Monday, September 6, 2010

Make the Perfect Patron Margarita, and Support Homeless Pets!

Help raise money for HALO Animal Rescue, and learn how to make the Perfect Patron Margarita!!!!

Total Wine is hosting an event at 3 of their Arizona locations September 9th, 14th and 30th with Regional Sales Manager and Senior Patron Trainer Chris Spake.

Seating is limited, so call Total Wine to reserve your seat.
Cost is $10.00 with all proceeds going to the HALO Animal Rescue.




http://www.halorescue.org/events.aspx?utm_source=firedrum&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Monthly%20Newsletter%20New%20Format#1











             

Sunday, September 5, 2010

MARICOPA COUNTY'S SPAY AND NEUTER ASSISTANCE PROGRAM


Spay/Neuter Assistance Program

Maricopa County’s Spay Neuter Assistance Program (SNAP) provides free spay/neuter surgeries for your dog(s) and cat(s) at participating veterinarians throughout the valley. Here are a few basic points about the process:
  • Simply fill out an application and return with payment (if applicable)
  • Approximate 2-6 week turn-around time
  • You choose from a list of participating veterinarians
  • You will have 90 days to use the voucher
Unfortunately, we have had to remove the application from the web site. You can still get one by coming by one of our Animal Care Centers We receive a limited amount of vouchers and run out quickly. You must come down on the 1st of every month, as we usually run out by the end of that day..
2500 S. 27th Avenue
Phoenix, AZ 85009
2630 W. 8th Street
Mesa, Az 85201
You can also get an application at any of our Uno por Uno events around the valley. Click here to see where we’ll be.

Friday, September 3, 2010

$10.00 Microchipping available at HALO Animal Rescue

HALO is a great no kill shelter located in Phoenix, they help rescue as many pets as they can especially those on the list to be euthanized from surrounding shelters in Arizona.  Please check out their link listed below.  They are still offering $10.00 microchipping thru this October.  Kudos for doing such a great job, thanks to all the employees and volunteers at HALO.  Some brief info from their website below.

 

HALO provides temporary shelter to abandoned cats and dogs until they can be adopted into a permanent home.
HALO is a limited admission or "no-kill" facility that does not accept animals from the public. HALO, believing that their strategy serves the animals in greatest need, selects animals from the euthanasia lists at "open admission" shelters in Maricopa County, primarily Maricopa County Animal Care and Control

Since HALO's inception in 1994, over 20,000 dogs and cats have found a new home, with our adoption numbers growing every year! In 2009 alone, we adopted out 2,584 dogs and cats in to new homes, giving them a second chance at happiness!

Adoption Center

5231 North 35th Avenue, Phoenix, AZ, 85017 (map it)
(602) 971-9222
Open daily from 11AM to 5PM
Our Adoption Center is on 35th avenue between Camelback and Bethany Home roads.

$10 Microchipping is BACK!

Come to our shelter any day from 11am to 5pm, and get your pets chipped for $10 each, including registration!  Rescues are welcome and there's no limit. http://www.halorescue.org/home.aspx
Offer valid August 2010 thru October 2010

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Do Your Pets Have the Back to School Blues



Along with your kids adjusting to going back to school, your pets also have to make the adjustment and here are some tips that may help their back to school blues.  Here is some great info from the ASPCA

As the summer light fades into fall, pets across the country are adjusting to new routines as their family members go back to work or school. What were once carefree days cruising around the park or swimming in the creek are now spent sitting by the front door waiting for busy pet parents to come home.

But what if your pet doesn’t adjust peacefully to this new reality? It’s not an uncommon problem—after all, cats and dogs are particularly vulnerable to any change in their schedules, andthey thrive on stimulation. With nothing to do, pets are forced to find ways to entertain themselves, which may include excessive barking or meowing, gnawing on shoes, raiding the garbage, eating houseplants and scratching furniture.

Here are some common signs that your pet may be having a hard time saying goodbye to summer:

-Urinating and defecating in the house
-Incessant barking and howling
-Chewing and digging
-Attempting to escape the house or yard
-Pacing without pause

But all is not lost! Our behaviorists have some great advice for keeping your pet’s "back-to-school blues" at bay.

-Start small by desensitizing your pooch to the cause of his anxiety. Introduce several short periods of separation, and then gradually increase time spent apart.
-Help your dog associate being alone with something good such as a tasty treat. Every time you leave the house, give your dog a food-dispensing toy—the Kong is one of our favorites, but there are plenty of others.
-Please don’t scold your dog if he doesn’t adjust quickly. If you punish him, he may become more upset and the problem could get worse.
-Be patient, and work with your pet until he feels comfortable and enjoys spending time alone. For a thorough guide to helping your pet overcome his anxiety, please visit our Virtual Behaviorist.


