Picture of your pet thread !!!

BygonEra

Well-Known Member
I and my ex partner blamed ourselves and I still feel guilty for possibly robbing him of a few more years,he was 13 and obviously apart from the damned cancer and arthritis which was relatively under control with meds he had no other health issues.
Bayley who was his best dog buddy is 8 now and she was neutered at a year old just before I got her.Her weight has ballooned over the last year or two,she now weighs 90+lbs,her appetite isn't huge for a big dog so I put it down to the neutering,I feed her boiled chicken,lots of fish and some red meat at times,I also have some dry prescription food which I give every 3rd or 4th or so but I'm not sure how good it is for her because she becomes really flatulent and sounds like a plane taking off for most of the night after and also really stinks.
If anybody has some healthy homemade dog food recipes they'd like to share I'd love to see them.

Sorry to hear about your girl also,it is a truly painful experience.I know that neutering a female is a lot more invasive in terms of surgery so it is always something that is best done young,that's just my opinion though.
Don't blame yourselves! Many people think they're doing their dogs a favor by allowing them to stay intact, but truthfully, it's in the dogs best benefit... not just to lower the risks of cancer, but dogs (males and females) are FULL of hormones... spaying and neutering eliminates the dogs desire to breed and makes for a much happier pooch (imagine being stuck in a compound wanting nothing more than the have sex but never being able to lol). But hey, your dog lived a long happy life, and who's to say the cancer wouldn't have originated elsewhere had you neutered him. Don't beat yourself up over it.

As for food, have you ever heard of the Raw diet? Here's a link that gives a basic overview: http://pets.webmd.com/dogs/guide/raw-dog-food-dietary-concerns-benefits-and-risks

It allows dogs to have a more natural diet and helps their digestive system perform the way it should. Also, many of those "prescription" dog foods have a lot of grain which many dogs can't properly digest or process... almost like Celiac's disease in people. My dog was having major skin allergies and was super gassy... switched to a grain free food per our vet's recommendation and he's symptom free. :)
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Our 2 backyard chickens. They have their own hen house beside the garage. They free range our entire yard during the day. They give us fresh eggs every day. Rosey is a Rhode Island Red, her sister Rocky is a Plymouth Barred Rock. Our 2 little peckers!:-o..
 

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lahadaextranjera

Well-Known Member
Lovely pics guys. Keep them coming!! It's so great to see how much you love AND care for your pets. What a wide range- parrots to horses ! Wow! This thread has really cheered me up no end. Just what I needed today so thanks. God knows why it's a 4 star thread still?? :)
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Here's the story of the "Lobster Catching Dogs of Baja". Until a few years ago we would drive down to Baja for our vacations. Camp on desolate beaches, fish & beachcomb. I have a 4x4 pick-up & camper & we could get to all sorts of remote beaches. One day while beachcombing at low tide, we came across a tide pool, up against the rocks, full of lobsters. There were at least 100 of them. The tide had gone out so far, they were stranded in the pool. There was dry beach between them & open water. Every time a wave would manage to splash into the pool, one or 2 lobsters would make a run for open water in the backwash. Soon our 2 dogs were chasing & catching their own lobsters. I can only tell this story because I have the pictures! Look real close at the last picture, can you find the lobster?:eyesmoke:
 

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dirtyho1968

Well-Known Member
Our 2 backyard chickens. They have their own hen house beside the garage. They free range our entire yard during the day. They give us fresh eggs every day. Rosey is a Rhode Island Red, her sister Rocky is a Plymouth Barred Rock. Our 2 little peckers!:-o..
Mmmmm, chicken.
 
Hens are fantastic pets. They are very responive to humans and really warm to their owners. My neighbours have a few that I look after whenever they go away. When I let them out of the hutch they follow me around the garden and sit by my feet. Only drawback is they only live a few years. One died last time I was looking after them and by law (in the UK) you are not allowed to bury them, all your allowed to do it put them in a plastic bag and put that in the bin. That made me really upset. Didn't seem right at all.
 

ProfessorPotSnob

New Member
That UK law is strange but true , guess it has to do with disease control amongst livestock ?

I remember being a little guy and trying to teach chicks to fly , sad to say I killed a few dozen before my grandma caught wind of what I was doing that day . She made me pluck chickens as a pay back later that day :(
 
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