From the category archives:

Animals

puppy mill survivor story

I feel like my entire blog could become dedicated to the small, daily updates Gizmo makes toward becoming a “real dog” – but I’m trying to limit myself. :)

Tonight, however, was a mini milestone that took us nearly a month in the making – and was so exciting (for me) that I had to sign online and blog it as soon as we stepped back inside:

Gizmo went on his very first walk tonight. In his life.

Many puppy mill rescues are the equivalent of a six week old dog – everything is new, everything is scary. Gizmo is the extreme of this, and when he feels something is suspicious (read: everything), he has two reactions: 01. Scream at it and dart or 02. Lay flat against the ground, as small as possible, and go completely catatonic. The second option is how he treats his harness and leash.

It also means he has INSANE amounts of energy that manifest themselves into barking, chewing, tail chasing – and we’ve been limited on outlets to redirect him. Fetch isn’t a concept he quite “gets”, you can’t walk him, he doesn’t play chase, and Bailey and Emmie can only wrestle so many hours a day before even they are like, “OMG, does it STOP?!” About a week in, we discovered he WOULD chase a remote toy car – which was a great method for wearing him out before bed, except a few times in and Emmie would swing by like Godzilla and eat it. After replacing two $40 cars in a week because of it (yes, she had to play, too – we’re not that smart), we realized he would chase something far less easy for her to eat: The dot of a laser pen.

A $10 laser pen is giving me my sanity back – and tonight, it gave us a walk.

It was Sean’s idea to try to lure him along on the walk with the pen, but our first attempts, he watched it but lay flat.

We spent a week letting him wear the harness everywhere, to adjust to it’s weight. Then we spent a week having him drag the leash around – but that became a mess when he’d get looped on things or decide to meander past a pile of poop in the yard. *rubs temples*

Wanting him to get outside and see that new smells/walk sounds don’t gobble him up, we’ve been including him on walks – which, yes, means that we take turns awkwardly carrying a 13 pound dog – which, believe it or not, morphs into a 55 pound dog before the first half mile. ZOMG. ;)

We tried to find a pet carrier he would use, but no cigar – he was too big for the ones that didn’t completely freak him out.

So tonight, after a fetching 15 minute game in the yard of laser pen, we hopelessly leashed him up and headed out with the moo’s. On a whim, I brought the pen with us – and ta-da, he flew after it. We had several moments where he would get too far behind Bailey (his NEW bff) and freeze – but a quick laser pen moment and we were off again. By the end of the walk, I was only popping it on every so often when he would realize he was on a big scary walk and pause… I think we are hoping after a week or two, he may just walk without it!

Sean and I were beaming, despite looking like weirdos walking dogs via laser pen down the block shortly before midnight and going, “YAY GIZZY!” the entire time. This is a great milestone for him – and, over time, is going to be a wonderful esteem builder – which he needs!

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, , , Animals > Personal Life

Happy Friday!

January 27, 2012 · 2 comments

cute funny pug picture

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, , Animals

We’re on day # 5 with Gizmo, and so far, we’re doing alright. We’ve decided to take baby steps and celebrate the little accomplishments. This week? We’re just associating us with positive things. We’re not trying to tackle big things, like being able to really walk toward him or using a leash, but instead acclimating him to our presence. We’ve been giving him treats and toys, simply handing him good things as we walk past, and we can actually pet him if he’s approached painfully slowly and already snuggled next to one of the other dogs. :)

Baby steps! He’s been sleeping on my legs or between us still – wherever another pup is.

As for the other pups, they’re doing so well. Princess Emmie has been anything but, getting up with me at 3am to stand around in the cold while we wait for Gizmo to potty or helping me corral him anywhere I need him to go by going there first. She’s a bit of a mother hen, always giving him kisses and snuggles, wrestling with him when he’s bouncing off the walls, grumbling him back into place when he grumbles at us. She’s really an asset – even Sean has commented that we probably wouldn’t be able to do this without her help, LOL.  I think she’s just very intuitive, and although she gives me plenty of, “Are we really seriously keeping that?” looks, I think she maintains patience because she realizes he’s a little bit damaged and needs the extra love. Bailey is his usual good self, following him when needed and providing a nap buddy.  He’s even shared his beloved pillow without so much as a grunt. All in all, we’re doing well. :) Thank you guys for all the positive words – hopefully no one minds if I track his progress on my blog?

Gizmo, debating the camera.

Bailey is the dignified older brother.

Gizmo, post yell fest.

Mother Hen

Sunshine feels good

Brothers.

He feels safe with her

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, Animals > Personal Life

Dog # 232.

