New home! Same old rules…

Hmm...I don't like the look of this...

My new home is very different from my old one back in Auckland. 

First, it has those slippery wooden floors…although I have to say, I am getting much better and confident about walking on them now! :P In fact, even though my humans put down rugs for me, I sometimes prefer to just lie on the bare, wooden floor. 

My new home is also much bigger – there are lots of rooms in the top part… 

…and then there are stairs IN the house (I’ve never had those before!) which go down to a big room in the bottom part. The stairs are very narrow and steep so I find them quite difficult to go up and down. 

The big room at the bottom of the house...

Because the house is built on the side of a hill, the garden at the back is lower than the front of the house. 

So you have to go down the stairs and through the big room at the bottom of the house to get to the garden… 

  

…so I don’t go there much coz it’s very hard for a big dog like me to go down so many steep steps and it is probably not very good for my joints. 

But that’s OK because there is a small patch of grass at the front of the house where I can lie and sun myself… 

Sunning myself in the small garden at the front...

There are some other strange things in this new home too…like a big hole in the kitchen wall where I can see my humans - 

 

- and hey, it even comes with a place to rest my big heavy head when I’m tired of holding it up! :lol:  

 

I made sure that I found all the sunny patches in my new home very quickly… (Hsin-Yi can’t believe that I would still want to sun myself in this hot weather but actually, I am getting used to it and have stopped panting all the time – and anyway, I just LOOOOOVE the sun! :D )  

 

 And guess what? My new home comes complete with a doggie neighbour! He is a Bull Terrier and he looks very sweet – although I have only sniffed noses with him through the fence. We have not met his humans but we have heard them calling him so we think his name is Monty. 

 

We feel a bit sorry for him because he is left alone in the garden the whole day, often till 6pm in the evenings -  his humans must be away at work a long time – but at least when they come home, they always let him into the house with them. Many other doggies in Australia seem to be “outside dogs” and are not allowed to go into the home to be with their families at all :(  - and are often not even taken for walks either, because their humans think that just having a big garden is enough! :evil:  

 

When I first arrived in my new home, the rooms were all very empty… 

 

…because our things which were coming on the ship from NZ hadn’t arrived yet. So my humans had nothing to sit on, sleep on, cook or eat with! So they went to one of Hsin-Yi’s favourite places in the world, called IKEA, and bought a few things just so they could live until our things arrived. 

Our sofa in Auckland was very old and made of wool – and that would not be nice to sit on in the hot, humid weather here – so my humans sold it and got a new one here! Hsin-Yi is really happy with it because it has washable covers – which is very good for a doggie household that gets lots of hair, mud and slobber! :D  

Here is a picture of us enjoying the new sofa…and see how big my new beanbag bed is??!! 

 

 But last weekend, our things arrived from NZ and we had lots of Mover Humans come to the house again… 

 

…and lots of boxes and mess everywhere… 

 

…of course, I had the important job of supervising again! 

 

(Hsin-Yi: our movers this time were wonderful: courteous, careful and efficient - they restored my faith in removal companies! The company in Auckland was called AusMove and their partner in Brisbane was called Wridgeways – I highly recommend them if anyone is moving between Australia & New Zealand!) 

 

 So this week, my humans are very busy again with unpacking and sorting stuff (and they are starting to do the Work thing again too – so that’s why they haven’t had much time to help me with blogging stuff!). 

 Well, one thing that hasn’t changed in my new home is my “house rules”! See, my humans have always been very strict about me following certain rules around the house – from the 1st day I arrived as a baby puppy. For example, I learnt to stay out of the kitchen, to only toilet in a special corner of the garden (NOT on the lawn!), to Sit at the front door when we have visitors and to never go out the front door or beyond the driveway unless I had permission. 

Respecting the Kitchen Rule... (my humans put down some temporary masking tape to help me learn the boundaries)

 My humans taught me these rules using commands like “Out!” and “Wait”, my toileting command (“Be Clean”) and my release word, “OK!” – (in the beginning, when I was really little and didn’t understand these commands yet, they had to guide me and use barriers like ’baby gates’ to help me learn) –  it took a lot of consistent repetition in the beginning but once I learnt these good habits, it made life very easy and I could enjoy more freedom around the house because my humans trusted me. 

For example, I can safely stay in the front garden by myself – even with the gates open… 

 

Here is a video showing how I “re-learned” these rules in my new home: 

  

A lot of people ask Hsin-Yi how she taught me these rules so well – the secret to training us doggies successfully is to be 100% consistent and to set up the situation and practise before trying to do it in the real thing. Most people fail because they don’t take time to set up and practise a situation – for example, polite manners at the front door: they only try to control us when visitors come for real and us doggies are super-excited and they get flustered and embarrassed and worried about keeping the visitors waiting…and so they let it go “just this once” but of course, we doggies learn that this means we can get away with naughty behaviour if we just push our humans long enough! :P  

When I was learning this rule, Hsin-Yi got Paul to knock on the door lots of times, so I would get excited and then she could practise my door manners with me – and she has also shut the door in visitors’ faces a lot of times, until I could learn to remain sitting calmly when it opened! :D  

This way, us doggies learn that we can never get away with it – not even once,  no matter what we try! – and after a while, we stop trying and it just becomes a good habit. In general, if you never give us doggies a chance to learn bad habits, we will never think of doing them. But give in to us even once in the beginning and we will try even harder next time! :P Every command that is given to us MUST be enforced – no exceptions – otherwise, it is better not to give the command at all, because it will teach us to ignore our humans. 

