Here's a familiar story to everyone who has had a dog-dog reactive dog: You're out walking in the neighborhood, your own dog responsibly on leash, when you look up and there is a ___________ (pick one: set of Golden Retrievers, Jack Russel Terrier, Black Lab, trio of Dachshunds) charging toward you and your reactive dog. Many yards behind the oncoming bundle of doom, the owner waves and smiles, shouting "It's okay!!! They love other dogs!!" Meanwhile, you're not fine at all. Holy moly, now what? You know your dog is not going to react well, and you know the other owner has no control over his/her own dogs, who are running toward you. This is when you want to employ what Karen London and I call the "Emergency Sit-Stay" in which you ask your dog to sit and stay behind you while you step Read More
Archives for September 2011
DVDs 25% Off!
Not very subtle, hey? Apologies, but I was convinced by some well-motivated smooth talkers that some of you really would want to know that all my DVDs are 25% off until next Monday. So there, I did it, the woman who would flunk out of marketing class on the first day. Whew. Okay, now to the really important stuff.... It's all about getting ready to go on a long trip right now, from seminar prep (just getting all my movies on a thumb drive is not small task!) to training new farm sitters to writing out instructions to, oh yeah, cleaning out the frig. [Ack, is that a new life form covering the yogurt?] If you're in the same boat, check out the comments to a blog I wrote on preparing for a big trip without your dog. I hope my comments are helpful, but I'd also advise you to check out the Read More
Two New Books — Snack Food and a Five Course Dinner
I thought you might be interested in two books I've devoured lately, as different from each other as a Bichon and a Bouvier, but both wonderful in their own ways. Right now I'm immersed in The Divine Life of Animals by Ptolemy Tompkins, subtitled "One Man's Quest to Discover Whether the Souls of Animals Live On." This is not beach reading, it's a serious yet engaging inquiry about whether animals have souls. (Note that he asks that in the book, but answers in a way in the subtitle.) I'm only half way through, but I'm fascinated by it, and love that someone has taken the time to seriously ask the question: "Do Animals Have Souls?" To answer that question, Tompkins first takes us through a comparative survey of how different cultures and religions have perceived who animals really are, and Read More