WATCHUNG MOUNTAINS YORKSHIRE TERRIER CLUB, INC.
Transcription
WATCHUNG MOUNTAINS YORKSHIRE TERRIER CLUB, INC.
The N E W S L E T T E R of the WATCHUNG MOUNTAINS YORKSHIRE TERRIER CLUB, INC. JANUARY 2014 Visit us at our website-http://WMYTC.org *************************************************************************************************************************************** Editor: Terri Cuchiaro 1803 Middlebrook Rd. Cell (732) 718-4024 Bound Brook, NJ 08805 President@WMYTC.org In God We Trust ************************************************************************************************************************************** Place: Date/ Time: Terri Cuchiaro’s Residence Sunday, January 26 1:00 PM - Pot luck lunch! Program: Making Fleece Tied Dog Blankets! We will learn how to make comfortable washable lovable blankets as this year’s fund-raiser! No sewing required! (instructions included on last page) Sunshine . . . Condolences to Liz Medina on the loss of her dear ‘Abuela’, her grandmother. Bret Walker passed away from an aneurism on December 30, 2013. He partnered with Jim Hupp under their wellknown kennel name ‘Exmoor’. Their most recent success is the #2 dog BISS GCH Exmoor’s Epitome. R.I.P. Peanut Butter Dog Biscuit Recipe. . . 68 • Top Notch Toys, November 2013 OWNER-HANDLERS By Kathy Ambler t's all politics... that is what we hear every single weekend. Owner Handlers just don't have a chance when there are pro handlers in the ring. The judges always look at the wrong end of show potential puppy. It was very difficult. It seems that show breeders are very leery of people who come to dog shows saying they want to do this too... but finally I did find a Yorkie breeder who was willing to give me a chance. really feel it was the best move I ever made Presently, I am specialing Silver GCH CH Windfall's Dude With Attitude, "OPIE" Opie is the #1 Havanese in the AKC Owner Handler series and has also been a top ten Havanese in breed all year, as well as a multi the lead. We pay the judges for an evalua- When I look back at my start in the show tion of our dog and we expect the judging ring, I have to laugh at how far I have come in group placer and winner. So, although I say I have been successful, to be based on the dog's merits, but it just such a short period of time. Of course I was a the closest I have come to a Best In Show was never is... it is all POLITICS. bit younger then, skinnier too, but "skorts" winning a group one this year. To others, I My name is Kathy Ambler and I am an and tee shirts with sandals, are not really suppose what I consider success, isn't success Owner/Breeder/Handler. I am a successful proper professional attire for the show ring. at all! Success, in my opinion, isn't just one too, at least I think so! My kennel name The first thing I noticed was that professional measured by how much you win, but by how is Ambler Havanese. So what separates me attire consisted of nice dresses or suits and many friends you have in the show world, how from others? Why do other owner/handlers good leather shoes! So, I went shopping. many people ask your advice, how many stay give up and quit completely, or hire a pro I can t really say I had a mentor, but I do to cheer you on when you are in the group handler to show their dogs? Why do I feel I learn by watching and watch I did. Every ring, and even how many are there to help am a successful Owner/Handler? breed. I talked to everyone who would talk to cheer you up when you LOSE! It is also I started out wanting to show dogs as me. I quickly learned that to get breeders to success in the whelping box, having or not a child. Unfortunately, I didn't have the trust you, you had to listen to them, take their having a CH in front of the parents' name does luxury of growing up in a dog showing advice and then show them you understood not change what they can produce there! family. We always had purebred dogs: a and could do this and were serious about it. I Producing happy, healthy puppies who also Poodle, Pointer, Mini Schnauzer, Ameri- went to every show I could, driving long conform to the AKC standard is very can Eskimo... and we had several mutts distances and making mini vacations out of it important. So, long ago, I decided the judges too. But we didn't show the purebred dogs with my husband. Soon people were beginning