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Lost Pet Alert – Frank Ortiz Dog Park

 Lost dog (Frank Ortiz dog park)

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© craigslist – Map data © OpenStreetMap

(google map) (yahoo map)

Our sweet but skittish dog, Cowgirl, was last seen on April 5th at the Frank Ortiz dog park in Santa Fe. She is a 50 lb black cattle dog cross with a white belly and white tipped tail.Please contact us ASAP if you have any information about Cowgirl. Her loving family misses her.
five oh five Three 31.5355 or five oh five two two seven.1517

Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – “Riley” Palace Ave. & Cerro Gordo

LOST DOG – REWARD (Palace Ave)LOST DOG Our beloved dog “Riley” was last seen the night of Mon 3/31, near Palace Ave & Cerro Gordo. Has tags and is a white/grey/black, 40 lbs Siberian- husky mix. REWARD   Call: 505.920.1106
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http://santafe.craigslist.org/laf/4403567219.html

 

Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – St. Francis and Rabbit Rd.

Missing 3 1/2 year old, neutered, male “Wilson”. Last seen on March 31st near intersection of Saint Francis and Rabbit Road. He is a mostly black, lab and pit mix. He has a white spot on his chest and white on his paws. His face is freckled with white spots where a porcupine got him. He is very sweet and we miss him. He is micro chipped but did not have his collar on. Please call 505-946-8778.

Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert/Gov. Miles and Richards Ave

Princess Fiona jumped the fence of her parents home on Thursday, March 20th at 11pm and was last seen on Friday, March 21st around 9am from a women who said Fiona jumped into her yard and was playing with her dogs. The woman let her go.
She is a medium sized mixed dog, mostly white with brown patches on her face and a few spots on her back and tail. She is a recent shelter dog and is timid around new people. Contact us immediately!!
Last seen on Monte Carlo near the Community College
Please Call (505)820-0731
or (505)699-0447Please Call (505)699-0447 if you see her.
http://santafe.craigslist.org/laf/4401301885.html
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Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – Blue Heeler/Southside

Escaped from THREE fences. 5 Year old Blue Heeler. His name is JD but not likely to come to it. He is un-neutered male, VERY skittish. JD is a special dog as all of them are. His human’s son was injured in a military accident in North Carolina one month ago. His humans went to take care of their son & his family. When they left they had given JD away to friends but he kept escaping & returning to his home in Pecos. I brought him to my home to prepare him to be shipped to North Carolina. He has been here almost a week when today he decided to leave. He chewed the fence of a 6×12 kennel, dug under a fence & jumped OVER a 5 ft fence.

He is wearing a Turquoise Premier collar, no tag or Microchip as I hadn’t gotten that done yet. He was scheduled to go to the vet on Friday to get shots & health certificate to fly to be reunited with his family.

If you see him do not chase, MAYBE he will come if you sit & call softly. Please call or text me 505.793.5417 with location & I will come immediately. I worry he will try to return to Pecos.

 

Filed Under: News

Coonhound – Espanola Valley Humane Society

 

Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – Warner Circle Area

LOST DOG MESA (2109 Warner Circle)

This morning at 9am a dog jumped an enclosed area at 2109 warner circle from Santa Fe Tails. She is a pit mix who is red and white. She was last seen near the Pantry restaurant. She is friendly and will answer to the name Mesa.
http://santafe.craigslist.org/pet/4369940211.html

Mid size dog, maybe 45 pounds, brown with white face, Shepard/Pitbull mix. Went over 2 fences at Santa Fe Tails, one 9 feet with barbed wire on top. Could possibly be injured, not sure. Last seen at 9am this morning. Please contact Santa Fe Tails at 505-820-0731 if sighted.

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Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – Nambe Area

Filed Under: News

Lost Pet Alert – Entrada de Milagro and Airport Rd.

 Lost mini pinscher (Entrada de Milagro and airport)

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Lost mini pinscher , answers to keiko.Went missing Friday Feb 28.Between Entrada de Milagro and airport rd. Please help if anyone knows or has seen or may have found him.He’s very loved and missed at home and we are very worried about him. Please contact my cell#505 310-9920 thank you

 

Filed Under: News

Dog parks aren’t always the best option

By Linda Lombardi / The Associated Press 
PUBLISHED: Friday, February 21, 2014 at 12:05 am

Visitors and their dogs enjoy a sunny afternoon at the Sepulveda Basin Dog Park in the Encino section of Los Angeles. Problems tend to arise because not everyone recognizes that safe dog play requires human guidance. Even when things are going well, it’s a good idea to regularly check in and let your dog know you’re still there. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)Visitors and their dogs enjoy a sunny afternoon at the Sepulveda Basin Dog Park in the Encino section of Los Angeles. Problems tend to arise because not everyone recognizes that safe dog play requires human guidance. Even when things are going well, it’s a good idea to regularly check in and let your dog know you’re still there. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)

Going to the dog park has become something dog owners think they almost have to do.