Respecting the Boundary Rule

You might be wondering why my humans keep the gates open in the front garden – this is because Hsin-Yi does not like dogs that patrol and rush fences, barking at people passing. It encourages aggressive-type behaviours in us doggies, which can then start extending outside the home to barking and lunging when out on walks, etc…

Of course, it is natural territorial behaviour for us doggies to bark at strangers but it is important that humans teach us what is “our territory” and that we should stop barking once we have alerted our pack leaders (our humans). Just rushing aggressively at fences is a bad behaviour to encourage. Dogs who are kept unsupervised all the time in gardens with people walking past, often learn this bad habit very quickly!  Because we doggies think people move away because we scared them off with our barking (when actually, they would have walked on past anyway) – we think we are successful and get rewarded for it – and so we start repeating this behaviour A LOT. And if our humans are not there to supervise and correct this behaviour, we think it is OK to do this. 

Us doggies will see any “barrier” as the limit of our territory and will rush to protect it (this is why we often bark & get aggressive in cars but are fine out on the street). By only having the front door as the “barrier” between me and the street, my humans teach me that my territory ends at the front door. By keeping the gate open, there is no barrier so I think that the front garden is just a continuation of the street and I don’t get territorial if someone is just walking past on the pavement. Anyway, I think even if someone just saw me behind the screen door, from the street, they would think twice about coming into our garden – gate or no gate! Hee! Hee! :twisted:  

And by the way, in case you don’t think I make a very good guard dog (due to certain photos with stuffies in the past – ahem!), here is a picture of me on guard duty…believe me, it’s very hard work! :D  

 

Now you might be thinking that it’s a bit mean making me follow all these rules when I’m just settling into my new home…well, actually, having rules and routines and boundaries actually makes us doggies feel much more happy and secure. We know where we stand and what is expected of us – and this is very important to us. This is a common mistake humans make with ‘rescue doggies’ because they feel sorry for them so they spoil them in their new homes and think they should let them get away with things for a while…and then they can’t understand why their rescue doggies start developing all sorts of anxiety and behavioural problems! In fact, my humans have been surprised at how well I have taken the whole move and it is partly because I have had these familiar old rules to hang on to and give structure and routine to my new life! ;)

Well, I have written a mammoth post again so I’d better stop but I hope you have enjoyed the tour of my new home! 

Again, I am so sorry that I have not been able to visit your blogs – hopefully, Hsin-Yi will be less busy next week after all the unpacking and sorting is finished and then she can help me do more blog stuff again! :)  

a family moment...

 

The year that was…2009

My blog friends, Jackson & Patrick the Chihuahuas, had the great idea of posting a slideshow of their year in review…so I thought I’d do something similar:

So here it is – well, between dog dancing and agility, swimming lessons and beach romps, not to mention birthday party, TV appearances, modelling and pet therapy work…whew! It’s been a busy year! No wonder I need to sleep 18 hours a day!! :D

Feeling HOT! HOT! HOT!

Well, my new home in my new country is very nice but - boy, is it HOT here!!  

And there is also a lot of something my humans call humidity, which means that the air has a lot of water in it and it makes you sweat a lot and feel like you are swimming around in a sticky rain all the time…doing anything is hard work! My humans say that I need to do something called ‘acclimatise’ and then I will feel better but in the meantime,  I spend most of my waking hours doing this:  

  

But we are lucky ‘coz our new home has special cold air which comes out of a machine, called AC, and so when it gets too bad, my humans shut all the windows and make the cold air come on – and then it feels wonderful! But Hsin-Yi does not like the AC – she likes the fresh, natural air better – and so she always tries to open the windows every morning and keep them open for as long as possible.  

(Thank you to all my friends for your ideas on how to cope with hotness - I will definitely try them!)

Because it is super hot, I can only go for a walk before the sun comes out in the sky or after it has gone away – and even then, I can’t walk for very long before I get so hot that my tongue is nearly dragging on the ground! Guess I can’t go on my 1 hour powerwalks anymore, like I used to in Auckland! :P   

Checking out my new neighbourhood...

 So my human, Hsin-Yi, has been getting up very early to take me for a short (15-20mins) walk before it gets too sunny, and then they take me for another short walk (20mins) in the evening, just before it gets dark. Hsin-Yi was so happy when it was grey and rainy for a few days because then she could get up later but it was still cool enough to take me out! :D   

  

  

By the way, in case you’re wondering – no, us Dane don’t need tons of exercises and 1hr powerwalks everyday. This is a common mistake – a lot of people think that because we are giant dogs, we need lots of exercise. Actually, Danes are pretty low-energy, placid dogs and I’m quite happy with a 20min stroll every day but my humans like to walk and they don’t think it’s a ‘proper’ walk unless it is nearly one hour and they have walked quite far (and in Hsin-Yi’s case, walked very fast! Hsin-Yi likes to do everything fast). 

