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OfflineToby. I don't know for sure what he is. It's been guessed but IDK. I picked him up out of a box at a church. He was the only one in the litter with long hair. Taking him to the vet we found out that worms had ate through his intestines, he had mange, and he had lice. Paid out the nose to save him. All the rest of the pups out of that litter were put to sleep. I have had him about 3 years. A girl I was friends with poisoned him after we had an argument. Once again, the vet saved him. He has no idea that he is a dog. Love him! He is my baby. Because of the damage done when he is poisoned he won't live long as he should. His kidneys took a beating and we have to make sure he gets plenty of clean water.
<a href="http://s296.photobucket.com/al…..g" target="_blank"><img src="http://i296.photobucket.com/al…..g" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>
OfflineI know that most of us are animal lovers as is evident by this thread. I am a long-time member of The Humane Society and donate whenever I can. I just got the e-mail posted below describing 4 successful raids by The Humane Society on 3 puppy mills and 2 dog fighting operations. As a result, there are now over 900 puppies and dogs in Indiana, Washington, Wisconsin and Alabama that need help.
I have gotten permission to post this information as well as a link to The Humane Society to make emergency donations. I normally don't ask others for things like this as I try to do my part and move on. However, this particular situation really got to me and I feel the need to do something about it.
So, if at all possible, please donate whatever you can to help these animals that can’t help themselves and to give the resources to those out there on the front lines dealing with the brutality first hand…
Thank you for your time and consideration.
-Martin
"The Humane Society of the United States' offensive against puppy mills continues. Just yesterday, we arrived on the scene at an Indiana puppy mill, where we found more than 200 dogs in grossly overcrowded conditions. Under the temporary care of our emergency shelter, the resilient animals already are showing signs of improvement.
Last week, local law enforcement and The HSUS rescued nearly 400 dogs from the horrific confines of a puppy mill operation known as the Sun Valley Kennel in Kennewick, Wash. We're now busy moving these animals to local shelters, where they’ll be adopted.
Meanwhile, we've been on the ground around the clock for two weeks in Wisconsin, tending to more than 300 dogs rescued from yet another mass breeding operation. And as if all that weren't enough, earlier in the week we raided two major dog fighting operations in eastern Alabama.
The dogs at Sun Valley -- like those in Indiana and Wisconsin -- had spent their entire lives trapped in deplorable conditions and were forced to breed continuously, all for the profit of the operator. When found, some of the animals were confined to grocery shopping carts, while others spun circles in rusty pens caked with feces. Many of the dogs suffered from malnutrition, urine burns, and overgrown nails.
Because of the efforts of our rescue teams -- along with the assistance of our partners from the animal welfare community -- their suffering is finally over. Tragically, hundreds of thousands of dogs still suffer at the hands of an industry that traps them in a cycle of misery. In the first five months of this year alone, our teams already have rescued more than 1,000 dogs from puppy mill nightmares. We won't stop until the cruelty ends.
Please help make these animal rescue operations possible. Watch our video, and then make a special donation today to fund the life-saving work of our emergency response teams.
Thank you for all you do for animals.
Sincerely,
Wayne Pacelle
President & CEO
The Humane Society of the United States"
OfflineI know that most of us are animal lovers as is evident by this thread. I am a long-time member of The Humane Society and donate whenever I can. I just got the e-mail posted below describing 4 successful raids by The Humane Society on 3 puppy mills and 2 dog fighting operations. As a result, there are now over 900 puppies and dogs in Indiana, Washington, Wisconsin and Alabama that need help.
I have gotten permission to post this information as well as a link to The Humane Society to make emergency donations. I normally don't ask others for things like this as I try to do my part and move on. However, this particular situation really got to me and I feel the need to do something about it.
So, if at all possible, please donate whatever you can to help these animals that can’t help themselves and to give the resources to those out there on the front lines dealing with the brutality first hand…
Thank you for your time and consideration.
-Martin
"The Humane Society of the United States' offensive against puppy mills continues. Just yesterday, we arrived on the scene at an Indiana puppy mill, where we found more than 200 dogs in grossly overcrowded conditions. Under the temporary care of our emergency shelter, the resilient animals already are showing signs of improvement.
Last week, local law enforcement and The HSUS rescued nearly 400 dogs from the horrific confines of a puppy mill operation known as the Sun Valley Kennel in Kennewick, Wash. We're now busy moving these animals to local shelters, where they’ll be adopted.
Meanwhile, we've been on the ground around the clock for two weeks in Wisconsin, tending to more than 300 dogs rescued from yet another mass breeding operation. And as if all that weren't enough, earlier in the week we raided two major dog fighting operations in eastern Alabama.
The dogs at Sun Valley -- like those in Indiana and Wisconsin -- had spent their entire lives trapped in deplorable conditions and were forced to breed continuously, all for the profit of the operator. When found, some of the animals were confined to grocery shopping carts, while others spun circles in rusty pens caked with feces. Many of the dogs suffered from malnutrition, urine burns, and overgrown nails.
Because of the efforts of our rescue teams -- along with the assistance of our partners from the animal welfare community -- their suffering is finally over. Tragically, hundreds of thousands of dogs still suffer at the hands of an industry that traps them in a cycle of misery. In the first five months of this year alone, our teams already have rescued more than 1,000 dogs from puppy mill nightmares. We won't stop until the cruelty ends.
