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felicia

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Everything posted by felicia

  1. did someone mention spanking? :lol: heeeeey! i just realised, i'm a regular now! woo hoo :bday:
  2. thankyou, i'm having a great time here, i already need my doggo fix a few times a day :drinking: :lol: i think it's so sweet when she try's to heal me, i don't let her do it but every now and then she'll get a lick in when i least expect it, i do think it's sweet though because it means she's trying to look after me. as for the shower, i just wait til she leaves now and get dressed real quick then she comes back when it's too late :lol: dogs are such loving little things! :D felicia
  3. Hi, i'm in the very outback, up north near geraldton....but inland, don't think there are any boas here but there are browns which worry me a lot. brisbane is close to rainforrest area, ther are some huge snakes over there, in west oz they are smaller but very poisonus, they don't worry me at all but i worry for anassa :( sometimes we go out collecting firewood and exploring, there is this place we like to go where there is an abandoned building and oh boy are ther snake tracks! they are absolutely everywhere! we don't ever take nass to these places but we like to go and see if we can see any snakes unfortionately we haven't come across one yet, we have seen a few huge lizards though which was awesome. one big problem we have to worry about out here is dogs chasing roo's, max has done it a few times and he will chase them for miles, roos can be dangerous though and i don't let nass off her lead out here just incase. boas also like dense rainforrest type areas, it's all red dirt out here and very very dry and hot...thank goodness or i'd have to worry about them too.....i feel sorry for the roo though, where's steve erwin when you need him huh? :lol: feicia
  4. Thanks guys! yes, my yard has a two meter high fence all the way around, there are no coyoties in Australia but there are snakes, iv'e actually only ever seen one in my whole life and that was in a swampy area, it was a tiger snake and i just stood there and watched it, it slithered away eventually, was actually very pretty :) however, dogs don't know that snakes are dangerous they probably just see them as another toy so i do get concerned that she will come across one, i check on her every 20 mins or so just to make sure she's okay and iv'e taken everything out of the yard that could be dangerous to her. i live in outback Australia and when i say that i mean there is red dirt and nothing else for miles, there are kangaroos jumping down the street at night and late afternoon and there are way too many strays :( plus, there is no vet, the only one is two and a half hours away, nassa got a wobbly fluid filled lump on her side a few weeks back and we had to speed to the vet which can be dangerous in the early morning because of all the kangaroos bounding across the street, she was fine but i had to make sure because it is not worth the risk to me, i love her way too much. i would get a doggy door installed but i can't do it here because i want my cats indoor only while we are in such a deserted place, once we move back to civilisation i'm getting a dog/cat door so everyone is happy, i think nassa should have a choice :) if cats couldn't jump fences i'd let them out too, they want to go out but we only have another 11 months here, thank goodness!! the only things in this town are a pub, a deli and a shire oh and minesites....this is the kind of town where people treat dogs as nothing really special so you can guess the look of surprise on their faces when i take nassa down the street sporting a doggy jumper :lol: luckily maxy's owner is just as passionate about dogs as me, so i have someone who understands and who i can talk to, damn i miss the beach though!! :cry: :cry: felicia
  5. when i first brought anassa home i had no idea on how to train a puppy etc so i joined a dog forums, can't remember the name but i wanted to get advice, share photo's and talk to other dog lovers. in this forum there were huge debates about dogs being left outside alone and that you had to watch them all the time or they would get killed by snakes etc. anassa sleeps inside at night except when max is over because they want to play outside and stuff but, she goes outside during the day by herself to play but only because she wants to, she will sort of paw the door when she wants to go out and do the same thing when she wants to come in and snuggle on the couch with me while i read a book or watch animal planet. i mentioned this at the forums i was at before and got torn down and told i was so cruel for letting her out....i decided to leave quietly and just not reply at all but i must admit, it hurt a lot, i didn't think i was doing anything wrong, she was never outside alone when she was a little puppy because that could have been dangerous. am i wrong for letting her out without supervision...is it really that bad outside? thankyou felicia
  6. [quote name='leahluvsherpups']EVERY time I get out of the shower Buddy comes in and proceeds to lick my legs dry. Does anyone else have a dog that does that?[/quote] nassa does that too! at least i know she's isn't the only one now, anyone have any idea why they do it? also, if i have a cut or some kind of injury she comes up and tries to lick it as well.....do you think she's trying to fix it? felicia
  7. thats kind of how i felt when i read the story, firstly, what an amazing dog, living in such horrid conditions yet living to such an amazingly old age. what upset me too was the fact that he was dumped in the first place and that he will or has...died alone and not with someone who loves him :cry: he seemed like such an amazing dog, a loner but hardy, it was a great thing that the miners fed him though, would have made his life a whole lot easier. i also thought the auditor was a cool name and really suited him. i think he was maybe best left where he was used to but it's hard not to wish you could take him home to love and spoil rotten. this story made me feel so sad :cry: i wonder if he's still alive? somehow i doubt it... felicia