This is one reason they chose a Great Dane – because us Danes are really flexible when it comes to exercise: when my humans are busy, they can just give me a 20 min stroll around the block and I’m satisfied with that – I won’t be chewing up the house or digging up the garden, like some other more active, hyper breeds…but when they want to go on a 3 hr trek in the mountains on the weekends, I’m up for that too! ;)  

Also, a lot of people think bored, hyper dogs need more physical exercise when actually what they need is more mental stimulation (ie. training & games), so because Hsin-Yi does a lot of training & activities with me, I need even less exercise. Remember, 20 minutes of Obedience training can equal to 2 hrs of running! Us doggies build up stamina faster than humans can give us the exercise – so if we’re hyper & destructive and getting into trouble, it is more useful if our humans spend 5-10mins making us “work” and do training exercises, than taking us for yet another walk! :D  

OK, many of you were interested to know if I still sleep with my head hanging off the bed, even with my new GINORMOUS beanbag bed! Well, I have to confess…yes I do! :P Even though Hsin-Yi is horrified – she thought a bigger bed would stop me doing that but…guess us doggies just like to sleep that way! Hee! Hee! 

 

But I have to tell you about my new bed! Well, it’s a “Pet Futon” actually, made by the Snooza company. You see, my humans were worried that my beanbag bed – with its furry cover – would be too hot for me to sleep on in Brisbane and so they also got me a lovely Pet Futon, which is cooler to lie on. 

At first, I wasn’t very sure about it – I’m very fussy about my beds, you know - ever since I first snuggled into my humans’ beanbag by mistake when I was a baby puppy, I have loved that “beany” feeling and refused to sleep on anything else. Once my humans even bought me a very expensive “orthpaedic bed” and took my beanbag bed away to try and make me sleep on that - but they found me sleeping on the floor next to the ‘orthopaedic’ bed! So they gave up and gave me my beanbag bed back… 

…so my humans are very happy because this is the first time I have liked anything other than my beanbag bed! My new Pet Futon is lovely and cushiony, even though it is not very puffy, and it has a cool, cotton cover which feels nice to lie on (and is washable too!) and it is very light and much easier to move around than my huge beanbag bed. And so during the day, when it is hot, I like to sleep on my Futon (but at night, for my big sleep, I still like to go back to my beanbag bed…!)

Here are some pictures of me enjoying my new Futon :P

My humans have been very impressed by the Snooza company and the things they make – so if any of you Australian doggies are looking for a new bed, do check them out!

My humans are still very busy and they still haven’t got much time to help me do blog stuff – so it’s taking me a long time to get around and visit you all again – sorry! Please bear with me! :)

(Belated) Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

(A little bit late!) Wishing you all a wonderful time over the holiday season and all the best for the new year!

* Because I am saying goodbye to New Zealand this year, I thought I would make my Christmas card this year with a photo showing the famous and beautiful pohutukawa – the ‘NZ Christmas Rose’ – which blooms  every year in Nov/Dec, in the Southern Hemisphere summer, and covers the NZ coastline with brilliant colour! :)

We did not do anything special for Christmas – my humans are very tired from rushing around, doing the Settling-In thing (and they’re still not finished!) and so they were not really in the mood to do much.  They said it was very nice just to laze around on Christmas Day and eat cold salads and not have to worry about cooking anything special or entertaining other humans or doing anything! (well, other than taking me for my daily walk, of course! :P )

But we did go into downtown Brisbane to see the beautiful, big Christmas tree in King George Square:

We tried to get a family photo using the self-timer but I looked away at the last minute! And it was so hot and I was panting so much that Hsin-Yi was worried about me and so didn’t want to hang around to try again…anyway, even though it’s not very good, here is the photo!

Hello Brisbane!

G’day everybody! Greetings from sunny, blisteringly hot, Australia!

I had an exciting time on the Big Flying Machine and an even more exciting time when I arrived!

My humans came to the airport to get me and they were very worried about me getting scared when the Freight people had to lift my crate (because I’m such a big doggie and grew so fast, I have hardly ever been lifted in my life)…

…but then when they saw me coming out, being carried by the forklift, I was just lying there languidly with my paws crossed, looking out of my crate, as if I was on a sightseeing tour! :P

The Dogtainers Pet Travel Consultants had told my humans that I would probably be fine because I am a very placid, laid-back kind of dog and also, I have been socialised lots (and continuously) all my life, so I am quite used to meeting and adapting to new experiences. Of course, I got very excited when I heard my humans’ voices and couldn’t wait to get out of my crate!!

"And here we have the Airport Freight centre to your left..."

Hmm...the views are not bad from here...

Oh! What's that? I HEAR MY HUMANS!!!

Come on! This disembarkation process is just too slow...!

Yay! Freedom!

Can you believe they didn't serve me any inflight meals? You must make a complaint!

So HAPPY to be with my family again!

I was lucky that being a NZ doggie, I didn’t need to spend any time in Quarantine, although I did need to show that I had had all my vaccinations and flea & worming treatments.

