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

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Chicago, Illinois - Bail Was Set at $100,000 for a 25-Year-Old Man Caught Beating a Dog


Bail was set at $100,000 Sunday for a 25-year-old suburban man whom Chicago police arrested after he was seen on a police camera punching and whipping a dog in the city’s West Englewood neighborhood.

The city-issued camera in the 6100 block of South Ashland Avenue captured the man, Isaac Goodlow, punching, kicking and choking the dog around 3:40 a.m. Saturday, prosecutors said.

Officers in Chicago police’s Strategic Decisions Support Center alerted district officers who arrived in time to see Goodlow whipping the dog with an extension cord, which he also used to drag the animal down the sidewalk, Assistant State’s Attorney Michael Knight told the court at the Leighton Criminal Court Building during a brief hearing.

The dog’s breed wasn’t discussed during the hearing, but Goodlow’s arrest report indicates the dog was a pit bull terrier.

Goodlow, of the 4000 block of Bonhill Drive in Arlington Heights, was arrested and later charged with aggravated animal cruelty, while police reached out to a veterinarian to assess the dog. Officers observed the dog to be “scared, shaking, injured, emaciated and dehydrated,” Knight told the court. In fact, after one of the officers gave the dog water, the animal vomited it up, authorities said.

A veterinarian examined the dog and determined that it had signs of prior abuse/torture based on numerous earlier injuries, authorities said. Prosecutors didn’t state whether they suspected the dog of participating in dogfighting, but Goodlow’s arrest report stated that after his arrest, he threatened to kill the dog and admitted to being in a street gang.

Judge John F. Lyke Jr. ordered Goodlow to pay $10,000 for release and to undergo electronic home monitoring if he was able to post bail.

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Ocala, Florida - A Woman Walked Into a Restaurant with a Miniature Service Horse


Imagine the quandary a Central Florida restaurant manager faced when a woman walked in with a miniature horse.

Table for two?

This wasn't just any horse, after all. This one is a service horse with its own Facebook page: Honey the Mini Service Horse

In a world in which people have tried to pass off squirrels, peacocks, hamsters and ducks as service animals or "emotional support animals" in fights with landlords and airlines, the manager of an Ocala First Watch restaurant wasn't sure what to do about Honey.

Or the woman who was hungry as a, well, you get the idea.

So he called the breakfast restaurant's corporate office in University Park, Florida, for some guidance, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

He found out Honey and her owner could be welcomed. (Is oatmeal on the menu?) There's a regulation that says so, the restaurant chain learned.

"On Friday, June 15, a woman came into First Watch in Ocala with her miniature horse. When asked if it was a service animal, the woman confirmed that it was.

"We brought her to a table, where the horse could stand against the wall next to her. Of course our team was a bit surprised, as we’ve never had anyone bring a service miniature horse into one of our restaurants. But we always to do our best to accommodate customers who have legitimate service animals," First Watch spokeswoman Eleni Kouvatsos said in an email to the Miami Herald.

The Americans with Disabilities Act has specific regulations concerning service animals, which the ADA describes as "dogs that are individually trained to do work or perform tasks for people with disabilities."

But the ADA's revised regulations from 2010 also contain a specific provision covering miniature horses, like Honey the Mini Service Horse. Miniature horses generally range in height from 24 inches to 34 inches measured to the shoulders and generally weigh between 70 and 100 pounds, according to ADA guidelines.

In other words, the Triple Crown winner isn't going to be seated next to you as you graze on your Açai Bowl at First Watch.

In part, the ADA regulation states:

"Entities covered by the ADA must modify their policies to permit miniature horses where reasonable. The regulations set out four assessment factors to assist entities in determining whether miniature horses can be accommodated in their facility.

"The assessment factors are whether the miniature horse is housebroken; whether the miniature horse is under the owner’s control; whether the facility can accommodate the miniature horse’s type, size, and weight; and whether the miniature horse’s presence will not compromise legitimate safety requirements necessary for safe operation of the facility."

Turns out Honey was a fine fit for this particular First Watch, Kouvatsos said.

"The horse seemed to be in the owner’s control, to be housebroken, and not to propose any safety concerns for our other customers or staff in the restaurant, so while unusual, we were happy to accommodate."

Honey lets her Facebook page speak for her.

On Friday, her owner posted on her behalf: "Had a great meal ... or at least watched my handler have a great meal. Everyone was so awesome."


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Researchers Want You to Keep an Eye Out For ‘Missing’ Mitten Crab


You won’t see the Chinese mitten crab’s mugshot on a milk carton, but researchers want you to keep an eye out for it anyway.

