PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
March, 2006
Hello!
This has been an interesting month for me. My
kitchen remodel is plodding along to a stopping point while I got to
finally experience something new in dogdom. Yes, though I’ve been in the
sport of dogs now for nearly a dozen years and have seen and done a lot,
I have never quite had the experience – or mortification – of a natural
breeding. So why is that mortifying? I guess in some places it could
be normal to have dogs getting amorous in the front yard, but in my
sleepy north Seattle neighborhood it surely isn’t typical! If all goes
well, I hope to be helping Morrigan whelp the first litter born under
the Lore kennel name in May.
The club is still looking for a Recording
Secretary to fill the rest of the term (though August) vacated when Liz
Swearingen stepped down due to her many, many demands with the SCA2006
National. If you can dedicate a little of your time to your club in this
position, please consider stepping forward. Please contact me or any
other board member to volunteer.
On Saturday, March 11th,
I got to sit in the SCWS Meet The Breed booth at the Seattle Kennel
Club’s show for a few hours. Big thanks goes to Darlene Rautio for
setting up the booth and being responsible for seeing it manned. Another
huge round of applause goes to Liz Swearingen who was a mainstay at the
booth as well. Doug Haldeman and Kim Leslie also worked the booth –
Thanks to both of you as well. The SKC show, while not the largest in
dog entries, does draw a large crowd of spectators. And it is always a
lot of fun interacting with them as they ask questions about our beloved
breed. We all got to talk for hours about our favorite topic: OUR DOGS.
The booth was pretty much constantly busy while
I was there, with people interested in adding a sammy to their family as
well as simply those curious about the beautiful white dog on the table.
I think my favorite moments are when the children come up. One little
girl in particular came up to Rowdy as he lay quietly on the grooming
table. She laid her face on his chest and wrapped her arms around his
neck, giving him a sweet, innocent hug full of love and trust. Something
about our Samoyeds just naturally instills faith in their gentle nature.
I don’t think you can ask more than that of a canine companion in life.
Cyndy
PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
April, 2006
It’s Spring!
I love spring. It’s perhaps my favorite season,
watching all the life come back into the yard, greening up after a cold,
grey winter. Spring, in my mind, is the season of rebirth and renewal, of
growth and changes. So when I sat down to write this month’s President’s
Message, I started wondering to myself what you, the club members, wanted
to hear about. What is it that you want out of this club? Surely it’s not
the dubious pleasure of reading my monthly column.
There are only 4 months left in my term as your
club president and I want to leave this position with a healthy, vibrant,
growing club. So how do I do that? This is where you, the club members
come in. Tell me what you want out of the Samoyed Club of Washington
State! I’ve heard that members want meetings to be held at places other
than dog shows. We’ve had a couple, and we got some faces not normally
seen at “show” meetings. I’ve heard that you want fun activities and we
had a dog walk around Green Lake with a lot of attendees (both members and
guests). But what else? This club has members from all walks of life with
all sorts of interests and I, for one, am always interested to learn more
about just about anything. So let’s share!
Thanks to Bo, our Vice President, the April club
meeting at the Timberland show in Centralia was held. Since I’m not
currently showing any dogs right now, I lost track of the show schedules
and by the time I remembered the show (and club meeting), it was too late
for me to drive down to hold a meeting. Thanks Bo!
Our next meeting will be across the mountains on
the Sunday of the Memorial Day weekend in conjunction with the
Spokane/Coeur d’Alene shows. Right after the club meeting, the SCA2006
committee will be gathering. Unfortunately (or not) I probably cannot
attend. You see, after nearly a dozen years “in dogs” I am having my first
litter! YAY! Morrigan is due on May 7th,
which means the pups will still be too young for me to drive over for the
show.
The club also needs volunteers to serve on the
Nominating Committee. This committee, made up of 3 people (one of whom is
may be a Board Member) and 2 alternates who nominate one candidate for
each office and five candidates for the Board positions. And yes, you have
to get them to agree to the nomination first. J The Nominating Committee
presents their report by the end of May (or at the May meeting if
possible) and the Newsletter Editor will publish the nominated slate. At
the July meeting, others can be nominated as well, and the election takes
place at the Annual Meeting in August. This is an important committee, one
that can definitely shape the future of the club. If you’d like to serve,
please contact the Chair of the Nominating Committee, Darlene Rautio as
soon as possible!
