6 common mistakes owners make when walking their dogs
6 common mistakes owners make when walking their dogs
Walking our dogs is an enjoyable bonding activity, but some common errors can make it less fun for other pups, ramblers and farmers. From not closing gates to poor recall training, it's vital to avoid the mistakes pet owners make when dog walking.
Previous research conducted by Forthglade found that 59% of owners forget to pick up dog poop on walks, while 22% allow their dog to jump up at other walkers. Most owners love daily dog walks, but there are some common etiquette rules to follow to keep others safe.
To help you out, animal behaviourist Caroline Wilkinson from Barket Place has revealed the top dog walking mistakes and how to overcome them. Take a look at them below...
1. Not picking up dog poop
As well as littering our beautiful outside spaces, the parasites and bacteria in dog waste can spread to other dogs. While it's not the most pleasant job, dog waste is toxic, harbouring bacteria, viruses and parasites.
Caroline adds: "When you leave your dog's poop behind you're risking someone stepping in it or a child accidentally touching it while playing in the park. You're also risking your favourite walking spot implementing a dog ban. So scoop the poop!"
2. Leaving poop bags on the ground
Always put your plastic bags of poop in a secure bin. Not only do the bags take years to decompose, but they are a choking hazard for other animals when left lying around. Dog poop can sit encased in plastic for years, so it's best to opt for eco-friendly alternatives.
"Whether it's a dog who has a penchant for other dog's waste or a hedgehog who could get a stomach blockage, you could risk causing another animal some serious damage," adds Caroline. "Most parks these days are well equipped with dog waste bins, so when in doubt, bin it!"
3. Not putting your dog on a lead
It's responsible dog etiquette to put your furry friend on a lead when approaching another on-lead dog, even if you are confident in your pup. Once you've walked pass the other dog, don't forget to reward positive behaviour with a yummy treat.
"There are many reasons why a dog may not be happy with another dog approaching," Caroline explains. "It may be injured and feeling vulnerable, it may be in season, or it may have had a recent traumatic event that's caused it to be wary of other dogs."
4. Not closing gates
Do you remember to close gates when on a dog walk? Well, according to previous research, 22% of British owners leave them open. It might seem simple, but closing the gate will protect other off-lead dogs in the area, as well as preventing livestock from escaping.
If you're heading out on a countryside walk, leave gates as you found them. Closed gates need to be closed, so don't forget to shut them as your pass through.
5. Dogs jumping up with muddy feet
"As a dog owner, you've no doubt experienced a dog jumping up at you and covering you with muddy paw prints," says Caroline. "When you're out walking in your mucky dog gear it's likely you don't mind that much. However, for someone walking to an important work meeting or a young child who's a little worried about dogs, they're likely to get upset."
If you're walking in a busy area, always keep your dog on a lead — and encourage them not to jump up at strangers. It could be worth working with a positive dog trainer to help teach your pup an alternative greeting.
6. Dogs with poor recall
Sadly, poor recall training is one of the main reasons dogs are stolen or lost. As well as being a huge safety issue, poor recall can also impact other people or dogs in the area who might not be happy with your dog running up to them.
Caroline explains: "Recall is one of the most important things we can teach our dogs - and it's the exercise we want to give the highest value, tasty reward for. If your recall needs some more work, then speak to a force free trainer - and in the meantime use a long line or secure field to exercise your dog."
Reference: Country Living: isa Walden
What happened to the racing pigeons that mysteriously vanished?
What happened to the racing pigeons that mysteriously vanished?
Thousands of British homing pigeons mysteriously disappeared during races across the country on Saturday 19 June, with as many as 250,000 released in competition that day and only a fraction arriving at their intended destination.
One race from Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, to the North East of England saw 9,000 released but only around 4,000 reach their goal, while another race between Swindon in Wiltshire and Swansea in South Wales saw thousands more vanish without trace.
“We’ve seen one of the very worst ever racing days in our history,” said pigeon fancier Richard Sayers of Sayers Bros & Son from Skinningrove, North Yorkshire, part of the East Cleveland Federation, who lost an estimated 40 per cent of his flock in the disaster.
olar storm above the clouds that created static in the atmosphere - but no one really knows.”
Homing pigeons use the earth’s magnetic field to navigate but their sense of direction can be interfered with by a geomagnetic storm.
Dene Simpson, race controller for the South West Wales Federation of pigeon fanciers, recounted his traumatic experience to The Daily Mail, explaining: “We’d let ours go from Swindon at midday on the same Saturday - that’s a 92 mile journey with the wind behind them, so it shouldn’t have taken that long.
