Animals We Love – Spring 2013 cover story
Transcription
Animals We Love – Spring 2013 cover story
“ The Brown Hound Bistro was named for my loyal hound dog, Henry, my ‘partner in crime’ for 10 great, adventurous years. I like to joke that he has outlasted all my boyfriends, so he got top billing! Henry’s since passed, but as I like to say, ‘Home is where your hound is.’ So Daisy, from a farm in Penn Yan, and Lily, a rescue from Tennessee, along with my tiger cat, Dice, make up the menagerie at my cabin on the hill. Daisy and Lily can often be spotted in the big mobile doghouse (my car) while I do my errands. Wherever we are, my dogs make me feel safer, their unique personalities entertain me and their sweet, nonjudgmental dispositions are always a comfort if I’ve had a tough day—or even if I haven’t.” Trish Aser (with Daisy) owner of the Brown Hound Bistro 30 Canandaigua Magazine coverstory When we set out to find people who loved animals, we didn’t have to search hard. We heard story after story of how the animal members of our families make a difference in our lives. Meet the pets who have changed people’s lives. we love Animals Story by Marci Diehl and Nancy McCarthy | Photos by Matt Wittmeyer Cutting-edge care These days, a trip to the vet might just include acupuncture needles or a chiropractic adjustment. As people explore such complementary treatments for themselves, they’re thinking of their pets as well. And that says a lot about how we view our animals today, says horse and cat owner Ed Varno: “They’re our pets and part of the family.” Chiropractic treatment of large animals actually dates back to the early 1900s, and many local horse owners use veterinary chiropractors. Dogs benefit from it as well. No, you don’t get a horse to lie down on a chiropractor’s table. Yet treating a pet is not so different from treating people, says Mike Priestman, a Canandaigua chiropractor who is also licensed as a veterinary chiropractor. “The structure of all mammals is very similar,” Priestman explains. “Whether you’re a human or cat, you have the same number of vertebrae in your neck.” Priestman’s human patients are used to his own laid-back “office dog,” Jersey, who sometimes sits in on appointments. Two local veterinarians—Bruce Campbell, DVM at Finger Lakes Animal Hospital in Canandaigua, and Karen Oros, DVM at Macedon Veterinary Hospital—sometimes use acupuncture treatments for their patients. They’ve found it especially useful for treating hip dysplasia, disk problems, skin ailments and digestive issues. Canandaigua also has one of only a few animal compounding pharmacies in the country. The Animal Pharmacy can customize medications to cater to the size, weight, precise dosage and even flavor preference of the animal (for anyone who has ever tried to serve up a bitter pill to a cat, for example). Or the pharmacists can formulate medicines into a lotion that can be rubbed into a cat’s ear to be absorbed through the skin. They make medicine “chewy treats” and pastes in petfriendly flavors such as liver and tuna. Canandaigua Magazine 31 coverstory The Animal Pharmacy has some interesting clients, from Rochester’s Seneca Park Zoo to a snake farm in Vietnam that produces anti-venom. A bacterial infection had spread in their snake pit, so animal pharmacist Kim Tenreiro, founder of the Animal Pharmacy, figured out a way to create a medicine to spray over the snakes, penetrating their skin. Because stuffing a pill down a cobra’s throat was not a good option. Patricia Garrett rides at a show in Florida. – M.D. Bowwow boom If you didn’t notice the sign for Boom Towne Canine Campus in Farmington, you might mistake the facility for an airplane hangar. No jets here, though—this is the spot for those who love to train, exercise, pamper, socialize, shop and care for the doggy members of their families. Boom Towne’s 8.5 acres of land include its 23,000-square-foot main building and a fenced dog park. Customers come here for boarding, training, grooming and day care services. Owners Richard and Margaret (Somerset) McCarthy bought the center a couple of years ago from the original owner. Their approach is working; as general manager Sarah Smith says, “We need another building.” Training is a key part of the center’s work, focusing on “what’s best for the dog, and not what’s fastest for us or what makes us feel more powerful,” says Paula Lightfoote, director of training. “It’s a philosophy of positive reinforcement. There are no choke, prong or shock collars used.” Puppies can come to Puppy Head Start day care (and their owners can watch them via live webcams) or get some education at the Puppy Pre-K socialization class. Canine athletes get moving in classes, agility training and the irresistible sport of flyball—a relay race with hurdles and tennis balls for teams of