HOWEDY malinda you pathetic miserable stinkin pathological
lyin dog abusing animal murderin punk thug coward active acute
chronic life long incurable mental case and sled dog FRAUD an
SCAM ARTIST,
"Melinda Shore" <shore@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:g1n2rh$m91$1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In article <2008052915411016807-montana@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> montana wildhack <montana@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>I walk in a neighborhood jam-packed with people, homes, stores, etc.
>>The "walkability" score is 87. I do not carry a day pack.
That's O.K., so long as montana can return to her HOWES
to re-up her ANTI-PSYCHOTIC medications on time.
> I live in a "neighborhood" with a walkability score of 0
Oh? Perhaps THAT'S on accHOWENTA the INSANE LYIN
DOG ABUSIN ANIMAL MURDERIN MENTAL CASE who
CAN'T CON-TROLL her "sled dog team" to go past a innocent
defenseless puppy on leash with his owner?
LIKE THIS:
Subject: Re: prong collar caution
In article <Vu92j.7651$r81.6487@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, filly
<fi...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Don't you love it when the dogs do everything
> right and someone is actually watching!
Well, it's going to take a lot of doing everything
right and frankly a lot of training to make up for
early last week, where someone was walking her
Australian Shepherd cross along the road as we came
up the section of trail that paralleled it.
My dogs went nuts, pulling towards them and
barking their heads off (and they rarely bark).
Ideally I'd be able to park the rig and pull the dogs
around, but even though I had the brakes locked on the
rig they were still pulling it.
So, I knew that if I got off the dogs would take off after her.
I dropped the snow hook, which I've been using as a ground
brake, but it landed prong-side up and that only compounded
the problem because as the dogs were pulling us forward the
snow hook was coming under the rig and the prongs were
inching towards the tires, which would have been shredded
(snow hooks:
http://www.nooksackracing.com/dog_sled_brakes_hooks.html).
This poor woman was clearly trying to pretend that a team
of four dogs wasn't barking their heads off at her, trying to
pretend that they weren't trying to come over for a visit,
trying to pretend it was just a normal walk down the road.
And in the meantime my dogs effectively
got away with really bad behavior.
So, a friend is coming over today to be an attractive
nuisance on the trails while we work on "on by," and yes,
I was pleasantly surprised when the dogs didn't try to go
visit Tom, standing in the hedgerow.
--
Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - sh...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
SEE?
BWEEAAAHAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~!
> (which is why it's so pleasant to walk here, if you ask me)
You mean, where you ain't likely to run accross a NORMAL person?
HOWE abHOWET if you should accidentally stumble over a DEER?
LIKE THIS:
From: Melinda Shore
Date: Tues, May 9 2006 2:21 pm
Email: s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Melinda Shore)
In article <e3qldc$g4...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
Ilja Friedel <i...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> You can never stress enough what dangers threaten
> the average dog (cougars, bears, s****s to name a few).
Many, many years ago I used to take my (I thought)
well-behaved, well-trained dog out on the trail off-leash.
One evening as it was getting dark she saw
a deer she wanted to chase and took off.
As in gone.
So there we were, wandering around in the dark for several
hours trying to find a dog that could have run 20 or more
miles in the time it took to finally find her.
That was the end of off-leash hiking for us.
It doesn't even have to be an attack for
bad things to happen to your dog.
--
Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Prouder than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
-------------
BWEEEEEEAAHAHAHAHAAA~!~!~!
> and I don't carry a day pack.
Well then, that answers the question:
"where do you carry your "trainin aids"?"
> I do carry a day pack if I go into the woods on trails (i.e. off the
> road).
Is that where you carry your breakin stick in case your
own dogs GO INSANE and start attackin each other?
LIKE THIS:
From: Melinda Shore
Date: Fri, May 6 2005 9:08 am
Email: s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Melinda Shore)
[]
I realized that the new dog honeymoon period was over last
Thursday when Crow attacked Image and did enough damage to
require a visit to the vet (deep puncture wound on the left
foreleg).
