranging for sport. What started as a human desire to assist the small band of dogs that befriended the Marines in his compound, grew rapidly into an international charity to support and assist animals and their soldiers.  Nowzad now works in both Afghanistan and Iraq.

The support soldiers gain from local dogs that befriend them is immense. In such a hard, high-risk environment, a few hours or even minutes spent caring for the dogs brings soldiers some normality and reassurance.  And when soldiers are sent home from tour, it can be impossible for them to abandon these dogs.

This is where Nowzad can help. They arrange for these dogs (and cats!) to be transported from remote and dangerous regions to their holding shelter in Afghanistan. Nowzad’s generous supporters  then raise funds to cover the animals’ transport and quarantine costs, and finally the dogs make their journey to their new life in the West, to be reunited with their old companions. Experience shows that the dogs can be hugely therapeutic and help soldiers re-adjust to life back home.

Nowzad realizes, of course, that it cannot transport all of the stray dogs of Afghanistan and Iraq to loving homes, so it also works hard to promote animal welfare and to assist in vital animal aid work that is so desperately needed in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Communities and individuals worldwide raise money to help both the dogs, and their soldiers. All money donated goes directly to helping the animals of Afghanistan and Iraq.

FIND OUT MORE

You can find out more about Nowzad by visiting their website (www.nowzad.com), and join their Facebook page for daily updates on their work and links to all the dogs’ and cats’ ‘chipin’ pages.

MERRY DOGS’ SUPPORT

We are proud to be assisting Nowzad’s animals and their soldiers this year by donating 50% of all profits from sales of our Union Jack beds, from September to December 2011. This bed is hand-made in the UK from separate layers of faux-suede fabric, cut and sewn in place. All colours of Union Jack bed will raise money for Nowzad.

“The bed has become a place of luxury to me! I would not exchange it for all the thrones in the world.”

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Take a sun-warmed, pale blue Welsh blanket …

Sew it neatly with care …  add some squidgy duvet filling  … and the magic begins to happen …

Sssshhh …

I am sure these sleepy bundles would agree with Napoleon Bonaparte’s thoughts on his bed…

Ewan McGregor falls in love with dog Cosmo on the set of his new film, ‘Beginners’

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Falling in love with your co-star seems to go with the territory for film stars.

It happened to Ewan McGregor on the set of Beginners, his new film. But the star that caught his eye was somewhat different to the usual Hollwood babe…this one has fur all over its body, a waggy tail, and a very toothy grin and was, in fact, Cosmo the Jack Russell.

Having fallen for his furry friend, Ewan describes the tears, parting, and happy ending, that followed…

Comedy/drama Beginners co-stars Christopher Plummer, Mélanie Laurent, and Cosmo, a Jack Russell plucked by his trainer from a rescue shelter. McGregor plays Oliver, a dog-loving graphic artist whose world is turned around when his elderly father, played by Plummer, reveals that he has terminal cancer, and is gay.

Beginners premiers in the UK on 11 July 2011 and goes on general release on 22 July.

THE DOG FILES – Sid the 2011 Woof Factor winner

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Welcome Sid, winner of Woof Factor 2001, to THE DOG FILES. In this interview we get behind the headlines to find out more about this dog star…

NAME: Sid

AGE: I can’t remember quite how old I am. My vet says I must be about 10.

My Woof Factor 2011 prize-winning portrait!

BREED: Lovable Labrador

WHAT EXACTLY IS THE WOOF FACTOR? It’s a photo competition run by the wonderful Oldies charity, which finds lovely warm firesides for us old boys and girls who haven’t got a home of our own. I won some lovely prizes, including one from Merry Dogs!

SO WHAT’S YOUR RESCUE STORY? Two and a half years ago I woke up in a vet’s, and I can’t remember anything before that. Apparently I had been in a dog pound for six weeks, becoming more and more poorly – I had pneumonia… A lady rescued me from the pound and took me to her vets. She was my guardian angel!  I spent five days there on a drip, and they didn’t think I was going to survive.

But I did, thanks to their care. My guardian angel asked the Oldies Club if they would care for me, and they took me to my foster home.  I had to share this house with two of the oddest looking dogs I have ever seen – they’re called Bassets. Anyway, my fosterers joined that popular society, the Failed Fosterers Club, and here I still am, two and a half years later, with the odd Bassets and my dear family.

