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On Mar 4, 6:38*pm, bpuharic wrote:
On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. *it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. He was great at first barking at dolphins. Then it got a bit choppy. Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. No way he was gonna get in that boat. I finally had to lift him in. He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. |
#2
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On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. He was great at first barking at dolphins. Then it got a bit choppy. Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. No way he was gonna get in that boat. I finally had to lift him in. He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. we have 2 standard poodles. took 'em to the boat for the 1st time last summer. walked up to the finger pier and the bitch fell right in the water...took about 2 seconds. fortunately she was wearing a harness, or i would have had to go in after her... |
#3
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On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: On Mar 4, 6:38*pm, bpuharic wrote: On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. *it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. He was great at first barking at dolphins. Then it got a bit choppy. Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. No way he was gonna get in that boat. I finally had to lift him in. He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. The way you describe your dog pulling like hell to get away from the evil boat is exactly the way mine acts around cars. Although, she is getting a bit better. She'll now jump into the back seat, after thinking about it a few minutes, if I put her dog food there. I'm thinking something very bad must have happened to her in the car. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H |
#4
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On 3/5/10 3:37 PM, bpuharic wrote:
On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. He was great at first barking at dolphins. Then it got a bit choppy. Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. No way he was gonna get in that boat. I finally had to lift him in. He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. we have 2 standard poodles. took 'em to the boat for the 1st time last summer. walked up to the finger pier and the bitch fell right in the water...took about 2 seconds. fortunately she was wearing a harness, or i would have had to go in after her... Maybe dogs are like people: some like the water, some don't. Many years ago, we were down at a pier at Virginia Beach, watching a charterboat guy clean the fish his customers had caught. He had a "boat cat." The cat was up on the dock with the captain, and the latter cut off small chunks of deboned filet for the cat every few minutes. When all the fish were cleaned, the captain, the cat and the boat took off for their next stop, wherever that was. I mention this because one of our housecats will perch on the edge of the tub if someone is bathing, and sometimes run his paw through the water. The rest of them don't like being near that much water for any reason. -- Which one is the girl? http://tinyurl.com/ycpsnzz |
#5
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On Mar 5, 2:43*pm, John H wrote:
On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: On Mar 4, 6:38*pm, bpuharic wrote: On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. *it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. *He was great at first barking at dolphins. *Then it got a bit choppy. *Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. *Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. *However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. *No way he was gonna get in that boat. *I finally had to lift him in. *He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. *She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. *These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. The way you *describe your dog pulling like hell to get away from the evil boat is exactly the way mine acts around cars. Although, she is getting a bit better. She'll now jump into the back seat, after thinking about it a few minutes, if I put her dog food there. I'm thinking something very bad must have happened to her in the car. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - John, maybe the dog just doesn't like riding in a car. Of course, you could probably take it to a pet psyciatrist and spend thousands of dollars to find the same results too. There's people who do that, y'know.... |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 14:03:32 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
On Mar 5, 2:43*pm, John H wrote: On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: On Mar 4, 6:38*pm, bpuharic wrote: On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. *it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. *He was great at first barking at dolphins. *Then it got a bit choppy. *Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. *Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. *However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. *No way he was gonna get in that boat. *I finally had to lift him in. *He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. *She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. *These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. The way you *describe your dog pulling like hell to get away from the evil boat is exactly the way mine acts around cars. Although, she is getting a bit better. She'll now jump into the back seat, after thinking about it a few minutes, if I put her dog food there. I'm thinking something very bad must have happened to her in the car. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - John, maybe the dog just doesn't like riding in a car. Of course, you could probably take it to a pet psyciatrist and spend thousands of dollars to find the same results too. There's people who do that, y'know.... Hey man, a few thousan is no problem. You got a web site? BTW, it's not my spelling. The letter before 'e' on my keyboar quit working. amn! Now I'll have to buy a new one. Wal-Mart, here I come! -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H |
#7
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On 3/5/10 5:46 PM, John H wrote:
On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 14:03:32 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Mar 5, 2:43 pm, John wrote: On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Mar 4, 6:38 pm, wrote: On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. He was great at first barking at dolphins. Then it got a bit choppy. Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. No way he was gonna get in that boat. I finally had to lift him in. He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. The way you describe your dog pulling like hell to get away from the evil boat is exactly the way mine acts around cars. Although, she is getting a bit better. She'll now jump into the back seat, after thinking about it a few minutes, if I put her dog food there. I'm thinking something very bad must have happened to her in the car. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - John, maybe the dog just doesn't like riding in a car. Of course, you could probably take it to a pet psyciatrist and spend thousands of dollars to find the same results too. There's people who do that, y'know.... Hey man, a few thousan is no problem. You got a web site? BTW, it's not my spelling. The letter before 'e' on my keyboar quit working. amn! Now I'll have to buy a new one. Wal-Mart, here I come! The letter before "E" on your typical keyboard is "W" -- Which one is the girl? http://tinyurl.com/ycpsnzz |
#8
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#10
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On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 18:55:59 -0500, I am Tosk
wrote: In article , says... On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 14:03:32 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Mar 5, 2:43*pm, John H wrote: On Fri, 5 Mar 2010 11:42:53 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: On Mar 4, 6:38*pm, bpuharic wrote: On Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:34:26 -0500, 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. get her some benadryl antihistamines. for a 55 lb dog like i have we give him 1 about an hour before we set out. *it has the same effect on dogs it has on you...it makes you drowzy and calms you down. this was recommended by a vet friend of mine and it seems to work pretty well, rather than giving tranquilizers. Took our young Golden Retriever sailing. *He was great at first barking at dolphins. *Then it got a bit choppy. *Believe me, there is nothing sadder or messier than a seasick dog. The Catahula went sailing with us one day, again, it got choppy and she was miserable looking so sad I had to bring her in. *Once on leash ashore, she was truly happy. *However whenever we approached the dock where the boat was she pulled like hell to get away from that evil boat. Took the retriever canoeing. *No way he was gonna get in that boat. *I finally had to lift him in. *He did not like it. Years ago when I was a kid, our dog always went canoeing with us and loved it. *She'd swim behind the boat and run along the banks. *These days, too many gators, she'd be eaten in a heartbeat. The way you *describe your dog pulling like hell to get away from the evil boat is exactly the way mine acts around cars. Although, she is getting a bit better. She'll now jump into the back seat, after thinking about it a few minutes, if I put her dog food there. I'm thinking something very bad must have happened to her in the car. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - John, maybe the dog just doesn't like riding in a car. Of course, you could probably take it to a pet psyciatrist and spend thousands of dollars to find the same results too. There's people who do that, y'know.... Hey man, a few thousan is no problem. You got a web site? BTW, it's not my spelling. The letter before 'e' on my keyboar quit working. amn! Now I'll have to buy a new one. Wal-Mart, here I come! Wal-mart!? shock. Can't JPS find you one that that was made by well paid union workers, oh, and they have to be happy union workers, in a country where the money is needed more than here, oh, and they.... maybe germapanexico? Scotty Hey, if the guy who leaves his Wal-Mart stickers on his computer calls me the 'WalMart Hippie', I might as well live up to the name. This new keyboard was all of $19.95, for a Microsoft Comfort Curve 2000. For what more could a person ask? D-d-d-d-amn. It works. -- "Your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it, in yourself and in others." (Unknown) John H |
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