Image is a stoic but this one left her crying.
Dog fights make me nauseous, and it turned out to be a
queasy weekend when Crow attacked Eclipse on Friday and
Cinder on Saturday. I was feeling a little panicky,
wondering whether or not we'd be able to get the situation
in hand and prevent this from becoming a continuing problem,
and thinking about the logistics of keeping Crow separated
from the others when I'm not there.
Then I realized: 1) Crow had attacked each female exactly
once and hadn't attacked any of them again (or even raised a
lip), 2) she hadn't attacked any of the males, and 3)
several days had passed, not only without incident but with
everybody frolicking together as they had before. Crow had
apparently decided where she wanted to be in the pack (on
top) and she had deliberately and methodically gone about
communicating her intentions, and it was settled quickly and
that was that. I've never seen a dog do anything that looks
quite so organized, and while I was quite distressed while
it was going on I'm still kind of impressed at her
deliberateness.
--
> Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Prouder than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
-----------------
"I'm also a fan of picking up the rear end of one of the
dogs, not only because it's a distraction (although if the
dog is really overwrought it simply won't notice at first -
another reason I have my doubts about the thumb-up-the-butt
technique) but also because the dog partially loses traction
and mobility.
I like to sing "The Girl From Ipanema" while I'm holding
onto a dog's hind end during a fight - it keeps my breathing
regular and helps me stay calm, plus it's just a really great
song." [That's my favorite. The image of Melinda singing "The
Girl From Ipanema" while holding a dog's rear end will always
spring before my eyes from now on, whenever I'll be thinking of
what bliss being a mainstream trainer must be]
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.pets.dogs.behavior/msg/a61c39..
> but you see some really nice teams with a lot of variety.
INDEED? Oh, you mean if you travel to Alaska <{}: ~ ( >
> Still, sometimes when I'm running Crow and Eclipse, who are
> very well-matched, together in lead they get fall into sync
> and it's very beautiful.
Ahhhh, you mean, like when they're ATTACKIN YOUR KATS.
LIKE THIS:
Tues,Apr 19 2005 6:54
Subject: Re: Introducing New Dog to Household Cats
sighthounds & siberians <x...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> I was going to ask how cat things were coming
> with Crow and Eclipse.
Not great! I had been just closing off the upstairs bedroom
(a baby gate with the door fixed ajar about six inches keeps
the dogs out better than you'd expect), but the cats like to
hide in the wall of the linen closet (gotta love these old
houses!) when they're nervous and Crow and Eclipse tore
apart the linen closet to try to get to them.
That's when I closed off the upstairs entirely. They're
also a bad influence on Cinder, who started out thinking
of the cats as dinner but who had learned to live with
them in peace until her sisters arrived.
I think it's possible but, frankly, improbable that
they're eventually going to be safe with the cats.
--
Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
BWEEEAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~!
From: Melinda Shore
Date: Sat, Dec 15 2001 10:51 am
Email: s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Melinda Shore)
In article <2tpS7.272$4O....@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
Marie <m...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> The first night, I fed them beth at the same time, [ ... ]
I'd suggest that Beth should have some say in this.
Anyway, in my pack I do allow negotiation but I do not allow
fighting. I also don't allow them to raid one another's
food. Aside from the fact that I want to be able to keep an
eye on how each is doing, one is on a veterinary diet and
another receives medication on her food. So, I crate feed
them. It doesn't sound to me like you've got a problem.
I'd just keep them separate during meals, and if a fight
does break out I'd reprimand each and give both a timeout.
It takes two to fight.
--
Melinda Shore - Software longa
-------------------
From: Jerry Howe
Date: Sat, Dec 15 2001 2:24 pm
Email: "Jerry Howe" <jho...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
So, you're gonna teach them not to fight by
reprimanding them both... BRILLIANT.
That's where allelomimetic behavior comes in...
