Saturday, April 23, 2011

Dog Massage? Isn’t Petting Enough?

Renee Lane's living room had been transformed into a spa. Candles twinkled on the coffee table; lavender oil scented the air; lilting guitar music played softly on the stereo. Grace, Ms. Lane’s 2-year-old caramel-colored toy poodle, leaped onto the sofa and, in response to Ms. Lane’s cooing invitation (“Want to lay down for Mama?”), got into position for her evening massage.

Ms. Lane took a deep breath and began making long stroking motions down the length of Grace’s back with her palms. With her thumbs, she kneaded the tissue around the dog’s delicate shoulders, and then began working her way toward the muscles in the dog’s legs. By the time the 20-minute massage session was done, Grace had entered a state of canine bliss, eyelids drooping, tongue lolling.

“Grace absolutely loves it — she just turns into a puddle,” said Ms. Lane, 43, a public relations and business development consultant in Edgewater, N.J. “I want to keep her around as long as I can, and I think it’s going to keep her healthy. She helps reduce my stress, so why shouldn’t I reciprocate?”

That is a question that a number of dog owners — and even some cat owners — have been asking themselves, buoyed by a belief that pet massage confers the same benefits as human massage: increased circulation, improved digestion, strengthened immunity, stress relief, comfort at the end of life and muscle relaxation after a hard day (even if it was spent at the dog park).

Some pet owners scoff at this idea. What’s wrong with regular old petting? they ask. And many veterinarians say that evidence of its benefits is flimsy. Nonetheless, pet massage workshops have flourished in recent years at pet stores, dog day-care centers, veterinary clinics, animal hospitals, massage schools and holistic institutes like the New York Open Center in Manhattan, where Ms. Lane and more than 75 other dog owners took a one-day class last summer.

“People realize more and more that what’s good for me, including massage, is probably good for my animal,” said Jean-Pierre Hourdebaigt, an animal massage therapist and teacher in Wellington, Fla., whose book “Canine Massage: A Complete Reference Manual” is considered the standard text.

“Today, you also have the baby boomers whose kids are gone,” Mr. Hourdebaigt said. They “have more time and money, and it’s easy for them to spend a couple hundred bucks on a massage seminar for their dog. The animal benefits, the benevolent action makes them feel good. Everybody’s happy.”

By most estimates, only a few of the nation’s pet dogs and cats — which the American Pet Products Association estimates at 78.2 million and 86.4 million, respectively — are fortunate enough to receive massages. But the numbers may be growing. The International Association of Animal Massage and Bodywork, a professional group in Toledo, Ohio, now has more than 500 members, up from just 200 in 2007. And a survey of more than 1,200 pet owners across the United States and Canada by the American Animal Hospital Association in Lakewood, Colo., found that the number who were pursuing alternative therapies for their animals — including acupuncture, massage, chiropractic and herbal medicine — rose to 21 percent from 6 percent between 1996 and 2003. (It may still be rising; the survey was discontinued after 2004.)

Many pet owners interested in massage hire professionals to perform the treatment. But the D.I.Y. approach — in which pet owners like Ms. Lane learn the techniques themselves — also seems to be gaining in popularity, as Mr. Hourdebaigt maintains. At the Northwest School of Animal Massage in Fall City, Wash., 170 people took the basic amateur workshop last year; eight years ago, only 24 people enrolled. At the Boulder College of Massage Therapy in Colorado, enrollment in a similar class has jumped 30 percent in the last two years.

Becky Brandenburg, an animal-massage practitioner and teacher in Martins Ferry, Ohio, said she started offering occasional workshops for pet owners last year, but now plans to offer them monthly. “Every time I announce a class, it’s filled within a day or two,” Ms. Brandenburg said. “It’s really taken off.”

The origins of pet massage can be traced to equine massage, a treatment popularized in the 1970s and ’80s by Jack Meagher, a massage therapist who worked with the United States equestrian team. By the early 1990s, a handful of people experienced in human or equine massage, or both, had begun adapting Mr. Meagher’s technique for use on dogs and cats.

Sometimes, it is veterinarians who suggest the practice to pet owners. Nanci Sloan Cummings, a mortgage loan officer in Lake Oswego, Ore., said she was urged by her veterinarian to try massage for her 12-year-old arthritic collie, Baxter. Although in his sprightlier days the dog could trek several miles, by last year he was able to walk only a couple of blocks. To see if she could help him become more limber, Ms. Cummings took a three-hour massage workshop at a dog day-care center in January.