On arrival at my new home - still looking poorly...

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT YOUR NEW HOME? Good food (especially the homemade stuff),  long walks and lying on my bed in front of the wood-burner.

WHO IS YOUR BFF AND WHY? Well, the Basset girls tend to gang up together – so I am friend to all the fosters who come to stay, big or small. It’s very sad when they leave to go to their new homes – but I know another confused soul will be along soon who will need my companionship. I do have a furry pheasant that I am very fond of – does he count?

WHAT WOULD BE YOUR PERFECT DAY? A cooked breakfast, a stroll in the countryside (with horse-poo treats for sustenance) and the pub for lunch. Home, nap, afternoon tea, nap, dinner, cuddle up with pheasant for nap. I wuf naps!

Running about enjoying myself!

ANY DISLIKES? Having my ears cleaned and my feet washed – yuk!

WHAT WELL-KNOWN SONG COULD HAVE BEEN WRITTEN WITH YOU IN MIND? My family chose this – ‘Simply the Best’ by Tina Turner. It’s made me blush..

WHAT’S THE BEST THING ABOUT HAVING YOU AROUND? The fact that I am just perfect! My family love it when I join them on walks, and I have a large repertoire of tricks. Oh and I follow commands (the bassets are rather wayward!). They cannot understand how I ended up in the pound.

IF YOU WERE HUMAN, WHAT JOB WOULD YOU HAVE? My family always insists than I have been in the RAF – one of the loyal hounds who sits beside the runway counting the planes out and back in again. I even have a cartoon of myself in uniform, and very dashing I look too!

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Black Labrador + dog flap + Tuffy Sherman sheep = doggy brain-teaser

Friday, June 3rd, 2011


Just watch Sophia work out how to get her Sherman out of the dog flap and into the garden…

Our dog had a similar problem once, while trying to take his Tuffy Bevo Bull into his outside kennel…but he obviously gave up and went to sleep!

Dog of the week – the ‘monkey-faced’ Affenpinscher

Friday, May 13th, 2011

COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Germany, seventeenth century

RELATED TO:  The Griffon Bruxelloise and Miniature Schnauzer both have Affenpinscher in their ancestry.

AFFENPINSCHER BASICS:  9-12 inches high, with a wiry coat. The coat is usually black but in the US it can also be grey, silver, red, tan and often with a black mask. Lives 11-14 years.

INTERESTING STUFF:  The name comes from the German word for monkey (Affe), which they are thought to resemble! Although they are often thought of as terriers (and were bred for rat-catching), their pinscher heritage means they usually like dogs and other pets.  They prefer to keep their toys and food to themselves, however.

AFFENPINSCHER ADJECTIVES … playful, confident, lively, affectionate, stubborn, loyal.

Useful link: Affenpinscher Club UK

Maremma dogs – extraordinary livestock guardians

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

A working Maremma in the Gran Sasso of Abruzzo, Italy

If you have been watching Channel 5′s fascinating series, Extraordinary Dogs, you will have seen their feature on Maremma dogs.  We hadn’t heard of this breed, but marveled at the dogs’ skilful behaviour. So, we did a little research and here’s what we found.

The Maremma are livestock guardians, and NOT herding dogs. Developed in central Italy to protect sheep from wolves, the dogs develop a strong bond with their livestock – be that sheep, goats, cattle or chickens. They are  introduced to stock at 3 or 4 weeks of age, and bond with them like a family.  Italian shepherds taught the dog to stay with the sheep even when the shepherd left the flock – to the dog, the livestock are his first priority.

Nowadays they are used by farmers in the US, Canada and elsewhere to protect stock not only from animal predators but from humans too. They are not naturally aggressive but will bark loudly and persistently when on alert, and will, if pushed too far, bite. They have been praised by environmentalists, for allowing stock and endangered predators to satisfactorily co-exist, and have been used in Australia to protect endangered penguins facing predation.

Their nature is stubborn and independent, as you would expect, and they only make suitable pets in the right environment (farm/ranch) and with the correct training – no shouting, or they will just run and hide!

Watch the Extraordinary Dogs episode here.

Watch a Youtube video showing how the dogs are being used in Switzerland to enable wolves and sheep to co-exist.