The mitten crab (Eriorcheir sinensis) gets its name from claws that appear to be clothed in algae. Like dozens of other species that have made their way into the Chesapeake Bay via ballast water or other methods of human introduction, the mitten crab is considered an invasive species earmarked for eradication.

But a renewed campaign to report sightings of the crab this summer isn’t geared at counting their abundance. Instead, scientists are asking the public to help confirm what they are beginning to suspect: that this species has disappeared from the Bay altogether — and possibly from the East and West coasts, too.

From Maryland to Connecticut, more than 150 sightings of Chinese mitten crabs were reported after a fisherman caught the first specimen in the Maryland portion of the Chesapeake Bay in 2005. But no one has reported catching or seeing a Chinese mitten crab on the East Coast since 2014.

The species is known to have boom-and-bust population cycles, but scientists say that four years is a long time for such a prolific invader to hide its beady-eyed face.

“This is the mystery we’re trying to solve,” said Gregory Ruiz, a senior scientist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in Edgewater, MD, where he runs a marine invasions lab. “It would be very unusual to have a crab or marine invader that was so abundant go extinct.”

Unlike the Bay’s native blue crab, young mitten crabs prefer low-salinity water, so experts say the animals could lurk in riverbanks up to 50 miles inland from the Bay. Mitten crabs are also catadromous, meaning they migrate from brackish portions of rivers into saltwater environments to reproduce — the opposite direction of anadromous fish species such as striped bass and American shad.

The mitten crab’s cute name belies its disturbing potential impact on local ecosystems and economies. They are voracious eaters of aquatic plants, algae and fish eggs that can displace local species.

Native to the East Coast of China and Korea, the mitten crab made the leap to Europe decades ago and has been spreading its territory there since the 1970s.

The palm-sized crab features long legs for walking sideways across land or along the riverbanks where it creates a home by burrowing holes. During its population booms in Britain, high concentrations of these holes have made the banks less stable in some areas and resulted in flooding.

On the West Coast, where the crab was first spotted in 1992, an outbreak of the local population by the end of the decade saw mitten crabs clogging water intake pipes along the coast as they made makeshift homes in infrastructure. The crab was abundant in the San Francisco Bay by the late 1990s, boring as many as 30 holes per square meter in some places, according to a study in 2000 by University of California researchers. 

“Our findings suggest that the mitten crab is here to stay as yet another member of San Francisco’s evolving non-indigenous communities,” the study stated.

But, a decade later, the crab was nowhere to be found on the West Coast, with the last reported sighting in 2010.

Ruiz, who runs a lab and research group in the San Francisco Bay as well, said having a species once so abundant on both coasts fly under the radar for years — or go extinct — could be a first.

On the Delmarva Peninsula, a South American aquatic rodent that destroys wetlands, the nutria, has been virtually eradicated through a hunting program that began in 2002 and will complete its verification phase in 2019. There have also been nonnative species brought to the United States in the past that never got established and faded away, such as clams imported for aquaculture.


Efforts to control invasive fish, such as the blue catfish and snakehead, have hinged on their edibility, encouraging fishermen and consumers to catch-and-eat as many as possible. But they are not disappearing.

“The mitten crab is unusual because it was so abundant on both coasts, and it has a strong record of being an invader in many other parts of the world,” Ruiz said. “In the San Francisco Bay, there were hundreds of thousands caught in some years. So we’re really interested in trying to find out if people are seeing any of these crabs on both coasts.”

To that end, SERC’s invasions lab has been spreading the word.

“Have you seen me?” reads one of the flyers circulating on social media with a photo and description of the crab. Others will be posted at fishing docks along the Chesapeake Bay with instructions for what to do if one is found: freeze the crab rather than throw it back, note the exact location where it was found and take as many photos as possible.

Photos and other information can be submitted to SERC’s Mitten Crab Watch website. The website was established soon after the first Chesapeake Bay sighting in 2005, and is still a good place to click through mugshots of the furry-clawed creature that members of the public have sent in over the years.

Researchers say that the mitten crab is easy to spot. The creature’s claws, covered with algae-like hairs, set it apart from the Bay’s other crabs. Other distinguishing features include four small spines along the front of a brownish-green carapace, which measures 3–4 inches across.

The crabs can be eaten and are grown on aquaculture farms in Asia for that purpose, but their small frames make them a lot of work for a small amount of meat.

It once seemed inevitable that the mitten crab would go the way of the blue catfish, the zebra mussel or the emerald ash borer, slowly but surely taking over an ecosystem to the potential detriment of native species, fisheries and infrastructure. But that doesn’t seem to be happening — and it could change researchers’ assumptions about invasive species.

