October 2009

There are a couple of  rescue organizations on Vancouver Island that regularly rescue and foster dogs from Mexico.  As most people are aware,  the attitudes regarding dogs in Mexico are very different to those in Canada.  We have attained a level of education here that allows us to see our dogs as individual beings who require and deserve our care  including food, shelter and love.  We also recognize the need for spaying and neutering.  Other countries, such as Mexico have a more indifferent attitude, allowing the dogs to run in packs and procreate at will.  The authorities do round these dogs up and in some instances, they are taken to a shelter where they are held for 72 hours before they are euthanized. 

Mexi-Mutts and Mex-Can  are doing their part to rescue some of these helpless creatures and re-home them both in Mexico and Canada.  One lucky little female is currently attending my group classes.  Little Katie is a loving, loyal and willing mix of perhaps whippet and German Shepherd.  She is approximately 5 months old and has assimilated to her new home remarkably well.  She is smart, quiet, learns very quickly and is one of the best family dogs I have had the privilege of training.  Her one fault was checking out garbage cans.  This is quite a common problem with dogs rescued off the street.  Most have had to raid  garbage cans for survival.  But once the dog gets to know that meals are regularly served, this habit usually resolves itself. 

Congratulations to the Clarkes for adopting and then taking the time to train their wonderful new pup. 

If anyone is interested in helping either of these organizations, please check out their websites.  www.meximutt.com and www.mex-can.org




June 2009

According to a recent article in the Nanaimo Bulletin, there has been  a huge response to the plight of the mother Rottweiler and her pups who were rescued from the filth and mud of a Ladysmith residence.  There is no way you could call it a home.  The SPCA has a long list of potential adoptees, have received donations cash for their medical care and food and the survivors are doing well.  Also in the latest newsletter from the SPCA it was announced the Hill’s Science Diet Pet Food have donated all the food the SPCA shelters require in every location in B C for the next year!  To top it off, they are also ensuring that every adopted dog goes home with  a bag of Science Diet pet food.




Renewed Life with Rescued Border Collies

Border collies are high energy dogs, so when Pat and I first met Jamie, a rescue dog who had spent most of his three years of life in a fenced-in kennel run, we were surprised to find a reserved dog who didn’t socialize with dogs or humans. He came to us timidly, and without a reaction to any form of touch. In the first few weeks, he needed to be coaxed past houses where dogs barked, he manically ran in straight lines and pounced anxiously at the dirt, and generally stayed in his own space without coming for any affection.

We have had Jamie for a year now and things have changed gradually through constant work and informed training. Our patient process with Jamie has been one of two steps forward and one step back. Over time we were able to wean him from always requiring a leash, to responding eagerly and consistently off-leash on our walks in the bush. At first Jamie shied away from meeting people and dogs on the trail and crept into the woods, when anyone appeared. Like a wolf, he moved silently through the underbrush and appeared back on the trail after the perceived danger had passed. In the house he found imaginary dogs in the mirrors, in the reflection of himself in the door of the fridge or the oven and barked and ran frantically down the hall. Of course this behaviour was annoying, as was his herding tendencies in the back yard where he crept up to the busy gardeners, only to frantically dash away when we looked up. Here was a dog who needed a lot of channeled direction.

Jamie’s training began when we enrolled him in Kathy Reilly’s, Miss Behaviors Family Dog Training basic obedience classes. Even though he was developmentally delayed because of the neglect , he became a star pupil. With expert instruction,  hard work on the part of my partner, Pat, and the innate intelligence of the breed, Jamie started to come to life. Although he was  reticent among the other dogs in the training sessions, he learned the basics of sit, stay, wait, down, and come. He, of course, knows many more commands and is learning more each week, and may in the future get up to the 360 word vocabulary many experts believe some animals can learn.

After basic boot camp, we realized that if we were to do justice to the dog that we had just rescued, it would not be enough to keep him around as an ordinary house pet. Here is a breed of dog that is genetically made to work. Some dogs are happy just lying on the rug beside the fire; border collies are not.

As Jamie began to socialize with other dogs, we quickly realized that he needed an activity, some work, so we enrolled him in agility training, around the same time that we rescued another border collie, a female who had been similarly abused for two years by being crated for most of her days. The unfortunate dog, whom we named Skye, came to us under weight, and only 15 inches high, three inches shorter than normal height for female border collies. As with Jamie, she came with her own set of issues. At first she chewed rugs, towels and shoe laces right out of their shoes. Her fixation with our shoes certainly went a long way toward making us keep the front hall tidy. She cowered when approached and at times was aggressive to other dogs who were just being sociable. Overall however, she displayed a very docile demeanor. In fact she was labeled the most “laid-back” border collie our vet had ever seen.

Skye’s introduction into the pack gave Jamie a friend. Over time they have learned to play together, wrestle, and make up running games. They are both enrolled in agility training and on a regular basis go out to Errington to herd sheep. Bernadette of DAWG Agility (http://www.goplayagility.com/) recognized that Jamie’s mind needed to be unlocked, since during agility training he was always anxiously looking over his shoulder in a stressed state. The other activities distracted him from focusing on the handler and the equipment. Bernadette mentioned sheep as a natural way to unlock his brain and Doe Shires, who owns her own sheep and six border collies, offered to give Jamie and Skye a go at the sheep. Yes, herding sheep! After all isn’t that what these dogs were bred for? Now sheep herders know that a good herding dog is a combination of innate ability and the training of a good handler, so Jamie and Skye, having been developmentally delayed will never make great sheep herding dogs, but this experience, just as the agility work and even the basic training, opened up their minds, unlocked their psyches and gave them fresh oxygen to live more fulfilled active and healthy lives.


We are both happy with their progress, satisfied that we are doing as much as we possibly can for these dogs amid our busy lives, and in return we are rewarded by being active ourselves in engaging these two great companions.

Written by David Fraser and Patricia Carroll


Note: If you have a Feel Good story to share please contact kathyreilly@shaw.ca