Archives for April 2011

Easter Pet Safety

easter pet bunny

Easter pet safety is important during spring celebrations. Pets, like kids, love to get into forbidden goodies. Unfortunately, raiding pets getting into the chocolate supply can face needless suffering-or death.

And each spring, animal clinics and veterinary hospitals see an increase in visits during those springtime holidays and Easter poses the greatest hazards to critters living with chocolate lovers.

Chocolate is toxic to animals and can be fatal because it contains a caffeine derivative (theobromine) and pets cannot fully metabolize chocolate. If enough is ingested it can create complications or kill an animal.

Symptoms from chocolate ingestion include hyperactivity, tremors, racing heartbeat, and seizures. Damage to the liver can also occur and is not so obvious.

This makes it is risky to leave boxes of candy out anywhere in the house.

So, how much chocolate does a dog have to consume before there is a problem?

In general it takes 100-150 mg/kg (2.2 pounds) theobromine to cause a toxic reaction.

Need to know info on theobromine in different chocolates:

  • Milk chocolate 44 mg/ounce
  • Semisweet chocolate 150mg/ounce
  • Baker’s chocolate 390mg/ounce

100 mg/kg (2.2 pounds) roughly translates to a toxic dosage of:

  • 1 ounce per 1 pound of body weight for milk chocolate,
  • 1 ounce per 3 pounds of body weight for semisweet chocolate, and
  • 1 ounce per 9 pounds of body weight for Baker’s chocolate.

 

Some flowers and plants can be toxic and it is a good idea to check with your veterinarians for a complete list for dogs, cats, or birds or see the toxic/non-toxic plant listing at the ASPCA pet poison information center.

Be sure to keep those flower baskets and potted plants out of reach of your animals too because animals love to explore with their mouths and make playthings out of everything. This means you should expect the worst and keep those lovely gifts and treats out of reach.

But there are other holiday hazards such as alcoholic beverages and wrapping items. Cellophane, ribbons, balloons, and other festive wrappings or decorations can be ingested and cause complications or death. Alcohol, often left out in glasses during celebrations, is another toxic item and should not be given to any pet.

You can combat some of the trouble if you make sure to provide special chew treats to occupy pets during egg hunts and other related activities during Easter and May Day celebrations. Also take care to note where all the human tidbits are hidden so that the pets don’t find the ones that got missed at a later date and get sick.

Easter Pets of the Past
In the past, Easter pets such as live chicks, ducks and bunnies were a common trend. However, thousands of these animals died from lack of proper care and stress. So, giving a live pet during this holiday is usually considered inhumane.

The best strategy is to teach children about responsible pet ownership or about being good animal caretakers. More appropriate efforts included the gift of a stuffed animal, an adoption certificate, or an Easter basket with novelty items such as Easter themed coloring books, toys, or snacks.

In fact, many zoos, farms, and shelters allow you to sponsor the care of an animal. These efforts help creatures of all types and teach responsible stewardship. You can also sponsor wildlife habitat. These types of stewardship or sponsorship certificates for animal lovers can be included in your baskets. If you want to give chicks as a gift, make a difference and give a flock of them to a needy family through Heifer International.

If you still insist on giving a live critter, remember that Easter babies require special care, feeding and temperatures. Ducks and chicks can carry salmonella and are not ideal pets since children can break their bones or cause other injuries by accident. Often other pets maim or kill them, and those once traditional Easter pets are not as amiable to attention as a dog or a cat.

Bunnies are cute when young but can live long lives. Unless trained, many rabbits do not like being confined and cuddled. They can bite or inflict pain to youngster by struggling and kicking with their hind legs. Rabbits can also be destructive and messy. These lagomorphs are at risk from dogs and cats, and many kids exhibit allergies to these animals.

Sadly, most Easter pets die in a few days or end up at animal service agencies where they are destroyed because they cannot be placed.

Instead, consider sharing the holidays with your humane pals and existing pets. Provide appropriate chew treats and toys to occupy your pets during your celebrations and spend extra time with pets or take a fun trip to a petting zoo or children’s zoo and enjoy close contact without the challenges.

Pet Parenting vs Pet Training

pet parenting or pet training

Many of you know that I am currently seeking funding for the pet parenting school, an online animal school to help keep companion animals in their homes and out of shelters.

Someone recently left a comment that they didn’t know the difference between pet parenting and pet training.

That is the point. People don’t know about pet parenting which is why animals end up in shelters.

Pet parenting is a lifestyle adjustment and coaching that takes place before formal training starts.

Yes, pet training can be part of an entire program but the problem is that people keep making the same mistakes and animals keep ending up without homes because they cycle hasn’t been broken.

Although a lot of people think the information is getting out to the masses, it clearly isn’t.

If it was, most people would be prepared for the animal that enters their home.

They aren’t.

If people had the info they needed they wouldn’t be lamenting about how their pet does X or Y and how it is making them crazy.

Lamenting over puppy or kitten behaviors and the challenges faced because of puppyhood or kittenhood wouldn’t be so common.

The problem people encounter is that their idea of warm and fluffy actually meets the reality of pet ownership when an animal enters the home.

Personally, I know that the reason all babies (of any species) survive is because they are so cute.

It literally saves their butt for a time, until they get older and people get less tolerant.

Take the guy down the street from my friend who just gave away his fifth dog in five years.

Each time the family gets enamored by young puppy they bring it home.

They do nothing to help it adapt to life with humans and reach the end of their rope by the time the animal hits five to six months of age.

Then they hit the, “I can’t deal with this any more” phase and get rid of the animal.

Only to repeat the same process the following year.

I wish I could say this issue is rare but it really isn’t.

There is the problem–it is a cycle.

In this situation, the problem isn’t finances, it is lack of motivation and knowledge.

The problem is with priorities and the failure to understand that it only takes consistent effort and guidelines to keep that animal in the home.

But, the other problem is that most people are not motivated to get the info they need early enough.

It isn’t a training problem, it is a lifestyle problem.

It is an early pet education problem.

So, if you could get the information you needed when you needed it–even if it was at 2am–would you get it? Would you use it?

Hopefully you said yes–and that is the goal of the pet parenting school.

  • Get the answers when you need them.
  • Get the info nobody else is giving you.
  • Save yourself and others a whole lot of anguish before it escalates and the animal ends up in a shelter or on the streets.

Tell me, how that is the same as training? Be sure to sign up for the advance notice for the pet parenting school.

Photo Credit: Alex J Tam