“We tend to think about what the impact will be when it arrives, but population dynamics are unpredictable,” Ruiz said. “It doesn’t change our approach, but it broadens our perspective about what’s possible with how a species will play out in a location.”


Ruiz said another lesson from the mitten crab case is the importance of engaging the public. When an invasive species has just been introduced or possibly eradicated, research can benefit from a wide swath of people keeping their eyes peeled for it.

Almost all of the records of the mitten crab in the Chesapeake Bay were reported by the public, not scientists collecting samples. Now, researchers hope that crowdsourcing will help them close the case of the missing mitten crab, for good.  

If you find a mitten crab, fill out a report on the Mitten Crab Watch website. If you think you have a Chinese mitten crab, but aren’t sure, contact the Mitten Crab Hotline at 443-482-2222 or email SERCMittenCrab@si.edu.



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Saturday, June 23, 2018

Vets Warn Dog Owners About High Car Boots


If you fancy taking your dog out for a lengthy walk in the countryside, rather than your local park or surrounding area, then having a car with a big boot can be hugely beneficial.

This includes 4x4s, which offer lots of room for your pooch, while also being able to cross tricky rural terrain.

But veterinary experts are warning dog owners who use such vehicles to not let their pet jump down from the boot as it may cause injury, a new study reveals.

The scientists behind the experiment, from Hartpury University Centre in Gloucester, concluded that a ramp should be set up from the boot to the ground instead. Dogs should walk down the ramp so as not to damage their legs from the impact of a jump.

To read more on this story, click here: Vets Warn Dog Owners About High Car Boots



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Pets and Estate Planning


What happens if you die before your cat or dog? It’s a question being addressed increasingly as more people are including pets in their estate planning.

PETS ARE PROPERTY
In the eyes of the law pets are property. But ask any pet guardian – otherwise known as a pet  owner – if Fido or Fluffy is on equal footing with their other possessions and most will say ‘no.’ Increasingly, dogs, cats and other companion animals are the subject of bitter custody fights when couples divorce, and are gaining the upper paw when it comes to estate planning.

While the law classifies pets as property, it does recognize that they’re qualitatively different than, say, a sofa or nightstand or the ’69 Camaro you painstakingly restored. In fact, it’s a crime in all 50 states to abandon an animal, an issue brought into sharp and painful relief during the ongoing home foreclosure crisis. Many animals die when once-responsible owners feel they have no choice but to abandon their pets, falsely assuming that someone from the bank will quickly come to their animals’ rescue. Rarely is this the case and a once-beloved family member is literally left to die.

To read more on this story, click here: Pets and Estate Planning


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45-Year-Old Designer, Iris Schieferstein, from Berlin, Germany, Collects Carcasses from Her Local Butcher to Make Shoes


This bizarre range of shoes may make the owner feel like they have one foot in the grave.

Crafted from dead animals, Iris Schieferstein's outlandish designs fetch up to £3,900 ($5,051.94 U.S. dollars), and have proved a hit with extreme dressers such as Lady Gaga.

Some of the most controversial pieces include a pair of sandals sporting stuffed doves with their wings spread wide and a collection of heels fashioned from hollow horse hooves.

The 45-year-old designer, from Berlin, Germany, collects carcasses from her local butcher which are discarded after the meat is used for sausages.

She spends a week stripping out any remaining meat and bones from the animal's feet and the skin is sent to a tanner to be treated for preservation.

The sculptor then sets the skin - complete with fur still in place - around a shoe model before hand-stitching insoles and lining.

She said: 'Creating the shoes is ugly work, taking the meat out is not nice, like any taxidermy.

'When I began working with dead animals I would pick them up from the street.

'But they are protected by the government in Germany, and so after ten years they tried to put me in prison. Now I use my butcher.'

The horse boots feature horse fur, a zip up the front, an intact hoof and horse bone as a heel.

While a pair of snakeskin stilettos feature a replica pistol as a heel with the reptile seemingly eating its own tail.

Describing her inspiration Ms. Schieferstein added: 'I love horses and I love shoes so I thought this would be perfect.

'Horses have a beautiful walk and I wanted to recreate that with my footwear.'

The footwear has been displayed at numerous exhibitions around the world and have even inspired a range from Dolce & Gabanna.

Despite the high price tag the footwear can only be worn for several hours at a time before becoming too uncomfortable.

Ms Schieferstein said: 'As yet no company has been willing to produce them for the high street.'

Last year the artist made a pair of custom-fit shoes for Lady Gaga.


