Pet parrot reunited with owner after stolen at gunpoint

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NEW YORK (WABC) — If you’re under the impression the cameras in city housing projects don’t work, you should take Darryl Walker’s story to heart.

They show him following a woman onto the elevator at the Governor Morris Houses in the Bronx.

She was holding her pet parrot in a cage and got off on her floor.

That’s where cops say Walker pulled a gun and grabbed the cage.

When next we see him, he’s running off with her bird.

“I’m sick I have high blood pressure. He pointed a gun, I tried to grab him but then he ran down the stairs,” said Ana Marte, robbery victim.

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Vet cares for vets’ pets

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COEUR d’ALENE – Larry Greenfelder lovingly caressed his dog’s head and neck as the veterinarian examined her. The Vietnam veteran exchanged glances with his 8-year-old black lab Boo Boo, reassuring her that Dr. Bruce King was not going to take the rawhide she refused to release from her teeth.

Her eyes said she believed him, but she still wouldn’t let it go. Not until the nail clippers were visible.

“She is one of the best dogs,” Greenfelder said, patting the 106-pound dog. He has had Boo Boo since she was about a year old.

Greenfelder is a man of thin frame with a short, gray beard, a man who has seen war and troubled times. He served in the Navy for nine years and was deployed to Vietnam for two six-month tours, where he earned medals such as the Combat Action Ribbon and the Meritorious Unit Citation.


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The 5 Most Famous Pet Custody Wars in Hollywood

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Pets are furry family members to many couples — and can spark nasty custody battles when those couples divorce. But courts often will not rule on pet ownership. “You don’t want to be the lawyer going in front of a judge asking to divide a pet,” says Freid and Goldsman divorce lawyer Jon S. Summers. When Fido’s fate does come before a court, the verdict could be heartbreaking. California law considers pets property, like a TV, so the judge almost always grants ownership to one ex, leaving the other petless. And anything from pet-food receipts to testimony from neighbors and therapists might be used in court to determine the pet’s rightful caretaker. But most couples, says Summers, reach pet custody agreements outside the courtroom. Here’s who won in five famous battles:

HUGH HEFNER VS. CHRISSY HARRIS

After breaking off their engagement in June 2011, the couple battled over who would win ownership of Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Charlie. Harris originally allowed Hefner to keep Charlie but changed her mind that December.

Winner: Hefner retained custody as evidenced by both dog and Hef being featured on Nat Geo Wild’s Dog Whisperer in July 2012.


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Soldier Whose Dog Was Given Away By A Friend During Deployment Turns To Craigslist For Help

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When 1st Lt. Brandon Harker returned home from Afghanistan recently, he discovered that the friend who was supposed to be watching his dog while he was deployed had given the animal away. Now, the soldier has turned to Craigslist for help finding his beloved pet.

Harker got Oakley, a purebred yellow Labrador retriever, back in 2011 while he was based in Georgia, according to CNN. Last year, before heading off to Afghanistan, he handed Oakley over to a “good friend” to take care of while he was overseas.

“Every time, while I was gone, I asked about him,” Harker told CNN. His supposed friend would insist the dog was fine and was “acting like his regular self.”

“I’d ask for a picture every now and then,” he said. “But I never got any pictures sent to me.”


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‘No dog should die alone’: Photographer promotes senior pet adoption

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Lori Fusaro is crazy about dogs. She’s lived with them for as long as she can remember, and she photographs them for a living. But until about a year ago, the idea of adopting an older dog made her squirm with uneasiness.

“I thought it would just be too sad and painful,” said Fusaro, 44, of Los Angeles. “I didn’t think my heart could take it, so I wasn’t willing to open myself up.”

Fast-forward to the present: Fusaro is lavishing affection on the most recent addition to her family, a sweet-natured 17-year-old named Sunny. Sunny rewired Fusaro’s view of older dogs so completely that she decided to launch a photography project called “Silver Hearts” to show how much senior pets have to offer.


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Pets given a reprieve after their owners die

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Britain is a nation of animal lovers but funeral directors say they are increasingly being asked to arrange for healthy pets to be put down. So should owners be able to take their pets with them to the grave?

Seven-year-old Laddie is the perfect companion to owners Dorothy and Barney Squirrell.

He’s a healthy, happy Cairn Terrier in the prime of his life but his story could have been very different.

When planning her funeral, Laddie’s previous owner asked for him to be put down when she died and buried in her coffin with her.

She was worried about who would look after Laddie once she was gone.