Story from the ASPCA
http://www2.aspca.org/site/MessageViewer?em_id=71785.0

Monday, August 30, 2010

Potty Training Tips for Your Puppy!!!

A friend of mine recently got a new puppy, and needs some potty training advice, any other comments to help her in the training process would be great.  If anyone has tips on what has helped them please feel free to comment.

This is for your Dy~
  • Crate or confine your puppy when you can't watch him—always. Train other family members to do the same.
  • If you feed your puppy a commercial dog food, feed dry food. It will keep his stools more solid.
  • Confine your puppy to rooms with tile or other washable flooring so mistakes don't ruin carpets.
  • Keep your puppy on a schedule. Feed him at the same time every day, and try to get up and go to bed close to the same time every day while he's being potty trained.
  • Puppies need lots of water, especially if they eat dry dog food. However, while you're potty training, feed your pup at least four hours before bedtime, and remove his water two hours before bedtime.
  • Take your puppy to potty after every meal as well as the first thing in the morning, the last thing at night, every time he wakes up from a nap, after an active play session, and in the wee hours of the morning if you hear him moving around. Take him on a leash to the place you want him to use—that will teach him to use that spot, and also teach him that he can go even on leash with you standing right there. That can be important if you're away from home.
  • When you take your puppy to potty, don't play with him until after he does his business. If he doesn't go within 10 minutes, put him in his crate for 10 to 15 minutes, then take him to potty again. When he potties, praise him and reward him with a treat or short playtime. Wait a few minutes before you take him in—sometimes puppies don't finish on the first try, so give him time to be sure he won't have to go again in three minutes.
  • Keep your puppy's potty place clean—pick up feces every day. You don't like to step in it, and neither does he.
  • If you don't have the time or patience to potty train a puppy, then adopt or buy an older puppy or adult dog that is already potty trained
Excerpted from The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting and Owning a Dog © 2003 by Sheila Webster Boneham, Ph.D. All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. Used by arrangement with Alpha Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.To order this book visit the Idiot's Guide web site or call 1-800-253-6476.   

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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Help Empty The Shelters!! ~Adopt-a-thon~ August 21st 2010



Saturday, August 21, 10:00 AM -10:00 PM
AAWL & SPCA,

30 N. 40th Place, Phoenix
Parking on NE or NW corner of 40th Street & Washington
When: Saturday, August 21, 2010 10am-10pm
Where: 30 N. 40th Place (AAWL Shelter)
Open our cages & take us home!
For more info visit
www.AAWL.org 
or call 602-273-6852 ext 116
Dogs-$25 Puppies-$50 Kittens-$25 Cats-$5
Best prices of the year for adoptions
Vaccines $14 ea or 3 for $40; Microchips $30
Low-Cost Vaccination & Microchip Clinic
Cooled area for your pet(s) provided by Typhoon Cooling.
Goodie Bags to the first 100 people
Food, Drinks, Music, Raffle


Two No-Kill Animal Shelters, One Powerful Goal
The two LARGEST NO-KILL shelters team up to save lives.
Our goal - adopt out ALL shelter animals in one day!
The two LARGEST NO-KILL shelters team up to save lives.
Our goal - adopt out ALL shelter animals in one day!
Publish Post

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Saturday, August 14, 2010

Helping Feral Cats in Arizona

Portrait of a female feral cat (Felis silvestr...Image via Wikipedia
What is a Feral Cat?

Feral cats are cats that have not been socialized to humans.  When cats are left to fend for themselves, they reproduce litters of kittens that are only socialized to other cats and are afraid of people.

What is TNR?

Trap:  The feral cats are trapped in humane traps using food as bait.

Neuter:  The cats are taken to a veterinarian where they are spayed or neutered.  While the cat is under anesthesia, their left ear is "tipped" in order to indicate that it  has been sterilized and part of a managed colony.  The ear tip is a nationally recognized form of identification for feral cats who have been sterilized.

Return:  The cats are returned to their outdoor home where their caregiver continues to provide them food and water.

What are the Alternatives?

Do Nothing
Eventually the problem will reach an unmanageable level and cause untold suffering.

Trap & Kill
This approach is not a solution.  The problem is everywhere.  More cats will simply move in to fill the void and continue the breeding cycle.

Catch & Tame
With the exception of very young kittens, this approach is not realistic.  It is extremely rare for an adult feral cat to become socialized to the point where it is able to live in someone's home as their pet.  For the small minority that could be tamed, the time and effort that goes into helping just a few cats is prohibitive.  Even
with kittens, taming can take several weeks of intensive socialization work.

Relocation
There is no other place for them to go and studies show that if you remove cats from their original location, others merely move into their place.  This is known as the "vacuum" effect.


