just dogs

Dogs?

  • Sit

    Votes: 41 16.1%
  • Fetch

    Votes: 46 18.1%
  • Belly Scratchers

    Votes: 80 31.5%
  • Dog Farts

    Votes: 69 27.2%
  • Leg Humps

    Votes: 28 11.0%
  • Cookie? Good boy..

    Votes: 58 22.8%
  • @Ceasar Milan, Fuck you!

    Votes: 104 40.9%

  • Total voters
    254

Bareback

Well-Known Member
Ok 3 hrs of figgiting with this invisible fence I finally got it. I tore the box open and hidden inside a flap was the manual for the collar. Prior i was gettin just a small shock. As per manual I had to set the correction level on the collar itself also. Ok so I tested it on myself and ouch! So I strapped it on her, walked her on a leash towards the line and she stood straight up and yiped a cpl times so i yanked her back. She cowered to the house and went to her pouty corner. Next pee break, I will just let her loose and watch her to see how she does. I did lower the level from 10 to 7. I hope she learns to yield back.
Anyone use one of these...any tips or tricks?
Yeah I have one, my dog runs through it and then stays out side of it until I true it off.

Sorry nothing helpful here.
 

lokie

Well-Known Member
My folks had that set up in a huge yard. One of the dogs was a full size bull headed Doberman whom when she wanted out would run full bore at the flags, a brief yelp as she went through & then she was free range.
I tried one for my dogs. It did not work on them.

Oh it would shock them, they were too dumb to get back in range or run out of it.
Fools would just stop in their tracks and sit, with the collar shocking them all the while.

I turned it off permanently when I found one dog had burn marks under its collar and the second
dog had visible marks too.
 

BleedsGreen

Well-Known Member
Any of you with older dogs that the Vet prescribed Galliprant (grapiprant tablets)? What an amazing transformation in my 16 year old Zena, she was lethargic with hip\joint pain arthritic etc.. I was starting to think maybe she would be better off..... So I asked the vet in November after her check-up and he said she is happy and relatively healthy for her age but her joints seem really painful. That is when he suggested that we try the galliprant if that did not help then maybe it was time. I am happy to say I have seen a drastic change. You can see she still has pain but by December for the first time in over a year she jumped up on the couch on her own again! The year before I had bought those doggie steps and she would climb up those but the past year she didn't even use them and would stay in her doggie beg instead of the furniture. She doesn't "jump" sometimes it is more of a climb on the furniture as much as she did when young but she naps on her recliner and the couch again which makes me smile every time I find her there.

Just figured I would share if anyone has an older dog dealing with pain and hadn't heard about galliprant. They did not have it when we had to put her older brother Duke down in 2012, I wish they had might of been able to relieve some of his pain and had him underfoot a little longer. :(
 
Last edited:

farmerfischer

Well-Known Member
Any of you with older dogs that the Vet prescribed Galliprant (grapiprant tablets)? What an amazing transformation in my 16 year old Zena, she was lethargic with hip\joint pain arthritic etc.. I was starting to think maybe she would be better off..... So I asked the vet in November after her check-up and he said she is happy and relatively healthy for her age but her joints seem really painful. That is when he suggested that we try the galliprant if that did not help then maybe it was time. I am happy to say I have seen a drastic change. You can see she still has pain but by December for the first time in over a year she jumped up on the couch on her own again! The year before I had bought those doggie steps and she would climb up those but the past year she didn't even use them and would stay in her doggie beg instead of the furniture. She doesn't "jump" sometimes it is more of a climb on the furniture as much as she did when young but she naps on her recliner and the couch again which makes me smile every time I find her there.

Just figured I would share if anyone has an older dog dealing with pain and hadn't heard about galliprant. They did not have it when we had to put her older brother Duke down in 2012, I wish they had might of been able to relieve some of his pain and had him underfoot a little longer. :(
Thanks for sharing. I'll have to ask are local vet if it's a good choice for her, she's on a low dose of doggy ibuprofen. this ol'girl turned 17 this February.. her back hips get stiff and give her a hard time with stairs sometimes..IMG_20180509_175031.jpg
She hates getting her picture taken...lol..
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Thanks for sharing. I'll have to ask are local vet if it's a good choice for her, she's on a low dose of doggy ibuprofen. this ol'girl turned 17 this February.. her back hips get stiff and give her a hard time with stairs sometimes..View attachment 4133545
She hates getting her picture taken...lol..
I was warned off of ibuprofen for dogs. Then the vet gave the dog a script for Tram adol- my dog fucking hated it and refused to eat the tablets.

He's been on a daily pea sized dose of canna butter for 18 months now and the only time he complains is when I forget to put it in his dinner!
 

farmerfischer

Well-Known Member
I was warned off of ibuprofen for dogs. Then the vet gave the dog a script for Tram adol- my dog fucking hated it and refused to eat the tablets.

He's been on a daily pea sized dose of canna butter for 18 months now and the only time he complains is when I forget to put it in his dinner!
I'm not sure exactly what it is.(on my way to work). all i know is it an antiinflammatory.. its got a weird name, I want to say vetprofrin but im sure that's wrong.. these that she is taken are like dog food tables, not a real pill, and she doesn't seem to mind them.. she get excited just like with any other treat I give her.. if I remember when I get home I'll look and see what they are..
 
Top