Bye! j;~(
Perhaps she learned THAT from YOU malinda? THAT'S called
ALLELOMIMETIC BEHAVIOR. THAT'S HOWE COME we
don't PUNISH and INTIMIDATE dogs for FEAR AGGRESSION.
LIKE THIS:
From: Melinda Shore
Date: Fri, May 6 2005 2:26 pm
Email: s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Melinda Shore)
In article <rcan71lebvnqnbo7qiqvb6t2rjbtrcj...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
sighthounds & siberians <x...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Melinda didn't say whether the other *****es fought
> back much, or whether she (Melinda) stopped the
> altercation before they had a chance to.
Combination. The other dogs really didn't fight back (I
was quite surprised that Image gave up, but she's 9 (holy
cow - how'd that happen?) and is slowing down a bit.
I did break up all the fights and after the last one
(Cinder) came down hard on Crow, pinning her to the
floor until she calmed down.
> I'm not suggesting that Melinda should have let them "fight it out",
I really think that letting them do that would tend to make
things a lot worse and is more likely to lead to escalations.
You can get a decent read on the dogs without
letting them duke it out, in my experience.
Cinder has always been submissive but Image was very much
in charge, and that's clearly changed from what I've seen
around things like waiting to go in and out, who sits where
when we do group treats, and so on.
At any rate, any dominance displays much beyond
a head fake are not tolerated here.
--
Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Prouder than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
-----------------------
> I assumed that the original blanket suggestion was an excuse
> to spam and that nearly everything since has been sarcastic.
Perhaps he got *your* EXXXTRA horse blanket since you
murdered your DEAD HORSE for an EZily curable problem
caused by ignorance and mishandling AND for the "WRONG
REASON" as you later discovered??
LIKE THIS:
Here's you MURDERIN your own horse due
to your colossal ignorameHOWES malignant
self defensive idiocy:
Equusite.com
Navicular Problems
"Navicular problems are not a disease, they are man-made."
Melinda Shore wrote:
> In article <Xns97E06728444B7amesnatlzooyahoo...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Mary Healey <mhhea...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>"Around here?"?!? Where would that be, the universe?
> Lameness and horses are like peas and carrots, Mutt'n
> Jeff, oxy and moron.
Yeah, but when I moved back here after a few years in the
SF Bay Area I was pretty surprised by the difference in
frequency.
> From foot soreness to stifle injuries to bruises and
> seromas, stringhalt and tendonitis, he tried them
> all. It's very educational, if somewhat frustrating.
I'll bet! Most of the lameness I've had to deal with myself
were pretty obvious - arthritis, navicular disease, etc.
The last horse I had was pretty much the last straw and
drove me out of horses - she was intermittently off with
what looked like neurological problems and we tried pretty
much everything to try to figure out what was going on but
kept coming up empty. Eventually she went into one episode
that was so bad and so persistent that I ended up having her
euthanized.
---------------
BWEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAHAHAAAAAAAA!!!
Navicular Problems
WRITTEN BY: Cheryl Sutor [October 7, 2002]
The most common cause of locomotor lameness in horses is
found in the navicular area of the horse's hoof. The "hows"
and "whys" of navicular problems are often written-off as
"un-known". I have decided to write this article to clear up
the confusion that is commonly spread about this problem,
which has grown to epidemic pro****tions.
I will define navicular problems, discuss how and why they
exist and give advice on preventing and treating these
problems in your horse.
The terms "Navicular Disease" or "Navicular Syndrome" are
often used to define navicular problems a horse may have.
However, neither of these terms should be used to define
navicular problems. Using the word "disease" has never
been justly defined when referring to navicular problems.
Navicular problems are not a disease, they are man-made.
The word "syndrome" is defined as: a commonly recurring
group of symptoms of unknown cause. The cause of navicular
problems IS known, and therefore, the word "syndrome" also
is not a correct identifier.
So, for the purpose of this article, I will use the term
"navicular problems" throughout.