ALTERED TAILS FERAL PROGRAM

We alter cats every Monday through Thursday by appointment.  Contact Jennifer at               (480) 968-4867 or email
TNR@alteredtails.org to schedule an appointment.  Feral cats must arrive in Humane traps and will receive an ear tip to indicate they have been sterilized and are members of a managed colony.  This program is supported entirely by donations.  See our Donate Page for more information on how to help.

WHY TNR WORKS...

  • It is more effective and less expensive than attempts at extermination.
  • It eliminate or reduces objectionable behaviors like spraying, yowling, and fighting.
  • It humanely stabilizes the free-roaming cat population.
  • It is the humane and responsible thing to do!

Visit the attached link to
The Foundation for Homeless Cats to read FAQ and find out more information about how to care for feral cats.  For more information on the Altered Tails TNR Program, please call Jennifer @              (480) 968-4867 or email TNR@alteredtails.org.

Contact Jennifer to schedule an appointment on one of our upcoming Feral Days!
 

  • Sunday August 22nd
  • Sunday September 19th
  • Sunday October 17th
  • Sunday November 21st
  • Sunday December 19th 

 http://www.alteredtails.org/TNR.html
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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Cat Marinating in Car Trunk, Rescued During Traffic Stop

I'm trying to figure out why this man would do this, just absolutely insane.


Buffalo police rescued a cat from a Cheektowaga man who apparently was planning to make a meal out of his pet because he thought it was ill-tempered, authorities said Monday.

When Ferry-Fillmore District officers pulled over a car driven by Gary L. Korkuc on Sunday night during a traffic stop, they said they heard a cat crying from inside the trunk and investigated.

What they found has left animal lovers at the SPCA Serving Erie County in shock.

The cat, according to police, was in a cage “marinating” in a mixture of crushed red peppers, chili pepper, salt and oil.
“It’s disgusting. It surprises me every day what people are capable of when it comes to violence, whether it is animals or people,” said Gina M. Browning, the SPCA’s director of public relations. “I’ve never heard of anything like this before.”
Korkuc, 51, was arrested on one count of cruelty to animals by Officers Jerry Guilian and John Poisson, shortly after he was stopped on the 1100 block of Broadway at about 7:45 p. m. for allegedly passing a stop sign.

Police took the 4-year-old cat to the SPCA on Ensminger Road in the Town of Tonawanda, where Korkuc had adopted it May 11. He told police the cat had been “mean” to him, authorities said.

In condemning the treatment of the cat, whose name is Navarro, Browning read from an SPCA memo put together in part from information provided by the officers and shelter staff:

“Do not under any circumstances adopt to this man ever again. He claims he did not want the cat because it was ‘possessive, greedy and wasteful.’ That the cat got pregnant after ‘spaying,’ even though it was a neutered male. This man is a danger to animals. . . . was soaking cat in marinade to ‘cook.’ ”

Workers at the SPCA gave Navarro two baths Sunday night to clean the spices off and were letting him calm down before bathing him again, Browning said late Monday, adding that the cat is adjusting well.

“We can learn lessons in resiliency. He is purring away and getting ready for his next checkup. He’s looking around like, ‘What am I doing here?’ He might be put [back] up for adoption,” Browning said.

Praising Guilian and Poisson, she added, “Thank God that police heard him. Thank God those cops took the initiative. By all appearances that cat may have wound up dead.”
Korkuc was also charged with passing a stop sign and failure to signal. After his arrest, he was later released on an appearance ticket.

Navarro has black and white markings, weighs 12 pounds and is described as having a good disposition. Adoption hours today at the SPCA, 205 Ensminger, are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

http://www.buffalonews.com/city/article97630.ece

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Brown Dog, Rolling with Fergie, Krispy Kreme Lover, and Social Media Extraordinaire

 Hello everyone,


Just wanted to share with you a picture of my brother's dog Chico, who we actually just call brown dog.  Brown dog was a stray pup my brother Vince found in his yard, over a year ago. He is one funny and spacey dog, and it is now an ongoing joke in our family to post Brown Dog in ridiculous pictures, so I thought I would share a couple with you.  


If you have your own funny pics of your animals, please email them to me at mcs274@stu.aii.edu .. WE ENCOURAGE PHOTOSHOP, it just makes us laugh is all.




Have a great day!



This below is the best one of all because Photoshop was not used, it's Brown Dog on his Facebook page.


Friday, August 6, 2010

Check out this Kitty bed!!!!