Cyndy
Artificial Sweeteners and Pets
This is not something that I have heard of
previously. I've confirmed the information via the American Veterinary
Medical Association:
http://www.avma.org/onlnews/javma/sep04/040901c.asp
Xylitol warning: Sugar free gum, candy, etc.
This is a danger I was unaware of until Friday. Xylitol is a sugar
substitute that is being used now in some sugarless gums and candies as
well as other products. I found a reference to a toothpaste with xylitol,
for example. Xylitol is very toxic to dogs. If I'd known this, I never
would have been casual about leaving a pack of gum lying around the
house, any more than I would be casual leaving a bottle of poison within
their reach.
Please help spread the knowledge of this danger so no dogs have to go
through what mine are even as I type this.
My Keeshonden have been in the emergency vet hospital since Friday
evening after getting into a nearly full pack of Trident sugarless gum.
Worrying about whether that much gum would cause an intestinal
obstruction, I got on-line to check. To my surprise and horror, I found
several articles about Xylitol poisoning in dogs. This substance is not
digested by humans but is by dogs. It causes insulin production and a
resulting drop in the dog's blood sugar. Hypoglycemia is the result,
with possible seizures, coma and permanent liver damage.
Deaths have been reported as well.
http://www.holisticvets.com/NewsLetter/ChewingGum/ChewingGumNewsletter.htm
http://www.aspca.org/site/DocServer/Foss-Tox_Brief-Nov_VT_04.pdf?docID=3781
A quick check showed Xylitol was in the gum my fur boys ate. Off we
went to the emergency vets. Animal poison control was called and their
protocols are being followed to try and prevent liver damage in my dogs.
In less than an hour, my boys' blood sugars were already dropping.
Normal is in the 80 range. My boys were down to 71 and 59 already.
Because I happened to do this check on the gum, having no idea the gum
itself was toxic, it looks like I did get my dogs to the vet in time.
They have been on a dextrose drip since animal poison control was
consulted. The dextrose has done its job, and my dogs have had none of
the complications that go with Xylitol poisoning. We won't be out of the
woods, however, until the drip is removed some time later today
(Sunday). When this happens, we will see how their bodies respond.
Hopefully their blood sugar levels will stabilize and we can put this
nightmare behind us.
Dominos and Dog Food
By Dave Wiley
I am convinced that there is no one better to hang out
on earth with than small children and dogs. Its like you live in a
cartoon. Armed with this fascinating tidbit of information, you save
yourself a lot of time being embarrassed about things because, quite
frankly, you already know upfront you will be embarrassed. So, when I
made the life choice of packing three dogs and two kids into the car for
a trip to Walmart, I already pretty much knew there'd be a story to tell
afterward.
So off we went.... The mission of the trip was simple.
Get dog food, cat food, cat litter, paper towels used primarily for
cleaning up recycled dog food and cat food, and treats, apparently to
pass out when the recycled dog and cat food made it into acceptable
pre-approved disposal areas, like the deck and the litter box. Being
male, I kept the list inside my head instead of writing it down,
primarily because of my stellar past performances of memory escapades
that always made me travel back to wherever it was I just came from
because I forgot something.
The dogs all laid down in the car, the boys were
perched in their car seats, and I drove the four-some odd miles to
Wal-Mart. When we reached the store, amazing gymnastics were performed
to get the two boys out of the car, while keeping the three dogs in the
car. Luckily, I was a pro at this. Someday I will write up the story at
how you become a pro. So, armed with one boy in one arm, and one
baby-seat carrying a boy in the other arm, we tromped into Wal-Mart to
get the variety of animal related products we required.
At the entrance of the Wal-Mart, right next to the 5
billion shopping carts, the Wal-Mart greeter, and the food place that
sells the same rotating hot dogs that have probably been there since the
rotating hot dog machine was installed, sat a GRANDIOUS display of
Easter baskets. My two year old was in heaven. They had Easter baskets
with golf clubs, race car sets, two foot high sponge bobs, and some with
girl stuff in them (funny how when you have two boys you don't even look
at the ones with girl stuff in them). The display consisted of well over
a hundred Easter baskets, all wrapped beautifully in crazy Easter
colored saran wrap. I set my two year old down, and put the baby seat
with baby still attached into the shopping cart.
