Author Archives: DoggyMom.com

Printing for Less – a dog friendly workplace

PrintingforLess.com (PFL) is a Montana-based printing business that is also a dog-friendly.  Their press release for this year’s Take Your Dog to Work Day proudly stated:

Here at PrintingForLess.com, we get to bring our dogs to work on a daily basis. We’ve found having office dogs helps with staff morale, builds camaraderie among employees, stimulates creativity and decreases employee absenteeism.

I’m a huge supporter of the pet-friendly workplace for all of the reasons stated above.  I recently heard a Chief Executive say that he uses statistics on frequency of employee sick leave as a measure of whether the employees are engaged with the business or not.   Many businesses with pet-friendly workplaces, like PFL, report that employee absenteeism decreases after the pet-friendly workplace is instituted.  That’s good news for employees, employers, customers, and the dogs!

Here’s a video (courtesy of YouTube) of Bodie performing tricks in the offices at PFL:

When you take a look at the PFL website, you can see that the company has a pretty special culture, and the dog-friendly workplace policy is only one part of that.   Watch the PFL culture video on their website.

Well done PrintingforLess.com!

Pet parks at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport

In May, I featured an item about the pet relief area at the Maui airport.

Did you know that in 2008, the US Department of Transportation passed a law called the Air Carrier Accessibility Act?  This Act requires airports to have relief facilities available to service dogs.

Many airports have since realised the value of catering to their customers who are traveling with their dogs and opened up these facilities not only to service dogs but all dogs.  One airport that is leading the way is the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.  This airport has pet parks at all three of its passenger terminals.  They are:

  • The Bone Yard (Terminal 4)
  • The Paw Pad (Terminal 3)
  • The Pet Patch (Terminal 2)

If you are traveling through Phoenix, remember that the Airport offers these facilities and, if you’re not, here’s a great video of the Airport’s pet parks for you to enjoy:

Paw Justice 2012 calendar competition

The  folks behind the Paw Justice campaign have come up with another creative way to help raise funds for education about animal abuse in New Zealand.

For $25.00, you can enter two photos of your dog in the Paw Justice 2012 calendar competition.   If you want to enter more photos, you can pay an additional $5.00 for each additional group of two photos submitted.

The grand prize winner will see their pet:

  • featured on the 2012 Paw Justice calendar
  • immortalised in a pet portrait commissioned just for you
  • replicated in a soft toy mascot for Paw Justice that will be sold in stores

All entrants will receive a copy of the Paw Justice 2012 calendar.

What are you waiting for?  Just click on the Paw Justice logo above and it will take you directly to the photo competition page.  Good luck!

Dogs as bed partners

Bedmaker Sleepyhead has released the results of New Zealand’s largest sleep survey.  The survey aimed to assess the sleeping habits of New Zealanders, primarily to make the connection between bedding and quality sleep.

The survey found that 60% of New Zealanders share their bed with a partner every night, 12% of us share our beds with our dogs or cats.

So, if you sleep with your dog – you are not alone!

(One of the benefits not mentioned in the survey is that your dog is an excellent bed warmer on cold winter nights.  Whereas a hot water bottle or wheat bag will cool down overnight, your warm and furry dog maintains your bed at a constant temperature.)

Firm comes to aid of disabled dog

When Lucky’s wheelchair was stolen, New Hampshire firm HandicappedPets.com stepped in with a new one.  Read the story here.

David Feeney with his dog, Lucky, in Lucky's new wheelchair. Photo by Matthew J Lee, Boston Globe.

Congratulations Dogwatch!

The Palms Shopping Centre in association with The Breeze easy listening radio station has been running a $100,000 campaign to give back to community organisations in Christchurch and Canterbury.   Members of the public were asked to vote on the organisation that they felt should win the largest grant of money.

I’m pleased to report that Dogwatch is the supreme winner – earning $50,000 for the charity.  Dogwatch takes condemned dogs from the pound and works to find them a forever home.

Well done, Dogwatch.  By all accounts, the animal sanctuary won by a landslide.

Watch the video, courtesy of YouTube:

 

Inner peace

This has made the rounds many times over the years…but it is still a goodie!

If you can  start the day without caffeine,
If you can always be  cheerful, ignoring aches and pains,

If you can  resist complaining and boring people with your  troubles,

If you can eat the same food  every   day and be grateful for  it,

If you can understand when your  loved ones are too busy to give you any  time,
If you can take criticism and blame without  resentment,

If you can conquer  tension without medical help,
If you can  relax without alcohol, 

If you can sleep without the aid  of drugs,

…Then You Are Probably  

The Family  Dog! 