Then it was time to head off to my new home! My humans had to rent a van especially to come and pick me up because my travel crate is just too huge to fit in a normal car – even an estate wagon!

When I got to my new home, it was very exciting because there were lots of new smells to sniff and corners to explore but – oh! Horror of horrors! The floor in my new home is just like that scary, slippery floor at that disaster Ceroc Party dog-dancing demo, when I was terrified and froze and could not do my dance routine at all! It’s all wooden and shiny and slippery – and my nails make strange clackety-clack noises when I walk on it.

I was really scared at first and just stood there, all hunched up, panting and whining…but my humans just ignored me acting scared – they didn’t comfort me or reassure me or make a big fuss about me being scared of the floor. Instead, they just went about doing their own things and after a bit, I tried to follow them around the house – and then slowly, I realised that walking on that slippery floor wasn’t so scary after all. Yes, it IS slippery and I do still skid and slide sometimes, especially if I try to run, but I’m getting used to it and I’m learning to cope with it! :D

And you know what? Remember I told you that my humans gave my big beanbag bed away to the doggies at the Auckland SPCA? Well, they made me a new one! Yes, they bought some fabric and got the Tailor Human back in Auckland to make up the covers (outer washable cover and inner for the beans) and then brought those covers with them when they came over first on the Big Flying Machine (Hsin-Yi said they took up half her suitcase!) and then bought lots of new “beans” here and filled it up.

And can you believe it – this bed is even BIGGER bed than my old one! Hsin-Yi thought it would be nice if I had more space to stretch out (and thought this might stop me sleeping with my head hanging off one end…). It is so big and puffy that I can barely climb on by myself – hee! hee! But it is lovely once I’m on it – so soft and cushiony…

….aaaaaahhhh!

I was so exhausted from all the excitement of my trip on the Big Flying Machine and then seeing my humans again and exploring my new home that I jumped on my bed immediately and in 2 minutes, was fast asleep, snoring, with my new stuffie! :P

I know I haven’t visited any of your blogs for ages – so sorry! My humans have just been so busy with settling in stuff that they haven’t had time to do any of my blog stuff or help me answer my messages…but Hsin-Yi says that now things are “slowing down” a bit, she can start to help me visit my friends again. So I will be catching up on all your blogs in the next few days – it’ll probably take me a while to get around to everybody and my humans are still very busy – so please bear with me! :)

By the way, I know it’s Christmas today – Merry Christmas! – I did plan a special Christmas post for today but since this one is late (my humans’ fault again!), I will have to do a belated Christmas post in a couple of days time!

Farewell Auckland!

Yay! My humans have found a dog-friendly house in Brisbane so I can go and join them!!

They have been running around like maniacs since arriving in Australia last week - looking, looking, looking all day at so many houses…

It was very difficult because they needed to find somewhere that was near Paul’s work place but that would let doggies live in it too – and also hopefully have special machines which makes cold air called ‘AC’ because Brisbane is a very hot place.

Lots of places were nice and in the right areas but would not allow doggies (it’s so sad - some people make their doggies stay outside in the garden all the time and never let them into the house to be with the family…) – others would allow doggies but be too far from Paul’s work or be huge, old houses (“Queenslanders”) which were really dirty and old and falling apart! :roll:

But – finally! – my humans found somewhere which was not too big or old and was near Paul’s work and was quite nice & clean…but the Landlord Human who owned the house did not want to let doggies live there! So my humans begged and explained that I was very well-trained and well-behaved (I would not be digging in the garden or barking or chewing up the floors!), that Hsin-Yi works from home so I would not be left alone in the house for long periods and that I sleep all day anyway…and finally, the Landlord Human agreed to let me stay. Whew! :P

It was a big relief because if my humans had not found somewhere this week, I would not be able to go on the Big Flying Machine until January because of the “Christmas shut-down” – but thankfully, I just made it! So I will be going on the Big Flying Machine tomorrow to join them in Brisbane – hooray! :D

By the way, some of you asked some questions about our ‘moving overseas’ thing so I thought I’d answer them here:

1) why did my humans do all the packing themselves?

Because they have had a lot of bad experiences with Movers, especially the first time when they moved from the faraway place called England, they let the Movers pack everything and were horrified at how things were being thrown anyhow into the boxes and even saw a couple of books being ripped and damaged in front of their eyes! Plus boxes were being sealed up half-empty which meant that they were paying for more space than they really needed and also things were rattling around in the boxes and getting damaged… And this was with a big company called Allied Pickfords too! So they told the Movers to go away and finished all the packing themselves – all night – until 5am in the morning. It was a horrible time and they promised themslves that they would never go through that again – so now they just do all the packing themselves, even if it takes a bit more time, so that they know that things are packed as carefully as possible and that all the space is used properly. Because Paul does not have a company which pays for “relocation” like many other humans and so my humans have to pay for everything themselves – so they always try to save money paper if they can! Anyway, Hsin-Yi says it’s a good way to make them sort through all their junk and throw lots of unnecessary things away! Hsin-Yi is a “hoarder” and never likes to throw anything away, and my humans have TONS of books – enough to open a book shop! :D

 

2) what happens to my Raw Diet when I go to stay at the pet hotel?