January 8, 2012 · 21 comments

gizmo

This weekend we added a third moo to our pack.

Gizmo is a 1.5 year old male Cavalier and he’s very special. Gizmo is a puppy mill survivor – that means, alongside being a rescue pup, he’s also going to be a very large “work in progress” in our home. :)

Up until six weeks ago, Gizmo was living in a commercial breeding facility as one of the ’stock’ – a place where dogs are bred for online pet stores and pet shops. Puppy mills, if you will. He didn’t have a name. He had a stock number. Dog # 232. Many sites/stores will tell you their puppies come from local breeders, raised in loving homes (cough Petland cough) – but they don’t. If they can’t produce the paperwork or give you the address to investigate yourself, they’re bluffing, and laws doesn’t currently exist to really penalize that fabrication. Many sellers work around this truth because  they purchase store stock through puppy brokers, who purchase dogs from commercial breeders during auctions, enabling the shops and sites to claim their puppies come from healthy, loving, hobby breeders.

stop puppy mills

Gizmo’s mill is run by a woman and her two sons, producing endless breeds, and raking in salaries over $100k per year. They’ve been fined four times in recent years for neglect or abuse by the USDA and they’ve had over 103 dogs confiscated due to conditions in the past. Gizmo was born, and spent the first year plus of his life,  in small wire cage, stalked atop other cages, filled to the brim with siblings and likewise. He doesn’t know human contact (and the little he does was not kind), he doesn’t know grass. He experienced so little and lived so inhumanely that he is scared of everything.

Sneezes. Movement. Cars. People going from sitting to standing. Human touch. Leashes. You name it, it’s new, and it’s frightening. He’s not my first rescue, but he is my first mill rescue, and it is an entirely different ball game. Per the experts:

“Rehabilitating a puppy mill dog is a long, slow process, and success is by no means certain. On average, it takes 6 to 8 months to see progress in the transformation. Mill dogs know nothing about being a beloved pet, or companion, or playmate. These dogs  have lived in wire cages, eaten poor quality food, been forced to share  their cages with many other dogs, never had the proper medical care, and  have never known the human touch of affection and kindness. They are  used to lying in their own excrement, and the excrement of other dogs  that share the same fate. Not only will these dogs bring tremendous training challenges, they will also challenge your patience and  commitment as you attempt to integrate them into your family life. Many of these dogs are shy. Many are  fearful. Many will bark at, or run and hide from, the “normal” sounds of a household – the doorbell ringing, a child’s joyful squeal,  the running of the vacuum cleaner, the jangling of car keys.”

The one thing he does know is other dogs – and having Emmie and Bailey has made him feel better.  Being in their company, he is at ease. Much to their demise, he lives under them and where they go, he goes, what they do, he does. It’s actually helping. We can’t approach him, but if we catch him next to one of the dogs and move slow, we can pet him. He learned toys aren’t so bad (and is also learning what isn’t his to hoard – aka no, he can’t steal the bath rugs or my sock or phone…). He learned the stairs, slowly, by bribing him with treats and Emmie. He attempted the dog door. He’s a gentleman to the cats. And despite the fact his coping mechanism is to yell, growl and hide from everything new (the dishwasher, me brushing my hair, Sean making coffee, switching rooms — no joke, we spent four hours last night being barked at, full volume, endlessly… but we ignore it and he’s already lessening this morning), he’s making his own version of progress. He helped himself onto the love seat to hang with me and the dogs earlier.

He even slept on the big bed. Our best progress was made, oddly, at bed time. It was the first night in his life he slept outside of a cage (mill) or crate (rescue). He waited until he thought we were fast asleep, and then quietly got up and sniffed our faces (!!!), before settling down between us, next to Emmie. This morning, he brought Emmie a toy (who “helped” teach him how to destroy it), and he let Sean hold his food bowl, even if he grumbled the entire time.

gizmo-night-one

Gizmo may never be “normal”, but we’ve decided that’s okay. He’ll get better, we’ll work harder, and he will see that life with people isn’t a nightmare. He’ll be safe. And that’s the entire point anyway, isn’t it? :)

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, , Animals > Compassion > Personal Life

Recent Etsy Splurges.

November 18, 2011 · 5 comments

recent_etsy_purchases

Recently, a good portion of my time is spent perusing vintage books (particularly pet stories) on Etsy – and these are some of my latest buys! A 1930’s dog-to-the-rescue children’s book, a 1960’s Readers Digest featuring The Fox & the Hound and a small set of one hundred and eleven year old encyclopedias! Swoon. I’m such a dork. I also bought Emmie a GORGEOUS glitter collar, because why? See previous sentence! ;)

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