REBECCA'S DOGSITTING: PROSPECTWALKS@GMAIL.COM
Thursday, February 4, 2010
"Green" Dogtoys and Accessories
I've lived in places where -- not only do dogs eat butcher scraps and chew on regular-old sticks, but -- people actually use what they own until it is completely beyond salvaging. Places where kids don't have stuffed animals, much less dogs. And here in New York, we give our dogs stuffed animals knowing full well that they'll rip them to shreds in twenty minutes, in search of the squeaky center!
With the heyday of the stuffed animal for doggies, even our dogs are generating lots of non-biodegradable waste. There's no need to involve our dogs in the mess we're creating of the planet.
With the heyday of the stuffed animal for doggies, even our dogs are generating lots of non-biodegradable waste. There's no need to involve our dogs in the mess we're creating of the planet.
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Green tips,
Practical tips
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Uncharacteristic "Pawz"
Does your dog usually tug ahead of you? Is s/he suddenly full of uncharacteristic pause, footdragging and whimpering on walks?
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Health,
Practical tips
Friday, January 1, 2010
Start Your Dog's New Year Off Right: Save Some Trees!

Happy first day of the year! In this last year of the first decade of the new millennium, let your dog's New Years resolution be: "This year, I will not pee on trees!"
Most people think the term "Curb Your Dog" has two meanings: 1. To keep your dog under control and out of trouble; 2. To pick up your dog's scat.
But why is it that you usually see "Curb Your Dog" signs near trees? Dog urine and leavings are poison for trees, grass and flowers. Saplings and young trees haven't got a chance against a barrage of neighborhood dogs marking their territory.
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Green tips,
Practical tips
Friday, December 11, 2009
Biodegradable Doo-bags
Years ago, I collected a series of tiny little sturdy, re-usable, nicely-designed Reisenthel and Envirosax bags for grocery shopping, etc., so I never needed another plastic bag.
But when I started dogwalking, I had to collect a bin full of plastic bags to accommodate all my dogs. I hate throwing away all those plastic bags, don't you? So a few weeks ago I wrote to a compostable plastic bag company and they sent me some samples. I can report that they (BioBags) work really well, much better than using old bags from the grocery store.
But when I started dogwalking, I had to collect a bin full of plastic bags to accommodate all my dogs. I hate throwing away all those plastic bags, don't you? So a few weeks ago I wrote to a compostable plastic bag company and they sent me some samples. I can report that they (BioBags) work really well, much better than using old bags from the grocery store.
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Green tips,
Practical tips
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Fussy, fussy
Back when I walked dogs down the grassy streets of a medium-sized Midwestern college town, I used to assume that those people who cleaned their dogs' paws had a diagnosable disorder.
But like everything else, the definition of "disorder" is relative to context. Since I started walking dogs in Brooklyn, I've learned that what seems neurotic in a spotless environment, is common sense in a world of sidewalks strewn with the leavings of Brooklyn's thousands of dogs.
Oh my goodness, talk about a city full of dogs with fussy stomachs. What to do?
But like everything else, the definition of "disorder" is relative to context. Since I started walking dogs in Brooklyn, I've learned that what seems neurotic in a spotless environment, is common sense in a world of sidewalks strewn with the leavings of Brooklyn's thousands of dogs.
Oh my goodness, talk about a city full of dogs with fussy stomachs. What to do?
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Health,
Practical tips
Friday, October 9, 2009
Is it Behavior or Genetics?
Epigenetics. Check it out sometime.
When scientists in the field of epigenetics observed rat mommas that were nurturing, that licked their babies, in comparison with those that took a paw-off approach and did not, they noted the following:
The unlicked babies had higher blood pressure. Their bodies were flooded with more of the stress hormones that actively promote heart disease, obesity and diabetes. When the unlicked babies were later placed with licking moms, and compared with those that stayed unlicked, they grew up to have far less health problems. Through nurturing behavior, the moms sculpted the genome of their babies.
In turn, there is some evidence that "Genetic Memory" does indeed exist in some form. That our ancestors' life experiences impacts our health, has been proven incontrovertibly. For instance, if one's great-great-grandparent experienced the Irish potato famine, generations later this will impact how one processes food, whether one is overweight, and whether one can or cannot withstand fasting.
What your grandmother was exposed to gets passed down to you – stress, smoking, pesticides. We have a responsibility for shaping our epigenome and passing it down to our kids - preferably improved!
The exciting thing to think about is that: We can change. So can our dogs and cats. And if we change, they certainly will too.
Now, let's get them out in the open air to walk, maybe even play!
When scientists in the field of epigenetics observed rat mommas that were nurturing, that licked their babies, in comparison with those that took a paw-off approach and did not, they noted the following:
The unlicked babies had higher blood pressure. Their bodies were flooded with more of the stress hormones that actively promote heart disease, obesity and diabetes. When the unlicked babies were later placed with licking moms, and compared with those that stayed unlicked, they grew up to have far less health problems. Through nurturing behavior, the moms sculpted the genome of their babies.
In turn, there is some evidence that "Genetic Memory" does indeed exist in some form. That our ancestors' life experiences impacts our health, has been proven incontrovertibly. For instance, if one's great-great-grandparent experienced the Irish potato famine, generations later this will impact how one processes food, whether one is overweight, and whether one can or cannot withstand fasting.
What your grandmother was exposed to gets passed down to you – stress, smoking, pesticides. We have a responsibility for shaping our epigenome and passing it down to our kids - preferably improved!
The exciting thing to think about is that: We can change. So can our dogs and cats. And if we change, they certainly will too.
Now, let's get them out in the open air to walk, maybe even play!
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Musings
Fearing Freedom

When monkeys raised in captivity, trapped their entire lives, are released from concrete and cages into open green spaces, they do not always know what to do.
One monkey, when released, paces back and forth on the narrow strip of concrete outside his trap door. He can't manage even the grass just beyond the concrete. He tries it out, but panics, returns to the concrete, pacing, anxious, finally recedes into the trap door.
Another monkey sees the open door to his cage, knows what to do, leaps past the concrete onto the grass, rolls around, sees the endlessness of the open space before him -- and the freedom he is about to experience -- and he does not hesitate, moves into the wide open, accelerating into a new life.
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Animal Behavior
The Urge to Play

The passion to play is a powerful learning tool. Animals tend to play in relaxed environments and don't tend to play with predators around. However, animals who live in high-risk environments know how to adapt, and often play in a high-risk way - this helps them to learn better how to contend with the risks around them.
Animals who don't learn how to play become rogues, and grow up to become aggressive and violent. Animals need to play daily, just like we need to talk to other people daily.
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Animal Behavior
"Owning" A Beast

Cats are like doorways,
the doorways they curl around,
because they exist on the edges,
between realities, this world and that,
civilized and beast.
They join us here for dinner,
while, with full bellies,
they nevertheless rip apart a mouse
for play.
They join us in our world, giving us the impression
they belong to it
and leaving suddenly to remind us
they do not.
When we try to coerce
their 'belonging' (or if they even sense we do)
if we forget, assume they are civilized,
their claws lash and eyes flash
in an instant to remind us -
they are certainly, indignantly, not,
not at all civilized.
How ridiculous. How perfectly preposterous.
Humans, such fools.
(Copyright, Refcah Manski 2009)
Labels: Practical Tips, Animal Behavior, Musings
Musings
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