I usually eat a combination of: raw meaty bones (eg. whole chicken carcasses, chicken necks, lamb brisket, offal, whole fish)  for my main meal in the mornings (500g) and a ready-made, frozen, raw BARF mixture in the evenings (200g) – total 700g daily, which is 1% of my bodyweight - which is how much us giant breeds should eat on a raw diet. (Smaller breeds eat more, like 2-4% of their body weight). Of course, when I go to kennels, it is not easy for me to have raw meaty bones – the Airport Pet Hotel are very good about trying to stick as close to my normal diet as possible and they even give me raw chicken carcasses from time to time. If I am going for a long time, my humans might take a bag of my frozen BARF mixture to the pet hotel for them to feed me but if I am going for just a short time, like a week, then they just let the pet hotel feed me whatever dry food they are giving the other doggies. Hsin-Yi doesn’t think this matters – she says this is like humans going on holiday and eating things different to their normal, everyday diet for a while. She thinks it is important to use common sense and be relaxed and realistic about doggie diets, not make it into a scary science – which is what all the pet food companies and marketing people are trying to do.

 

3) why aren’t my humans shipping my bed and old toys to Brisbane?

Australia is awfully strict about things coming into their country and so they check EVERYTHING – especially anything to do with animals - and if they think it is dirty and “contaminated” with any soil or dirt or bugs or anything that is a “biosecurity risk”, they will make you pay lots of money paper to “fumigate it” or they will take it away from you and destroy it. Some of my things (like my brand new birthday toys!), my humans cleaned really well and shipped but other things like my beds and older toys – they knew they could never clean it properly enough so it is better to throw them away and get new ones in Australia, than to pay a lot of money paper for shipping and then for checking and fumigation in Australia, when the things were very old anyway. Also, the Moving Company told my humans that the more things that had to be checked and fumigated, the longer they will keep everything – which means my humans won’t get their stuff for AGES!

The reason I can go in without quarantine is because NZ has the same kind of biosecurity rules as Australia and so anything from here is already “safe” – so any doggie who was born and has lived here all their life can go to Australia without quarantine.

For more information, go to Australian Quarantine & Inspection Service (AQIS) – FAQ’s

Well, I’d better go and get ready for my flight…it’s 3 & a half hours, by the way, for those of you who were wondering – so not that bad! :)

See you all in Brisbane!

Packing up and shipping out!

So sorry for not posting for so long! Things have been crazily busy here because we are doing the “moving overseas” thing to Brisbane. My humans have been rushing around in the last 2 weeks and acting very stressy. They have been spending lots of time looking at things…

…and then throwing some of it away and putting the others into boxes.

The house started to look quite strange - there were boxes everywhere and nothing was where it used to be…even my bed disappeared from where it usually was and there were more boxes instead!

Of course, I tried to help but I’m not sure they really appreciated my efforts – Hsin-Yi just complained about me slobbering on things or shouted at me for blocking her way when she was carrying something heavy…really! I was only trying to help! :twisted:

In the end, I decided that since my humans weren’t doing enough relaxing and chilling out, I would have to do it for them. So I found myself a nice sunny patch near them and made myself comfortable…

Sometimes, I would get a special yummy in my travel crate while they were packing…mm-mmm…

I really like my travel crate now and often spend a long time in it when my humans are busy with the packing stuff – they shut the door and leave me and I have a little snooze until they let me out again. The best part is that they always give me a treat or yummy chew whenever I go in it, so I think it’s a really cool place! :D

Oh, by the way, some of you were worried about whether the crate was big enough for me because you saw that picture of me turning around in it…don’t worry, the Dogtainers Pet Travel Consultants people are really experienced so they know exactly what size is right. And bigger isn’t always better, you know! Because we don’t have ‘seatbelts’ inside the crates - if there is turbulence, we need it to be quite snug so we can “brace” ourselves against the sides – otherwise, we’ll just be thrown about inside the crate! :-? So that is why they measured me so carefully and made it so that it is just big enough for me to stand up comfortably and turn around but not so big that I’d be rattling around in it! :D

Anyway, if you want to see just how big it is, here is Hsin-Yi sharing it with me! :P

Well, I’ve also been busy supervising a lot of visitors to the house:

There was a man who came from the Auckland City Mission to take away things that my humans didn’t need anymore but which other humans might need.

And then my humans said that we were giving my outside bed away because the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service is very strict about anything that us animals use and will make us pay a lot of money paper to check it and “fumigate” it – so it is better to just leave it in NZ and buy a new one in Australia…

(Luckily, all NZ doggies can go to Australia without Quarantine!)

So my humans said a nice thing to do would be to give my bed to the homeless doggies at the Auckland SPCA

…Oh! But then they took my beanbag bed – my favourite – too! 8-O

I was really worried – what would I sleep on then? But Hsin-Yi explained that I would be going to the Airport Pet Hotel to stay, because the special Moving Humans were coming the next day to wrap everything up and it would be dangerous for me to stay in the house…

…and then my humans were going first on the Big Flying Machine to Brisbane, to look for a house for me! So I would stay at the Airport Pet Hotel until they found a house that Great Danes can live in. Hsin-Yi is a bit worried because a lot of humans don’t like big dogs to stay in their houses (and I’m a HUGE dog!) and so it might be hard to find a place for me – but my humans will try their best to find one as quickly as they can! :)

our last photo together in NZ...