  8. i just read a story about a dog living on a mine site, it was being fed but the conditions of where it lived weren't great, whta do you think they should have done or what would you have done in this situation....i'm really not sure what i would do, i feel sorry for him though : okay, the link wasn't really working so here's the photo and story - [img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v632/felicia24/shaggydog5sy.jpg[/img] Within the environmentally hostile confines of the Berkeley Pit lives perhaps Superfund's most amazing paradox. Its name is `` The Auditor.'' Its genus is Canus, but its species -- if indeed there ever were another single dog like it on the planet -- would be nothing other than extraordinarius . This mysterious mongrel has called the 5,000-acre contaminated expanse of the Berkeley Pit federal Superfund site, combined with Montana Resources' active mine permit area, its home since 1986. Ironically, its only help in surviving has come from the compas sion of miners. `` He really is a neat dog,'' says MR Operations President Steve Walsh. The Auditor, who got his name by always showing up `` when you least expected it,'' has served as the open pit copper mine's de facto mascot since its employees befriended the stray nearly 16 years ago. Numerous snap shots of him are proudly placed alongside ore samples and awards plaques in the main office's glass display case. Workers on the night shift have been dili gently putting out food and water for the dog whenever it has shown up for the majority of its residency at the mine. For the past few years, baby aspirin has been added to his diet, on a veterinarian's recommendation to help an arthritic limp he's developed. And now, with the recent flurry of activity with the construction of the Horseshoe Bend water treatment plant, the dog has shown up unexpectedly over the past few months, accepting an occasional handout from the workers. MR employees also erected a shanty dog house at the foot of an enormous waste rock dump where the dog is still fed and sometimes sleeps. Mirroring its owner's mangy appear ance, the shack is bleak and bedded with rags. But it's better than nothing. As a rule, feeding time around 7 p.m. is the only time The Auditor can be expected to appear in all his unsightly glory. For the rest of his waking hours, he roams the vastness of his toxic home in elusiveness, sometimes miss ing for weeks, even in the dead of winter. In these instances like a drunk disappears on a bender, the small group of people who care for the dog have feared his death more than once. But just as he got his name, he's always shown up. `` God only knows what he does all day,'' says MR employee Ron Benton. `` You've got to won der why an animal would choose a place so forlorn.'' Forlorn indeed. Not a single blade of grass, nary a tree, shrub or weed can survive on the acidic crust that dominates this animal's yard. Reeking of sulfur and acidity, this is the kind of soil that eats men's boots, let alone the feet of any normal dog. And the water here is lethal, should you suppose he walks on that. In 1995, the deceptively calm surface of the Pit infamously claimed the lives of 342 snow geese that made the mistake of a migratory stop. `` It's unbelievable how it could live in a place that's supposed to be so toxic,'' says local veterinarian Ed Peretti. `` He's one tough dog, I'll tell you that.'' Regardless of whom you talk to who has seen him, the `` one tough dog'' description is the first definition given of The Auditor. Charlie Palagi, now retired from Montana Resources after serving his entire career in the Butte mines, still buys the food for The Auditor. He fondly tells many a tale about the mutt, all beginning or ending with the declara tion of The Auditor's toughness. `` He's kind of like our mascot, huh,'' says Palagi, who has several photos of the dog in his retirement albums at home. Perhaps the dog's most evident trait comes from his origins in the gritty town from which he most obviously wandered. From its heyday as a raucous mining boomtown in the early 1900s to its current economic hardship in the troubled industry's absence, an enigmatic toughness has always been the bread-and-but ter of Butte's sometimes-ugly reputation. Once heralded as The Richest Hill on Earth, its loca tion now serves as the beginning of the nation's largest Superfund area, stretching 120 miles from the Berkeley downstream to the Milltown Dam just east of Missoula. MR suspended its operations in June 2000 because of high, deregulated energy rates coupled with another drop in the price of cop per. That's when Peretti got a call from a MR employee concerned with The Auditor's future at the mine. The plea was to track down the dog for an examination and to help its caretak ers formulate a long-term survival plan should they close for good. After driving around for several hours on more than one occa sion, the most Peretti ever got was a glimpse of the dread-locked mutt as it lumbered over a rocky dump too steep for the vet to fol low. In hindsight, it's probably better the dog's life wasn't interfered with, Peretti said. The Auditor is well over a hundred in dog years now. Belying his ailing and hideous appearance and despite the noxious surroundings he claims as home, the animal has been getting along fine ever since. Much the same, in the absence of a mining economy and under the shadowy stigma of Superfund, Butte has managed to keep hanging on as an undying anomaly to ghost town theory. The dog's only extremity that can be made out from beneath its filthy, grossly matted coat is its hardened snout. Some years back, one of the miners who cared for the dog was able to shear its bangs in one of the only instances of human contact The Auditor has ever allowed. Beneath his dreaded shroud shined a pair of beautiful eyes. Butte too, beneath its grizzled appearance from the outside, pos sesses a unique magnificence and embraces a human kindness found in few places. Whether the natives in The Mining City know it, they too have a mascot in the amazing Auditor. How threatening is the scarlet brand of Superfund upon a com munity already marked on the outside by its hard rock mining past? Since the area's listing on the EPA's National Priority List in 1983, nearly half a billion dollars that otherwise would not have been spent by the responsible parties has created a substantial environmental sector in the town's economy. Several amenities and needed infrastructure has also resulted from a number of cleanup remedies. Therefore it is difficult to insist it has been entirely bad. And for what has been bad, the people of this granite-hard town have lived by the unspoken creed of a mortal dog that has survived among the worst, reminding us always to never underestimate the unexpected. -- Matt Vincent of Butte is a reclamation specialist for ButteSilver Bow County. He also works part-time as a sports reporter for The Montana Standard. felicia
  9. at least i'm not alone :lol:
  10. :lol: thanks, had a blonde moment :wink: felicia
  11. Thankyou :) this is going to sound like a stupid question, actually it is a stupid question but what are withers? :oops: felicia
  12. anassa is a wolfhound cross english pointer. she's 5 and a half months at the moment and last time i measered her she was 24.8 inches and 40lbs.....she has quiet big feet but i'm not sure what size she will be, can anyone help? also, does anyone know how tall a english pointer is at five and a half months? thankyou felicia
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