dogs. (Boom Towne’s team is called 2 Fast Fur You.) Boom Towne hosts 32 Canandaigua Magazine regional and national competitive sport and breed trials in its training area. But perhaps you want a gentler bonding experience. Consider the Canine Freestyle Dancing class, which teaches you how to dance with your dog. Recent additions to the roster are classes in Nose Work (scent detection) and weight pulling. The center also works with rescue groups to help rescue dogs make the transition to new homes. In the summer, things get even busier, with bring-your-dog birthday parties, Camp WannaWalkaDog, a Hike With Your Dog club, and dogs splashing in wading pools in the dog park. Yes, it’s a dog’s life. Lucky them. – M.D. The family that rides together Emma Garrett sits astride Lena, a Westphalian hunter warmblood, and guides the mare to take a 3-foot jump in the indoor training arena at Blumont Stables in Victor. At 5 feet tall, Emma has outgrown ponies and moved up to competition horses. Up in the observation deck, Emma’s grandfather, Roger Garrett, and his daughter, Patricia Garrett, watch Emma below. A visit to the stables is a commitment: They spend one to two hours grooming and bathing the horses, washing their hooves, putting on saddle and tack. After exercise or a lesson, it’s another few hours settling the horses back in their stalls, cleaning tack and nuzzling a bit before calling it a night. “When you own and ride a horse, you have a friendship,” says Emma, an eighth-grader at Victor Middle School. “You connect on a different level. You control a oneton animal with your mind, hands and legs. You have to connect, or it just doesn’t work. But once you do, it’s amazing.” Patricia Garrett, a freshman at the Harley School, rides five to six days a week and shows her horse, Bordeaux. She has been riding since she was 9 and, working with Blumont’s owner/trainer Kristen Montevecchio, has moved into equitation, where the courses are more technical. Such competition forges unique bonds. “Bordeaux is a pet and a teammate,” Patricia explains. “You don’t want to let half of the team down.” Roger Garrett is the horseman in the family—wife Kitty Van Bortel, Patricia’s mom, doesn’t ride. But both Garrett and Van Bortel share transportation duties to the barn and as far away as Florida for shows. Garrett grew up on a farm, and the family had draft horses. Later, as an adult, he bred and trained racehorses at Finger Lakes racetrack. Now, Garrett jokes, “I’m a horse parent.” And it’s a hobby that suits all ages. Debbie Barmaster, owner/trainer at Running Brook in Bloomfield, sees many women taking up riding as adults. “We give a lot of adult women lessons in the morning or early afternoon while their kids are in school,” Barmaster says. The Garrett girls say they’ll always be “barn girls.” Emma is “very interested in horse psychology. You have to build trust, put yourself in the horse’s mind.” And Patricia says riding “is definitely what I want for the rest of my life.” – M.D. World travel on horseback Ed Varno never had pets growing up and had never been on a horse. Then Vanessa Waters came into his life—along with her horses—and the adventure coverstory Ed Varno had never ridden a horse until award-winning equestrian Vanessa Waters came into his life. Now the couple rides all over the world. began. It took them on horseback across the United States, to Canada, to national parks out West, and to Europe and Asia. In the 1990s, Waters was a wellknown competitive horsewoman. When Waters and Varno became a couple in 1994, Waters taught Varno to ride. Her teaching brought remarkable results: The following year, Varno was able to enter a national trail-riding competition in which horse and rider follow a course of up to 35 miles. “Competitive trail riding is similar to a road rally,” Varno explains, “The horse in the best condition at the end wins.” Waters also competed in endurance racing—100-mile races that take place over the toughest terrain in the U.S. and Canada. Riders gather points for national awards. “I went along as her ‘water boy’ for that,” Varno jokes. Varno, executive director of the Ontario County Historical Society for 18 years, also wrote for The Trail Rider Magazine for 14 years under the pen name Ben Theyre. The couple’s 19th-century house is full of ribbons, awards and memorabilia from their competition days. The house sits on 40 acres outside of Canandaigua, where they keep their six Arabian horses. Arabians dominate at top levels in endurance riding; Thunder, a gelding, was Waters’ endurance horse. Now Thunder enjoys retirement with “the boys,” as Varno calls the horses BeBop, Kahn and Beanie. There’s also Tali, a mare and stallion, PassU, who has quite the pedigree—his sibling is owned by the Queen of Jordan. Waters and Varno stopped competing in 2006 