Aiden took the opportunity to high tail it over to the
baskets. Nolan and I rolled up seconds later with the cart. Aiden had
selected an Easter basket with golf clubs in it, and one with a race
track for his little brother. With all the powers of storytelling I
could muster, I explained how you could not actually buy these Easter
baskets, but that the Easter bunny had rented out the Wal-Mart greeting
area as a storage facility for all his baskets and we would have to wait
until Easter for our particular baskets to show up somewhere in our
homes. I don't think my son bought the story, but he did put back the
baskets so we could proceed to the pet section of the store. I got dog
food, cat food, cat treats, dog biscuits and cat litter while my son
watched approximately forty fish peck on the two dead ones. "Sleeping
daddy?" "Yes, I think he's sleeping Aiden". And we headed off to check
out.
After returning to the car to a chorus of "Thank
Goodness you're back, we've suffered" barks, I loaded all the food into
the car. Then I realized we'd forgotten the paper towels. Thinking
(usually typing the word thinking is sort of where the story turns
somehow into a story) the food would be safe for two minutes, the boys
and I hustled back into the store for the paper towels. Wow, how cool
was this.... Paper towels were just inside the store by the entrance!! I
set Aiden down and grabbed the 24-for-4.99 pack of super-cala-fraga-listic-absorbant-ala-doshious
paper towels and turned back just in time to have a "slow motion"
moment. Slow motion moments are those times in your life when you know
exactly what is going to happen but have absolutely no ability to stop
it. My current "slow motion" moment was watching Aiden once again select
an Easter basket with golf clubs in it, and an Easter basket with a race
track in it for his brother. The only difference now was he'd chosen the
top row of the bleacher section of Easter baskets to pick his selection,
instead of the front row like the first time he'd chosen.
So, now my life shifted into SUPER-SLOW-MOTION..... I
heard myself say "NooOOOooOOooOOOOO!!!" although it sounded more like a
fog horn, and very slowly, one by one, the Easter baskets began toppling
over. They did not stop until all one hundred baskets had taken out each
other and tipped to the floor like dominos. Really though, it wasn't all
one hundred. Aiden was holding two of them, so it was only about 98
baskets.
The Wal-Mart greeter woman turned a nice color of
chartreuse, and all around me I could hear whispers of "Glad that wasn't
my kid". For the next fifteen minutes, I picked up Easter baskets. Now I
noticed all the girl ones. Girls get pretty nice stuff in Easter baskets
too. Aiden said "Do it again Daddy!!" which earned him a spot in the
shopping cart. Finally the baskets were back together with no help from
anyone, and we paid for the paper towels.
Well when we got back to the car, the dog food, the
cat food, the dog biscuits and the cat treats PROBABLY would have been
safe for a few minutes. They might have been safe for five minutes. They
may have even lasted ten minutes.... But twenty minutes is a long time
to leave dogs and food unattended. The inside of the car wreaked of
kibble smell. And I thought the Easter basket fiasco was a mess. I
decided just to put the boys in the car and go home. The front seat of
the car looked like one of those beady things a cab driver puts on his
car. I didn't care. I just sat on it. We went home, crunching going on
the entire time. Nolan, my eight month old, thought the crunching was
uproariously funny, and laughed the whole way home.
By now my wife was home from work, so everyone went in
the house, and I went back out to the car and cleaned up
dog/cat/food/treats for the better part of the evening, separating it
all out into its own piles and redistributing it into the house storage
containers. I'm really looking forward to Easter this year. Maybe we'll
make colored eggs tomorrow. That went so well last year when the dogs
ate all the unguarded eggs. The sad part is, I wasn't the least bit
embarrassed, as I appear to have become immune. I even thought the
Easter basket thing was cool.
Does Your Dog Own You?
You believe every dog is a lap
dog.
If you are cold, you put a sweater on your dog.
You have a picture of your dog in your wallet, but not one of your kids.
You often claim that it was love at first sight with you and your dog.
You have your dog talk to your friends on the phone.
You can’t fully enjoy yourself without your dog.
No matter how large your bed is, it is not large enough for you and your
dog(s).
You spend more on clothes and food for your dog than you do for yourself.
You have no reservations about kissing your dog on the lips, even when you
know where his lips have been.
You believe it is your duty to talk to, pat, and even feed every dog in
the neighborhood. You know their names.
You let the neighbor dog sleep over.
You believe there is no such thing as a naughty dog.
Your vet and grooming bills exceed your rent.
When you need someone to talk to, your dog is your first choice.
You sit on the floor if the dog got in the chair first.
You talk to your dog when you are driving. He answers.
Your dog taught you to fetch and roll over
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