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More Dog Food Recalled August 08, 2008 »

Mars Petcare US Issues Voluntary Recall of Limited Bags of PEDIGREE® Complete Nutrition Small Crunchy Bites at Albertsons in Southern California and Las Vegas due to Potential Salmonella Contamination

Contact:
Debra Fair
Public Relations Manager — Central Marketing
MARS PETCARE US
(973) 691-3536
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – FRANKLIN, Tenn. – August 08, 2008 – Mars Petcare US today announced a voluntary recall of limited bags of PEDIGREE® Complete Nutrition Small Crunchy Bites sold in Albertsons stores in Southern California and Las Vegas, Nevada. The pet food is being voluntarily recalled because of potential contamination with Salmonella. There have been no complaints or reports of injury resulting from consumption or handling of the recalled product.
 
The product should not be sold or fed to pets. Pet owners should dispose of product in a safe manner (example, a securely covered trash receptacle) and return the empty bag to the store where purchased for a full refund.

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Responsible Breeding vs. Irresponsible Breeding »

Responsible Breeding vs. Irresponsible Breeding

I am still amazed how many emails I get from people who have bought puppies from a newspaper ad or worse yet a pet store! The general public don’t seem to be aware of the difference between buying a puppy from a Responsible Breeder or an Irresponsible one.

In a nutshell, responsible breeders promote and protect their chosen breed through careful breeding practices. Backyard breeders or Puppy mills damage the breed through overbreeding, mass production, and breeding genetic abnormalities.

I found an excellent and easy to read chart with a comparion. Just click HERE (http://www.geocities.com/Petsburgh/Fair/1901/chart.html )

Also from this website… Read the rest

Heredity & Environment- What Role Does Nutrition Play in our dogs? »

Heredity & Environment What Role Does Nutrition Play?

Are many of our dog problems today due to their environment or to poor heredity and what role does nutrition play? Read the rest

Hawthorn For The Heart »

 Hawthorne is a spiny shrub that has been traditionally used as a heart tonic in European herbal medicine. The primary active ingredients, the proanthocyanidins, are responsible for the red-to-blue color of many fruits, such as blueberries, grapes, and blackberries. The proanthocyanidins, and a related group of ingredients, the anthocyanidins, are known as potent antioxidants and for their protective effects on the heart and arteries.

The herbal medicine is made from an extract of the proanthocyanidin-rich leaves or berries blossoms of two primary species (Crataegus oxycantha and Crataegus monogyna). Other hawthorne species (Crataegus spp.) have long been used in both European herbal medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine due to their similar effects. Read the rest

World’s Oldest Dog? »

World's Oldest Dog?  Bella

Bella with owners David Richardson and Daisy Cooper

At 203 in doggie years, is Bella the mongrel the world’s oldest dog ever?  That is about 29 years old in human years and my guess after reading this is that she has lived so long due in part to her diet! 

“ And with most of her teeth missing, she can no longer manage to gnaw on the remnants of a leg of lamb.   Bella has always had a good appetite and she only has the best. She has only got two teeth left so she can only have soft stuff now. So she has shredded chicken and fish and sometimes, boiled liver and best tinned stewing steak, mackerel and sardines.”   Hmmm, what,  no kibble? 

By Chris Brooke  The Daily Mail

The joy of gnawing on a bone is a distant memory and these days the only walkies she can manage is a potter around the garden.

But that’s not bad going considering Bella the Labrador cross is around 29 years old.  That’s 203 if every year of a dog’s life equals seven human years.

The faithful pet is believed to be the world’s oldest living dog and could even be the oldest dog ever. Read the rest

Why is Fido dead? Prescription drugs are killing dogs, too »

Drugs have a long term detrimental affect to your dog’s health and longevity. Drugs collect in the liver and kidneys and shorten a dog’s lifespan. Drugs are merely a band aid to suppress the symptoms while the patient is bleeding to death! They just don’t work because they don’t get to the cause of the problem.

I posted this article originally in March of 2007 and there has been no removing of these drugs from the market nor have vets stopped prescribing and dispensing them (most of which do not go over the known side effects or risks involved in giving them to your dog!)

