Showing posts with label jack russell terrier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jack russell terrier. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2015

(wo)MAN'S BEST FRIEND

The right man will love you unconditionally, be loyal, and always be happy to see you.

Oh wait...that's my dog.
My dog does that.

Happy #nationalpuppyday



Whoever said a girl's best friend is diamonds obviously never owned a dog.
(I'll still take diamonds if offered though.)

Friday, February 14, 2014

CUPID

My dog...the kidder
Hope you had a happy Valentine's Day!

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

KONG Dog Toys GIVEAWAY

Disclosure: I got this product as part of an advertorial.

Day-Z is a smart dog. She likes to do dog puzzles to to give herself both a mental and physical workout. For her birthday month, I chose to give her a KONG Satellite Treat Dispenser. It's a unique toy that dispenses treats and totally provides your dog with lots of exercise. 
It's easy for adults or kids to add the treats to the toy dispenser.

The KONG Satellite Treat Dispenser (about 8.5 inches in length) is translucent which allows dogs to not only smell but also SEE the treats inside.
 The holes are positioned in different spots so the toy
 dispenses treats as you spin, tilt and tumble it.

Moderation - It helps make your dog have to work for the treat
instead of just scarfing them all down right away.
Hershey came over and easily figured out as Day-Z was busy doing all of  the work to get the treats out, she could sneak a few. 
Day-Z instantly chews and destroys the $1 plastic squeaky toys I buy from Wal-mart. But Kong dog toys seem to last A LOT longer. Kong is known for making high-quality, durable toys that dogs love and we can add our testimony to that!
She did get a little rough with this one, but this all the damage she did. A few small scratches. Not bad at all.

 Kong toys are 100% safe and come in a variety of shapes, colors, and models to meet your individual dog needs.
Want to win one for your pet? Enter below:
a Rafflecopter giveaway


I received one or more of the products mentioned above for free using Tomoson.com. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

1 Year ANNIVERSARY

Day-Z and I have been best friends for 1 year!
Happy anniversary and birthday, my sweet pooch.
What did we do to celebrate? 
We went to the store where she picked out a treat, played at the dog park, and then stopped at the Humane Society shelter where I found her to get updated on her vaccinations.
She likes to party!

Thursday, December 19, 2013

CHRISTMAS CARD PHOTO SHOOT

Day-Z and I had some photos taken for my Christmas cards this year.
 Don't mind the double chin
 Great action

 We went through A LOT of treats

She was so well behaved during the shoot. I'm surprised because she is normally very camera shy.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THINGS STINKY

I have tried to get my dog to swim in so many nice, clean, bodies of water.
Yesterday, she ran into Utah Lake with no coercing of any kind and played for an hour.
Probably because it the dirtiest water playground we could possibly find.

At least, I now know she isn't afraid of water.

Bless her stink loving, dirty, little heart.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

DISGUISE

I can't find my dog, but this bear keeps following me around.
She's such a kidder.

Monday, July 1, 2013

PILLOW PET

Day-Z is Lola's real life pillow pet.
Best Friends Forever!

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

3 MO FOLLOW-UP

For those of ya'll who might be wondering...
Today was Day-Z's 3 month follow-up appointment after her eye surgery. The doctor said her eye is looking great! That's it. Yeah the appointment lasted like a total of 1 minute.

To celebrate Day-Z's awesome status, I hung a canvas print I received from PrintFirm.


Isn't it super magical?! It's a 24x24 wrapped canvas. The quality is fantastic (full color and high quality offset printing) and the website is very user friendly (their Design-It-Online tool is incredibly easy to work with).  Add great service and fast turnaround and you will be very impressed with the entire process and company. PrintFirm not only does canvas prints, you can also have them help with your printing needs for magnets, DVD covers, flyers, calendars, business cards, menus, brochures, and so much more. 
Check them out on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PrintFirm

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

HANDCUFFED

I came outside to find my dog being handcuffed
by a neighbor kid dressed in a police officer uniform.
He told me he was going to radio the station for help.
Busted!

Monday, March 18, 2013

DON'T JUDGE ME

First of all, I want to apologize for a previous post. I normally don't show much emotion on this blog. But I did the other day...so there you have it...I have emotions (don't tell anybody else). This car accident event was a little tough for me, but Dayz has been doing much better. Her happy attitude is showing through the stitches.
Here is Day-Z:

(She is very camera shy)

I have had several people offer kind words, giving support and letting me know things will be ok. One comment stood out the most saying she might LOOK different, but she will still BE the same dog and we'll LOVE each other just the same. I've realized this is true since her surgery medications have worn off and she is back to her super happy (sometimes stubborn) dog self.

After answering the door and having the UPS guy pet her and ask, "What happened? Did her eye get ripped out or something?" and a 7 year-old girl comment, "She's weirding me out. I'm not coming over any more because of her," I was a little nervous. I am aware Day-Z is a dog. She doesn't care who you are, she'll wag her tail and sniff your hand for a scratch behind the ear. I know that I love her and I think Day-Z is beautiful - inside and out. She is the sweetest, most gentle, funniest dog I have met. I just hope others can see that too.
Mother Teresa said, "If you judge people, you have no time to love them." That statement is so simple yet so profound. It is much easier to find the faults in others instead of looking inward and finding what it is that we are seeing in this person we are judging. We need to be fair. 

