The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too

Friday, October 30, 2015

Meet Hank the Obese Pooch Who Travels First Class


An obese dog was wheeled on to an American Airlines flight and treated like a king first-class style this week, as onlookers stood by, amazed at the pampered pooch's size.

The dog, named Hank, then sat in the front row of first class on the LAX flight on Saturday, with his owner, Kari Whitman, an interior designer who founded Ace of Hearts Dog Rescue in Beverly Hills, California.

Due to an illness, Hank, who is Whitman's support animal, has gained weight and can only move with the aid of his luxurious, pillow-topped cart.

A fellow passenger of the flight out of Los Angeles took a photo of the dog and uploaded it to Twitter under the username @madeleinedoux.

The photo has been retweeted more than 4,200 times.

Hank seems indifferent in the photo, as several American Airlines employees gathered around to admire the dog and take photos.

It appears that this isn't Hank's first flight, however, as there is an Instagram for the dog, @hankthetank, that shows him traveling with his owner.

On the feed he is seen at Denver International Airport, lying next to his padded cart, and in another photo Whitman took a selfie with the pooch while in the air, captioned, 'Hank flying first class from Denver to LA'.

In an interview with Mashable, @madeleinedoux said it appeared that Whitman had bought two first class tickets on the LA flight - one for her and one for Hank.

“Everyone, both while boarding the plane and on the plane before takeoff, was speculating as to how the dog got so fat,” she said. “You could legitimately hear hushed whispers of "He's riding first class.”

The traveler added, however, that Hank stayed quiet for the entire flight and spent most of his time on the floor in front of his seat.

A very large dog named Hank was wheeled on to a an American Airlines flight on Saturday as onlookers admired his size


Hank, who is a support dog for interior designer Kari Whitman (right), rode in the front row of first class alongside his owner


Hank has an illness that limits him to his wheeling bed. He appears to travel regularly with Whitman, who bought two tickets for the LAX flight on Saturday



In the Denver International Airport earlier this year, several fellow travelers gathered around Hank to take photographs



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George Clooney and wife Amal, Adopt an Adorable Basset Hound from an Animal Shelter


George and Amal Clooney have a new addition to their family - a cute basset hound mix named Millie.

The happy couple adopted the four-year-old rescue pup from San Gabriel Valley Humane Society shelter on Wednesday.

Millie was found homeless and begging for scraps outside a restaurant earlier this month, and was taken in by the shelter.

According to the website, George, 54, and Amal, 37, 'were searching for a basset hound and saw Millie’s picture on Petfinder'.

They also have a Cocker Spaniel, named, Louie, another rescue. They made sure that the two pooches got along before making the adoption official.

They did a "meet and greet" with her and spent time introducing her to their other rescue.

It was good news that Millie and Louie hit it off and the happy, new family headed home together!'

George has made no secret of his love of animals over the years, and is also a pet parent to a cocker spaniel mix named Einstein. 

The senior dog, who the actor says has 'a beautiful life', features in the newly released book My Old Dog: Rescued Pets with Remarkable Second Acts.

George adopted Einstein in 2010, and had been nervous that the pooch wouldn't take to him during their first meeting.

“I start to panic that Einstein is not going to like me,” he previously admitted to Esquire. “So I ran into the kitchen, grabbed some turkey meatballs, and I rub them all over my shoes,” He said.
George has also admitted he had a pet pig named Max who died at the age of 18 in 2006.

New addition to the family: George and Amal Clooney adopted rescue pup Millie, a basset hound mix, from San Gabriel Valley Humane Society shelter on Wednesday. They are also seen here with their rescue dog Louie



Cool customer: The four-year-old pooch was sadly found begging for scraps of food outside a restaurant earlier this month



Animal lovers: Both of the couple's other dogs - Einstein and Louie - are rescues. They are pictured here visiting George on set of Money Monster in April
  
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Homeward Trails Animal Rescue, Arlington, Virginia, Needs Your Help with an Urgent Puppy Situation – Please Share


From: Homeward Trails Animal Rescue, Arlington, Virginia

We have an URGENT puppy situation! We are trying to save this litter of 6 week old Border Collie mix puppies TOMORROW. Their mother was killed after being hit by a car and these little ones are stuck in a high kill shelter and have to get out tomorrow if we are going to save them! We are looking for 4 fosters to take 2 puppies each. (The puppies are young and must go out in pairs - much easier to care of for puppies in pairs as well, as they entertain themselves!) If you can help or send an email to HTARAlicia@gmail.com. We're in a time crunch and really want to save these lives! Please help!








