Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Oct 15 2009

TCM & Acupuncture for Dogs

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

Traditional Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture can treat the following conditions in dogs:

Hip & Elbow Dysplasia
* Internal Medicine
* Movement Disorders
* Neurological Disorders
* Pain Management
* Stress/Anxiety
* Arthritis
* Osteoarthritis
* Allergies
* Asthma
* Low Energy
* Spinal Cord Injuries
* Shoulder & Elbow Injuries
* Ligament and Tendon Injuries
* Recovery from Fractures
* Neurological Disorders
* Degenerative Myelopathy
* Muscle Strains
* Off Season Agility Conditioning
* Low Back Pain
and so much more!

Worried about how your dog will react? Dogs actually like acupuncture. Most dogs fall asleep or become very relaxed once the needles are placed. It is a very gentle and effective therapy.

While acupuncture is effective for a wide range of canine ailments, don’t expect too much from a single treatment. Acupuncture in dogs and humans have a cumulative effect. Over time, the treatments build on one another, giving greater effect with each treatment.

PLEASE NOTE!
Each state has its own regulations about veterinary acupuncture. It is important to find a practitioner who has more than a few weekends of training. Some states only require veterinarians to have 130 hours of training in veterinary acupuncture. Unfortunately this is not an adequate amount of time to learn Traditional Chinese Medicine. Other states only allow veterinarians to practice.

All licensed acupuncturists have at least 3,000 to 3,500 hours of training and graduate with a Masters degree. To find an acupuncturist in your area visit acufinder.com.

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Sep 28 2009

Help Your Dog – Help Other Dogs!

Published by jeanie under LinkedIn, Uncategorized

New Patient Special!

With your dog’s first acupuncture session we will donate 10% of the fee to the MSPCA. You will receive a certificate in your dog’s name from them.

The MSPCA Animal Care and Adoption Centers around the state care for and adopt out thousands of homeless and unwanted animals each year. We shelter a wide variety of purebred and mixed-breed dogs and cats, as well as rabbits, guinea pigs and many other small animals. Our Nevins Farm & Equine Center is a unique center for horses and other farm animals, including goats, cows, sheep, pigs, chickens, geese and ducks.

We also go beyond sheltering, striving to be our communities’ best resources for animal-related information and assistance. We provide advice on animal behavior and training, answer questions on dealing with wildlife, educate the public about responsible pet ownership and pet-population control.”
MSPCA

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Sep 18 2009

International Talk Like A Pirate Day September 19th

Published by jeanie under Dog fun, LinkedIn, Uncategorized

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Aug 03 2009

Surf’s Up!

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

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Got the summer-time blues? This youtube should cheer you up in no time. Enjoy!

Surf’s Up youtube

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Jun 01 2009

new website for alternative medicine practioners

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

http://www.alternativemedicinepractices.com”

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Sep 25 2008

A PET’S TEN COMMANDMENTS

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

1. My life is likely to last 10-15 years. Any separation from you is likely to be painful.

2. Give me time to understand what you want of me.

3. Place your trust in me. It is crucial for my well-being.

4. Don’t be angry with me for long and don’t lock me up as punishment. You have your work, your friends, your entertainment, but I have only you.

5. Talk to me. Even if I don’t understand your words, I do understand your voice when speaking to me.

6. Be aware that however you treat me, I will never forget it.

7. Before you hit me, before you strike me, remember that I could hurt you, and yet, I choose not to bite you .

8. Before you scold me for being lazy or uncooperative, ask yourself if something might be bothering me. Perhaps I’m not getting the right food, I have been in the sun too long, or my heart might be getting old or weak.

9. Please take care of me when I grow old. You too, will grow old.

10. On the ultimate difficult journey, go with me please. Never say you can’t bear to watch. Don’t make me face this alone. Everything is easier for me if you are there, because I love you so.

~Take a moment today to thank God for your pets. Enjoy and take good care of them.

Life would be a much duller, less joyful experience without God’s critters

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Sep 18 2008

Puppy Mill Awareness Day

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

Puppy Mill Awareness Day in Salem, MA

Help Stop Puppy Mills

Join us, Saturday, September 20th
Salem Common, 12 – 4 PM, Salem, MA
Come and learn what you can do to save the lives of puppies

Food, Music, Raffle (good stuff for you and your pet), local rescue groups with animals to adopt, and more! Animals and Humans welcome!