Nearly every evening since then, she has put down a cushioned mat near the ficus tree and potted fern in the living room of her three-bedroom house, and performed the routine she learned: kneading, squeezing, stroking and tapping Baxter.

“At night, when I watch ‘American Idol,’ I’ll sit on the floor and massage him to the music,” Ms. Cummings said. “It’s very distressing to see your aging animal suffer, and very rewarding to think that maybe you can help him feel better. I think just the attention and affection, if nothing else, is helpful.”

But there are plenty of veterinarians who believe that massage offers little beyond the attention and affection. They note that few clinical studies of pet massage have been conducted, and that claims of its benefits are usually extrapolated from research on humans. At best, they say, pet massage fortifies the bond between human and animal in the same way that a good belly scratch does, and at worst, it may aggravate a serious medical condition or prevent owners from seeking veterinary help.

“I have two dogs, and I pet them all the time,” said David W. Ramey, a veterinarian in the Chatsworth area of Los Angeles, and a co-author of “Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Considered,” a book that looks at the science behind various alternative therapies for pets. “I think everybody should pet their dogs. But I don’t refer to that as ‘massage,’ and I certainly wouldn’t send anyone to a glorified school of dog petting.”

Narda Robinson, a veterinarian at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, has a more benign view. Dr. Robinson, who established a canine medical massage course at the university in 2008, believes that massage, properly administered, can help dogs recover from illness, injuries and stress. And while massage classes for dog owners are largely unregulated and of varying quality, she said, they can be helpful as long as they are “based on actual science, rather than lost in mysterious energies.”

For many pet owners, though, the goal is not therapeutic — it’s just to make their dogs feel good.

One recent Sunday afternoon, several people showed up for an advanced canine massage class at My Dog’s Place, a training school in Mystic, Conn., along with their charges: a miniature dachshund, a Rhodesian Ridgeback, a cocker spaniel and a few others. The dogs sniffed their hellos, then settled on blankets on the floor, and Suzin Webb, who teaches about 15 such courses a year, began her instruction.

For two hours, the students worked the muscles along their dogs’ spines, stretched their limbs, rolled the dogs’ skin between their fingers and gently tugged their tails. By the end of the class, none of the dogs seemed particularly eager to move.

The miniature dachshund, 13-year-old Wylie Angelo, lay on his back, tongue out, limbs splayed. His owner, Cricket Murphy, a 67-year-old aesthetician, had taken Ms. Webb’s beginners’ class three years earlier to help Wylie Angelo heal from disk surgery. Since then, she has been massaging him every morning.

Their ritual takes place in the bedroom of her house overlooking Long Island Sound in Niantic, Conn. Ms. Murphy fetches a dish of water and a homemade cranberry biscuit for the dog, and then the two sit on Ms. Murphy’s king-size bed, she with her back against the headboard and Wylie Angelo in front of her on a down pillow. She begins the massage by rubbing his belly with rose ointment.

Ms. Murphy said she believes that this daily routine has improved Wylie Angelo’s mobility and bolstered his circulation. But she is more certain about other benefits.

“He goes straight to la-la land,” Ms. Murphy said. “It’s a very quieting time for us. We’re in bed together, he’s propped up on a pillow, and pretty soon, he’s just in the zone.”

Sit, Stay, Relax

Jean-Pierre Hourdebaigt, a teacher and practitioner of canine massage, recommends that pet owners interested in learning the technique enroll in a class, study a textbook like his “Canine Massage: A Practical Guide” or watch one of the many instructional DVDs on the topic. He also offered a few pointers.

• Start with light pressure. “Most people have so much power in their hands, they don’t realize that it can be too much for some animals,” Mr. Hourdebaigt said. Only if the dog seems comfortable should the pressure be increased.

• Maintain an even speed. “If you’re erratic — starting fast, slowing down, getting fast again — the animal worries too much,” he said. “If you maintain one stroke per second, whether you’re doing gentle kneading or friction, the animal can relax in the flow of the rhythm.”

• Place the pet on a table to keep your own posture comfortable. “If you massage on the floor on your knees, you will get sore knees and a sore back, which makes you tense up and makes the whole experience more negative,” he said.

• Avoid massaging the animal with other animals nearby. “If you have several dogs in your house, and take one particular dog aside and isolate him on the table while the others are having fun, he’ll feel like he’s missing out on something and won’t relax.”

