Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 4.01

July 19, 2010

A Reminder about the Risk of Heat Exhaustion

I last posted about heat exhaustion in the summer of 2005. I took the advice of a retriever trainer about distinguishing between a dog's refusal of a command or quitting on a hot day and heat stroke, and extrapolated advice for the common pet owner:

If your dog ordinarily comes enthusiastically on command, but on a hot summer day stands or lies down where s/he is and stares at you, don't get mad, get your dog out of the sun and get water.

Somerville dog blogger MuttStuff recently posted about heatstroke. Sadly at least one dog has died this summer because of heat exposure. Melissa C. McCue, Certified Pet Dog Trainer [CPDT] compiles a lot of important information about heat stroke: signs of; what to do if your dog is a victim of, and how to prevent.

Remember that your parked car—even with the windows cracked—is not a safe place for your pet in the summer. If you see an unattended animal (or a child for that matter) in a car, please notify the authorities: the Somerville police (911), Somerville Animal Control (311), even a local business owner.

July 14, 2010

Summer School for Dogs

StrummerAndDan.jpgStrummer participated today for the third time in studies at the Canine Cognition Lab at Harvard University. Here she is outside William James Hall—the home of the Canine Cognition Lab—with Dan, a summer intern who is studying Cognitive Science at the University of Pennsylvania. For her contribution, she was awarded a Certificate of Canine Achievement (see below).

Strummer participated in two experiments, one studying whether dogs are reading the intentions of a human pointing, and another exploring whether dogs have a sense of fairness. Of course, because of her training and good manners, Strummer, again, didn't get past the warm-up exercises.

I would have been really interested to see Strummer performing in the experiment on fairness. When I give another dog a treat in Strummer's presence, my sense of equity prompts me to offer her a treat, too. If Strummer has a sense of equity, however, I don't think it's as simple as if-another-dog-gets-a-treat-it's-only-fair-that-I-get-one-too. For one thing, she doesn't necessarily accept a treat that is offered just because I offered one to another dog. On the other hand, when we are visiting my parents, if my father gives his younger, larger male German Shepherd Dog, Shadow, a treat, Strummer will cock her head and raise her ears. But then my dad is a pez dispenser, so it may not be so much that Strummer thinks it's fair that he give her a treat, too; she may have been trained to expect one.

I wonder if Strummer would feel that a young male didn't deserve the food as much as she deserved it. Would she use access to food to demonstrate her seniority to another female? I expect that she would probably defer to another dog if she felt the food were his—just as she always defers to other dogs when chasing balls or sticks: When she's playing it doesn't matter who gets the toy as long as everyone gets to keep playing.

But, alas, Strummer is not the dog that will reveal the secrets of canine cognition in a controlled experiment.

I did appreciate learning that one of the papers that the Lab is trying to get published is about dogs' behavior during the warm-up exercises as a predictor for their behavior in the experiments. I'm sure that Strummer's work is central to that study!

Also, when I told Dan that I would be posting (and had posted before) about the Canine Cognition Lab on the somerville dog weblog, he mentioned that a lot of Somerville dogs participate in the studies! Somerville dogs are contributing to science!

CanineCognitionLab-Certificate.jpg

July 2, 2010

Off-Leash Recreation Area at Tufts

Tufts University's Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine will be creating a fenced-in area for off-leash recreation at its farm field in Grafton, MA. At a public meeting Wednesday evening Dean Deborah Kochevar said that Tufts is planning to fence in an area in the thirty-seven-acre field that members of the community can enjoy together with their off-leash dogs. Check out the stories Worcester Telegram and the Daily Shrewsbury.

In an e-mail to members of the public yesterday morning, Tom Keppeler, Associate Director of Public Relations for the School, outlined the plan for public access to the field going forward: all people who wish to visit the field for recreational purposes will need to register; people with dogs will be issued an identification tag that their pets will be required to wear in the field; "the agricultural portion of the field will be strictly on-leash only." In addition to these new policies and enforcement, the School will be convening an advisory body "to discuss issues at the field."

People with whom I've spoken who attended the meeting were pleased with the outcome and were especially appreciative of Dean Kochevar's emphasis on the importance of educating the public about responsible dog handling.

Kochevar's comments on identifying problematic behavior in dogs are quoted in the Daily Schrewsbury article:

"As an educational institution, we feel it's important to help you evaluate whether your pet should be on a public field," said Kochevar. "If you know your pet has been aggressive before, dog on dog, dog on person, you probably shouldn't be in that public venue."

Kochevar owns a Rhodesian Ridgeback.

I followed up this morning with Keppeler to find out more about the provisions for responsible dog owner education in the School's plans for the off-leash recreation area. Keppeler explained that, in her comments, Kochevar went on to discuss the opportunity that the mandatory behavior evaluations will afford the School to direct members of the community to resources, including the Behavior Clinic at the Foster Hospital for Small Animals, for addressing behavioral problems so that they can enjoy the benefits of socializing and exercising their dogs off-leash in public open space. When dogs are well-socialized with other dogs and with people, we can all better enjoy living with them in our communities.

By providing an area for off-leash recreation, the School is providing a real service the towns of Grafton and Westborough: When people have safe and legal options for off-leash recreation, in other parks and open spaces there are fewer violations of the leash law.

When the Tufts School of Arts and Sciences is ready to follow the example of the Cummings School and provide a fenced-in area for off-leash recreation at its Somerville campus, the Somerville Dog Owners Group will be pleased to work with the Administration!

June 27, 2010

Sneak Preview: Powder House Camera Project

PowderHouse-Annie_240.jpgSomerville dog owner and local artist, Annie Smidt, welcomes guests inside the Powder House to see how her camera obscura—the biggest camera in Somerville—works.

On Saturday, June 26, participants in the Powder House Camera Project had their portraits taken by (not next to, but by means of) the powder house.

Smidt had covered all openings through which light could enter with the exception of a "pinhole" (about one-inch square) in the window of the powder house door. Through the pinhole the scene outside was projected on a screen inside.

Inside the powder house, as our eyes adjusted to the darkness, we could see the scene outside projected (upside down and backwards) on the screen. First the dark trees against the bright sky, then the park sloping down to College Avenue where, occasionally, cars would pass by. Finally the eerie figures of people outside the powder house appeared, their voices, muffled by the stone walls, moving in the opposite direction of their bodies.

Jake, an Irish Setter who lives in Ten Hills, had his photo taken with his people Alan and Elaine. Inside the powder house Smidt took digital photos of the image on the screen. Each photo had a six-second exposure.

PowderHouse-Elaine_500.jpg

Annie's photos—the ones she took using the Powder House Camera—will be available soon on the Powder House Project website.

Other free-standing camera obcuras include Foredown Tower in in Portslade, England; the Giant Camera of San Francisco at Ocean Beach, and the camera obscura at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.