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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
On Mar 4, 11:34*am, John H wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mar 4, 12:51*pm, John H wrote:
On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34*am, John H wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On 3/4/10 2:15 PM, Tim wrote:
On Mar 4, 12:51 pm, John wrote: On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34 am, John wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't. My guess is the dog figured out his new msster is a racist. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On 3/4/10 2:20 PM, Harry wrote:
On 3/4/10 2:15 PM, Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 12:51 pm, John wrote: On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34 am, John wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't. My guess is the dog figured out his new msster is a racist. ....posted before I finished the thought: My guess is the dog figured out his new master was a racist, and that Herring was taken him to the ovens. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mar 4, 2:15*pm, Tim wrote:
On Mar 4, 12:51*pm, John H wrote: On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34*am, John H wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You'd think the thing would run out of puke and snot at some point!!!! |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mar 5, 1:47*pm, Loogypicker wrote:
On Mar 4, 2:15*pm, Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 12:51*pm, John H wrote: On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34*am, John H wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You'd think the thing would run out of puke and snot at some point!!!!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Eventually, you'd think so, bu after a while you begen to ask yourself. "How much can that dog hold???" |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 12:01:26 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
On Mar 5, 1:47*pm, Loogypicker wrote: On Mar 4, 2:15*pm, Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 12:51*pm, John H wrote: On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 09:38:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Mar 4, 11:34*am, John H wrote: ...but the damn thing is deathly afraid of being in the car. When put in, she immediately begins over-salivating to the point where the saliva is coming out as long streams. If we go for a very short ride, she will simply sit and drool. We recently went to Stafford, about a twenty-five minute trip. She threw up three times. I've tried several things to get her more comfortable in the car. I'm now feeding her there, and she's finally gotten to where she'll climb into the back seat to eat her food. Before, I'd have to pick her up and put her in the car. When we go for a walk, I put her in the car, drive a couple blocks, park the car, and then walk. Coming home we do the reverse. I've several times taken her out and put her in the car while I climb in and read. The vet has given us some Xanax, but that must be given a half hour before a trip. Plus, I'd rather not have to medicate her. Any ideas out there? Where I launch the boat is more than twenty minutes away, and I don't want to have to clean up her puke when I get there. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white. Sounds to me that you might have to get used to it, John. Then consider boating. I haven't known of any retriever that didn't love to jump into water. Soooo. You'd probably have to leash it into the boat.Then clean up dog puke there too! That doesn't sound like fun. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking, which is why conservatives can see in black and white.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, it probably doesn't.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You'd think the thing would run out of puke and snot at some point!!!!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Eventually, you'd think so, bu after a while you begen to ask yourself. "How much can that dog hold???" When I took it on the twenty mile ride and it puked three times, the first was almost solid, the dog food she'd had an hour or so earlier. The second was about the consistency of wet mud, and the third was just yellow liquid. I expect she'd start dry heaving if I'd taken her on a longer ride. Although, she didn't throw up at all coming home. Maybe she's a three shot dog, and that's it. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H |
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