were not the ones who would determine my and didn't breed them either. to recognize me and letting me help them breeding plans. Maybe I realized I was I graduated from high school and mar- show their dogs too. I think that really boosted actually successful when I was asked to judge ried and had a family. I would slip away my confidence, when other breeders let me the sweeps at the Southern Magnolia Regional every year to go to the dog show in Lon- take their dogs in the ring, even if they were Specialty, and then chosen by the Havanese don, Ontario and would stand in awe of all the "fillers". Club of America members to judge the sweeps the beautiful dogs in the rings and be jeal- I had a bit of success with Yorkies, but ous that I could not be out there doing the then discovered the Havanese. After finishing same thing as a handler/owner. Of course my bred by Yorkie boy "Jesse" (Am/Can CH at the National Specialty this year. What an honor! I realized then that other breeders actually felt I knew a good dog! I would watch the Westminster Dog Show Amblers American Outlaw) under Richard So, back to the show ring... So many times on TV each year too. It was my dream to Beauchamp at the Mt Rainier Yorkie Specialty I read on the judge's "report card" type lists that one day have a top five dog and be invited show and being awarded Best Bred By in So and So is political, So and So doesn't know to compete there. My first marriage ended Show, I decided he would be my last bred by a good dog, So and So hates judging the in divorce. When I met Richard, my hus- Yorkie and I would concentrate on the Havanese... People report that SO and SO is a band now, I think one of the first things I Havanese. I absolutely love the Havanese breed great judge because they gave their dog the win. told him was, "I want to breed and show and Or they are a bad judge because they didn't Yorkies". Together Richard and I went on the hunt for someone who would sell me a 46 I QUICKLY LEARNED THAT TO GET BREEDERS TO TRUST YOU, you had to listen to them, take their advice and then show them you understood and could do this and were serious about it." give their dog the win and they clearly had the best dog in the ring. Unfortunately in reality, what I have seen is owner handlers taking their little dog in the ring like they are just taking a stroll in their local park. They are not "showing" their dog at all. While I don't agree with all the artificial products used to make the dogs "look better", and I don't do it, I do feel you need to present your dog to the judge as if it is the best dog he will see all day. Show off that good rear, beautiful neck and superb gait. Be an aggressive handler. Don't let that pro stack their dog out in front of yours. Go in the ring like you mean it! Smile! Show your pride at being an Owner/Handler, always with a positive attitude. And again... DRESS APPROPRIATELY! Do like I did in the beginning. Watch and learn. How do the pros do it? They show many dogs, an owner handler has one or two. An Owner/Handler should know every in and out of their dog. What bait works best, what shampoo works best, what speed they should be gaited at. What are your dog's faults and what are his good points? Remember, this is NOT a walk in the park. It is a dog SHOW. A "newbie" will lose more than he wins. It is a fact. WHY? Because you probably can't SHOW your dog like a pro can. Judges have 2 minutes per dog. They cannot give you 5 minutes to try to get your dog to walk down and back to try to see his gait. And if you can't get your dog to gait right, chances are you are not going to win, even if your dog truly is the best dog in the ring that day! So, instead of giving up and hiring a pro handler. Watch and Learn. Dress the part. Groom your dog. Train your dog. Show like a If it is, and a breeder should know, SHOW IT! pro and mean it! It is so satisfying when you Dress and act the part. Have your dog trained finally get the hang of it and can show like a and groomed and be ready to go in the ring pro and be competitive. It doesn't take 15 when it is your turn. If you have more than years, but it does take time. It also takes one dog, have someone helping you change commitment. You can't put a leash on your arm band numbers. Don't make the judge wait. dog only on show days and expect he will Don't rush into