Winter Solstice
Showing posts with label Dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dogs. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2023

Holiday Banana Peanut Butter Dog Treats



Making holiday dog treats shouldn’t take all day. 

These 4 ingredient biscuits are done from start to finish in about 30 minutes.


QUICK AND EASY HOMEMADE DOG TREATS

Making treats for your dog is no more difficult than a batch of holiday cookies. 

Plus, there are so many options when you make them yourself.




It’s a great gift for your dogs, they will think Santa brought these especially for them.






PREP TIME

5 minutes

COOK TIME

18 minutes

TOTAL TIME

23 minutes


INGREDIENTS

  • 3 cups old-fashioned oats (not quick cooking)
  • 1 banana
  • 1/3 cup peanut butter
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tbsp flour, if necessary


INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F (176°C). Line baking sheet with parchment paper or silpat, set aside.
  2. Add oats to the bowl of a food processor.
  3. Let machine run for 2 - 3 minutes, until oats are almost flour consistency with a few big pieces left.
  4. Add peanut butter, banana and egg to food processor.
  5. Mix until dough looks uniform.
  6. Turn the dough out onto the countertop.
  7. If the dough is too sticky to work with - sprinkle the countertop with a tablespoon or two of flour, and work some of the flour from the counter into the dough until it is no longer sticky.
  8. Roll the dough out to roughly 1/8" thick.
  9. Cut treats out with cookie cutter and place on baking sheet. Bake for 16 - 18 minutes, rotate trays halfway through.
  10. Cool completely before giving to your dog.

DOGS WITH DENTAL ISSUES OR SENIOR DOGS

You can bake treats for 14 - 16 minutes for a softer treat. Make sure treats are baked all the way through before removing tray from oven.


You can use the smallest cookie cutter in the set (2") and the recipe will make 90. 

If you use a larger cutter, you will obviously have fewer treats.







Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Dog Comforts Stranger In Airport Who Had Just Lost His Own Pet

The dog's owner asked the man if she was bothering him, and he looked up with a somber face and watery eyes and said "No no; I lost my dog last night."



This traveller's dog has just died and Cora the Corgi showed up. Cora, like dogs in general, seems to have a sixth sense for feeling the pain of others.

"Cora just kind of walked around in our little seating area and said hi to everyone who was walking by and sitting near us," said her owner, Madison Palm.

"She was taking a snooze so I let go of her leash briefly while I relaxed and had a snack; that is when she woke up and snuck over to him. 


"Before I could even call her she was already at his feet being loved on.


"I asked him if she was bothering him and with a sombre face and watery eyes he said, 'No, no; I lost my dog last night.' He scratched behind her ears, patted her on the back and was whispering how cute she was.




"He took out his phone to snap a photo and she sat directly in front of him facing him and staying perfectly still for it." 




Once again, the love and magic of these wonderful animals is so heartwarming.

This is nature and our connection to it.

It is the essence which binds all things together.


Tuesday, May 3, 2016

The bond between owner and dog is so strong that their hearts beat in sync



According to a new study, the bond between an owner and their dog is so strong that their hearts actually beat as one.
An Australian research team found that when a dog and an owner spend time together, their heart rates not only fall, but begin to beat in sync.
So, once again we know that having a dog good for our hearts, it’s good for theirs too.
Three dog owners were separated from their dogs and then later reunited, both humans and dogs were fitted with heart monitors to see how their heart rates were affected.
‘There was a really strong coherence in the heart rate pattern of both the owner and dog,’ lead scientist Mia Cobb told Huffington Post Australia. ‘Upon being reunited, within the first minute each heart rhythm became almost directly aligned and we saw a reduction straight away.’

While the team expected to see the heart rates lowered, they were surprised when they saw that the heart rates mirrored each other so closely.
‘This project is a really good illustration of what most owners experience every night when they come home from work and are reunited with their companion,’ Mia said, adding: ‘This kind of effect of experiencing a lowered heart rate makes a significant difference to our overall wellbeing.’

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Cats, Dogs and the Full Moon


Okay, we know the effect the full moon has on werewolves, but what about cats and dogs?
There have been plenty of studies suggesting that pets get into more mischief and are injured more often when the moon is fullest, but is lunar activity the reason?

The study, authored by Raegan Wells, DVM, and her colleagues at Colorado State University's College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, said there seemed to be a correlation between an increase in emergency room visits for dogs and cats  when there was a full moon.

The study, titled "Canine and feline emergency room visits and the lunar cycle,” appears in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

The data, compiled from case histories of 11,940 dogs and cats treated at the university's Veterinary Medical Center, indicates that the risk of emergencies on fuller moon days was 23 percent greater in cats and 28 percent greater in dogs when compared with other days. The types of emergencies ranged from cardiac arrest to epileptic seizures and trauma, and the increase was most pronounced during the moon's three fullest stages—waxing gibbous, full and waning gibbous.

"If you talk to any person, from kennel help, nurse, front-desk person to doctor, you frequently hear the comment on a busy night, 'Gee is it a full moon?'" said Wells. "There is the belief that things are busier on full-moon nights."

We realize that folklore alone does not make for good science, but the research indicates that this folklore may indeed be based in fact. 

Modern studies have associated the full Moon with insanity, traffic accidents, increased aggression, unintentional poisonings and absenteeism, and the female menstrual cycle, but many of the studies are a mixed bag of results. 

"While the results of our retrospective study indicate that there is an increased likelihood of emergency room visits on the days surrounding a full moon, it is difficult to interpret the clinical significance of these findings," Wells writes.

There has always been the belief that a full moon can effect people and animals causing them to act strangely. In fact, the word ‘Lunatic’ came about due to the belief that the Moon can make one mad.

We have a lot of cats, we have dogs as well, and regardless of what the opponents say, we see that our 4 legged family members are affected to some degree during the full moon.

Because we have some knowledge of ours own cats behavior, we know when things are different.
As a result we get a lot of questions from cat owners about their cats and the full moon! 
“Can a full moon cause cats to act weird?,” “cat meowing more," “cat more crazy than usual during the full moon?,” “cat temperament changes around full moon,” “why are my cats more aggressive during a full moon?"
It's obvious people see something is different with their pets when the full moon is out.

So, we believe there is a full moon behavior having an effect on the feline's circadian rhythm, that is, physiological and metabolic processes that are based on a passage of time, change of season, tidal variations, gravitational cycles and amount of light or darkness. This variation in circadian rhythm presented by the completion of the lunar cycle to full moon, thereby leading to changes in night-time light and gravity, affects the behavior of felines. It is not only felines that get affected, as the same variations of behavior associated with full moon affect dogs and even people in much the same way.

So, what does all this mean for pet owners?

"It serves as a good reminder to remain cognizant of your pet's environment and overall health status, and to avoid situations that would put them in harm's way," Wells said.

This advice includes keeping a closer eye on them near the full moon, when their likelihood of injury explicable peaks.