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Peanut sniffing dog

rocko1A service dog in Colorado isn’t working for peanuts. He’s working against them.

Rock’O's job is to detect peanuts so that his owner, second grader Riley Mers, isn’t exposed to them. Riley is highly allergic to peanuts and just touching someone who has touched peanuts can leave burns, hives and scars on her skin.

Riley’s family and her dog’s trainer have teamed to form Angel Service Dogs to help familes like hers afford dogs like Rock’O, who can be lifesavers.

I guess Rock’O, who is named after President Obama, has a really good sniffer and great self control.

- Staff Writer Dawn Marks


New Tulsa dog park sets opening date

Tulsa’s newest dog park, Biscuit Acres, is set to open this summer. Biscuit Acres will open at 11 a.m. June 6 at Hunter Park, 5804 E 91. Check out more info here.

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll


Pets in the paper – dogs and horses and bears, oh my!

Check out these animal stories in The Oklahoman today, yesterday and Saturday -

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll


Edmond Pet of the Week

pet6pet23Ella is a spayed female, brown brindle boxer mix. She is about a year old and is current on her vaccinations. She has been at the shelter since March 13.

Dana is a spayed female, black Labrador retriever mix. She is about 2 1/2 years old and is current on her vaccinations. She has been March 10.
Adoption fees are $70 for cats and dogs at Edmond Animal Welfare Shelter, 2424 Old Timbers Drive in Cross Timbers Municipal Complex on Covell Road east of Interstate 35. It is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays. Saturdays are only for adoptions and pickups.

For more information, call 216-7615.

 

 


One cute monkey

Not much to say about this video of a delightfully cute 4-day-old monkey born at the Taronga Zoo in Auzstralia. Well not much to say except “Awwwwwwwww.”

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

- Staff Writer Bryan Dean


Dogs have a nose for … DVDs?

sniffing-dogOne of our dogs can’t stop sniffing. Everywhere she goes, that nose is plastered to something, getting an up-close sniff. I’ve decided that if we had a chance to name her again, I’d call her Wiggly Sniff.

I know dog noses are sensitive, but I had no idea how sensitive. Authorities are training dogs to sniff out all kinds of new things, including illegal DVDs. Pups can find more than drugs and people. According to a story by CNN, some of the more interesting things they’re sniff out include cash, cancer and cell phones. Other fun finds:

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll


Nightline to focus on Amish puppy breeders

Here’s a press release from ABC News about a Nightline special tonight:

Exclusive Access: Cutting-Edge Facilities or Puppy Factories?

‘Dogs Viewed as Livestock’ in Amish Community, Says Animal Rescue Advocate

By SHARYN ALFONSI and TED GERSTEIN

March 27, 2009—

The Amish are widely viewed as plain, peaceful people. Reclusive and private, most people only catch glimpses of them as they make their way through the hills of Pennsylvania’s Dutch County in buggies.

But some of their perfectly manicured farms are home to a secret world. Lancaster County has been called the puppy mill capital of the U.S., and the trade is largely dominated by the Amish.

Watch the story tonight on “Nightline” at 11:35 p.m. ET

It is a world most people never see, but undercover video shot by Main Line Animal Rescue provides a startling look. Hundreds of puppies can be seen stacked in crate on top of crate. Most of those puppies will eventually be sold to pet stores, but their mothers will likely never know a home other than this.

The female breeders live their life producing litter after litter… until they can’t any longer. Bill Smith, the founder of Main Line Animal Rescue, says that the dogs are then disposed of — sometimes euthanized, sometimes shot. And it’s perfectly legal.

“Unfortunately if a kennels breeds less than 60 dogs they can shoot them,” he said. “If it’s over 60 dogs they can’t be shot.”

That’s why Smith spends so much time driving the country roads of Amish country, rescuing dogs from breeders. On the day “Nightline” visited, he convinced an Amish farmer to give him a female golden retriever who could no longer breed, in exchange for some free dog food. The dog — who spent her life in a cage — struggled to walk.

“When they come out of the rabbit hutches they walk like crabs because they don’t know what it’s like to walk on a proper surface,” Smith said. “They drag their bodies.”

There are about 300 licensed breeders in Lancaster County, and rescue workers estimate another 600 unlicensed facilities operate in barns and sheds. Those breeders go to great measures to avoid discovery. Smith says some even “de-bark” their dogs.