In conjunction with www.AwarenessDay.org, part of a NATIONWIDE effort to put an end to puppy mills Contact info: NoMorePuppyMills88@gmail.com, 978-745-5288

www.Awarenessday.org

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Aug 19 2008

DOG-A-THON in Beverly MA

Published by jeanie under Dog News, Uncategorized

Walk your dog for a great cause at the 2008 DOG-A-THON in Beverly, MA.

Help raise money for the Beverly Housing Coalition.

Saturday September 13, 2008
9am to Noon
Walk starts at Coldwell Banker office at 54 Dodge Street, Beverly MA at 9am

There will be vendors, raffle ticket sales, info booths and lots of fun for all.

All dogs on leashes are welcome! Prizes for the shortest tail…. Biggest dog…. and more!

For more information contact lesli.woodruff@nemoves.com

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Jun 23 2008

In Memory of George Carlin

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

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George Carlin

May 12. 1937 – June 22, 2008

“HOW’S YOUR DOG? Did you ever have a guy who asks you that? “HOW’S YOUR DOG?” …Fine, he’s all right. They’re not your dogs; they’re our dogs! Every now and then one of us has one for awhile. But they’re our dogs.

Okay, you’re home at night, got the TV on, but you got the lights on too ’cause you’re reading, doggie’s there, doing a crossword puzzle, answer the phone. You got a Pepsi, bag of Doritos, hey…Does this happen in your house? If a dog is shown on television, do you try to get your dog to look at the dog? “Look at the dog! Look at the dog! Look at the doggie! LOOK AT THE DOG, YOU *******!” They never look where you want, do they? They look at your hand. “Look over there” “What’s his hand doing up there, man? His hand is on my head! What did I do wrong?” “Well, for one thing, you missed the dog!”

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Jun 10 2008

Your Whole Pet

Published by jeanie under Uncategorized

10 holistic pet care tips you can trust

By Christie Keith, Special to SF Gate
Wednesday, June 10, 2008

For more than 22 years, I’ve been raising and caring for my pets using alternative and complementary methods. In that time, I’ve seen dozens of supplements, herbs and nutritional theories hailed as the one true way to pet health, and then fall by the wayside.

After interviewing dozens of holistic vets, following a lot of tips that sounded promising and undergoing a great deal of trial and error with my own animals in the past two decades, I’ve come up with a list of 10 tried-and-true holistic tips that have worked for my pets as well as many others.

One caution, and it’s a big one: Talk to your veterinarian before trying to treat your pet at home. It’s one thing to give a gingersnap to see if it helps a healthy puppy’s mild carsickness; it’s another to think you can treat a pet’s violent or chronic diarrhea at home. There is nothing “holistic” about treating conditions without a diagnosis.

1. Peppermint and catnip
Peppermint (Mentha piperita) and catnip (Nepeta cataria) are wonderful remedies for nausea and car sickness. Peppermint also regulates peristalsis, so it can help with irritable bowel syndrome, and even with symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease.

Catnip has similar effects on digestive upsets while being more palatable for felines. Even if your cat doesn’t experience a euphoric reaction to the herb — and 20 percent of cats don’t — it still has digestive benefits and can also serve as a mild appetite stimulant to both dogs and cats. It may help with some forms of vomiting in cats, but it’s important first to have your veterinarian determine the cause of the vomiting.

If your cat is attracted to catnip, you can just put some of the dried, crushed herb on the ground for the cat to roll around in. If not, you can add the dried herb to their food at the rate of around half a teaspoon per pound of food. You can also give cats or dogs a glycerin-based tincture (available at some health food stores), half a milliliter for every 20 pounds of body weight.

Glycerin-based peppermint tinctures are widely sold in health food stores for use by children. Dogs can be given these products dosed by body weight according to the guidelines on the label; those that also contain ginger are especially helpful for car sickness. (And yes, a gingersnap will also often do the trick.)

Because dogs tend to like the taste, they will usually drink a weak peppermint tea given in a bowl instead of water. It should be offered lukewarm or at room temperature rather than very hot or chilled.

Peppermint is contraindicated for pets with reflux, as it relaxes the esophageal sphincter.

2. Medical grade honey
When one of my dogs developed a drug-resistant staph infection, I spent weeks and hundreds of dollars on antibiotics, only to have the infection come back again and again. I finally banished it, hopefully forever, with the aid of an FDA-approved bandage containing medical grade honey.

This honey contains an enzyme that is believed to prevent bacterial growth. It comes from bees that feed on the flowers of the Manuka plant in New Zealand. It’s being used in both human and veterinary medicine to treat and prevent resistant bacterial infections. The product I used is called Medihoney.
To read the rest of this article click on www.sfgate.com

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