For the past few months, I have been trying to talk my parents into getting me a Dachshund. I was always looking in the newspaper and at the Humane Society. A few times I found Dachshund puppies in the paper and told my dad. I was upset when we wouldn't go look at them.
One time my dad took me to a pet store and there was a Scottish Terrier. We asked the lady working there if she could take him out. After a few minute of playing with him, we were an inch away from getting him. My dad told we that we should look them up on the Internet and talk to my mom about it. As soon as we got home I looked Scottish Terriers up on the Internet. Come to find out, they do better in cooler weather and they are moody. So I was glad that we didn't get him.
A few months later, Dad took me to the Humane Society and there was a really cute Terrier mix there. I really wanted her. Dad again said that we should talk to Mom about it. Two days later, we take Mom there and I don't see the Terrier mix there. My dad told me he saw her in one of the meeting rooms. Again, I was upset.
But last week, I was looking in the classifieds on the newspaper website. Some of the animals for sale have pictures and some don't. I was looking at the pictures and was bummed when I didn't see any Dachshunds. Just when I was about to close the Internet, something told me to scroll down further. I saw Poodles puppies, Yorkie puppies, and Pit Bull puppies. When I was near the bottom, I sawMiniature Dachshund puppies for sale! I rubbed my eyes just to make sure I wasn't wishful thinking and I wasn't! I took my laptop to my dad (who has two weeks off) and showed him the add. He laughed as he read the add.
Long story short, I now have a Dachshund! Her name is Lucy. Though the first night was rough, and last night wasn't a walk in the park, I know that I love her and she is coming to love the family. She is the cutest thing you have EVER seen!! LOOK!!
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Some Faves of Brad Stine
I just went to my friends blog and she had a video of this Christian comedian I showed her a few days ago and she gave me the idea to put some of my favorite clips from him on my blog. This has GOT to be one of the funniest guys on the face of the earth! THANKS SLOAN!!! LOVE YA!! [-;
Steven Curtis Chapman, "Remembering You"
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe + Steven Curtis Chapman = AWESOME MUSIC VIDEO!!
Friday, September 19, 2008
Animal Eating Toads
TO ANY AND ALL WHO HAVE PETS, SMALL OR LARGE!!
I just found out about these toads that hurricane Fay brought here to Florida. They are called Bufo Toads. They will litterly EAT small animals! It is really scary! This is a report I found that I have copied and paisted...I hope this report was helpful. [-;
To the growing list of environmental problems exacerbated by Tropical Storm Fay, add dog-killing toads.
“Just like we’ve had an influx of (non-native Cuban) treefrogs since (Tropical Storm) Fay,” said Ken Gioeli, natural resources agent at the St. Lucie County Cooperative Extension Service, “stagnant fresh water is a prime location for cane toad tadpoles.”
Cane toads, also known as bufo toads, can secrete a milky substance from glands behind their ears that’s toxic enough to kill animals under 40 pounds and make larger animals incredibly sick. Dogs are particularly vulnerable because they often try to eat the large toads.
Even if a dog just sniffs a bufo toad, Gioeli said, “the stuff can get on his nose, and he might lick it, transferring it into his mouth.”
Greta Wester of Hobe Sound found that out the hard way when her toy poodle, Cherie, recently grabbed a bufo toad she found in a hedge in the yard.
“Within 10 minutes she was foaming at the mouth and having seizures,” Wester said. “I thought she was going to die. Her eyes had rolled back into her head.”
Wester and her husband, Larry Wester, took Cherie to an all-night veterinary clinic for treatment that included oxygen and intravenous fluids.
Wester and her husband, Larry Wester, took Cherie to an all-night veterinary clinic for treatment that included oxygen and intravenous fluids.
“Now I’m very careful when I take Cherie out,” Wester said. “I make sure the area is safe and keep an eye on her.”
Cherie found another bufo toad Monday, Wester said, but her husband dispatched it. (Let’s just say he’s an avid golfer.)
Dr. Megan Davis, a veterinarian at Savanna Animal Hospital in Jensen Beach, said the toads usually can be seen on a night after a rain.
“Normally they dig holes or hide under rocks or in woodpiles during the day,” Davis said. “The rain forces them out.”
Davis expects the influx of bufo toads to get worse before it gets better.
“The toads that have hatched since Fay are just little things now and aren’t much danger,” she said. “But in a few months they’ll be fully grown.”
Dr. William Klein, a veterinarian at Live Oak Animal Hospital on Old Dixie Highway in southwest Vero Beach, said he hasn’t seen a dog infected with bufo toad toxin in about six months.
“We only see one or two cases a year,” Klein said. “They used to say Jupiter was the northern boundary. I know that when I was practicing in Melbourne, I never saw bufo cases. So if they’re moving north, it’s happening very slowly.”
Bufo facts:
• Bufo marinus, aka giant toad, marine toad, cane toad
• Non-native invasive species that threatens native Florida plants and animals
• Brown to grayish-brown with a creamy yellow belly and deeply-pitted parotid glands extending down the sides, generally range in size from 6 to 9 inches but may get larger
• Natural habitat from the Amazon River basin north to southern Texas
• First appeared in Florida in 1936 when 200 were released in Palm Beach County to control sugar cane beetles
• Found mainly in disturbed areas, such as around buildings and in yards, and near canals and ponds
• Omnivores eating just about anything including insects, plants, small birds, other toads and frogs, lizards, small mammals, snakes, table scraps, dog and cat food
Source: University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
Keeping bufos at bay
• Turn off the lights: Bufo toads, like other insect-eaters, are attracted to houses with lights on at night because that’s where the bugs are.