and now ride for pleasure near Bristol Mountain and along their property in the Adirondacks. But in 2009, they rode a lot farther. “We had a desire to ride in exotic places,” Varno says. So they embarked on a horse safari in northwest India, with Canandaigua Magazine 33 coverstory (This page) Joe Murphy with K-9 partner Asta, a German Shepherd bred in Czechoslovakia. (Opposite page) Brian Lazarus with Dafne, also bred in Czechoslovakia. a visit to the Pushkar Fair and its famed horse and camel trading. Along the way, they met a young traveling Englishman named Paresh Parmer, who knew the Hindi language. Waters taught Parmer to ride on the spot, and a friendship formed. Parmer, in return, acted as interpreter so they could visit remote villages. “It was a life-changing experience,” says Varno. The following year, Parmer invited the couple to visit his home in England, where they took a five-day ride together in Wales and beaches in England. Back home, Varno and Waters also have Baxter the alpaca and five Abyssinian cats to share their lives. But it’s the horses that “bring adventure,” Varno says. “They’re our escape.” – M.D. Happy Tails The success stories on the Ontario County Humane Society “Happy Tails” website can be real tear-jerkers. Harley, a senior dog, was lost for nearly a year and still wearing an Invisible Fence collar when he was discovered hanging around the landfill in Seneca. Happy Tails reunited him with his owner—who lived in Elmira. Bob the seagull got surgery to remove a tangle of fish line and hooks, enjoyed some TLC and even shared a few staff lunches before returning to the skies. Happy Tails Ontario County Humane Society (OCHS) keeps a certain number of kennels open for any dog that’s picked up by its officers. (The shelter also supports cat adoptions.) When the dogs come in, they’re “usually scared to death,” says Ed McGuigan, shelter director and cruelty 34 Canandaigua Magazine investigator. The staff checks for microchips, rabies tags and collars, which bring great success in reuniting lost dogs with their owners. Legally, the shelter can hold a dog for five days. After that, if they’re not claimed by the owner, healthy and nonaggressive dogs can be put up for adoption. The group’s website featuring adoptable dogs and cats has spurred interest in adoptions, and shelter manager Linda Albanese and staff work at matchmaking. They encourage families to bring their kids—or current pets—in to meet the animal. If feel it’s a bad match, they won’t allow the adoption. Happy Tails will keep an adoptable dog for as long as it takes. McGuigan’s son, William, is one of OCHS’ officers, and he takes his own dog, Sierra, into schools and even birthday parties to talk about pet care and safety. And that brings us to another tearjerker: One 8-year-old boy invited William and Sierra to his birthday party and asked his guests for presents to give to the animals at Happy Tails rather than for himself. William came away with a load of supplies and toys—and $600 in donations. – M.D. To serve and protect The K-9 dogs of the Ontario County Sheriff’s Department share a deep bond with their deputies—one unlike any other working dog. But how does a canine earn its own badge number and the job “to serve and protect” the public? And what do police dogs do when they’re off-duty? We sat down with Ontario County’s four K-9 officers to find out. The deputies and their dogs are together 24/7—but there’s no curling up on the couch for the police dogs at home. They stay in a kennel outside in the yard at the deputy’s house, never entering the house. (Think of it a bit like having a partner who lives in an inlaw apartment.) coverstory coverstory “When we’re in a house, we’re looking for drugs, suspects or explosives— this is what the dog associates with being inside a house,” says Deputy Patrick Fitzgerald, who works with Cecil, a German shepherd from the Netherlands. “In that search, a dog will do things like climb onto counters.” Not exactly good house manners. Climate is the other reason the dogs stay outside (though in an insulated kennel). “The dogs have to acclimate to the weather,” says Deputy Joe Murphy, who works with Asta, a German shepherd from Czechoslovakia. “They may need to go out on the job on a winter night at 3 a.m. when it’s 10 degrees and windy. You don’t want them cold and shivering.” Being outside isn’t an adjustment. In their training, they grew up in kennels overseas and know nothing else, the deputies say. But not so for Truman, an Americanbred bloodhound working with Deputy Anthony “Joe” DiMarian. An elderly couple had donated Truman at the age of 2 to the Sheriff’s Department, and he became one of only seven police bloodhounds in the state. “Having grown up in a home, he didn’t want to go to work,” DiMariano remembers. “He wanted to