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UK’s first ‘cat cafe’ opens in England’s ‘Narnia’

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A cafe filled with cats has opened in England’s Narnia by former wildlife hospital owner Liz Dyas.

Dyas has become owner of Britain’s first cat cafe, which is a haven of holistic therapy, organic food and independent retail and its town sign was graffitied with the words “Twinned with Narnia”, the Daily Express reported.

The cat cafe phenomenon began in Asia with the world’s first opening in Taipei, Taiwan, in 1998 and is now hugely popular in Japan where living conditions are often too cramped for pet ownership.

It charges customers an hourly fee that allows them to relax with a drink and a cat to stroke, which is a form of on-site pet rental-meets-pet therapy.


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Dog Finds A Tiny Kitten, Risks Everything To Save Her

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Anderson Independent-Mail / via: 10news.com

Animal control officer Michelle Smith got a call about a yelping dog behind a Home Depot. She climbed down a steep embankment to find a shih tzu, tangled in a mess of briars. But she looked more closely, she realized Goldie had a friend: a tiny kitten who was nursing at the dog’s side.

Anderson County P.A.W.S. / via: facebook.com

Anderson Police Dept. / via: foxcarolina.com


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Fire Preparedness for your pets

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Here are a few tips to consider if you live in an area prone to wildfires or other natural disasters:

Planning: Be proactive! Start a neighborhood program to make sure everyone has vital information including e-mail and all phone numbers. Create an email list for your neighborhood that will give everyone easy access to important information such as pets’ names and ages, their favorite hiding places, their vaccine history, and where to take them in the event they need to be evacuated.

Circulate schedules so all people in the neighborhood know if you are out of town or who is home during the day. If you are on vacation, make sure your house sitter or pet sitter has a copy of this information.

Consolidate the Essentials: Create a small kit to keep near an exit. This kit may include a copy of your pet’s medical history, a supply of any daily medications your pet may require, a favorite toy and information on local boarding facilities. Photos of your animals may be important if someone other than you attempts to rescue them from your home prior to your family being permitted to return home.

Keep Collars and Tags Near the Door: Some guardians remove their dog’s identification at night for comfort or because of the jingling of the tags. If this is a habit in your household, you may want to keep the collars, leashes, harnesses, etc. near the door you would exit through. This way, if you need to leave in a hurry, everything is in one place. A currently registered and up to date microchip listed in a national database can help reunite you and your pet should you be separated.

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A Number of Environmental Factors Can Affect the Incidence of Hip Dysplasia in Dogs

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Hip dysplasia (HD) in dogs is affected to a larger degree than previously believed by the environment in which puppies grow up. It is particularly during the period from birth to three months that various environmental factors appear to influence the development of this disease. During the puppy stage, preventive measures can therefore be recommended with a view to giving dogs disposed to the condition a better quality of life.

Randi I. Krontveit’s doctoral research has studied the incidence of HD in four breeds of dog in Norway and examined factors in the environment where the dogs grew up that can have an affect on the number of cases. HD is a genetic disease which also occurs in several other species. Dogs are not born with HD, but genetically disposed puppies can develop varying degrees of HD. The degree of HD has an affect on when the dogs show symptoms and on how long they live.

Five hundred privately owned dogs participated in the study and the four breeds investigated were the Newfoundland, the Labrador Retriever, the Leonberger and the Irish Wolfhound. The environment in which the dogs were born and grew up was registered by means of questionnaires filled out by the breeder and the new owner, and by examinations carried out by veterinary surgeons.

Findings from previous experiments and studies from other countries have indicated that rapid growth and a high body weight are factors that increase the likelihood of developing HD. Randi I. Krontveit’s research has shown that rapid growth and high body weight in the first year of the puppies’ life did not result in an increased risk of HD. On the contrary, she found that the breed that had the slowest growth rate — the Newfoundland — had the highest incidence of HD (36%). The Irish Wolfhound had the lowest incidence of HD (10%), yet had the fastest rate of growth.

Puppies usually live with their mother at the breeder’s for the first eight weeks of their life. Several factors related to the living conditions at the breeder’s were shown to have an influence on the incidence of HD. Puppies born in the spring or summer and at breeders who lived on a farm or small holding, had a lower risk of developing HD. After about eight weeks, the puppies began life with their new owner. The opportunity to exercise daily in parks up until the age of three months reduced the risk of HD, whereas the daily use of steps during the same period increased the risk. Overall, it would appear that daily exercise out in gently undulating terrain up until the age of three months gives a good prognosis when it comes to preventing HD.

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