This is how Get Along Little Doggie's, Mr. Hud, got his exercise on this sweltering day in Houston. He actually trotted for about 15 minutes, but we didn't think it was that interesting! Walking on the treadmill is a great way to wear your dog out physically and mentally. A tired dog is a happy dog! Hud has been walking on the treadmill for a few years now and is very comfortable on it, but he was petrified of the treadmill the first few times. He was slowly trained with tons of positive reinforcement and cheese! When we began training on the treadmill, Hud wore a harness and leash to help guide him and to ensure there was no choking caused by a neck collar. Now he loves it and will sometimes just go and stand on the treadmill, as if to say, "Let's roll!" It by no means replaces the all important outside walk, but it is a great supplement on hot or rainy days. If you want to train your dog to walk on the treadmill, remember to take your time and ease your dog into treadmill training. Take baby steps and build on success. If your dog panics or freaks out, STOP! Some dogs take to the treadmill much quicker than others. Also, if your dog is overweight, out of shape, or has health issues, you should consult your vet before adding the treadmill to Fido's exercise routine. If you feel unsure about it all, contact a professional dog trainer for help. Be safe and have fun!
Last week, I had a client ask me if I knew that owning a dog was worse for the environment than owning an SUV. "WHAT?" I was flabbergasted. I decided to do some research and found that all the hubbub stems from a book released in 2009 titled, Time
to Eat the Dog, The Real Guide to Sustainable
Livingby Robert and Brenda
Vale.
I then found the following blog written by Tim Wheeler for the Baltimore Sunand thought it was definitely worth passing along:
To save the planet, keep your SUV, ditch the
pets
Do
dogs take a bigger bite out of the Earth than gas-guzzling sport
utility vehicles? That's the contention of a pair of academics in New
Zealand, who figure that a medium-sized dog has twice the eco-footprint
of a Toyota Land Cruiser.
In Time to Eat the Dog, the real
guide to sustainable living, Robert and Brenda Vale calculate that
it takes roughly 2.1 acres to produce all the meat and grains consumed
by a typical medium-sized pet pooch in a year, compared with about an
acre needed to produce the energy burned in the SUV.
The pair,
architects who specialize in sustainable living at Victoria University
in Wellington, don't just pick on dogs, but go after all pets as another
form of conspicuous consumption that's taking a toll on the planet.
They suggest those who care about living sustainably but just can't live
without a pet consider sharing one with others. Or, they add, get pets
that serve a dual purpose, of companionship and food, like say, hens.
Obviously, all of this set my wheels turning. Whether the theories are true or not, there must be ways that dog owners can do their part for Mother Earth. The following is a blog about my favorite idea yet:
Dog Poop Composter!! (Be sure to watch the video below for a visual guide!)
My boyfriend had
argued for a rottweiler. I lobbied for something that weighed a more
manageable 30 pounds and didn’t look like it snacked on children.
(Rotties can be very sweet, I know, but I also wasn’t into the
uncontrollable drooling.) We compromised and found an adorable, 45-pound
mutt at a local shelter. Honey has a yellow lab body with a pit bull
head that looks like it was screwed on by a mad scientist. Actually, she
is totally adorable and not at all mutant-like. Though nowhere near the
scale of a rottweiler’s waste, Honey’s poops are still considerable
and, needless to say, unavoidable.
I started getting the newspaper delivered around the same time we got
Honey, and because our paperboy insisted on double bagging on even the
driest of days, our porch was overrun with yellow plastic sleeves. After
a few weeks of grabbing one from the growing pile and using it as a
pooper-scooper, I returned home, sunk the knotted-up bag of dog waste in
the trash can and felt overwhelmingly guilty.
I was taking a natural product that would eventually degrade on its
own and encasing it in plastic. In an airless landfill, my dog’s waste
will outlive her. (Hell, it’s gonna outlive me.)
I wish I could get all renegade and tell people to leave the poop
where it lies, but a) this isn’t Paris, b) that will make people hate
you and hate all dog owners by extension, and c) dog poop is actually
really dangerous. Dogs carry E. coli, salmonella, and giardia, among
other nasties, so when you just leave the poop there to rot, the rain
can wash it into rivers, streams, and oceans (beaches have been closed
across the country due to contaminated water caused, in part, by dog
doo). So, my moral quandary became: Do I doom it to a landfill or
directly contribute to unsafe swimming conditions? My choice was
neither, and that’s how I ended up as the crazy lady who composts dog
poop.
Turns out there are a few commercial composters out there, like the Doogie Dooley,
but since I feel my $89.95 could be better spent on squeaky toys and
treats, I decided to make one myself for less than ten bucks. All of the
credit goes to Sharon Slack, head gardener of City Farmer at
Vancouver’s Compost Demonstration Garden. She’s been doing this for more
than twenty years on her own, so I called her up and shamelessly mined
her for wisdom after poring over the slide-show instructions on the City Farmerwebsite.
Sharon tells me to pick an area with porous soil that doesn’t have a
high water table and is at least fifteen feet from my garden, due to the
aforementioned contamination issues. Since my basement threatens to
flood every time there’s a chance of thunderstorms, I assume I’m okay on
the water table front. (And I realize I’m lucky enough to actually have
a backyard, unlike some of my apartment-dwelling friends, who refer to
their fire escapes as the “lanai,” a la The Golden Girls, to make
themselves feel better about their lack of outdoor space.)
1. I choose a flat patch behind the garage, then grab an old, plastic
garbage can, cut out the bottom, and drill drainage holes in the sides.
While I do that, I try to convince my boyfriend to dig a can-sized
hole, but he refuses, saying, “this is your project.”
2. After I’m done digging the hole, I sink the can into it, the top
just above ground-level, and add rocks to the bottom for drainage.
3. At last, it’s time to throw in the dootie I’ve stored in 100
percent biodegradable BioBags (get ‘em on the company’s Web site; there
are other bags out there that are sold as biodegradable but aren’t).
4. I add in a can of septic starter I bought at a hardware store,
then enough water to soak the whole mess. I stick a lid on the thing
and ignore it unless I’m depositing a BioBag, an armful of grass
clippings, or more septic starter to keep breaking down the mess.
5. In time, Sharon tells me, I should have a nice, rich soil to
spread on my non-edibles (go figure–bacteria-laced compost should be
limited to decorative plants since it’s not so great for your veggie
patch). The whole thing took me less than an hour, which I suspect will
make it among the fastest and easiest eco-friendly changes I’ll ever
test-drive. What’s the hard part? Teaching Honey to poop directly into
the composter.
WATCH THIS:
"Histories are more full of examples of the fidelity of dogs than of friends."