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Opt-In for Our Upcoming Newsletter

The 5th issue of  The Animal Support Project’s email newsletter is in development, and we’re hoping to get it out to all of you who opted in before the trees lose their autumn leaves.

In this edition, you’ll find out how Mitch’s dogs are doing. You’ll meet a couple of TASP volunteers who have been helping out with all four units of TASP’s Incident Command structure: Finance, Logistics, Operations and Planning (better known as FLOP) ;o). And of course, we’re bringing you up to date on all the latest tips, resources, and legal developments concerning companion animals! 

What’s that? You say you haven’t received a TASP email newsletter yet?  Well, then you might still need to OPT-IN.

To opt-in, just click on this Opt-In link and follow the ensuing instructions. BTW, please share with anyone you know who might also be interested in receiving the newsletter. Thanks as always for keeping tabs on us. We hope you will enjoy the newsletter as much as we enjoy creating it for you.

The fifth edition will be out before you know it!

And you won’t want to miss out on the news about Sarah!


TASP Fantasy Photos, NOW AVAILABLE ONLINE!

Jonesing for your monthly TASP Fantasy Photo clinic?  Wish you could have gotten that special photo of your best friend on one of our fabulous Easter/Springtime theme photo backgrounds BEFORE quarantine?  Well, thanks to the wonders of technology, TASP has found a way to keep the Fantasy Photo Fun flowing!  Starting this month and continuing until COVID-19 lets us all get back on the circuit, The Animal Support Project’s Fantasy Photo clinics are going ONLINE!  Now you can order your TASP Easter/Spring photo ONLINE and know you’re continuing to help our community’s pets stay safe and healthy!  

It’s easy to get a TASP Fantasy Photo emailed directly to your inbox and/or a print mailed to your home.  Just send us an email at taspinfo@yahoo.com that includes the following

Choose your background(s). CLICK HERE TO SEE THE BACKGROUNDS.

Attach your own photo of your subject(s) taken against a plain background.  If you have multiple subjects and want them to appear in the same photo, just send us a photo of each subject separately and we’ll combine them digitally.  Already been to a TASP photo clinic in the past? We can look up previous photos of your subject(s) from our archives and use them to create this month’s photo.

Let us know how you’d like to receive your photo:

Emailed .jpg photo @ $10 donation

Mailed hard copy print @ $10 donation (Be sure to supply your mailing address).

Or get both for $15 donation!

Lucite® frame for mailed photos optional @ additional $3 (covers cost of frame and mailing)

*Please be sure your email includes a phone number where you can be reached in case we need to contact you.

TASP volunteers will create your special photo and email you an invoice when it’s ready.  Payment can be made through Paypal, Venmo or Facebook Pay.  Finished photos will be sent out within 24 hours of payment received.

With so many challenges brought about by COVID-19, more companion animals than ever are going to need TASP’s help to stay safe and healthy.  Bringing our friends and supporters this popular activity ONLINE at this time is our way of continuing to finance our mission, while hopefully creating some much-needed smiles.  As always, all proceeds are spent on supporting our community’s most vulnerable companion animals. Thanks for caring!


Grrrrrrreat Reads – Not Just For 1st Time Adopters

 

It is exciting to find so many good books about pet adoption on the market. Those of us who live with adopted pets know how much they mean to a family.

 

If you have ever opened your heart to an older pet, here’s a book you’ll want to check out:

 According to William Hageman, Reporter for the Chicago Tribune,  “If you read My Old Dog: Rescued Pets With Remarkable Second Acts (New World Library) and don’t want to run out to a shelter and rescue a senior pet, you have a heart of flint.”  The book, written by Laura T. Coffey and photographed by Lori Fusaro, champions a sometimes-forgotten segment of the animal shelter population.  It contains some truly beautiful photographs of senior dogs and a very nice resource section for folks who make older dogs a part of their life. http://www.myolddogbook.com/

 

 

Perhaps the writer of My Old Dog will follow up with an equally well-built version about senior cats? Let’s hope so. In the meantime, we have an excellent book available now, offering the latest information on Senior Cat Care. Written by Susan Easterly, Your Older Cat – A Complete Guide to Nutrition, Natural Remedies and Veterinary Care is a veritable Bible of good information for anyone whose cat is reaching its sunset years. With easy to follow tables, resource lists and helpful hints, this book will help any reader get a grip on old-cat topics like the aging process, preventive care, natural healing options, chronic diseases and senior cat nutrition. The suggested reading list is most helpful and the photos are just beautiful.