hang out with my wife in the house. But he had to be outside to acclimate to our weather.” The officers and dogs train together. “We also act as decoys for handlers,” says Deputy Brian Lazarus, who works with Dafne, a German shepherd from Czechoslovakia. “It’s the single most unnatural thing you’ll ever do to ‘catch’ a dog in a bite test, but also the most exhilarating.” The four deputies share a tight bond as K-9 officers. With the dogs trained variously in drug and explosives searches, the K-9 teams often go on dangerous calls. The German shepherds are the officers’ first line of backup as a partner, trained to protect them with their lives. That’s not to say it’s all work and no play. For the dogs, work is play. “Everything we do is a game to the dog,” Lazarus explains. “Whether it’s searching for a suspect, sniffing for drugs, explosives, or chasing down and holding a fleeing suspect—in their minds, they get to ‘play’ for their job. Your pet is happy when you come home from work. Our dogs are happy when we go to work.” Fitzgerald has two pet dogs at home and also his former police dog, retired at age 8 and now living inside. “When the dog is retired, you still have that bond. You spend six years together, and you want to take them as a pet. They deserve a good retirement…and a good life.” – M.D. Driving—no car needed He might make his living as a dentist in the family practice on Middle Cheshire Canandaigua Magazine 35 coverstory Road, but Geoff Hallstead is also a time traveler. You may have seen him driving his old-fashioned carriage behind his trusty mare, Fancy Fixins. Maybe you even took a ride with him when the Granger Homestead was offering carriage tours. Granger is where he learned this slowand-steady pastime, from the legendary Dennett Pimkowski, who established the Granger carriage tours back in 1998. You might have even caught a glimpse of Hallstead’s 105 acres on a former dairy farm near Cheshire, where he lives with his wife, Jane, son Rick and daughter Serica. There you can step back in time with him, standing by his collection of antique horsedrawn vehicles, with two barn cats and some chickens underfoot. Life slows down nicely here with the “country dentist” and his big-sky homestead. There’s plenty of room for his gelding, Peter, and Fancy Fixins, who had a racing career before spending four years pulling an Amish buggy (yes, even the horses are getting a chance to appreciate a slower, quieter life). They get their outings, at events such as the annual Walnut Hill Carriage Driving Competition (this year, Aug. 1418), where Hallstead and Fancy Fixins can cavort with fellow carriage enthusiasts. But mostly, carriage driving is a chance to step back to a different way of life. “I still like the freedom of getting somewhere without relying on fossil fuels,” Hallstead says. – M.D. To the rescue Dr. Jo Beth Mertens of Canandaigua didn’t remember not having a dog—until the family’s German shepherd passed away last year. Surfing the web on a sleepless night, she stumbled across Big Dogs, Big Hearts (BDBH) and read about a white German shepherd left tied to a tree when its owners moved away. Mertens became a BDBH volunteer, one of 40 at the rescue, and ended up transporting that very dog to Cornell for surgeries. Darcy Drons, BDBH’s volunteer director, has fostered 41 dogs since she and others founded the organization in 2008. Drons lives in Bloomfield, but BDBH has no physical address. 36 Canandaigua Magazine Canandaigua artist Nancy Lane and husband, Mark Obbie, adopted their German shepherds, Luka and Zoe, from BDBH. Jean Angelilli, BDBH’s animal photographer, was Luka’s “foster mom,” and Luka still recognizes Angelilli at BDBH’s annual adopters reunions. How does she know? Luka “gives her a bear hug—paws on her chest—and a little kiss,” says Lane. BDBH focuses mainly on rescuing German shepherds and large breeds. Greyhound Adoption of the Greater Rochester Area (GAGR) pairs retired racing greyhounds with adoptive homes. Volunteer coordinator Sue Benedict and family fostered eight greyhounds in their Farmington home and then adopted one. Foster families ready dogs for life off the track as they learn to negotiate things like glass doors, stairs and wood floors for the first time. Becca Birx of Canandaigua adopted her yellow Lab from Rudy’s Rescue, which focuses on Labrador retrievers. Birx says rescue dogs share a special bond with their owners because “they know they have been saved.” Amy Holtz founded Rudy’s Rescue as a personal mission. While searching for a dog of her own, she found a sweet Lab at a local shelter slated to be euthanized because he had bitten someone. Holtz wanted to adopt it, but the shelter would only release the dog to a Lab rescue. None existed in the area, so Holtz vowed to start her own; Rudy’s Rescue opened in 