• Learn palpation, a technique of touching aimed at discovering abnormalities. “Any time you feel unusual heat, puffiness or swelling on the animal, back off,” Mr. Hourdebaigt said. And before doing any massage on the suspect spot, ask a veterinarian.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Tibetan Terrier Molly missing in Concord, California

Molly, a beautiful Tibetan Terrier, who lives in Concord, California is missing. Please pass this information on to friends in the area.

Here are the details on her escape....

Our back gate was accidentally left open and we didn't realize she was missing until she was gone. Three of us drove around for about an hour tonight and found no sign of her.

She is a white and black/gray Tibetan Terrier. She is an important member of our family and we hate the thought that she is out there tonight ALONE!

We live close to Baldwin Park near Port Chicago Highway. I'm hoping your readers can keep an eye out for her. She got a bath today so unfortunately she did not have her collar on, but she is chipped.

Hopefully Molly will make it home very soon!

If you've seen her, or know where she is located, please email mayorofclaycord@yahoo.com

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Hannah and Her (Twin) Brother

Above: My daughter Sadie as drawn by Hannah

I think you know my daughter Sadie lives with Grammy Jill and PaPa in a lake community in Michigan. When we visit Sadie we love to go on float boat rides and long walks.

One day when we were walking around the north point of the lake we met Hannah and her twin brother, their little brother and their mom and dad. You see, they had been watching Sadie for a long time as she walked around the lake and across the golf course with Grammy Jill. Many times they had thought about stopping their car and introducing themselves to Sadie and Grammy Jill. You see, they thought Sadie was awfully cute and wanted to know all about her.

Hannah and her entire family happened to all be in their front yard (unloading groceries from the minivan or some such thing) on the day Sadie and Angus and Roxie and I strolled past. Hannah and her twin bother ran to the curb and introduced themselves and gave us lots of love. Little brother and mom and dad followed and everyone had a very nice time.

Well this chance encounter developed into a very nice relationship. Sadie soon introduced Grammy Jill to Hannah and her entire family. Now Sadie sometimes gets to visit Hannah when Grammy Jill has another engagement and doesn't want to leave Sadie home alone.

Now Every time we pass Hannah's house, Sadie tries to drag us to the front door.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Rachel, Rachel

I have a new friend and pen pal and her name is Rachel. You see, I met Rachel and her parents at the Ritz Carlton in Chicago on the very same weekend that Rufus became the youngest Grand Champion in the history of the world. You know when he took Best of Breed at the Tibetan Terrier Club of America's supported entry at the International Kennel Club. Am I repeating myself? I really must pick up some Gingko.

Well, would you believe, Rachel is getting her very own Deep Acres Tibetan Terrier pup and she's busy researching everything so that everything is just perfect for her new pup. You see, Rachel is like that. She's a very thoughtful and enterprising young woman.

Dear Ms. Suddie:
I am very excited about the new dog! My mom has a jar that my family is filling up with money for the dog and for what it needs. I have thought of names and I like Luna and Harriet the best. I would like to know what Tibetan Terriers eat? What do Tibetan Terriers like to play with? By the way Angus is realy cute! I can't wait to have a dog like Angus.
Sincerely,
Rachel


Dear Rachel,
How great to get your note. It makes me feel good that one of my pups is going to be lucky enough to come live with a thoughtful girl like you. I wanted to send you this picture of Angus in his winter hat. I think he would look very smart walking next to you in that snazzy winter coat of yours (the one your mom saw in a magazine and sent a buyer to New York City to get just for you). Would you mind sending me a picture of you in that coat? I would love to put it on my blog along with your note.

I love both the names! Luna and Harriet! When I was younger I loved the book Harriet the Spy. Have you read it? After I read it I put together a spy kit and spent the next few weeks spying through all our neighbors windows. They were really happy when I moved on to my next thing. Well not really happy cause my next thing was selling what I thought was rhubarb door to door. You see there was a plant that grew on the bank behind our house and it looked very much like rhubarb. Luckily my mom (Or someone, I think my mom might have actually been out playing tennis in a very short skirt) intervened and no harm was done.