the ring and stress yourself and perform like a champion. Practice, Practice, your dog out. Know your dog's greatest points Practice. and SHOW them to the judge. And most of The best tips I can give owner handlers all, HAVE FUN! If it quits being fun, then who are struggling and are frustrated because you have lost perspective and you need to step it is "POLITICS", is to pay attention. Lose the back and figure out why it isn't fun anymore. kennel blindness, quit making excuses. Is your Has winning all the time become your main dog truly the best one in the ring? objective? Dog shows were (Editor: B&W unprintable photo from article was replaced with Valentino owner-handled to BOB at the Garden) created to evaluate breeding stock, to show off what you have and to see what others have. To find your next stud dog or find the girl you want your next puppy from. It is about breeders sharing experiences for the betterment of the breed. Success isn't always about the wins, remember that. If you have the right perspective and are prepared, the wins will come. You must have the right attitude and show good sportsmanship, and even when the win seems "political" and you feel your dog should have won, congratulate the winner! DON'T GIVE UP!! Being on the end of the lead when your dog does win, is absolutely the best feeling EVER! ■ TOP NOTCH TOYS, NOVEMBER 2013 • 69 All Dogs May Go to Heaven. These Days, Some Go to Hospice. Dr. Mary Gardner, a veterinarian, co-founded an in-home pet hospice and euthanasia service called Lap of Love. By MATT RICHTEL Published: November 30, 2013 More and more, cats and dogs get the human treatment. There are pet spas, pet therapists, pet clothes. And as it goes in life, so it now goes in the twilight. The latest phenomenon: pet hospice. Daniel Rosenbaum for The New York Times Denise Fitzmaurice, right, brought her 4-year-old dog, Sophie, to Dr. Michele Price’s mobile veterinary clinic for an examination. Around the country, a growing number of veterinarians are offering hospice care, and marketing it as a way to give cats and dogs — and their owners — a less anxious, more comfortable passing. The approach, in the spirit of the human variety, entails ceasing aggressive medical treatment and giving pain and even anti-anxiety drugs. Unlike in hospice care for humans, euthanasia is an option — and in fact, is a big part of this end-of-life turn. When it’s time, the vet performs it in the living room, bedroom or wherever the family feels comfortable. That’s a big part of the job, the vets say, relieving pet owner guilt, giving them an emotional bridge to a pet’s death, and letting them grieve at home — rather than in a clinic or animal shelter. The intimacy carries a premium, sometimes costing 25 percent or more than euthanasia in a clinic. Vets, and their customers, say it can be worth it. “They’re in their own environment, not only the pet but the owners,” said Dr. Mary Gardner, co-founder of Lap of Love, a Florida-based company that is one of the leaders in a small but growing market. “They’re allowed to have other animals present, other cats or dogs present, other children,” added Dr. Gardner, who refers to a pet’s owner as its “mom” or “dad,” and has since relocated her own practice to Los Angeles. “I’ve been to some homes where they had barbecues for that dog, and invited me and the neighbors, and the dog was the man of the hour.” Lap of Love’s business has blossomed since 2010 from two providers to more than 68 vet partners in 18 states. The International Association for Animal Hospice and Palliative Care, a group started in 2009, now has 200 members, mostly vets, but also several family therapists, lawyers and an animal sanctuary in Northern California that takes in and provides holistic healing and hospice for terminally ill and elderly pets. “There is a formal end-of-life movement, a formal hospice movement,” said Dr. Eden Myers, a veterinarian in Kentucky who runs JustVetData.com, which tracks industry trends. Of the providers who do this, she said: “They’re everywhere.” Dr. Amir Shanan, a vet in Chicago who started the International Association for Animal Hospice, described the movement as growing, but still not mainstream; veterinary schools are only now embracing the idea. “There are skeptics out there,” he said. “But 20 years ago, there was almost no one