Doggy quote of the month for July

“If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went.”

–  Will Rogers, actor and cowboy

Michael Vick – a time for forgiveness?

Michael Vick is known for two things:  NFL football and dog fighting.

Earlier this week, Michael Vick was named the Subway Sportsman of the Year at the Black Entertainment Television (BET) awards for his efforts as the quarterback for the Philadelphia Eagles.  His performance was lauded as exceptional “after being off the field for 20 months.”

The win has sparked outrage amongst animal lovers and activists in the United States with a petition on Facebook to boycott the Subway restaurant chain (No Way Subway).  There are those who say that, as sponsor of the award, the Subway corporation cannot influence the outcome of voting.  Others with experience in the management of professional sport say that the restaurant chain’s management would have been told of the outcome of the voting regardless of the winner – giving them time to prepare publicity about it.   Protestors say that this would have been an opportunity for Subway to distance themselves from the winner if they had wanted to.

This debate opens up wounds that are still fairly recent for most dog lovers.  Michael Vick pleaded guilty for his actions that spanned the years 2001 – 2007 as a co-conspirator and financial backer of a dog fighting ring.  That’s over 6 years of criminal behaviour and only 4 years later, he’s back playing NFL football, earning big bucks for it, and – now- public accolades.

Is it time to forgive Michael Vick?

The details behind the Vick dog fighting ring are not pretty.  The pit bulls involved in the operation were terrorized to make them mean and angry.  Dogs who were deemed to be unsuitable for fighting were cruelly killed.  A 2009 article in the San Francisco Chronicle provides some of the ugly details of the ill-treatment of the dogs.  For example, how the dogs were electrocuted by attaching jumper cables to their ears and throwing them into a swimming pool to struggle and die.  The sides of the pool had telltale scratches and dents from the dogs as they fought to escape.

Is it time to forgive Michael Vick?

A big enabler of forgiveness is when an offender expresses regret for their actions and the consequences of them.  Unfortunately, there is nothing on the record that shows that Michael Vick understood the cruel nature of some of his offending.

In his public statement after pleading guilty to a range of charges, Mr Vick acknowledges that he was ‘immature’ and how he let his fans down.    Is this regret for the offending or regret for getting caught?

For more details of the case, read the plea agreement and statement of facts which I have also downloaded for you.

Michael Vick’s comeback to professional football has come comparatively soon compared to the years he spent offending.  Is this right?  Or is it the usual story of professional athletes getting put on a pedestal because of their prowess on the sports field?  The official record on this case is that Michael Vick has paid his debt to society and is a free man to go about his profession as a professional football player.

Is it time to forgive Michael Vick?  Only you can decide for yourself after weighing up the facts.

For the record:  I’m not ready to forgive Michael Vick.  He hasn’t shown he’s sorry and with the attention he is now getting for his football play, I doubt he ever will.  I have to respect, however, that he is technically a free man.  That doesn’t make me happy and I reserve the individual right to protest against any company or franchise that backs him.  In my opinion, his lack of true remorse is equivalent to an endorsement of animal cruelty and dog fighting and organisations would do well by distancing themselves from such an individual.    I’m not ready to forgive Michael Vick and I don’t want to see him endorsed by any awards programme.

Footnote:  As part of the plea agreement, Michael Vick was required to establish a fund for the care and rehabilitation of the dogs found at his Bad Newz Kennels.  Their story is told in a book which I highly recommend:

The Lost Dogs:  Michael Vick’s Dogs and their Tale of Rescue and Redemption.

Kathleen Crisley, Fear-Free certified professional and specialist in dog massage, rehabilitation and nutrition/food therapy, The Balanced DogChristchurch, New Zealand

How kindness built civilization by Gareth Cook

Any columnist who begins an article with “It’s about time the dog got a little more respect” is bound to get my attention.

In this article  Gareth Cook, a columnist with The Boston Globe, discusses the research of Brian Hare who compared the intelligence of dogs with chimpanzees and found that the dogs are more intelligent in many aspects.

The lesson:  “To be smart, first play nice.”

Read his story here.

Kathleen Crisley, Fear-Free certified professional and specialist in dog massage, rehabilitation and nutrition/food therapy, The Balanced DogChristchurch, New Zealand