2006. With the help of 30 volunteers—Birx now among them— Rudy’s Rescue places about 50 dogs a year. And for the cat lovers among us? The Colony Caregivers rescue in Shortsville manages free-roaming cat populations, fostering and placing adoptable cats and caring for wild “feral” cat colonies. Founder Maureen Robert says, thanks to veterinarians who waive fees or offer discounts, the group has spayed/ neutered more than 1,300 cats since its inception. Volunteers foster the adoptable ones until they find a “forever home.” Wild cats are returned to their colony, typically behind shopping areas or in parks or abandoned buildings. Volunteers also feed and check on the colonies. That sounds like a lot of work. But, Lauren Van Deroef works 15-hour days in her dog-walking and pet-sitting business, Pets of Canandaigua. says Robert, “I can’t imagine doing any less than I do every day.” – N.M. Empire in the making? After three years of pet-sitting, Lauren Van Deroef finally realized she had a bona fide business on her hands. Van Deroef had begun cat-sitting for friends and family in 2009 to earn some extra cash. She was working in retail but wasn’t happy in her job, so one day she advertised dog-walking and pet-sitting services in the local PennySaver. Once she had enough clients, she quit her job, choosing furry clients over grumpy humans. “Dogs never have bad days,” she points out. Van Deroef’s business, Pets of Canandaigua, is proudly displayed on decals splashed onto her car—a traveling billboard that has brought in clients such as Kathie Affleck, who hired Van Deroef to walk her Lab, Jessie. Most of Van Deroef’s customers live within 10 miles of downtown Canandaigua. Van Deroef will do it all, from feeding and walking to scooping litter and watering plants. She’s certified in animal first aid, so she’ll administer shots. She’s brave, so she took on the assignment to feed live fish to piranhas. She’s not finicky, so she was fine with mixing up variations of “dog soup” (dog food, water, olive oil and canned vegetables). And she’s maternal enough: “Corgis need to be burped after they eat,” she notes. Van Deroef, who is 23, says she works at least six “crazy days” a week. Her typical day starts at 7 a.m. and ends at 10 p.m. She admits her schedule isn’t for everyone. She plans to hire two employees this summer—high season for petsitting—but turnover has been a problem in the past. But she says she loves her job. “Everyone is happy to see me,” she explains, laughing. Affleck now hires Van Deroef to move in with Jessie the Lab when she travels. “Jessie is happier in her own home,” Affleck explains, adding that her dog has “bonded with Lauren.” When Van Deroef lives at a client’s house, she has to schedule visits to tend to her own two cats. Someday, though not anytime soon, she wants to have her own dog. “A Great Dane, mastiff, Newfoundland—anything gigantic,” she says. She also wants to open a pet hotel some day. She envisions rooms that “don’t look like boxes,” and complementary offerings such as training, grooming and possibly swimming facilities. “My pet empire,” she says. – N.M. Cat haven It might look like a three-bedroom house, but those are actually “cat rooms,” with windows situated perfectly to look Canandaigua Magazine 37 coverstory We live by the conviction that pets are not people; they are unique animals with unique nutritional needs that are distinctly different from our own. COURTESY OF NANCY LANE Happy family: Mark Obbie and Nancy Lane adopted Luka and Zoe from BDBH rescue. We are committed to innovations in Health Nutrition and improving the lives of the cats and dogs we serve. Based on extensive scientific research we make the most precise and effective nutrition for cats and dogs determined by size, age, lifestyle and breed. Catrina DeJaneiro, Local Contact 716.517.1484 www.RoyalCanin.us Royal Canin USA Customer Service 800-592-6687 Manufactured in ISO Certified Company Owned Facility 100% guaranteed 38 Canandaigua Magazine out onto 15 pastoral acres. Pet Pride was established by cat lover and advocate Jacqueline Russel in 1977 as a nonprofit cat shelter. What started in Russel’s home now has a permanent location in Victor, thanks to a $250,000 grant from Maddie’s Fund, a family foundation dedicated to no-kill shelters. The felines roam freely by day when staff is present. Cages safely secure them at night. Pet Pride tries to find homes for the cats, but as a no-kill shelter, it doesn’t euthanize cats it can’t place. Cats that aren’t adopted live their natural lives out at the shelter. So characters like George, a striped domestic short hair admitted in 2008, are lucky to be here. Shelter manager Norma Halbleib calls George “a sweet cat,” but he has a less-sweet tendency to “mark” when he’s under stress. He’s now a shelter kitty, along with