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Thursday, October 29, 2015

Today is National Cat Day


Your kitten will probably mark the day with a nap, a romp with a paper bag, a nibble of kibble and another nap.

But you can be as ambitious or as low-key as you like with your own National Cat Day celebrations.

Watch cat videos in a big way

Consumption of internet cat videos is bound to spike on National Cat Day. The Internet Cat Video Festival will showcase the best of the best on October 29 at 7:30 at the Berklee Performance Center in Boston.

The event, which launched in 2012 at the Walker Art Center, is a live showing of a curated collection of about 100 cat clips -- from Vine videos to short films. Admission is $8 in advance and $12 on the day of the event.

Adopt a feline or treat a cat to something nice
















National Cat Day organizers want cats to find good homes, and the occasion is a fine time to consider adopting a cat from a shelter or pet rescue organization.

Volunteering at a local shelter or donating blankets, pet food and toys are also nice ways to celebrate the kitties of the world. #!celebrate/c1x0f

Uber is delivering 15-minute kitten cuddles ($30) to offices in 50 cities, and the kitties in most of the cities are eligible for adoption.


Have a warm beverage at a cozy cat café


Cat Town Café in Oakland, California, is a non-profit rescue operating in partnership with Oakland Animal Services.


The space features a cafe and separate cat zone where between six and 20 adoptable cats roam freely. Food and beverages from the cafe can be brought into the cat zone, where up to 14 people are allowed to get to know the felines each hour.

Walk-ins are welcome, but Cat Town recommends reservations, which are available with a $10 donation.



Curl up on the couch

Revel in your role as warm furniture as you and your feline peruse cat books together.

Take some inspiration from "Artists and Their Cats,"featuring human-kitty pairings, including Salvador Dali with his pet ocelot Babou and Matisse with sleek black stunner la Puce (the flea).

Then dive into the hard-hitting "Cats on the Job", which profiles felines who don't have time to lounge around looking at cat books.

While your cozy companion is sleeping, tune in to DVRed episodes of "My Cat From Hell" on Animal Planet and catch up with the Internet's most famous felines.



Take a nap
It's been a busy day. Rest up.


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Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Today is National Pet Fire Safety Day


In honor of National Pet Fire Safety Day, Center for Pet Safety has put together the following list of practical tips and free downloads to help families prevent pets from causing fires. Being prepared for any emergency is mission critical and will help you save the life of your family and your pets. Please take a moment and learn how Center for Pet Safety helps you be prepared.

Window Clings and Identification – Installing a window cling on the front window of your home is a simple way to help to notify First Responders that your pets are inside. However, that’s not everything you’re going to need in an emergency. You should also keep ample identification aids (including images of you with your pet and microchip id), medical records, and county registration records in an easy to access off-site location – like a neighbor’s house. Also the contact information of veterinary, and the nearest emergency veterinarian is something to keep with your records. While you’re at it, think about keeping a copy in your vehicle glove box too – because accidents happen.

Center for Pet Safety’s PAWS UP for Safety® program has a link to download a free vet record book. http://www.centerforpetsafety.org/pet-parents/paws-up-for-safety/vet-record-booklet/

To read more on this story, click here: Today is National Pet Fire Safety Day
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Sunday, July 12, 2015

Circus Cats: Meet the Amazing Acro-Cats and Rock Cats


To train a cat to balance on a ball and walk it forward, you will need a weighted ball, a track to place it on, a hand-held clicker and lots of kitty treats. Each time the cat masters part of the process — standing on the ball, say, or learning to walk backward to make the ball advance — you make a clicking noise while delivering a treat. It takes time, patience and a willing cat.

