View of Twin Peaks and Mt. Davidson in the background |
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Rediscovering Fort "Fun"ston
SAND. Lots of it. Permeating everything. That's what happens at Fort Funston. But you just have to go with it and have a great time. This video and photo tell the story.
Labels:
Fort Funston
Location:
San Francisco, CA, USA
Puppy II Class
They say you should socialize your dog early and often.
Since Daisy missed out on most of that early socialization and training we are determined to give it to her so she can develop confidence and conquer fear. We loved Mike Wombacher's training with Alba, and got in touch regarding Daisy. He immediately slotted her in his puppy II class which started a week ago. He knows the Vizsla drill and is careful about what techniques to use on Daisy.
Today's lesson was all about stay and heal. With Alba as her lead, Daisy did very well for her first sit/stay, down/stay and stand/stay exercises! Heal will take more time and we'll try the sensation collar Mike suggested to work on that a lot more since it is critical for our neighborhood walks.
Since Daisy missed out on most of that early socialization and training we are determined to give it to her so she can develop confidence and conquer fear. We loved Mike Wombacher's training with Alba, and got in touch regarding Daisy. He immediately slotted her in his puppy II class which started a week ago. He knows the Vizsla drill and is careful about what techniques to use on Daisy.
Today's lesson was all about stay and heal. With Alba as her lead, Daisy did very well for her first sit/stay, down/stay and stand/stay exercises! Heal will take more time and we'll try the sensation collar Mike suggested to work on that a lot more since it is critical for our neighborhood walks.
Just getting their attention before class (Alba on left, Daisy on right) |
Daisy and Alba working on their stand/stay |
Labels:
Dog Gone Good,
Mike Wombacher
Location:
San Francisco San Francisco
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
The grass is not always greener
Wow, it's been a while since our last post. The silence has certainly not been due to a lack of activity on this end. Daisy is making many strides (more on those later), but she did hit a bump in the road two weeks ago and it has taken a little while to get back on track.
We took the girls to Crissy Field on one of those gorgeous Sunday mornings at the end of February, where they ran like crazy. The grass was green and they munched in between fits of chasing each other. We ran into another group of Vizslas and stopped to chat while the dogs munched on more grass. Sensing a theme? Early spring grass always seems to attract dogs, and theories abound on why dogs eat grass. Some say they eat it to settle an upset stomach, but even vets can't seem to agree on exactly why grass is appealing to dogs.
It all seemed innocent enough at the time, but fast forward to the next afternoon, when Daisy throws up after a bully stick, and much of the contents of her stomach included undigested breakfast and a whole lot of grass. Ok, the episode is over, don't give her any food until dinner (and then bland chicken/rice watered down), but around midnight, the vomiting began in earnest. And diarrhea. In waves and even a couple hours apart. She was completely restless. Of course this was the morning that Erik had an early flight to the East Coast. At 2:30am I called SFVS and gave them symptoms and general update. They said to monitor Daisy and if it kept happening to bring her in. At 4am, things weren't improving and I took her to the emergency room. She was actually excited to get in the car (she always is). But poor thing was dehydrated and needed help right away. She looked as green as the grass she had eaten.
Lots of heavy duty meds, sub-q fluids, and no food/water for the next 12 hours. Then another late morning vet appointment to check status and healing of stitches from spay (another pesky and lengthy healing time), lots of sleep, and staying low key for several days. No grass! She got better, than it came back, tested for giardia which was negative, but more bland diet, meds, and recovery. Let's hope we don't do this again soon!
We took the girls to Crissy Field on one of those gorgeous Sunday mornings at the end of February, where they ran like crazy. The grass was green and they munched in between fits of chasing each other. We ran into another group of Vizslas and stopped to chat while the dogs munched on more grass. Sensing a theme? Early spring grass always seems to attract dogs, and theories abound on why dogs eat grass. Some say they eat it to settle an upset stomach, but even vets can't seem to agree on exactly why grass is appealing to dogs.
It all seemed innocent enough at the time, but fast forward to the next afternoon, when Daisy throws up after a bully stick, and much of the contents of her stomach included undigested breakfast and a whole lot of grass. Ok, the episode is over, don't give her any food until dinner (and then bland chicken/rice watered down), but around midnight, the vomiting began in earnest. And diarrhea. In waves and even a couple hours apart. She was completely restless. Of course this was the morning that Erik had an early flight to the East Coast. At 2:30am I called SFVS and gave them symptoms and general update. They said to monitor Daisy and if it kept happening to bring her in. At 4am, things weren't improving and I took her to the emergency room. She was actually excited to get in the car (she always is). But poor thing was dehydrated and needed help right away. She looked as green as the grass she had eaten.
Daisy looking a little greener than usual |
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