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“But, of the 1,400 that went out, only about 200 to 300 made it home. And when we looked on social media later on we saw that lots of other federations around the UK had experienced something similar.”
Like Mr Sayers, Mr Simpson suggested an unusual weather event was to blame for the disappearance of the pigeons.
“The forecast had been overcast in the morning but with good visibility - by the afternoon there were clear blue skies back home in Swansea, which is why I think something invisible to the naked eye occurred, something that messed with the birds’ internal sat nav and caused them to veer off course drastically,” he said.
“There was definitely something strange going on that day because there were hardly any wild birds in the sky at all beforehand, it was just dead up there. Personally, I’ve not ruled out a series of mini tornadoes being to blame.”
Ian Evans, CEO of the Royal Pigeon Racing Association (RPRA), was also baffled, telling The Sun: “We became aware quite quickly that something very unusual was happening.”
“I have never heard of anything like this,” he said. “On the face of it, the weather conditions were good. But in the event, thousands of birds simply didn’t return.
“Something happened that disrupted their navigational abilities. We believe it may have had something to do with solar wind activity.”
While a freak weather event does appear to be the most likely explanation, Met Office spokesperson Nicola Maxey told The Times that there has been “nothing unusual” in the atmosphere to impact the birds’ behaviour.
“Looking at space weather, there has been nothing unusual that has happened in the last few weeks,” she said.
“It has all been business as usual. There has been some low-level geomagnetic activity but just fairly regular occurrences, nothing strange or extreme that we haven’t seen lots of times before.”
How many have been returned?
Since the initial story of the strange mass disappearance broke, some of the birds have put in belated reappearances.
“I’d like to think the number missing today is a lot less and it should get a lot less over the next few days,” Mr Evans told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that week.
“Pigeons are actually very clever. If they do get tired and into difficulty they’ll find another pigeon loft where they can rest up and the people there will take care of them. Then when they’re fit enough and healthy enough, they will liberate them to return home.”
The RPRA tells The Independent that they are unable to confirm precisely how many birds have come home to roost and are still unsure of the cause but that Mr Evans himself released 27 pigeons that day and has had all but two return.
There have also been reports of individual birds pitching up in unexpected places and identified by the registration tags tied around their legs.
One from the Peterborough race was subsequently found in West Cork, Ireland, according to The Cambridge Times, with a woman in Clonakilty spotting it perched on her windowsill.
“We have tried to catch him but even though he is approachable he manages to thwart all our attempts,” she said.
“He is perched on our bedroom window and we have been feeding him with bird seed and water… We have already saved him from a neighbour’s cat who made a rush at it. It doesn’t appear to be streetwise where cats are concerned.”
A resident of County Mayo found another of the Peterborough birds dead in her garden.
In better news, The Sun reported another sighting in the Spanish holiday resort of Santa Ponsa, Majorca, prompting some lovely PhotoShop work from the tabloid and a “Wish Coo Were Here” headline.
The British expat who spotted it told the newspaper: “We’ve got millions of wood pigeons here and feral ones in nearby cities like Palma, so they’re easily identifiable. I had friends who used to keep pigeons.
“I know the difference. This one was a racing pigeon. It was well looked after, glossy and groomed. It was disorientated and tired.”
According to Mr Simpson, one of the birds belonging to a member of his federation has turned up in the Netherlands.
“It’s upsetting for the boys because they’ve reared these birds by hand, really looked after them,” he said.
“And, while money is the last thing on anyone’s mind at a time like this, pigeon fancying can be an expensive hobby. Losing this many birds will have cost a fortune.”
Further suspected sighting of the missing pigeons have also been reported on social media:
The RPRA, incidentally, offers advice on how to care for lost pigeons and report your discovery.
Why are we asking this now?
The story attracted widespread interest across the world last month and was reported everywhere from The Times of India to NPR in the United States, but, three weeks later, its cause remains a mystery, with some news outlets excitedly proposing a “Bermuda Triangle” lurking in the skies above the British Isles, an idea that overlooks the fact similar episodes have been reported in Belgium and Portugal.
While some birds have returned or been rescued, many are still missing and, without an explanation of its cause, the possibility remains that it could happen again, a source of likely concern to breeders.
A major weather event like the solar storm or mini tornado suggested by the fanciers would appear to be the most likely explanation but, that avenue of inquiry having been shut down by meteorologists, we are left without a clear understanding of what caused this strange occurrence, rarely heard of in a sport whose traditions date back as far as Rameses III and Ancient Egypt.