“Our society has gone from thinking dog play is fun to thinking dog play is vital,” says Robin Bennett, co-author of “Off-Leash Dog Play: A Complete Guide to Safety and Fun.”

 

But not all dogs are suited to this kind of play, experts say – and even if yours seems to be having a good time, you need to watch closely and keep connected with your dog.

To humans, normal dog play can look rough, with wrestling and body-slamming and face-biting. But that doesn’t mean anything goes. Unfortunately, dogs do get injured and sometimes even killed in dog park fights.

Safe dog play requires human guidance. Trainer Sue Sternberg, who has spent the last few years videotaping and studying dog parks, says, “The subculture in most dog parks is, it’s a dog village, this is their time to be a dog, you don’t interrupt – and that’s a dangerous subculture.”

To keep dog play safe and fun, know when to calm the situation. That should start before you’re even in the park. When dogs run up to the gate and your dog is bouncing with anticipation, don’t enter till your dog settles down and the others lose interest and walk away.

“When your dogs are revved up like that, that arousal and aggression are linked,” says Bennett. “It’s possible for them to get really excited and it spills over into a fight.”

That connection between arousal and aggression is why you should keep a close eye on play and not hesitate to step in. “What keeps a group of dogs safe is timely interruption,” says Sternberg.

So you don’t want to be drinking a latte and chatting, or looking at your phone – unless you’re looking at Sternberg’s dog park app, “Dog Park Assistant,” which helps identify unsafe behaviors.

A few of the play interactions that she considers red flags:

• Group chase. Chase is great exercise, but Sternberg says it’s really only safe when it’s two dogs, not a group.

• Wrestling between two dogs can be good fun, but safe wrestling involves turn-taking – if one dog pins the other for five seconds or more, it’s time to break it up.

• A dog rolling all the way over is usually a sign of over-aroused play, whether it’s caused by impact from another dog or just running out of control.

“If owners see any of those things, that is a cue to go in there and interrupt – physically get close to the dog and touch and reconnect,” Sternberg says.

Even when things are going well, it’s a good idea to regularly check in and let your dog know you’re still there.

“There’s no harm in interrupting, as long as it’s not punitive,” Sternberg says. “Go in, get your dog and move away. No harm done, and what a great thing to reconnect to your dog.”

Snarling and teeth bared usually indicates play is getting too rough, too intense. Problems tend to arise because not everyone recognizes that safe dog play requires human guidance. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)Snarling and teeth bared usually indicates play is getting too rough, too intense. Problems tend to arise because not everyone recognizes that safe dog play requires human guidance. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)

Recognize signs of distress. If a dog yelps, don’t assume it’s an accident – it indicates your dog is in trouble, as does a tucked tail. “A dog that tucks its tail, even if it’s momentary, feels vulnerable,” says Sternberg.

Sometimes dogs are asking for help and owners don’t realize it. “There’s a kind of jumping up that’s, ‘Hello, can you not see I’m freaking out here? Take me home!’ ” says Bennett. “Owners tend to ignore that, thinking the dog is being annoying, but the dog is asking for help.”

And if your dog is hiding – getting between your legs, using you as a barrier, or getting under a bench or table – take the hint.

“So often owners yank their dog out from under the picnic table and go, ‘Really, it’s fun! Go play,’ ” says Bennett. “That dog is hiding for a reason.”

A small dog in the Sepulveda Basin Off Leash Dog Park is greeted by other dogs upon their arrival to the park in the Encino section of Los Angeles. To keep dog play safe and fun, you need to recognize when to calm the situation, and this should start before you’re even in the park. When dogs run up to the gate and your dog is bouncing with anticipation, don’t enter till your dog settles down and the others lose interest and walk away. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)A small dog in the Sepulveda Basin Off Leash Dog Park is greeted by other dogs upon their arrival to the park in the Encino section of Los Angeles. To keep dog play safe and fun, you need to recognize when to calm the situation, and this should start before you’re even in the park. When dogs run up to the gate and your dog is bouncing with anticipation, don’t enter till your dog settles down and the others lose interest and walk away. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)

Your dog may be great with some dogs and not others. Dogs have different play styles – some like to body-slam, some like to chase, some like to be chased – and while there’s no intrinsically bad style, there are bad pairings. Sternberg’s app has a cast of the characters you’ll see over and over again, and indicates which combinations make for good play.

There are also dogs who are better off avoiding group play entirely, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

“There are dogs who are the greatest dogs in the world, great canine citizens, great with people, and simply shouldn’t be with other dogs,” says Sternberg. “And that’s far better than being the other way around: great with other dogs and you bite all people that you see.”

Remember that the park is not the only way to meet your dog’s needs – and it’s not necessarily the best, says Sternberg: “The most important playmate for a dog is their owner, because play is so enriching, is such a bonding event, is so healthy for mind, body and spirit – and the most important creature your dog can play with is you.”

Filed Under: News

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