 

At the opposite end of the spectrum, there’s an excellent book on how to raise a great puppy written by Dr. Sophia Yin. Dr. Yin died a few years back, but she left behind her a tremendous wealth of writings about positive methods in pet training based on the latest research. Being a veterinarian, Dr. Yin also tempers her writings with the physical drivers behind behavior. Illustrated profusely with photos and drawings that are easy to interpret, Perfect Puppy in 7 Days – How to Start Your Puppy Off Right not only can help someone raising a puppy to do it right. It also can help the owner of a young dog understand the reasons behind behaviors they may be seeing in their pet, and how they can best modify those behaviors without ruining the dog.

 

Since we like to be even handed in our reviews, we owe it to the felines and their families to mention an equally interesting and well-designed how-to book about cats by Pam Johnson-Bennett: Think Like A Cat – How To Raise a Well-Adjusted Cat – Not a Sour Puss  From how to choose a new cat or kitten to how to kitten-proof a home to how to help your vet diagnose your cat’s ailments, this book is the one cat owners will turn to again and again over the lifetime of their cat. There’s some exceptional material in here about how to not only train a cat, but how to modify and even eliminate undesirable behaviors your cat may have developed. Personally we might have liked to have seen a few more illustrations in this book to break up the text a bit and help the more visual learners in our midst to get the message; but with so much valuable information in this book, we can forgive the lack of images and appreciate the treasure between its covers.


We’ll be there……….will YOU?

poster-news10-PET-CONNECTION


An Introduction to Raw Diet for Dogs

By Barbara Russo, Esq.

 

Many people have been choosing to provide their companion animals with a home-prepared, raw diet, instead of commercial dog food. There are different methods of feeding raw diets, including “Biologically Appropriate Raw Food” (B.A.R.F.) and the “Prey Model.” The B.A.R.F. model consists of feeding a combination of raw meaty bones, organ meat, muscle meat, eggs, and optional vegetables, grains, dairy and supplements (such as kelp powder, flax oil, and others). Amounts of each are based on percentages and the dog’s weight. The “Prey Model” consists of feeding a diet based on whole prey and excludes anything else, such as dairy, vegetables, fruit or supplements. This diet is based on a desire to mimic the diet of a wolf in the wild. The diet involves feeding large chunks of meat along with small amounts of bone, organs and eggs. Whichever model is followed, a variety of protein sources should be fed (i.e. chicken, rabbit, turkey, venison, beef, lamb, elk, fish, etc.). Do not rely on just one protein source.

 

With a home-prepared, raw diet, you are better able to control the quality and quantity of food your pet consumes. You control all of the ingredients, making it easy to avoid foods your dog may have a negative reaction to (i.e. allergens) and adjust the diet as needed based on weight, activity level, etc. Unlike highly processed commercial dog food, a raw diet is less processed and contains no artificial additives, colors or preservatives. Fresh foods supply nutrients in their natural form. The high level of processing used for commercial foods causes foods to lose much of their nutritional value, which must then be added back in synthetic form. A raw diet is much closer to a dog’s natural diet, rather than the overly processed commercial dogs foods which often contain a high level of carbohydrates.

 

Several people who have switched to a raw diet for their dogs have noticed a number of benefits. A raw diet may help with food allergies. Chewing the raw bones promotes cleaner teeth. Some advocates of a raw diet boast better coats and skin, brighter, clearer eyes and less body fat. Some have observed less severity in chronic conditions such as arthritis, ear infections, IBD and other digestive disorders, and some have even noticed reduced amounts of seizures in animals suffering from that condition. While not every dog with health problems gets better when switched to a homemade diet, overall, many who have switched to a raw diet have noticed better overall health in their companion animals.

 

If you are thinking about switching to a raw diet, do your research to be sure you are feeding a proper balanced diet. There are a number of resources which contain information on feeding raw. For more information, see*:

  • Work Wonders: Feed Your Dog Raw Meaty Bones, by Tom Lonsdale
  • Give Your Dog a Bone; Grow Your Pup with Bones; and the BARF Diet by Dr. Ian Billinghurst
  • Raw Dog Food: Make It Easy for You and Your Dog, by Carina Beth MacDonald
  • Switching to Raw, by Susan Johnson
  • Whole Dog Journal, “Have Dinner In,”April, 2007 issue; “A Raw Deal,” May, 2007 issue; and “Keeping It Raw,” August 2007 issue

 

*This list is by no means exhaustive; do a Google search on B.A.R.F. and you will find a number of articles and references to other books.