other than skeptics, and that’s changing rapidly.” There are no formal standards for this hospice care, and Dr. Shanan said there was a debate about what those standards should look like. “The core of the debate is who is to decide when is the right time to euthanize, if at all,” he said, noting that some hospice supporters advocate giving pets palliative care until they die naturally, as in human hospice. Hospice and in-home euthanasia are different things. Their growth is owing to similar factors, says Dr. Myers, including a growing acceptance of hospice for humans, as well as cellphones, laptops and online marketing that make mobile vet services easier to operate. Plus, she said, more vets offer the services as a business alternative to the high cost of starting and maintaining a traditional clinic. “And,” she added, “you’ve got people willing to spend scads of money on their pets.” For pet owners, the financial implications of this end-of-life movement cut two ways. In one light, hospice can be seen as reducing the cost of aggressive medical care, or it can be seen as its own version of aggressive comfort care, at least when compared to euthanizing a pet sooner. A hospice or euthanasia visit from Lap of Love generally costs $200 or $250, including drugs. Euthanasia at a clinic typically runs less, though prices vary widely, and is even less at a nonprofit shelter, like a local animal shelter. Some pet owners say costs are irrelevant given the peace of mind — their own. “It was more for me than him,” said Jan Dorr, a bookkeeper in Boca Raton, Fla., who was an early Lap of Love customer in 2010. She’d spent $5,000 on chemotherapy for her chocolate lab, Darby, but the dog’s health continued to fail. When she heard about the idea of pet hospice, her reaction was positive; a year earlier, her own father died after a positive hospice experience. She called Dr. Gardner, who helped make Darby comfortable by increasing his pain medications, and giving Ms. Dorr a checklist of ways to recognize when it was time to let go, such as when Darby stopped eating, walking or interacting. When Darby’s condition worsened just days later, the vet returned to perform euthanasia. Ms. Dorr lay down on her bed with Darby, hugging him. “She let me say when,” Ms. Dorr said, referring to the vet’s final injection. It was far preferable, she said, to the alternative: “I just couldn’t get it into my head to put him on a steel table in a cold room and let him go.” Kathryn D. Marocchino, a professor of death and dying at California State University in Vallejo, who in 1996 founded the Nikki Hospice Foundation for Pets, said the end-of-life movement for pets addressed what she described as a “sense of coercion” faced by owners of sick pets forced to decide between aggressive treatment or euthanasia. She said that her group got calls from people thanking them, and saying things like: “Where were you 30 years ago? They made me kill my dog.” Dr. Michele Price, a veterinarian in Northern Virginia whose in-home end-of-care business has doubled since 2009 to 20 percent of her practice, got a call recently about an ailing Labrador named Champ. She’d first seen the dog in August when his owners thought it was time to euthanize. But when Dr. Price got to the house, Champ was doing O.K., and she and the family decided on hospice treatment and pain meds. Later, Champ took a sharp downward turn and couldn’t walk. Dr. Price returned and they set up for the euthanasia. Champ was on a quilt next to the fireplace when Dr. Price administered the initial sedation. “They hugged him, and told him what a good dog he was. They said, ‘We love you’ and ‘We’ll miss you,’ ” Ms. Price said of the dog’s owners. As for Champ, “He fell asleep. That’s the last thing he remembered.” OLD DOG Barbara Jean Andrews The old dog waits beside the lane, his clouded eyes dull with pain. Muzzle frosted, tail unwound, but ears alert for any sound. Expectantly he tests the breeze as the broad chest labors, lungs a-wheeze. He shifts his weight from paw to paw and I wonder what he thinks he saw. Did he imagine an overdue friend - or is that a shadow there in the bend? The old dog’s gaze is suddenly keen on something only his eyes have seen. The weakened spine no longer sags as tempo increasing, his back end wags! I fear my eyes will over strain from searching