Extreme dressing: A pair of shoes featuring cream horse fur with a front zip and bone heel



Suffer for your art: The heels can only be worn for several hours at a time before becoming too uncomfortable



Macabre: This pair of snakeskin heels show a snake seemingly eating its own tail



Some of Iris Schieferstein's most controversial designs include a pair of sandals sporting stuffed doves


Sculptor and artist Iris Schieferstein has been using dead animals for her works, here she models a hat made from a dead bird

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Do You Think People Should Have Their Pets Tattooed?



What is our society thinking?...or are they! I hope these pictures are photoshopped.

Apparently, a new trend is getting tattoos put on your pets, particularly any pet that is hairless. In Russia, the hairless Sphinx is the most frequent tattoo victim. Yes, I said victim.

In the 1980s before the microchip was invented for identifying pets, it wasn’t uncommon to tattoo pets with an identification number, often on their inner ear or bellies while they were under anesthesia for another procedure such as spaying or neutering. I think animals should never, ever be put under just for a tattoo.

Note: some of the images may be photoshopped. Very hard to verify.



    Body Modified Dog - Thank GOD this one is totally photoshopped. I hope.




Cosmetic Tattoos - This poor Dalmatian had a pink nose, which is a failure in the breed standard. So his owner got his nose tattooed.



In the ear tattoos - Dogs are often tattooed in their ears, usually with an ID number to help find them if they get lost. But this whole image thing is new.



Sphinx Cat with Ink - By far the most common pet that gets tattooed appears to be the hairless breeds, such as the Sphinx cat pictured here. This could be fake/photoshopped, but it looks pretty much like human tattoos do.



  Jack Russel Belly Tattoo - So this poor dog got a Hello Kitty tattoo on it's belly.



Cat immediately post-tattoo - In this photo, the cat is still anesthetized following it's tattoo. I found several shots of this cat being tattooed while under, so I do think it's real. It's a beautiful tattoo. Just wish it was on someone that could give consent.



                              It's likely these are fake...I hope.




Yes, another hairless Sphinx sporting what looks like real ink. That's a lot of ink for a little cat. I'd say it took 3 hours at least.




Daschund Belly Ink - This little guy has a tiny tattoo on his belly. Likely done when it was spayed/neutered and didn't take too much time.




 Louis Vutton Pigs - Apparently, tattooing pigs is a HUGE thing. Seriously, 
      google it. Scary.




                                         Small Tribal on a Sphinx




                         Demon bat wings tattooed on both sides...sad!




                                                    Tattooed Pigs

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Koko, The Famous Gorilla Who Learned Sign Language, to Be Laid to Rest at Animal Sanctuary


Koko, the gorilla who mastered sign language and became a pop-culture phenomenon, will be laid to rest Saturday in a ceremony at an animal sanctuary in Northern California where she lived for decades.

The western lowland gorilla died in her sleep Tuesday morning at the age of 46, according to the Gorilla Foundation, which is headed by animal psychologist Francine "Penny" Patterson, who worked with and cared for Koko since the primate was a year old.

Koko was renowned as one of the most intellectual apes in history, beloved by millions of people around the world. Under Patterson's tutelage, she learned more than 1,000 words in sign language and came to understand over 2,000 words spoken to her in English.

"She taught me more than I taught her, for sure," Patterson, 71, told ABC News in a telephone interview Thursday. "She had opportunities to show her brilliance and that’s what we saw. We saw a person, really. She had all the attributes of a person and then some."

To read more on this story, click here: Koko, The Famous Gorilla Who Learned Sign Language, to Be Laid to Rest at Animal Sanctuary



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It Was Either Me or the Cat — And I Won


After two years of dating, it was time for Arran and me to take the next step in our relationship. Arran was attractive, successful, funny and kind. He was, above all, loyal — and I was thrilled we'd be moving in together. I was less happy, however, that our living together meant living with his cat.

I'm a dog person, and own a pit bull named Spud. Although I am not particularly a cat person, I particularly disliked Chloe. She was overweight and tattered looking, smelly and unfriendly — except at three in the morning, when she'd sit on your face, demanding pets. But Arran loved her, and so I kept my criticisms to myself.

Seeing that I have a rent-controlled, one-bedroom apartment in a prime neighborhood in Manhattan, it was decided we'd all be moving into my place. In the beginning, the biggest question was where we'd put the litter box. I approached the challenge cheerfully. I googled "small space litter box solutions" and researched clever ways to disguise the smell.

To read more on this story, click here: It Was Either Me or the Cat — And I Won


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Thursday, June 21, 2018

Are Sugar Gliders Good Pets?