• Keep an eye on your outdoor pets: If you feed your dog outside, bring the bowl indoors as soon as the dog is finished eating. Toads can be attracted to even tiny scraps left in the bowl; and dogs are likely to bite a scavenging critter.
• Contrary to common belief, bufos cannot squirt poison impulsively; the toxin is released only when the toad’s parotid glands are squeezed.
If your dog bites a bufo
• Immediately rinse the dog’s mouth with fresh water.
• Don’t, however, stick a water hose down the dog’s mouth; the dog could drown.
• Use your finger or a napkin to wipe out the inside of the mouth.
• Bright red gums, as opposed to normally pink gums, can be a sign the dog has ingested the toxin.
• Get the dog to a veterinarian as soon as possible to treat for symptoms that can include seizures, heart problems such as arrhythmia and temperatures that skyrocket and then plunge.
• Bufo marinus, aka giant toad, marine toad, cane toad
• Non-native invasive species that threatens native Florida plants and animals
• Brown to grayish-brown with a creamy yellow belly and deeply-pitted parotid glands extending down the sides, generally range in size from 6 to 9 inches but may get larger
• Natural habitat from the Amazon River basin north to southern Texas
• First appeared in Florida in 1936 when 200 were released in Palm Beach County to control sugar cane beetles
• Found mainly in disturbed areas, such as around buildings and in yards, and near canals and ponds
• Omnivores eating just about anything including insects, plants, small birds, other toads and frogs, lizards, small mammals, snakes, table scraps, dog and cat food
Source: University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
Keeping bufos at bay
• Turn off the lights: Bufo toads, like other insect-eaters, are attracted to houses with lights on at night because that’s where the bugs are.
• Keep an eye on your outdoor pets: If you feed your dog outside, bring the bowl indoors as soon as the dog is finished eating. Toads can be attracted to even tiny scraps left in the bowl; and dogs are likely to bite a scavenging critter.
• Contrary to common belief, bufos cannot squirt poison impulsively; the toxin is released only when the toad’s parotid glands are squeezed.
If your dog bites a bufo
• Immediately rinse the dog’s mouth with fresh water.
• Don’t, however, stick a water hose down the dog’s mouth; the dog could drown.
• Use your finger or a napkin to wipe out the inside of the mouth.
• Bright red gums, as opposed to normally pink gums, can be a sign the dog has ingested the toxin.
• Get the dog to a veterinarian as soon as possible to treat for symptoms that can include seizures, heart problems such as arrhythmia and temperatures that skyrocket and then plunge.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
All I Want For Christmas...
For a few months, I have been trying to talk my parents into getting me a Dachshund. I think I have them by now. I've done research and everything. But now the matter is just waiting for God's timing. Even though it is hard!! I don't think my brother's are to fond of the idea if getting a dog. But who could resist this face??? This is all I want for Christmas!! ^_^
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
My Big Bro
So, my big brother, Jake, is really into movie making and the kind of stuff and I have got to admit, he's pretty good. Here are some things he has done. The first one is about two or three years old, but it is REALLY cute!! And my other brother, Sam (they are twins), did the music in the first! [= His "companny" is called RockFilmers!! CUTE!!
Thursday, September 11, 2008
7 Years Ago
I truly can't believe that it has already been 7 years since America changed forever. I had woken up that morning, thinking that it was just going to be another normal day of school, but I was sadly mistaken.
My mom was at work and at the time my dad was homeschooling us. I'm pretty sure we were doing math when my mom suddenly called and said to my dad, "Turn the news on!"
At what we saw, I was shocked. I sat on the couch, eyes wide, just starring at the T.V. I couldn't believe what I was seeing. "Who could do something like this?" I was wondering. I didn't know much about terrorism, didn't really even know what it was. But then I knew.
We didn't do any more school that day. My dad and I just watched what was unfolding.
There were 2,975 fatalities, excluding the 19 hijackers: 246 on the four planes (from which there were no survivors), 2,603 in New York City in the towers and on the ground, and 125 at the Pentagon. An additional 24 people remain listed as missing. All of the fatalities in the attacks were civilians except for 55 military personnel killed at the Pentagon. More than 90 countries lost citizens in the attacks on the World Trade Center. (Copy and pasted from Wikipedia)
I will always remember that day and my reaction. I pray for the family and friends that people lost 7 years ago.
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Bird...Catching?
About thirty minutes ago, my brother's and their friend, Nate, were over here. And while they were here, a White Ibis landed in our back yard to eat some of the bugs in the grass. In typical boy fashion, they all decided that they were going to try to catch the poor thing! Well, after making sure they weren't going to hurt the bird, I watched at the back window while Sam and Nate climbed up in the top of the house. The first attempt ended with the bird flying away. When the White Ibis came back, they tried again and I ran to get my camera.
But attempt number two, also, ended with the bird flying away. Then ten minutes later, the bird came back! At that point, I knew that he was just teasing Sam and Nate. My mom agreed. I got a few more pictures, and the same thing happened. It was just fun to get the pictures! A minute ago, I looked out the window, and the bird wasn't back. I think he got tired of the game, too! Sam and Nate were not happy!
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
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