Alie (personality issues) and Charlie (a diabetic). Bob Boeckman, a chemistry professor at the University of Rochester, and his wife, Mary Delton, adopted a gray and white tiger cat, Little Bits, with a “personality that wouldn’t quit.” Boeckman became a board member and, when Russel retired in 2006, took over as board chair. The shelter works with the community, as well. Scouts volunteer at the shelter to earn badges, and students organize can and bottle drives to raise funds. Members of Happiness House’s Traumatic Brian Injuries group in Canandaigua have volunteered to work on regaining work skills. Sometimes it takes a village to raise a cat. – N.M. First and last resort When all else fails, people call dog trainer Melissa Cocola. As a young girl in Manchester, Cocola loved to walk dogs and watch her father train hunting dogs. In her 20s, she apprenticed with a dog trainer and became a veterinary assistant. But it was earning her master trainer certification at age 30 that jump-started her career. A year later, in 2001, Cocola purchased seven bucolic acres in Walworth to open a boarding and training complex. Cocola’s Creekside Pet Resort took a fresh approach: an all-inclusive price for cage-free accommodations, medications, bathing, special diet requests, walks and group play. She added Creekside Lodge in Macedon in 2011. Paul Creek, co-owner of Sutter’s Canandaigua Marina, and his wife, Holly, have boarded their German shepherd, Uno, at Creekside since 2007. Creek says he was struck by how the attractive complex resembled an Adirondacks chalet. But ultimately he was most impressed by the staff’s love of animals. Now the couple is reluctant to leave their dog anywhere else. “If I can’t find a slot at Creekside, I hire someone to dog-sit at my house,” he says. But training remains Cocola’s first love, and she has kept busy through referrals from clients and veterinarians such as Dr. Steve Smith of Canandaigua Veterinary Hospital. Smith says he refers significant behavioral problems, such as aggression or anxiety, to Cocola because he has seen “profound transformations” in canine patients who train with her. Cocola rarely turns away cases. “Dogs don’t work on a timeline,” she says. One option she offers, Canine College, is a residency program to address severe behavioral issues. Dogs live at the Creekside complex to train extensively with her and associate trainer Kourtney McKnight. Collegebound dogs have arrived from as far north as Canada and as far south as Florida. “All of the out-of-state cases had been to other trainers prior to coming here and were told that the dogs were too aggressive to be rehabilitated,” says Cocola. Many people reach out to her as a last resort, but her services also include standard private lessons, puppy management and breed selection. Cocola’s personal breed preference is the Doberman: “smart, sweet goofballs,” she calls them (she has two of her own). Cocola’s young daughter, Francesca, is already following the family tradition. “Her first word was ‘dog’,” Cocola says with a laugh. Go figure. – N.M. c Putt for pets The 8th annual Pet Pride Classic golf tournament fundraiser will take place Tuesday, June 18, at Ravenwood Golf Club in Victor. The tournament begins with lunch. For information or to register, contact Bill Crocker at 585-329-1077 or visit PetPrideNY.org. “ “ Over the years, our family pets have brought us joy, comfort, love, many laughs, and ultimately even many tears.…I’ll never forget the time the high school bus went by at the usual time and Sibley, our loving black Labrador, went to the back door with her most enthusiastic tail wag…Only, no one got off the bus this time—the kids were off to college. It took one look from her and I just walked over, wrapped my arms around her and cried...it felt so good to know someone—my dear dog—understood.” Maria Adukonis Clark Writer My 40-pound, soft-coated Wheaten Terrier, Riley Bo Jangles Dunkin Snow (Riley for short) is a light of happiness in my crazy busy life. When long stressful days try to get the best of me…Riley gives me a breedfamous “Wheaten greetin” with paws up for a big hug, tons of kisses— and his tail wags so hard he almost falls over. He helps me to stop and realize to take each day and moment as a blessing.” “ “ Elisha Snow Communications & events coordinator, Canandaigua Chamber of Commerce democrat and chronicle FILE PHOTO Our cat Felix is the “F” in F. Oliver’s; her picture is on our flagship product, our 18-year-old reserve balsamic vinegar.” Penelope Pankow Proprietor of F. Oliver’s Oils and Vinegars A good pet is something wonderful to come home to each evening. That’s why dogs are a little better. Cats are probably very happy to see you, but dogs really let you know!” Lynne Erdle Canandaigua City school superintendent Canandaigua Magazine 39