“You start very small,” said Samantha Martin, ringleader of the Amazing Acro-Cats, a 14-cat circus that is coming to New York City next week for the first time. “Some tricks take weeks to train, some take just minutes.”

She should know. Ms. Martin’s cats, who will play one-hour shows from July 16 through 19 at the Muse Brooklyn, are trained to do highly non-catlike things: Tuna, the lead performer, rings a cowbell; Alley, who holds the Guinness World Record for longest cat jump (six feet), plies her specialty; Sookie pushes a shopping cart across the stage, unless she is distracted by shiny objects or finds the stage too warm, in which case she lies down.

The show ends with the Rock Cats, a six-piece band whose members play free-form on a miniature guitar, drum set and other instruments. Except when they don’t.

“I am pretty much at the mercy of what they want to do,” said Ms. Martin, who is in her late 40s and has been training animals from a tender age. The performance, she said, “is never the same, because the cats lead the show.”

Ms. Martin is based in Chicago but drives her circus around the country in a painted bus reminiscent of the Partridge Family’s. Until now, she has avoided New York for fear of maneuvering the bus in the city.

She got her start at 10, teaching simple tricks to her family’s yellow Labrador, Boots. As a teenager, she became enamored of rats.

“At one point, I had a rat trained to drive up to my dollhouse in a little tiny fire truck, go up a ladder, retrieve a doll and bring the doll down into an ambulance,” Ms. Martin said. But her first attempt at a pet circus, the Amazing Acro-Rats, was not a commercial success, for obvious reasons. “I couldn’t make a living with rats,” she said.

Then Ms. Martin migrated to fowl. “I had a chicken that played the piano, a duck that played the drums and a goose that played the guitar” using their beaks, she said. “Poultry is remarkable to work with — they learn very quickly.” But along came avian flu, and people stopped turning out to see this act.

Ms. Martin switched to cats roughly 10 years ago, training shelter cats that she adopted and fostered. All the performers are her pets. When they are not jumping through hoops, climbing ropes or pushing wheelbarrows onstage, Ms. Martin’s cats are prized by television directors and have appeared in commercials for brands like Target and Purina.

“My cats are excellent on set,” Ms. Martin boasted. “They just move in — they are accustomed to the stage.”

Part of her message is familiar in cat adoption circles: Friendlier shelter cats are more appealing to potential owners. Since 2009, Ms. Martin said, she and her two assistants have trained 159 foster cats, often teaching them to give humans a high-five or to jump through a hoop, to make them more adoptable.

“So many cats end up in shelters because they have behavioral problems, and most behavioral problems are due to boredom,” Ms. Martin said. “If you train your cat to do tricks, you make them use their brains. I hope to encourage people to expect more of their cats.”

Dr. Carlo Siracusa, a veterinarian specializing in behavior medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary School’s Ryan Hospital, said that while cats do not need to be trained — and some need less stimulation than others — there is no harm in teaching them tricks as long as no punishments are involved. (Some Russian cat circuses have drawn controversy for the way they treat the animals.)

“Emotionally, it’s not bad for the cat” to be taught anthropomorphic tricks, Dr. Siracusa said. “One ethical thing is whether it’s appropriate to watch animals mimicking human behavior, but I don’t really think that a cat cares about this. The action for the cat, playing on an instrument, it’s not fun, but they’re waiting for the treat.”

One of his students, Dr. Siracusa noted, has trained a cat to play dead when she points her finger like a gun and says “bang;” a video of this is posted on a Penn Facebook page. Like all such tricks, it brings to mind the Samuel Johnson saying involving a dog walking on its hind legs: “It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all.”

At the end of Ms. Martin’s show, the musician cats play on, and the audience can mingle with the performers.

Angela Buccinni, director and founder of the Muse Brooklyn — a circus-oriented performance space that moved to Bushwick in April after losing its lease in Williamsburg — said she was looking forward to the show. “I know that we’ve had a ton of inquiries,” she said, “and that all of our managers are fighting over who is going to get to work this event.”