Sugar gliders are popular exotic pets. They're small, cute, and unique little animals. But just as you would with any other exotic pet, a potential sugar glider owner should be aware of the care requirements and personality traits of a sugar glider before getting one. Sugar gliders are a long term commitment, living up to 14 years in captivity, and require a special diet, lots of attention, and space.

Sugar Gliders in the Wild

Baby sugar gliders start life off in their mother’s pouch and are referred to as joeys, just like kangaroos. Because of this unique start to life, sugar gliders are classified as marsupials, not rodents like the similarly looking flying squirrel. 

All wild sugar gliders are from Australia, Indonesia, and New Guinea where they live in tree tops. They get their sweet and airborne name from the food they eat and their characteristic mode of transportation.  Their namesake diet includes nectar and sap from trees and they are often seen gliding between branches using unique flaps of skin called patagium. Sugar gliders are omnivorous, so in addition to the nectar and sap, they will also eat both plant material and meat including fruit, insects, and even small birds or rodents.

To read more on this story, click here: Are Sugar Gliders Good Pets?


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This Baby Feathertail Glider Weighs Just 1 Gram - And is Going to Get Even Cuter


This tiny patient at the Australia Zoo Wildlife Hospital weighs just one gram and is their smallest visitor.

She fell out of her mother's pouch and now needs careful care.

Boop is a baby feathertail glider and has amassed many fans on social media.

A spokesperson for the hospital said Boop will one day return for the wild - but for now she needs careful care.

To read more on this story, click here: This Baby Feathertail Glider Weighs Just 1 Gram - and is Going to Get Even Cuter


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Delta Airlines Announces That Pit Bulls Have Been Added to List of Banned Service/Support Animals


Delta Airlines announced Wednesday it’s updating its service and support animal policy yet again to further enhance restrictions.

The airline will now allow only one emotional support animal per customer per flight and will prohibit all “pit bull type dogs” as service or support animals.

These new limitations come as a “direct result of growing safety concerns following recent incidents in which several employees were bitten,” the airline said in a press release.

Delta first updated its policy in March, citing customer abuse and a rise in animal-related incidents.

The regulations require those wishing to travel with a service or support animal to provide special documentation. Customers must show a current signed veterinary health form or immunization record for the animal 48 hours in advance, as well as a signed letter by a doctor or mental health professional and proof the animal can behave while in the cabin.

"The safety and security of Delta people and our customers is always our top priority," Chief Operating Officer Gil West said in a statement. "We will always review and enhance our policies and procedures to ensure that Delta remains a leader in safety."

According to the statement, the airline carries around 700 service and support animals daily and has seen an “84 percent increase in reported animal incidents since 2016, including urination/defecation, biting and even a widely reported attack by a 70-pound dog,” which they note is uncommon behavior for properly trained working animals.




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Heartbreaking Tributes Pour in After Famous Gorilla who 'Captivated the World' Dies at 46


When a celebrity passes away, fans around the world take to social media to share their condolences and their favorite songs, movies, or events that the deceased was a part of. But what happens when a famous animal passes away? On Thursday, June 21, fans around the world are sharing their loyalty and despair over the “gorilla who captivated the world,” Koko.

Koko the ape was one of the most beloved animals in the world who captured the world’s attention years ago over her amazing connection with humans and other animals. The research center that has done a lot of work with the gorilla announced her death.

They said, “The Gorilla Foundation is sad to announce the passing of our beloved Koko.”

Koko was best known around the world for her ability to communicate through American sign language and for her love of kittens. In 1978, she was even featured on “National Geographic.”

To read more on this story, click here: Heartbreaking Tributes Pour in After Famous Gorilla who 'Captivated the World' Dies at 46

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What Should Be Done for Ailing, Abandoned and Skittish Cat?


Neighbors have been caring for the cat for years, but now it’s starting to look poorly and wants nothing to do with humans.

DEAR JOAN: Many years ago someone in the neighborhood moved and left their beautiful cat behind. Kitty has stayed put, living for years within a four-house range.

Good friends across the street took to feeding the cat twice a day and making a sheltered, warm bed in a corner of their front porch. The cat has never allowed anyone to come close and is beginning to look very ragged, has obvious hearing problems and this morning I noticed kitty seemed disoriented.

What do you recommend we do, if anything? If the cat is dying of old age, I worry about kidney failure or that the cat will be in pain. Should there be any intervention? Capturing the cat would be a traumatic experience.

To read more on this story, click here: What Should Be Done for Ailing, Abandoned and Skittish Cat?



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