So now my humans are in Brisbane and I’m here at the Airport Pet Hotel. I hope they find a house quickly for me so we don’t have to be apart for too long – it would be lovely for us to all be together again for Christmas! :P

Last dance in NZ…

My human is crazily busy with preparing for our big move to Australia – so please forgive me if I can’t visit your blogs much in the next few weeks!

Earlier this week, my human, Hsin-Yi, and I - together with the rest of my dancing buddies from the ChoreDOGraphy Connection team – performed in a Canine Freestyle “doggie dancing” display for the Manukau Dog Training Club X’mas party – and it was quite sad because it was my last dance performance in New Zealand…

The ChoreDOGraphy Connection Team!

It was also quite exciting, however, because my friend, Bodie the Border Terrier and I were debuting our ‘Pairs Routine’ for the 1st time! As you know, we have been working very hard on this although we have only really had the chance to practise it once a week - at the Paws 2 Music club practices on Thur nights – for the last 2 months…and the humans kept changing the choreography so it has been very messy! 

But anyway, because I’m leaving NZ in a couple of weeks, this would be the last – and only – chance for us to perform it together so we decided to give it a try!  :P

Our humans were really proud of us because both me and Bodie are “non-traditional working breeds” – and not the kind of dog you’d expect to be doing Canine Freestyle or Obedience – not with his terrier independence or my mastiff dopeyness! :P – and we’re the 2 most – ahem! - “unreliable” dogs in the team (to put it politely!) so to put us together was a bit of a risky exercise…but we did really well, especially considering that we have only had 2 months to practise…

So there! Bodie and I both show that it’s not about breed stereotypes but about our humans believing in us and having patience and putting enough time & effort into training us! Hsin-Yi loves the phrase from Adidas: “Impossible is Nothing!” :lol:

(Actually, as you will see in the video, it was Hsin-Yi who messed up because she totally forgot to start dancing in the beginning when it was her turn and just stood there like an idiot! )

So here it is! “For one night only…” :D

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I have to say, I can’t really blame Hsin-Yi for messing it up because she was still recovering from our first routine (‘Me & My Shadow’) where I suddenly decided to stop and just stare into space in the middle of our leg weaves and she was left hopping about on one leg, with the other one hooked over my back – and then she nearly fell flat on her face!  She was really mad at me for doing that to her – and for not performing my best in that routine (I was just being generally slow and dopey all the way through it) – but hey, I was the only dog who had to perform TWICE that day so I think deserve a little break! ;)

Anyway, here is a video with just the highlights of all the  routines and also some of the really cool Manukau Dog Training Club Christmas parade with all these doggies in brilliant costumes! 

Hope you enjoy it!

(The bit where Hsin-Yi falls off is not in the highlights ‘coz she is planning to do a “bloopers” video soon so she is saving it for that! :D )

Goodbye, Bodie – my dancing buddy – I shall miss you!

Last beach walks in NZ: Tamaki Drive & St Heliers Bay Beach…

 So sorry but my human is so busy with our “moving overseas” thing that she hardly has any time to help me do blog stuff and I’m finding it really hard to keep up with visiting my friends at the moment – so please forgive me if I don’t manage to comment much in the next few weeks!

I’ve got lots of things I wanted to post about from ages ago which have been sitting in a queue but I keep having so many new adventures that I’ve had to tell you about those first and so my catch-up list keeps getting longer and longer! :)

But now that we are leaving NZ, my human thinks we should quickly tell you about all these things before we leave – as I’m sure I will have even more adventures to post about after we move to Australia! So I hope you won’t mind me bombarding you with posts about “old stuff” for the next week or so (whenever my human can get time away from all the packing and “moving overseas” stuff!)

OK – so I wanted to tell you about a lovely walk I did on St Heliers Bay beach back in July. My human, Hsin-Yi, says that we are very lucky because Auckland is a “harbour city” right next to the sea and so there are many “inner-city beaches” that we can get to in 10mins with the car machine, to enjoy.

Enjoying the sunshine on Tamaki Drive

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In fact, there is a beautiful long road called Tamaki Drive which follows the side of the sea and there is a row of “waterfront suburbs” along this road which all have beautiful beaches.


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Tamaki Drive

Lots of humans like to walk, jog or cycle along Tamaki Drive and it’s REALLY busy on Sunday mornings! :D

 (Hsin-Yi says: I think this is one of the most beautiful city drives in the world, with the sparkling blue sea dotted with yachts on one side, and on the other side – the pohutukawa trees (aka. the ”NZ Christmas Rose”) with their bright red blossoms fringing the road and the sleeping volcano, Rangitoto Island, looming on the horizon…

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Rangitoto Island

You can get lovely views of Waitemata Harbour, from anywhere along Tamaki Drive and also beautiful views back to the ‘City of Sails’ with the Sky Tower dominating the skyline…

 

Our favourite, of course, is Mission Bay where there is a beautiful fountain and park and lots of people sit at the cafes out on the street and it feels like you are on holiday all the time! :)

(Mission Bay has more young humans living there and is more “trendy and happening”, with lots of bars, restaurants, cafes and an art-deco cinema)

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Mmm - my special treat!