down that empty lane. Dust motes dance in the noonday sun as the old dog moves to greet someone. Someone or something? I cannot see! But it’s surely here with old dog and me. His head is higher than it’s been in years and I savor the taste of happy tears As the light grows brighter around my dog and years roll away like morning fog. He’s young and strong and whole again, gaiting powerfully, sure to win Another heart, another show. And then, and then – the light departs. My eyes could stay forever sealed but cannot deny what I know is real. The illusion lies in sifting dust. An old dog gone where old dogs must. I pray that he can hear my song in that place where all my friends have gone. My gaze returns to his lifeless shell and a curtain of sadness I can not quell… Comes down. Oh, not for the dog who now is free but for me. For me. %%%%% Adopted dog treks 10 miles in freezing cold back to shelter to be with his beloved mate Ben (left) and Jade (right) are canine sweethearts. Photo: Tribune Star Two stray dogs met on the streets of Terre Haute and fell in love. Ben, a 4.5 year old mixed breed and Jade, a 1-year-old German Shepherd mix were well known in the Indiana community. Good Samaritans made sure the pair had food, but when Jade became pregnant last summer, the Terre Haute Humane Society caught them and brought them to the shelter. The bonded pair were kept together and when Jade had her puppies, she stayed in a foster home until the puppies could be adopted out. The new mother and father were reunited back at the shelter until Courtney and Jason Lawler decided they wanted to adopt Ben. They had him for about three weeks when he ran away to find his beloved mate. He trekked 10 miles through freezing cold until he found his way back to Jade at the shelter a day later. Although Ben clearly wanted to reunite with Jade, he also knew the shelter workers wanted to catch him and were using Jade to lure him out, Kali Skinner, of the Humane Society, explained to the Tribune Star. While he wanted desperately to be with his mate, he did not want to get caught, either. Shelter workers tried four hours on Sunday to get him — even using Jade as bait. “He knew it was a trap,” Skinner said. Jade was inside a fence, and Ben was out. She must have been warning him, because he would not go inside. He did, however, “kiss her through the fence,” said Skinner, one of several who worked feverishly to capture the street-savvy Ben. The shelter workers renewed their efforts on Monday, New Year’s Eve, and finally used a dart gun to tranquilize and slow him down, although he put up a long, hard fight once again and it took another several hours before they captured him. When the bonded pair saw each other, they were overjoyed. When Courtney and Jason learned what Ben had done, they knew then that Jade had to become part of their family too. "He'd keep getting loose if we took him and not her," Courtney told NBC2 News. “The story, the emotion and the energy it took to track this fellow and get him back to the shelter was amazing to witness,” wrote Sue Berta, a shelter volunteer, who helped recapture Ben, a carmel-colored German Shepherd and husky mix. On Thursday, the Lawlers took the re-united couple home. Ben likes to hide under a bed, while Jade lies on a mat beside him. Both are shy animals uncomfortable around strangers, and the Lawlers hope to receive assistance from a shelter volunteer trained to work with such animals. “It will take a lot of time and patience in working with them,” Courtney Lawler said. She described Ben as “content and happy because he has Jade,” while Jade “still has a lot of puppy to her.” Ben and Jade "want to be together" said Debbie Floyd, president of the Humane Society board. "There hasn’t been a lot of human love in their lives. They found love with each other and that’s what makes them happy…Hopefully, they will live their lives happily ever after." %%%%% Authorities are asking for the public's help in finding the person(s) responsible for dumping a Yorkshire Terrier on the side of a snowy road in an upstate New York town on Friday morning. A passer-by driving in the Town of Kent spotted the small dog huddling in a small black metal pet crate on a snowy patch of property just off the side of the road near the intersection of White Pond Road and Farmers Mills Road. The Good