But I digress, don't I. We dogs love to eat a dog food called Wellness Core. It's grain-free and we like that. I think we will probably feed the puppies Wellness Puppy food, but I haven't decided on that for sure. I like to always be on the lookout for the most nutritious best puppy food out there. With our last litter of pups, we fed them Holistic Select Puppy food. I will keep you posted on this and as we get closer to the time your puppy is ready to come home to you I will send you a Puppy Info Packet that I put together that contains lots of good advice on bringing up puppy.

We dogs also love good ole' Milk Bone biscuits. We can't get enough of them. Our favorite chew toy in a synthetic bone made by WagWear that comes in lots of cool flavors like peanut butter, cashew, and pistachio. We seem to agree that the peanut butter is best followed by pistachio. I get them at a store in Dallas called Tails of the City. Nancy, the owner there, used to have two Tibetan Terriers. One was named Yankee Doodle Dandy cause he was born on the Forth of July. They called him Doodles. Anyway, Nancy is a hoot and I am sure she would send you a few WagWear bones once your jar starts to fill up.

Did you know that I love pasta. I'm only allowed a little bit though. Check it out:Suddie Loves, Suddie Loves, Suddie Loves Pasta
And check this out for some of my pups favorite toys:
Pups Favorite Toys
Hope to hear from you again soon.
Suddie and Roxie and ESPECIALLY Angus


Dear Ms. Suddie:
Thank you for the information and the pictures of Angus. Angus is now the background picture on our computer.

I haven't read Harriet the Spy but it sounds interesting. I think I will pick one up the next time we go to Barnes and Noble. Right now I'm reading Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. I recieved some exciting news last week. I'm now in the accelerated reading program at my school. I'm reading with the junior high kids. Finally something a little more challenging.

By the way my dogs Mabel and Spencer like pasta. They like penne pasta and I love bow tie with olive oil and garlic.

Mom helped me attach pictures of me in my coat. She had trouble deciding which pictures to send. I told her to assume they were all good. She laughed and told me to go look up the words ego and then humble.
Sincerely,
Rachel
(P.S. I am going to ask my mom to make me pasta tonight.)

And today I was lucky enough to hear from Rachel again!!

Dear Ms. Suddie:
We are going to make the cake from your blog. I bet it will be delightful to our tastebuds. My mom and I can't wait to bake the cake this weekend.

I have a recipe for a chocolate mug cake and I will put it in this note:

4 T. flour
4T. sugar
2T. cocoa
1 egg
3 T. milk
3 T. oil (we like to use EVOO)
5 - 6 T. chocolate chips
2 drops vanilla exract
1 large mug

Add dry ingredeints and mix well. Add egg and mix well. Pour in milk and oil and mix well. Add chocolate chips and vanilla and mix well. Cook in microwave for 3 minutes on high. Cake will rise above top of mug so don't be alarmed. Allow to cool a little then tip onto plate. Serve with ice cream.
Enjoy!
Rachel
PS - I like the picture of Angus on the book.


I LIKE RACHEL

Thursday, April 14, 2011

(Back) Cover Boy

My boy, Angus, was selected to appear on the back cover of the Tibetan Terrier Association of the UK's Year Book which hit the shelves at Crufts just a few weeks ago. Crufts is the world's largest dog show. No longer purely a dog show, Crufts celebrates every aspect of the role that dogs play in our lives.

It has changed in ways that couldn’t possibly have been imagined when the show was set up in Victorian times by the late Charles Cruft. Although it was a very different event in 1891 Charles Cruft was a great showman and would surely have enjoyed the size and scope of the event today, which is an essential date in any dog lover’s calendar.

The dog show is still an important part of the event, celebrating the unique relationship that dogs share with their owners. Judges are trained to ensure that only healthy dogs win prizes, which in turn encourages the breeding of healthy dogs. But the event is now about so much more besides.

Crufts is ultimately a celebration of all dogs. It celebrates working dogs, which are fit and healthy enough to perform the jobs for which they were originally bred, such as those in the Gamekeeper classes or which line up for the Police Dog Team Operational and Humanitarian Action of the Year award, and it hails hero dogs through the Friends for Life competition. Rescue dogs are celebrated in the rescue dog agility competition and the speed and agility of dogs is celebrated in the ever popular competitions of Flyball and Heelwork to Music.

For prospective dog owners and dog lovers, Crufts is a prime opportunity to talk to Kennel Club Accredited Breeders, rescue charities and breed experts about how to responsibly buy, train and enjoy life with your dog.

And of course, with hundreds of trade stands selling anything and everything for dogs and dog lovers, it is a shopping extravaganza!