I love the beach at Mission Bay and often meet my friends there (check out my post:A Walk with Chobe & Breakfast at Mission Bay“)

- and sometimes, after our walk, my humans will take me to the ice-cream shop to get me a special treat!

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But all the other beaches along Tamaki Drive are also really beautiful. Kohimarama is smaller & narrower and lots of people who live in the waterfront suburbs like to walk their dogs there but we don’t go as often ‘coz Hsin-Yi doesn’t like the way some of the other dogs (or their irresponsible owners!) behave and she says lots of uncontrolled, aroused dogs in a small space is just asking for trouble…

We learnt this the hard way because when I was younger, she used to take me to a dog park called Madills Farm where lots of humans like to stand around and gossip and just let the dogs play around them, instead of walking them…and while I was playing nicely with a Border Collie pup, a Husky-Shepherd-cross suddenly arrived at the park and ran up to me and tore a strip out of my shoulder! 8-O And his owner wasn’t even sorry – he just laughed and said proudly, “Look at that! Going for the biggest dog in the park!”

I was bleeding very badly and my humans had to rush me to the vet for stitches. I still have the scar – ouch! That was one of the ‘bad experiences’ which started me getting grumpy with strange dogs…and Hsin-Yi has had to work very hard with clicker training and “re-conditioning” to get me friendly with strange dogs again.

So now, Hsin-Yi avoids taking me any place where people  just want to gossip and be lazy and hope their dogs will exercise themselves - unless the dogs all know each other really well and (more importantly!), the owners are all sensible and responsible and have good control over their dogs – because even best friends can have an argument sometimes or accidentally hurt each other during play and of course, us doggies argue with our teeth! :D And if you have a pack of dogs together all highly aroused, then what started as a little argument can quickly turn into a nasty dog fight!

So the best thing is to always keep moving when out walking – this is much more natural for us doggies anyway and we get to see & smell more things and the exercise is better for our health and our humans’ health! :D Even if people want to socialise with a group of friends, they should keep moving because a group of dogs walking together is usually a happy, peaceful pack.

Oops! Sorry for that long story! Anyway, back to the beaches: after Kohimarama is St Heliers Bay beach which is bigger and quieter, so we like it better. St Heliers Bay also has some nice cafes and shops but it has more older humans (who are not working anymore) living there and feels a bit different to Mission Bay.

Me at St Heliers Bay beach

When we arrived that day, it was very exciting because some killer whales had just been passing by that morning, hunting sting rays for food in the sea, and now there were hundreds of birds coming to check out the “leftovers’!

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A lot of the half-eaten sting rays had washed up onto the beach…

They smelled deliciously fishy but actually tasted quite leathery and not very nice at all! :-?

So I left them alone and contined my nice walk along the beach…

…until I found a stick! :D

Oh! But then a black spaniel came out of nowhere and tried to steal the stick from me!

But I won – ha! ha! ;)

We had a nice play together, though, because Hsin-Yi is always very strict about teaching me to share my toys with other doggies. Then some more doggies arrived to join the fun!

Hmm...if you lost a lot of weight, you might look like my friends, Cookie & Cinnamon!

The sun was setting as we started walking back to the car machine but there was time for just one more picture! :P

I didn’t know then but that was actually the last time I could enjoy the beaches on Tamaki Drive! :(

See, usually dogs are only allowed on the “inner-city beaches” in the winter months (from Easter until end October) and even then only before 10am or after 4pm…so in winter, my humans usually take me to Mission Bay and the other Tamaki Drive beaches a lot for my daily walks.

But this year, just shortly after this lovely walk in July, a terrible thing happened! Five dogs died from eating something poisonous on the beaches and there were also some dead dolphins washed up on the beach, so they shut all the beaches along the Waitemata Harbour coastline and told all humans not to swim in the sea, until they could find out what it was.

Very sad – they have been shut ever since and now it has passed October which means we doggies can no longer go on the beaches anymore…so I have missed my chance this year and since we’re leaving NZ now, I will never get to go again! :(

They are still not sure what the poison was but they think it was “tetradotoxin” which was in some sea slugs washed up on the beach that the doggies (and other animals) ate…

The good news, though, is that it is still OK to go to the beaches on the West Coast ‘coz they are next to a different water. I love these beaches too, like Bethells Beach (Te Henga) which was my first ever beach when I was 3 months old, and dogs are allowed on them all year round but they are about 1 hrs drive from Auckland centre. Still, my humans have promised to try and take me there for a last walk before we leave NZ - if they manage to finish the packing in time! :P


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* For more information about Auckland’s beaches, check out the Auckland City Council website: http://www.aucklandcity.govt.nz/whatson/outdoors/default.asp

* For more information about the West Coast beaches, check out the Waitakere City Council website: http://www.waitakere.govt.nz/cnlser/pbr/prkgrnsp/index.asp

It’s here! My travel crate…

Guess what arrived today? My travel crate!