Those Depeche Mode guys sang (from the song People Are People):

So we're different colours
And we're different creeds
And different people have different needs.
It's obvious you hate me 
Though I've done nothing wrong.
I never even met you
So what could I have done.
I can't understand
What makes a man
Hate another man.
Help me understand.


At Powell's City of Books in Portland, there is a section where they ask you to actually judge the books by their ridiculously awesome covers, but I think most other times - especially with people *and pets* - I'd say we should keep the judging to a minimum. 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

LEPRECHAUN DOG

Happy St. Patrick's Day from Day-Z and me.
Now time for a little Irish jig with the leprechaun dog!

Saturday, March 16, 2013

GETTING....BETTER

Day-Z has improved so much the last two days. If I look past the not being able to sleep at night because she hits me in the face with her cone, the fact that I have to put bologna in her water dish to trick her into drinking water so she stays hydrated (don't most dogs love to drink water?), and 30 minute wrestles to get her daily eye drop in her eye, I'd say she is closer to being back to her normal self. She longs to run outside and play with her neighborhood animal friends, to jump and play, and do her really big yawns. However, she needs to stay calm so she doesn't rip out her stitches and to avoid infection. She is great at giving kisses, cuddling, and just being her super happy dog self already.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

DAY-Z DAY 3

I was given instruction to make sure Day-Z stays inside away from other dogs so she doesn't get excited and disrupt the healing of her eye. She has been sitting at the front door begging me to take her for a walk all morning. The weather was warm and sunny this afternoon so Dayz and I went to the backyard and laid together on a blanket soaking up some vitamin D. After a little while, I noticed a drop of watery blood on my arm near where she was resting her head. I wasn't sure if it came from her nose or eye so we went inside in case that was too much sun for her. The eye doctor told me they were going to sew the tear duct in the eye they removed closed so there might be some drainage through her nose.
Day-Z enjoyed her mini trip outside so much she even started wagging her tail again. 


There is gladness in my soul today,
  And hope, and praise, and love,
For blessings which He gives me now,
  For joys laid up above.

Source: http://www.hymnal.net/hymn.php/h/343#ixzz2NZG5BcQf

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

THE CAR ACCIDENT

Maybe you didn't read the earlier post about rescuing Day-Z from the shelter. After 3 adoptions, she found her permanent home with me. I love her.
We have a morning routine: we wake up, eat some breakfast upstairs, she burps, we go to the park just a few streets away, she does her Day-Z duke there, we come home, and then go on with our day. Dayz loves running at the park!
This morning, we went to the park as usual. As we were getting out of the car, Day-Z noticed a cat across the street. She normally stays on the grassy area and doesn't cross the street. I hadn't put her leash on yet as I opened the car door and she excitedly weaseled her way over and this morning she ran toward the cat instead. I crossed the street as well to get her and she ran around a little. I waited for her. Dayz noticed I wasn't going to chase her and she ran back across the street to the park. I was still on the opposite side waiting for a car to pass before I crossed to her. Suddenly, she turned around and looked to see the cat had climbed down from the trees he had used to hide in and she started to run toward the cat once more. There was a second red pickup truck passing that I was waiting for. Day-z didn't see it and the driver of the truck didn't see her either.

Day-Z was hit. The truck pulled over. Dayz layed in the street a little frazzled. I hurried to her and picked her up. Blood started to come from her right eye. She was hit by the driver's side of the car so I didn't fully see the collision, but I did notice something fly on the street near her that looked like pieces of ice had come off the truck. That seemed strange to me. I carried Day-Z to the car. My hands were shaking as I tried to unlock the car door. A woman in the parking lot asked if she was ok and if I needed to use her phone. I told her I didn't know why I would use her phone. Then I remembered the strange thing that looked like ice from the truck. I put Day-Z inside the car and walked back into the street to the strange object. I picked it up. It was a round jelly like substance. The driver was still pulled over to the side of the street sitting in her truck. I walked over and told her, "I don't know what to tell you. I have to take my dog to the hospital."

The woman that offered to let me use her cell was still standing there and told me there is a pet urgent care hospital nearby just minutes away. I proceeded to drive there and on the way phoned my mother and a friend for advice or maybe just for support so I didn't freak out myself. I think I needed to know somebody would be there if I needed help. I couldn't find it in the parking lot so I googled the address and called the office. There was no answer. Instead I heard a recording saying the office hours were from 8pm-6am. It was around 10am. They were closed. I phoned the vet I had taken her to for her physical when I first adopted her. (I have that number memorized because it is only 1 number different from my parent's home phone and my mother used to get calls from people trying to call the vet office asking, "Do you do snakes?" after she said hello - kinda funny story).
I explained what had happened and that the Urgent Care was not answering. The person on the other end of the line told me to come in right away or take her to a 24 hour Urgent Care facility in Sandy (20-30 min away). Dayz was standing in my lap a little worried at the time so I decided it would be best to take her to a closer office.