Independent reader tigger444 offered an interesting suggestion in a comment under our original story by pointing to a precedent in American science writer Arthur Firstenberg’s book The Invisible Rainbow (2017), which records the disappearance of 90 per cent of pigeons from races across the US in October 1998 and explains: “The trigger for the two weeks of sudden bird disorientation was apparently the commencement of microwave rain falling from satellites.”
Firstenberg blames the recent launch of 66 Iridium satellites by Motorola a month earlier to support its new mobile phone network and connects the phenomenon with the discovery by Canadian researchers in the late 1960s that “bird feathers make fine receiving aerials for microwaves.”
Whatever the truth, homing pigeons are too often unkindly written off by some city-dwellers as “rats with wings” but actually have a noble tradition of public service, delivering vital communications across battlelines in both World Wars, which is all the more reason to be concerned for the plight of our feathered friends now.
Tiger King star Joe Exotic likely to have prison sentenced reduced as court vacates original 22-year term
Tiger King star Joe Exotic likely to have prison sentenced reduced as court vacates original 22-year term
A court has ordered a likely reduction to the prison sentence that Tiger King star Joe Exotic is serving for abusing animals and plotting to murder rescue campaigner Carole Baskin.
The former Oklahoma zoo owner, real name Joseph Allen Maldonado-Passage, was sentenced to serve 22 years in prison in 2020 on charges of murder for hire and animal abuse.
However, on Wednesday a three-judge panel for the US Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in Denver found that his prison term had been wrongly calculated under sentencing guidelines.
The panel agreed that the two charges should have been treated as one conviction at sentencing, because they both involved the same goal of killing Ms Baskin, who runs a rescue sanctuary for big cats in Florida and also appeared in the Netflix documentary.
The judges said that Maldonado-Passage should have been sentenced to somewhere between 17 and a half years and 22 years in prison, rather than between 22 years and 27 years.
The documentary subject will now be re-sentenced by a lower court and could see years shaved off of his sentence, though the 58-year-old is likely to continue to face the prospect of more than a decade behind bars.
He previously launched an unsuccessful campaign to get a pardon from former US president Donald Trump, after the then president’s son Donald Trump Jr appeared to suggest he would push for the move.
However, Maldonado-Passage’s name was absent from an extensive list of pardons granted by Mr Trump prior to his exit from office, which largely bailed out those with convictions connected to his own administration.
The zoo owner later complained: “I was too innocent and too GAY to deserve a pardon from Trump… his corrupt friends all come first.”
In June, Ms Baskin was awarded ownership of Maldonado-Passage’s former zoo.
Reference: Microsoft News: Nick Duffy
Yorkshire Vet star horrified by injuries to dog which tried to 'have sex with hedgehog'
Yorkshire Vet star horrified by injuries to dog which tried to 'have sex with hedgehog'
Yorkshire Vet star Peter Wright was horrified when he had to treat a bulldog which sustained injuries while trying to have sex with a hedgehog.
The 64-year-old was left lost for words when the owner brought in their beloved pooch named Little Boss and told Peter: "He's tried to have sex with a hedgehog."
The vet, who has been on the Channel 5 show since 2015, revealed he has never come across a case as "unusual" as this one.
The TV star took Little Boss into a room and explained to nurse Steph Gill what had happened.
He told the nurses: "We've got quite an unusual problem here. This is Little Boss and Little Boss has tried to have sex with a hedgehog," as they started laughing.
"I can hardly believe the words coming out of my mouth."
Steph replied: "I've never heard anything like that before, what have you been doing?"
"He's got blood coming from his penis or sheath, so we need to have a look to see what he's done," Peter explained.
Thankfully, after Peter checked over Little Boss, the vet came to the conclusion the pooch did not need surgery.
But he revealed Little Boss would need to be neutered in order to stop him from trying to have sex with another hedgehog.
Peter told Little Boss' owner: "He's going to need to be castrated as he's going to keep doing this and it is going to cause him trouble, he has suffered some trauma.
“In all my years as a vet I’ve never seen anything like this before, it is highly unusual.”
In recent weeks, Peter shared the reaction of Channel 5 bosses after he announced that he would be quitting Skeldale Veterinary Centre.
He decided to leave the town after 40 years after a change in direction for the practice and he said that the show's producers "had a heart attack" when they thought he would be leaving the documentary series after 12 seasons.
The series follows the ups and downs of vets Peter and Julian Norton from their base in Thirsk, North Yorkshire.
Peter has now decided to leave there and start again at Grace Lane Vets in Kirkbymoorside.
Reference: Mirror: Brogan-Leigh Hurst