The Amazing Acro-Cats and Rock Cats will perform July 16 and July 17 at 8:00 p.m., July 18 at 5 and 8:00 p.m. and July 19 at 2:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. No cats are allowed in the audience; the Muse Brooklyn, 350 Moffat Street; circuscats.com.






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A 5-Year-Old Girl Has Been Killed by a Jumping Sturgeon Fish Which Leaped Onto Her Family's Boat


Jayln Rippy was travelling along the Suwannee River near Gainesville, Florida, on Thursday when she was struck by the fish.

Her mother Tanya Faye, 31, and nine-year-old brother Trevor were also injured during the horrifying incident.

They were airlifted to hospital and treated for facial injuries that will need surgery.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said it was the first death caused by a sturgeon this year, while four people have been injured.

Two other people, Colleen Harvey, 42, and her husband Charles, 41, were also hurt by jumping sturgeons Friday while boating on the nearby Santa Fe River, WTSP reported.

Maj. Andy Krause, FWC regional commander in Lake City, said: 'With the low water levels in the river system, the sturgeon are jumping much more frequently than in recent years.

'We want everyone boating on the Suwannee and Santa Fe Rivers to be aware that the sturgeon are jumping and that people have been injured.'

A GoFundMe page http://www.gofundme.com/yhf7v4  was set up to help the family cover funeral and expenses costs.

The description read: 'The Rippy family was involved in an accident on Thursday, July 2, 2015 where a sturgeon collided with their boat.

'Their precious baby Jayln became an angel early July 3, 2015. Tanya and Trevor will both have to see specialist and face possible surgeries.

'This family will also face the cost of the funeral. Please donate what you can and continue to keep them in your prayers more than everything!'

As of Saturday afternoon, they had raised $7,930.

The fish are known for leaping more than seven feet above the water.

They can grow up to eight feet long and weigh up to 200 pounds and can cause serious injuries.






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Is It Against the Law to Leave a Dog Unattended in a Hot Car? Do You Know the Law for Your State?


Although animal cruelty, neglect, endangerment, and abuse in a variety of forms are illegal in all 50 states, in varying degrees that can earn the offender a simple citation all the way up to a felony charge, only 16 of those states have laws on the books specifically prohibit leaving an animal locked inside a hot car.

Of all fifty states, only Arizona, California, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia have state statutes in place that protect dogs specifically from being trapped in cars.

In the 16 states named above, although it is illegal to leave a dog unattended, it is also unlawful for a concerned citizen to take matters into their own hands.

Of the 16 states that make it illegal to leave a dog in a parked car, only 14 grant permission to either law enforcement, animal control, or other authorized personnel to enter a vehicle.

In New Jersey and West Virginia, although it is illegal to leave a dog trapped in a hot car, no one, not even law enforcement officers, are granted the authority to break into the vehicle to save the dog from dying.

What about those other 34 states?

Although the remaining 34 states may not have laws that specifically make it illegal to leave a dog (or other animal) unattended in a vehicle, all 50 states have laws in place to protect animals from abuse, neglect, and cruelty.

It can be argued that a dog left unattended in a parked car, without protection from extreme heat (or cold), that is suffering or showing signs of distress, is the victim of cruelty.

In other words, even though a dog owner may reside in one of the 34 states without specific laws to protect dogs in hot cars, they can be (and very often are) charged with animal cruelty for doing so.

Additionally, although state laws may not specifically address dogs trapped in hot cars, many county and municipal laws do address the issue. Check with your own city and county to be sure of the exact laws in your area.

So what is a concerned animal lover that spots a dog suffering inside a hot car supposed to do?

Currently, there are zero states that grant legal permission to concerned citizens to break and enter a vehicle to save a distressed animal.

If you see a dog in a parked car, no matter which state or what that state’s laws provide for:

1. Make every reasonable effort possible to locate the dog’s owner.

2. Call local police and animal control and report the incident.

3. Remain with the dog until help arrives.

4. If the dog is in imminent danger and help has not yet arrived, you’ll have to use your own judgement, considering the possible legal ramifications of breaking and entering to save the dog.

Many of us would happily face criminal charges, fines, and possible jail time if it meant saving the life of a dog.
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