Q. Right now these are my job choices:
Dog bakery and botique owner.
Pet photographer.
Pet shop owner.
Dog spa owner.
Doggy day care.
Dog massage therapist.
..And pharmacy, but I doubt I'll go with that one.
Dog bakery and botique owner.
Pet photographer.
Pet shop owner.
Dog spa owner.
Doggy day care.
Dog massage therapist.
..And pharmacy, but I doubt I'll go with that one.
A. Consider enrolling in Butcher School.
You get to work with animals a lot, and you need never go hungry.
You get to work with animals a lot, and you need never go hungry.
Where can I find an all-encompassing online guide to pet services in a local area?
Q. I just moved to a new city and am trying to find a comprehensive online guide to groomers, vets, doggie day care, dog-friendly restaurants, dog parks, etc. Any suggestions?
A. switchboard.com has business listings by category and location or any online telephone directory
What is the most intelligent, strongest and loyal dog breed?
Q. I don't care what dog you have or that "all dogs are different and depends on training". From ability to be trained and natural strength. What dog is superior to them all?
This means...which one, with all these abilities combined make the best dog.
This means...which one, with all these abilities combined make the best dog.
A. When listing your criteria, you omitted the most important one & that is the dog has to be genetically sound in the head.
There is more than one breed dog that could be described as intelligent, strong & bonds closely with its human pack. The best dog is the one that suits the individuals purpose in having a dog & they are capable of safely handling.
A person might like a Fila, but its not the breed for a novice owner & has very specific requirements in an owner because it *is* naturally protective, strong & bonds closely with its human pack.
There is more than one breed dog that could be described as intelligent, strong & bonds closely with its human pack. The best dog is the one that suits the individuals purpose in having a dog & they are capable of safely handling.
A person might like a Fila, but its not the breed for a novice owner & has very specific requirements in an owner because it *is* naturally protective, strong & bonds closely with its human pack.
How to break up a dog fight without being seriously injured?
Q. I am being train to be a kennel worker to care for dogs & cats for people that work or go on vacations, and today two dogs fight aggressively and both were bleeding. Both dogs were male pit bulls. I try to beack it up but too much dogs were in the area. One of the workers say that pulling the collar is not enough. They say I have to hit them and kick them. I want to know what is right and wrong and the do's and don'ts on the situation.
A. That sounds like a really serious fight. Pitbulls are hard because they can be aggressive and they latch on when biting each other.
Don't grab for their collars because you are putting your hand too close to their mouths. They'll bite you without even noticing.
I agree that two people are better than one.
I've read that you should throw a coat over their heads and pull them back with that rather than grab for their collars. Also, I've heard about pulling them back by their hind legs.
I've noticed in our dog park that when trouble is brewing -- not a full-fledged fight -- people will use those ball-flinger things to poke a dog in the chest when it's getting aggressive. Not to hurt it, just to get its attention away from the other dog. Then they separate them. Of course, when trouble like that is brewing, you should get them away from each other and also from a crowd of dogs. When dogs get crowded together like that, the tension level for all of them goes up. Prevention is a lot better than cure.
Don't grab for their collars because you are putting your hand too close to their mouths. They'll bite you without even noticing.
I agree that two people are better than one.
I've read that you should throw a coat over their heads and pull them back with that rather than grab for their collars. Also, I've heard about pulling them back by their hind legs.
I've noticed in our dog park that when trouble is brewing -- not a full-fledged fight -- people will use those ball-flinger things to poke a dog in the chest when it's getting aggressive. Not to hurt it, just to get its attention away from the other dog. Then they separate them. Of course, when trouble like that is brewing, you should get them away from each other and also from a crowd of dogs. When dogs get crowded together like that, the tension level for all of them goes up. Prevention is a lot better than cure.
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