Crufts is proud to welcome visitors from all over the world and have arranged a lounge especially for overseas visitors.

Anywho... Angus is credited in the Year Book as American Champion Deep Acres Cream of the Crop. I hear that my dear friend Ella, from the Isle of Skye, graced the back cover last year. I won't go on about how wonderful Angus is, how he has always been destined for stardom, etc, etc...

I mean, anyone who has a Facebook account knows how tremendously tedious that can be.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Do you believe in Magic?

Well, I don't pay much attention to Horoscopes. I didn't even know my zodiac sign until a few minutes ago. I'm a Gemini by the way. I also have a positive polarity! Can anyone tell me what that means?

You see, I was flipping through the Round Town News when I landed on the Horoscopes page written by Kenny Corris.

Gemini: The power of positive thinking sets you in the right direction right now. This surely is a testing time and you know that you have to be sure before you take things further afield. The attitude of those who really have your interests at heart will be something rather wonderful, and you can begin to dump negative energies you have developed for the sake of both, vital and adequate protection.

No idea, really, what Kenny was trying to tell me, but I kept reading. My tail stood straight up. Turns out Kenny has been in contact with a Tibetan Terrier on the other side of the Rainbow Bridge. An angel?

"One client wanted to make contact with Charlie one day. After opening doors and channelling energy to facilitate this I was initially upset that clear communication was not getting the audible response that was called for. I suddenly realised that Charlie was a dog. A Tibetan Terrier to be precise, and my client knew that there was actual contact with her departed pet when I recognised the breed! Then a little bell could be heard. Charlie had a bell on his collar to warn away the squirrels that he loved to chase in the garden. Sound and picture, loud and clear from the Spirit Realms! One very happy lady left my office that day."

It turns out Kenny Corris is a working Medium, Clairvoyant, Psychic, and Astrologer, a Healer, Psychic surgeon, Teacher, Therapist and Life Coach with over forty years of experience.

He studied Astrology with the late and great Carole Golder, Astrologer to the U.K. Daily Express for many years, and he has been casting horoscopes himself for some thirty years.

Kenny currently writes articles for a growing number of publications, including the Round Town News on the Costa Blanca in Spain, and casts Horoscopes internationally for the World’s press, on a regular basis.

No stranger to broadcasting; Kenny’s first break was with Molly Parkin on her “Good Golly Miss Molly” show on BBC Wales. He has made appearances on Thames TV, with Robert Kilroy Silk. And has guested on TVam, Anglia, and STC, as well as W.I.O.D. Miami where he presented daily horoscope readings and forecasts. Currently Kenny is a weekly guest on Coast Radio FM’s Friday afternoon show, on the Costa Blanca.

Dividing his time between private sittings and castings and a host of personal appearances, Kenny always enjoys demonstrating his abilities publicly, speaking to groups and organizations, promoting spirituality wherever and whenever in a down to earth and practical manner.

Kenny runs a number of workshops and courses throughout the year on spiritualist matters.

This winter Kenny visits New York to demonstrate on tour. He has also been invited to Madrid, Barcelona, Bergen, London, St Ives, and Southern California to run workshops and courses.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Sh-Sh-Sh-Sherpa, Beautiful Sherpa

Sherpa, CH Deep Acres Autumn Splendor

Today is my boy's, Sherpa's, 18-month birthday. He lives in the state of Connecticut where, apparently, dogs are allowed on the dining room table.

I so want to live in Connecticut.

Instead of singing that tired old birthday song, won't you join me in a round of Sh-Sh-Sh-Sherpa, Beautiful Sherpa (sung to the tune of K-K-K-Katy, Beautiful Katy). I'm sure you know this old ditty.

"K-K-K-Katy" was a popular World War I-era song written by Geoffrey O'Hara in 1917 and published in 1918. The sheet music advertised it as "The Sensational Stammering Song Success Sung by the Soldiers and Sailors," reflecting a time when speech impediments could be poked fun at—albeit gentle fun in this case. The song tells the story of Jimmy, a young soldier "brave and bold," who stuttered when he tried to speak to girls. Finally he managed to talk to Katy, the "maid with hair of gold."

Sh-Sh-Sh-Sherpa, Beautiful Sherpa
You're the only b-b-b-boy that I adore
When the m-moon shines over the cowshed,
I will meet you at the k-k-k-kitchen door