I love it when something vintage becomes something modern, and what a great way to put your eco friendly brain to work, and make a kitty bed out of old vintage suitcases.
 Mad props go out to artist Erika Tugas who creates these one of a kind Snuggy Luggage pet beds, and sells them on her Etsy store "The Pop Stops Here"

Please visit her Etsy store and check them out!!

http://www.etsy.com/shop/ThePopStopsHere








Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Nica Surf Dog

In 2006, we rescued a puppy from the Bulverde Area Humane Society to give to our son Justin who was living in Boulder, CO. After the preliminary vet checks we flew the puppy to CO. Justin named her Nica, as he had recently returned from a surfing trip to Nica, Nicarauga. Justin got a new job two months later in Kauai, HI. Hawaii has a 120 day quarantine for incoming pets as Hawaii has no rabies. Instead of putting Nica in jail for 120 days, we brought her back to San Antonio, and spent the next year doing all the shots, vet checks and rabies tests for Nica to qualify for direct release in Hawaii without quarantine. We then flew her to Hawaii to re-unite her with Justin. Since then Nica has thrived in Kauai, spending lots of time camping on the beach, hiking, and even surfing! Nica is a beautiful well behaved dog, we believe she is an American Eskimo. She lives and plays with lots of doggie friends in Kauai, all of whom were rescued or adopted. We firmly support pet adoption! Shelter dogs like Nica make wonderful loving pets.

Story from Jim & Dyana Eiler

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Year of the Cat!

...non fidarsi รจ meglio - my scared cat / gattoImage by Paolo Margari via Flickr


Maricopa County is seeing a cat crisis. Thousands of cats are without homes and hundreds more are born every year.

Maricopa County Animal Care and Control (MCACC) saw 14,082 cats come through the doors last year. More than half of those cats arrive during the late spring, early summer months, resulting in an overwhelming number of cats and nowhere to put them. Intake increases a whopping 181% from the slowest to busiest months. With only 25% of the cats getting adopted and about 20% getting rescued, there is too large of a gap.

Cat euthanasia is higher than dog euthanasia. Unlike dogs, a small number of lost cats actually go back to their owners. More than 10% of the dogs that come to the shelter get returned to their owners compared with a mere ½% of the cats.

What's more, cats tend to stay longer at the shelter than dogs—nine days versus six. While only a few dogs stay more than a month, a handful of cats stay over three months.

MCACC has dedicated 2010 as the Year of the Cat to change these numbers, in effect, saving more cats lives.
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Sunday, July 25, 2010

Pet Pix, San Diego, Ca

Mark your calendars for PETPIX!
August 4, 2010
3:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Admission: $5.00 deposit
Join us August 4th for professional pet and owner photography. Pet Pix will capture the true personality of your pet through quality photographs and art that you'll treasure for years to come.
For more information, please call 8586761600 or email ER4PETS@PETSURG.com.



PETSURG & ER4PETS
12335 World Trade Drive suite 16
San Diego, CA, US
8586761600
ER4PETS@PETSURG.com

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Spay and Neuter Clinic Jul 23, 2010 | Friday

Petco - MESA-AZ
845 N DOBSON RD
Mesa, AZ 85201


Cost: PRICE: $30 - $90 : $90, 76-100 pound female dog; $80, 76-100 pound male dog; $80, 51-75 pound female dog; $70, 51-75 pound male dog: $70, 26-50 pound female dog; $60, 26-50 pound male dog; $60, 1-25 pound female dog; $50, 1-25 pound male dog; $50 female cat; $30 male cat
The Nip and Snip Mobile Spay/Neuter Clinic offers discounted surgeries for cats and dogs. Female cats cost $50 and male cats $30. Female dogs range from $60-$90 based on weight and male dogs $50-$80 based on weight. Cats must be in a carrier (one cat per carrier) and female dogs must not be in or recently (one month prior) been in heat. See website for a full list of rule and pricing schedule based on the type of animal, gender and weight. Reservations required

Oil Spill Dog's Journey

Oil Spill Dog's Journey

Welcome to Paws for the Cause!

This blog was created to spread awareness on the staggering amount of homeless pets that are being euthanized each year, and how we can do our part to help lower that number.
Maricopa County is the second largest animal welfare system in the country, and last year close to 100,000 dogs and cats were in our shelters either as a stray or surrendered by their owner. 14,000 adoptable dogs and cats where euthanized last year due to lack of space, kennels, foster homes and medical help.
Nationwide there are 6 to 8 million dogs and cats that enter shelters, to begin to think about how many were euthanized is more than heartbreaking. We can help little by little by being responsible owners, and having our pets spayed or neutered, adopting from shelters instead of breeders, by the way did you know that 25-30% of dogs up for adoption are purebred? We need to start taking action now!
This blog will help inform, educate, and share with its followers on upcoming events, adoptions, tips, and much more. We also encourage you to please post your pictures and videos of your pets , and share any stories you may have ,and to please forward this blog to all your friends whether they are pet owners or not.
Lets all PAWS FOR THE CAUSE!!!!!