“The farmers, the Amish and the Mennonites, they pull the heads back and then they hammer sharp instruments down their throats to scar their vocal cords so they can’t bark,” he said. “So that way they can have 500-600 dogs in a barn and no one knows. As we said, it’s an industry of secrecy.”

Secretive and profitable. Breeders can make upwards of half million dollars a year. The Amish breeders sell the dogs at auctions and the puppies at pet stores.

Purchasing Puppies: ‘People Are Deceived’

“People are deceived,” Smith said. “They’re nice enough and they put down their money and they walk away with a dog and they don’t realize that there are 500 dogs in a barn and are suffering horribly. So it’s something that people have to be aware of. They have to know that going in. When they buy these dogs, they’re keeping that going.”

In one night, Smith and his team rescued a dozen dogs, which were unloaded at its facility. The next day, rehabilitation began.

“Dogs in this community are viewed as livestock,” Smith said. “Nothing more. Chickens or pigs or goats. It’s just a source of income for them.”

Ezekiel — not his real name — is a Mennonite farmer in Pennsylvania. He agreed to speak to “Nightline” under the condition that we not reveal his name or exact location. He fears what he calls “militant animal activists.

“I am the type of person & I don’t believe in animal rights,” he said. “But I highly believe in animal welfare.”

The difference, he says, is that “animal welfare is you treat the dog how you want to be treated. And animal rights activists, they just have a different mindset, a mentality, that, I’ve never really figured it out. ”

Ezekiel showed us the “public” face of his business. The heated shed where buyers are invited to pick out the puppies they want.

“The puppy we sell here is a healthier puppy than if I had Lassie running around, feed her puppies over here,” he said. “The way that we raise them is much healthier than the other way.”

Then we asked him to show us the back room, where the public is not allowed. He gave us an exclusive look inside his facility where he breeds hundreds of dogs in cage after cage.

He considers the facility to be top of the line. There is no chicken wire, the dogs stand on plastic grating and they have access to solid floors, and he showed us his “state-of-the-art” waste disposal system.

“This system is commercially available, they use it in swine and veal and things like that,” he said.

Inside Access: ‘They Love Being Here’

The technology, he says, allows Ezekiel and his wife to take care of all 200 dogs by themselves.

“The way we have the building set up, the modern way, if we have to go back, if new legislation goes into effect, we will not be able to care for this many dogs because it’s just going to be so much more labor intensive,” he said.

Pending legislation would require dogs to have solid flooring and access to the outside to exercise. Ezekiel says that is unnecessary.

“What she’s doing is she’s running,” he explained, showing us a dog on an exercise wheel in an an enclosed space. “She’s getting her exercise, you know instead of letting them run around … we put them in there, they use more muscles that they wouldn’t use running around.”

“In the state of Pennsylvania, the confinement laws that we have, that if the dog goes off our property, we can be arrested for it,” he said.

He added that it would be “more inhumane” to have the dogs “out in the mud, in the cold, the rain, [the] wind.”

Ezekiel says his dogs are healthy and happy, and says he doesn’t operate a “puppy factory.”

“If this would be a puppy factory, that Daschund you see right there, she wouldn’t be doing what she was doing. She’s wanting me to hold her, if she would be a puppy mill she would cowering in the back of that box, you can see, a lot of our dogs, they love being in here.”

Back at Mainline Rescue, the dogs rescued last night are being assessed by a veterinary technician. Smith says he’s rescued about 2,000 dogs from the Amish and almost all of them have been placed in permanent homes.

“I would encourage people adopt,” he said. “Eight million dogs are euthanized; 8 million pets are euthanized every year in this country and yet they breed 8 million dogs.”

Much of that breeding happens in Lancaster County, home to one of the most secretive people — and industries — in the nation.

Copyright © 2009 ABC News Internet Ventures


Pets in the paper –

Check out these animal stories in The Oklahoman today -

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll


The Vick heebie-geebies

vickMaybe you sensed something in the air. Maybe you had that uneasy feeling that something was amiss in Oklahoma City yesterday.

If you’re a dog owner, it probably was this: Michael Vick was in town.

The notorious dogfighting criminal was en route from his cell in Kansas to Viriginia, so he spent the day at the Federeal Transfer Center in Oklahoma City.

No wonder I felt so sick yesterday.

Read more of our Michael Vick coverage.

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll


Pets in the paper – Your dog is psychic

Check out these animal stories in The Oklahoman today -

Staff Writer Carrie Coppernoll