Samaritan contacted Kent Police Department, who in turn called an animal control officer, who retrieved the dog at around 7am on December 27, 2013. The abandoned dog is estimated to be between 4 to 6 years old and is un-neutered. The Putnam County SPCA said that anyone with any information on the dog or how he came to be abandoned can call them at 845-520-6915. Calls can remain anonymous. Putnam County SPCA wrote on their Facebook page, "Thank you to all of those who have expressed an interest in adopting the Yorkie from the abandonment case yesterday. As of now, the dog is not available for adoption as we continue our investigation.” Abandonment of animals in New York State is a misdemeanor crime punishable by imprisonment for not more than one year, or by a fine of more than $1000 or by a combination of both. SHOW AND TELL . . . Liz Medina’s ‘Hailay’ Desire York won Dec 7-8, Winners Bitch/Best Opposite Sex both days at the Oaks PA shows! (one dog shy of a major!) Hailay is now singled out (has all her single points) and looking for those elusive and rare majors! BISS Silver GCH Carasel’s V al e nt i no CGC and Terri Cuchiaro Dec 7-8, Best of Breed at both Oaks PA shows, well-attended for two more GCH majors. ALSO OwnerHandled Best of Breed AND on Saturday – OH Toy Group 1 Winner !! and on Sunday, OH Toy Group 3 !! # 9 Yorkshire Terrier in the country as of November Canine Chronicle Breed statistics! Always Ownerhandled and shown in a tight north-east region only! To whatever judge we get we show our best! # 1 Yorkshire Terrier in the country in the AKC National Owner-Handled Series 2013 & 2012! LITTERING . . . Meet Kathy Joback’s ‘Keurig’! (on left) “Ivorilace Brew The Love” th And below is a photo of Terri Cuchiaro’s litter at 6 weeks: a 4 generation of Carasel! GCH CH Carasel’s Beladora X CH Tyava’s Tuffer Than Tuff New way to help ears stand up . . . Thanks to Kathy Joback for sharing a tip she learned about. She says, take a Breathe-Right nose strip (they have glue on one side with a center staid), cut it in half and place on the inside of the ear with wide end at the bottom. To assist the strip in staying in place for 5-7 days, add some Torbot bonding cement. Instructions for Fleece Tied Blanket: Supplies: 1. You will need 2 pieces of fleece Fabric at least 40 inches or wider (most are 54 inches) Toddler/Crib Size: 1 1/2 yards of each piece of fleece, the print and the solid Child size 1 3/4 yards of each piece Teen/Adult size 2 yards of each piece (TC: Small Dog–I’m guessing 2 feet will make 2) 2. Sharp Scissors or I use a Fiskars Rotary Cutter and Cutting Mat, so much faster! 3. Ruler or tape measure (I’m using a Fiskars 3×18 Clear Acrylic Quilting Ruler) Instructions: STEP 1: Lay both pieces of fabric on the floor with the WRONG sides touching. (The right sides will be facing out so you can see them) Carefully trim away any of the seam edges. This is also to make the edges of both fabrics match up. TIP: It is easiest to cut BOTH pieces of fabric at the same time. STEP 2: Once your edges are straight, cut a 4 in x 4 in square from each corner, do this on all 4 corners, again cutting both pieces of fabric at the same time. STEP 3: Using your rotary cutter or scissors, cut 4 in deep strips at 1 inch widths apart all the way down each side, again cutting both pieces of fabric at the same time. Tip: The strips of fringe don’t have to be exactly 1 inch, you can eyeball it, but just try to make them basically the same width. STEP 4: Once all of your fringe is cut, you can start tying hand knots. I tie using a square knot. Make sure not to skip any strips or you will have a mess on your hands. (Alternate method: If you’d like your fringe to alternate colors along the edge, you can tie every other one, flip the blanket, then go back through and tie the remaining fringe.) http://www.confessionsofahomeschooler.com/blog/2011/12/ no-sew-fleece-tie-blanket-tutorial.html ... Terri Cuchiaro, Editor 1803 Middlebrook Rd. Bound Brook, NJ 08805 Officers: Terri Cuchiaro, President st Claudia Pierro, 1 Vice-Pres. nd Tom Becker, 2 Vice-Pres. Gary Vega, Treasurer Lizeth Medina, Secretary 1296 Millstone River Rd Hillsborough, NJ 08844-4729 Board of Directors: Tom Pierro, Class of 2014 Anthony Pollio, Class of 2014 Elaine Pollio, Class of 2014 Diane Stanley, Class of 2016 Jim Stanley, Class of 2016