The lovely Dogtainers Pet Travel Consultants people brought it to our house in a big car machine…

Ooh! Look who's here!

I helped by supervising the unloading…

You take the left, I've got the right...

Are you tensing your core muscles before you lift?

Usually, travel crates are put in the house – like in the living room, where most of the family spend their time – so us doggies can get used to staying in it there…but in my case, it’s so big and our house is so small that it would have taken up half the house! :D

So my humans decided to leave it in the garage and I could just go and practise staying in it there for a short time each day.

Hmm...the latest in luxury canine travel, huh?

Anyway, my human, Hsin-Yi, will probably be spending a lot of her time in the garage in these last couple of weeks packing up all our stuff…so it’ll give me a handy place to laze around while supervising her! :)

Hsin-Yi let me sniff all around the crate and explore it in my own time – she didn’t try to force me to get in or anything like that, which made me think it wasn’t so scary after all.

Good thing they took my measurements to make sure it's tall enough!

You see, I have never been crate-trained and so I have not been used to being confined in anything small in my life. But the key to introducing new things to us doggies is to not rush us but be very patient and let us take “baby steps” at our own pace and have lots of positive experiences with it, so we associate it with nice things and learn to like it.

Hsin-Yi had put an old yoga mat and blanket down in the floor of the crate to make it nice and comfy for me to lie on…and then she put 2 yummy cookies in it and just waited to see what I would do…

Well, silly human – what does she think? :D

Wow - this travel crate comes with inflight snacks!

It was a bit of a tight squeeze turning around to get back out but I managed! :P

Breathe in! Breathe in!

(To be honest, I’ve had lots of practice squeezing into tight spaces this year having to ride in our tiny car machine!)

Since Hsin-Yi was busy doing her ‘crazy Camera Machine dance’ around me, I decided to humour her and stay in the crate a bit to pose for her pictures…

Did you get it from this angle?

After that, she let me get out and we went back into the house. She said that since this was the first day, it was good enough just getting me going into it happily & voluntarily - after a few more days of this, she will try getting me to do a Down Stay in there (with the door open) so I learn that I have to stay in there for a while…

…and then after a few more days of that, she will shut the door but stay around me, doing stuff in the garage…

…and then after a few more days of that, she will shut me in it and go back in the house for a few minutes…

…gradually working up to leaving me shut in it alone for longer and longer times. Baby steps, remember? :)

This is quite similar to the normal method of introducing a puppy to a crate. If you would like more information about that, here are some useful links:

I will also be getting super yummies when I go in the crate, like special chews and stuffed Kongs, etc – and maybe also having some of my meals fed in there, so I will really associate it with good things! :D

* By the way, in my original post about doing our “Moving Overseas” thing, some of you asked in your comments about whether us doggies should be sedated when we are going in the Big Flying Machine. Actually, this is a very old idea which is wrong because the medicines used to sedate us can make us doggies very sick when we are in the air.

Hsin-Yi recently wrote an article on Emigrating with Your Pet for one of her dog magazines and here is an excerpt from that article, which will explain to your humans better why pets shouldn’t be sedated for air travel:

You might think that a good solution for nervous, timid dogs would be sedation. But in fact, sedating an animal is probably the worst thing you can do and airlines now refuse to carry any animal which looks like it has been sedated.

Sedation reduces an animal’s ability to cope with stress, such as moving around, panting, drinking and so on, and some sedatives, such as ACP, may actually directly affect thermoregulation. Furthermore, aircrafts are pressurised at between two-thirds and three-quarters of normal atmospheric pressure, which lowers the blood pressure of both humans and animals. Since sedatives also work by lowering blood pressure, the combined effect would be seriously dangerous to the health of the dog.

However, help is at hand for anxious dogs, through the use of natural anxiety-relievers which do not lower blood pressure and are safe to give when administered according to veterinary advice.

“Dogs with major behavioural/ anxiety problems such as severe separation anxiety are not good candidates for travel,” admits homeopathic veterinarian Richard Allport. “The dog is away from the carer, in a strange, noisy place for a long period. However, natural anxiety relievers such as herbal Skullcap and Valerian, or homoeopathic Passiflora are usually helpful.”

“Most dogs will cope, which is not to say there isn’t some degree of stress involved. Just like people, every dog is different. Most dogs subjected to sitting in a kennel in the cargo hold for several hours would find the experience pretty unpleasant but would soon – perhaps not forget – but put the experience behind them. Because dogs live much more in the here and now than we do, the experience may be, if anything, more stressful at the time, but conversely they may be even more able to move on and put it behind them. A few, more sensitive, dogs might have a deeper and longer-acting reaction. It’s a question of knowing your own dog.”

Choosing a reputable, experienced pet transport company can also make a big difference in reducing the stress to an anxious animal. Not only would the company know how to select the most direct air route and keep the time spent in travel crates to a minimum but many of them also have ‘strategies’t to help anxious animals cope better.

“We spray all our crates with DAP pheromone spray which helps the dogs,” says says Bob Ghandour, Veterinary Consultant and Director of PetAir UK, which flies thousands of pets per year around the world. “Also, a nervous pet can have his crate to get used to it before the flight and they will usually travel very well.”

I hope you found that useful! :P