I walked in the office with Day-Z in my arms and the jelly ball I picked up off the street in my hand. The vet told me it was her lens. She took her into another room to check her for any trauma besides the obvious bleeding eye. Nothing. The vet offered to remove her eye immediately or informed me there is a pet eye specialist in Salt Lake City I could take her to at a cost of about $2500. I decided to take her to the specialist in hopes of saving her eye no matter the cost. 
I was unbelievably calm until the friend I had called earlier walked into the room I was sitting in at the Vet office. Then I was a little worried. My friend offered to drive to Salt Lake with me while I held Day-Z in my lap. She wasn't howling, whimpering, or moving around the car as I would imagine her to be since I'm sure she was in immense pain. Instead she was lying in my lap with her head on the middle console in the car letting off random quiet sighs/breaths. As we made the drive to 3300 South, we got about a block away and her eye started to bleed again.
The doctor took her into an examining room right away. Dayz was completely compliant with the doctor without having had any pain medication yet. She was even wagging her tail. I couldn't help though. I began crying and had to look away as she checked out her eyes with different lights and scopes. I was informed by the doctor that hereditary traits cause dogs to have weak hips, bad eye sight, or are prone to disease. Small dogs like Jack Russell Terriers have the risk of having weak eyes. The jelly thing I picked up was in fact her lens. It was weakly attached and because of the collision, it was knocked loose and came out over her eye. That shouldn't have happened. So we were recommended to go to SLC to the specialist to also make sure her other eye is not at risk.
Before leaving the room, the doctor then told me that her eye could not be saved. If it had been struck at the top or side of the iris, maybe it could be saved with loss of vision. Unfortunately, she told me the eye needed to be removed and lid sewn shut. The doctor left the room to see if the vet back in town could do it (probably for a lower price) and to take Day-Z to another room to another doctor to make sure she was operable (that she didn't have a concussion, broken bones in her face, exploding heart rate/blood pressure, etc). As she left and the door closed, I lost it. Her eye sewn shut?! Would my beautiful canine look like a monster. Thoughts of "pirate dog" or "frankenpooch"went through my head. People thinking she looked like a monster if I took her to the park again or her not having a normal life and being depressed. My mind was racing. Tears were flowing. Regrets and blame came to me. I wondered if maybe I had parked in another spot facing the other way, if I had gone to park 10 minutes earlier or later, what if...what if...what if...

The original doctor came back in the room and told me the local vet could not get her in for an appointment for an entire week, but that would be too long for her to wait and be in pain. I was glad, I personally wanted an expert to take care of her even if it meant the price was more. Price really wasn't a factor to me, rather I was more worried about my dog's health and well-being. She didn't have any other trauma and was able to have the surgery right away. I was sent away and told to come back in approximately 4 hours. The doctor reassured me that there would be someone with her at all times, the other trauma specialist would sit by her side as she performed the operation in case anything went wrong, and an assistant to hold her as she woke up after the procedure. 

I left the clinic and went to the nearby mall to try to not worry/panic. It didn't help. Thankfully, I had a tank top on so I was able to take off my sweatshirt covered in blood and dog hair (Dayz sheds a ton when she is nervous). But the worry/guilt/fear was still there. I cried. A lot. Like a baby. Any make up I had on was gone, my eyes were red, and I'm sure I looked a little scary to other shoppers around me. I left the mall and headed to Supersonic Car Wash to clean the car. I drove to the attendant in the car wash drive thru and began sobbing as I tried to ask for the price to clean the interior of the car to remove blood, vacuum the hair, and wash the car. After being directed off to the side to compose myself, I was quoted a price of $48 and told it would take 2 hours for me to get all of done. "I can't wait 2 hours, I have to pick up my dog from surgery at 4pm." Seeing the blood and the clear residue from the lens I placed on the middle console was making me cry more. I tried to calm down.
Three hours later and a Mrs. Field's cinnamon roll cookie later (you MUST try one), I received a call from the office. They told me the operation was a success, Day-Z showed great signs of improvement and relief, and that she was going to sleep for an hour before I picked her up to take her home. A nurse met me in the lobby at 4pm and gave me a list of medications for Dayz to take twice daily. She also told me in order to keep her other eye healthy and at a lower risk of detaching, I need to give her some eye drops twice daily for the rest of her life at $87/month. Poor pup. I tried to hold back the tears. Then she went in the back to get Day-Z and carried her out to me. Her face was shaved and very swollen, she was wearing a cone, and she seemed completely disoriented. I began crying again. I tried to hold it in to not stress Dayz out any more than she might have been. I paid the $1800 bill and we went on our way home to rest.
She has to wear a cone until she gets her stitches removed in two weeks. Along with her eye, the doctor found a cut on her cheek when they shaved her that needed to be stitched. I held her close and tried to comfort her on the ride home. She moaned a little during the journey. She was groggy at home, but still wanted to move around the house. My heart was broken to see her like this. I felt exhausted. We both took a nap. Hopefully there will be improvements tomorrow-for both of us.