(NewsTarget) The FDA has released information concerning non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for pets — including Metacam, Deramaxx, Previcox and Rimadyl — that shows they have been connected to 22,000 cases of illness in dogs, almost 3,000 of which were fatal. Read the rest

Singing The Praises Of Apple Cider Vinegar »

Apple Cider Vinegar

Apple Cider Vinegar

Apple cider is known around the world as Mother Nature’s miracle medicine, a powerful weapon in the war against aging and disease that is more effective than many high-priced prescription drugs. When God created this fruit He designed it be a food and a medicine!

Apple cider vinegar (ACV) is golden liquid concentrated with the healthy goodness of apples. It contains more than 30 important nutrients, 12 minerals, over 6 vitamins, essential acids and several enzymes. Moreover, it has a large dose of pectin for a healthy heart, and thus, healthy as a whole.

Many vitamins, minerals and other nutrients and substances are available in ACV to improve the health of your dog. ACV can provide them with enzymes and important minerals, such as potassium, calcium, magnesium, sulfur, chlorine, Read the rest

Come To The Edge part 3 The Conclusion »

I hope you all have enjoyed this series of articles as much as I have!  Here is the conclusion.

Come To The Edge part 3 The Conclusion

© Written by Dr. Kim Bloomer
Edited by Dr. Bera Dordoni

re-printed with permission:

Come to the edge, he said. They said: We are afraid. Come to the edge, he said. They came. He pushed them and they flew.” -Guillaume ApollinaireIn conclusion of our journey of animal care, laws, welfare and rights…

Possibly all the people pushing for these new hard-core draconian laws really believe it will make things better for the animals. I tend to think that many believe this but at the core of the movement behind these laws are those who believe that animals should be living separately from us in order to allow animals to have “real” lives. Some even believe that, for animals to live with us, work with us, play with us and/or help us is for them to be enslaved, and they are better off dead than enslaved. I honestly don’t think my dog thinks he’s the slave in our house. He has it pretty good, especially considering that before he came to live with us he had been a very abused, starved and neglected puppy. He hasn’t missed a meal since he came to live with us and he is rather demanding that his meals be on time! We bathe him, brush him, do his nail trims, minister to him when he’s ill, pay for his food (he is fed a species natural diet) and all his expenses which include the best nature can offer to an ailing animal, get up at ungodly hours so he can cavort with his dog friends at the park, and play with him. I think the “enslaved” part of this thinking is grossly misplaced. And I don’t think he’d rather be dead in place of the life he now leads even though he previously led a life of abuse and neglect.

Possibly people want to see the end to the horrific abuse we thrust upon animals in the name of both economics and protection. Read the rest

Changing The Concept Of Canine Hip Dysplasia »

DysplasticHipsgoodhips

Changing The Concept Of Canine Hip Dysplasia

by Dr. Wendell O. Belfield

I am excited to share this very interesting information with you on Hip Dysplasia and how it may be able to be prevented naturally!!

It may interest breeders and fanciers of the larger breeds of dogs, the winds of time are changing the concept of canine hip dysplasia (CHD). In the May, 1997 issue of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, were two papers discussing a new outlook on CHD. Read the rest

WARNING!!! COMFORTIS and Ivermectin interaction Safety Warning »

COMFORTIS® and ivermectin interaction Safety Warning Notification

Today the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) is announcing that it has received reports of adverse reactions in dogs receiving the drug Comfortis® (spinosad) concurrently with high, extra-label doses of the drug ivermectin. The clinical signs of these adverse reactions are consistent with ivermectin toxicity.

Comfortis® (spinosad), manufactured by Elanco Animal Health, a division of Eli Lilly and Company, is a monthly oral, chewable tablet used for the prevention and treatment of flea infestations on dogs. Veterinarians who use high, extra-label doses of ivermectin to treat dogs with non-responsive demodectic mange and other conditions should be aware that some dogs have developed signs of ivermectin toxicity when ivermectin is used concurrently with Comfortis® (spinosad). 

CVM and Elanco Animal Health are advising veterinarians that dogs receiving extra-label doses of ivermectin should not receive concurrent treatment with Comfortis® (spinosad).

CVM is working with Elanco Animal Health as they address this issue.  Additional information regarding this safety warning can be obtained on the Elanco Animal Health website.

Lilly Companion Animal Health Technical Bulletin:  Spinosad and the Extra-Label Use of High Dose Ivermectin for the Treatment of Generalized Demodicosis in Dogs - http://elms.xh1.lilly.com/10788_03_tech_Bulletin.pdf