Please help make these animal rescue operations possible. Watch our video, and then make a special donation today to fund the life-saving work of our emergency response teams.
Thank you for all you do for animals.
Sincerely,
Wayne Pacelle
President & CEO
The Humane Society of the United States"
October31st,
I'm a huge animal lover! I also am a member of The Humane Society of the U.S. Thanks for posting this!
Don't forget to click once a day at http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com. Each click on the purple "Click Here to Give – it's FREE" button at The Animal Rescue Site provides food and care for a rescued animal living in a shelter or sanctuary. Funding for food and care is paid by site sponsors.
For all our furry and feathered friends. /wink.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':(' />
Carolyn
OfflineHere's another of Nilla crashed out on the front steps.
And this is how she falls down the front steps or off the stoop. She gets all blissed out with tummy and neck rubs and she rolls too close to the edge. In this photo she's actually dozed off and when I close the front gate she'll wake up and usually fall off the step.
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OfflineThat last picture is always the last thing I see before he jumps out at me to attack. Many a times he has snuck up on me and pinched my leg.
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OfflineI love cats who think they are dogs. Actually – they are the only cats I love.
I used to be a cat person, not a dog person – or so I thought. Then we got Emily. That cat – OMG – she was a smart one. Jyb and I have french doors in our bedroom, and Emily quickly figured out that she could bet let in and out at ANY time of night by banging on those stupid french doors. We tried to ignore her – she would persist. If inside she would wail and bang the blinds. If outside, she would wail and paw. No amount of ignoring EVER got her to stop until she had us trained. Then it was in/out/in/out ten times a night. We were getting no sleep. We tried locking her upstairs at night with litter box and food/water (which is huge – she had tons of room to roam and play, comfy furniture on which to sleep), and no go – she started peeing on everything because she was mad at us about locking her upstairs.
The other thing is that we live in the woods. This means there are TONS of critters for her to hunt and night. She was a good hunter. She'd make a kill. If it was small enough, she would find her way into the basement from the outside, and then come to the top of the stairs where she would shove a dead or stunned critter under the door that opens into our hallway. Down the hall I'd walk in the morning, and there would be a half dead-mouse dragging itself towards me down the hall. Even worse were the snakes she'd bring in. God. If she couldn't shove it under the door, she'd just eviscerate it and leave its bloody corpse and innards all over our front porch. Gaaa. Once it was a bunny, another time a squirrel. I always figured if I came out one morning and had to step over a dead deer, the message would be, "the kids are next." Fortunately, that never happened.
Finally, the no sleeping thing about killed us – so Emily went to live with Tanner's dad, where she still lives. We figure the change in scene disrupted some of those habits, because she's been a great cat for them. We've not had a cat since – we have the three dogs. They are much easier and more eager to please.
OfflineI think there is a chance that my cat will bark some day. He is too smart for his own good, he too has me trained and wrapped around his paw. If he is cold at night he climbs under the covers and puts his cold nose on my leg to move over. He is an indoors cat only, he cannot go outside unless I am out there with him, my street gets kind of busy. I don't have a dog only because I live in an apartment and don't think that is far to keep a dog locked in a small space, they need a yard to run around in. I cannot go to the bathroom without him, he runs and jumps on the door if I shut it all the way and scratches on it till I open it. There has been a few times that I have been in the shower and he crept in, not expecting him I about had a heart attack when the door slowly started to open, he slid the door open and stuck his head in to see what I was doing. He chases his toys and brings them back to you so you can throw it for him to catch. Oh, don't ignore him if he wants to play catch because he will pinch you on the leg, arm it don't matter where ever he can get skin. But I love him and don't know what I would do without him.
OfflineI think there is a chance that my cat will bark some day. He is too smart for his own good, he too has me trained and wrapped around his paw. If he is cold at night he climbs under the covers and puts his cold nose on my leg to move over. He is an indoors cat only, he cannot go outside unless I am out there with him, my street gets kind of busy. I don't have a dog only because I live in an apartment and don't think that is far to keep a dog locked in a small space, they need a yard to run around in. I cannot go to the bathroom without him, he runs and jumps on the door if I shut it all the way and scratches on it till I open it. There has been a few times that I have been in the shower and he crept in, not expecting him I about had a heart attack when the door slowly started to open, he slid the door open and stuck his head in to see what I was doing. He chases his toys and brings them back to you so you can throw it for him to catch. Oh, don't ignore him if he wants to play catch because he will pinch you on the leg, arm it don't matter where ever he can get skin. But I love him and don't know what I would do without him.
Hi Duckie!
How cute your cat is! With some personality. Long time ago, I had two Tabby twin brother cats.
Lenny and Squiggy, named after Laverne and Shirley show. They were great pets!
Lenny, was the little dog, of the two. /biggrin.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':)' />
OfflineOh – that was the other thing my cat, Emily, would do. She would stand in the entryway in the middle of the night on nights that Jim was working and wail at the top of her lungs as if her tail was caught in something. I'd stagger out of bed and down the hall in the pitch black, and she would be waiting around the corner behind a wall, where she would jump at my face as I came down the hall. I'm pretty sure that when I screamed she ran off laughing.
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