Navicular problems are completely man-made through
improper trimming, short-term or long-term shoeing,
and/or inadequate natural environment throughout a
horse's life. This improper care can cause problems in
the navicular area of the hoof, not to mention a plethora
of problems within the entire horse.
--------------
From:
Human_And_Animal_Behavior_Forensic_Sciences_Research_Laborat...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
7 Nov 2006 16:07:07 -0800
Local: Tues, Nov 7 2006 8:07 pm
Subject: Re: Eats Everything, Sticks, Rocks
HOWEDY malinda you miserable stinkin lyin animal
abusin punk thug coward active acute chronic long
term incurable mental case,
Melinda Shore wrote:
> In article <2006110614034416807-montana@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> montana wildhack <mont...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > Teach your dog what "leave it" and "drop it" mean.
Buggy Sky means AFTER the dog has STOLEN STUFF to swallow.
> > I'd Google those and read through the articles.
Yeah. We'll find YOUR OWN dogs destroyin an swallowin STUFF.
> > Different people have different ideas
> > about how to train these commands
INDEED? Apupriate handlin an trainin AIN'T a matter
of PREFERENCE or OPINION, it's SCIENTIFIC FACT.
> > and it can be helpful to recognize what
> > those differences are.
Those "DIFFERENCES" are the DIFFERENCES
between LIFE or DEATH <{): ~ ( >
> Pica is a psychological/neurological disorder
Pica is an OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE
DISORDER CAUSED BY MISHANDLING.
> and "drop it" doesn't really help very much.
INDEEDY. Looks like that's all there is to it, eh malinda???
> I knew one very nice dog who had to have surgery
> (rocks in the gut) a couple of times and ultimately
> the owners decided that there really wasn't anything
> they could do and the third time they had her euthanized.
Oh? Oh, you mean like HOWE you MURDERED your horse for
a similar "INCURABLE PROBLEM" caused by MISHANDLING.
> This was in a medium-sized mu****ng kennel.
EXXXPERTS, eh malinda???
Like yourself!
BWEEEEEEEAHAHAHAAAAA!!!
> They kept her on sand but as soon as they let her off her
> tieout for play time she'd make a beeline to the rocks.
> Worse, she'd scoop rocks when they were out training.
Yeah, and the ignorameHOWESES didn't know HOWE to TRAIN
their dog like you didn't know HOWE to pupperly handle your DEAD
HORSE an MURDERED IT JUST LIKE HOWE YOU DONE, REMEMBER malinda???
> I'd think, though,
No you wouldn't you pathetic miserable stinkin lyin simpleton.
> that in a one-dog household it should be manageable as
> long as the owner accepts that they're going to have to
> be a lot more vigilant than they'd have to be with a
> more typical dog.
Oh? You mean MANAGE, AVOID an SUPERVISE, malinda?
Here's someMOORE "DEEPLY UNCOOL"
from malinda's CASE HISTORY:
Subject: semi OT- water dish
From: Melinda Shore
malinda wrote:
> They're heavy when full and they're one of the few
> things that Eclipse hasn't seen fit to relocate within
> the house
Well HOWE COME would she WANT to what with all the
other GOOD STUFF you provide for her to play with?
> (last week I found a lightbulb in her crate,
Like THAT for EXXXAMPLE. NHOWE THAT'S CREATIVITY.
You should encourage your dogs to do more play / learnin / trainin
activities. Dogs are like wet sponges, don't you know!
HOWEver, The Freakin Simply Amazing Puppy Wizard
can't think of ANYTHING MOORE DANGERHOWES
for a doggy to PLAY with, malinda. Perhaps you should
offer her an alternate?
Try TRADING UP for sumpthin of higher value. Perhaps
you can offer to let her make her own choice of say,
ANY TWO items from your bedroom in EXXXCHANGE?
> for pete's sake -
Ahhh, yes, Pete. That's Laura's dog you was tellin
abHOWET HOWE to post through The Freakin Simply
Amazing Puppy Wizard's 100% CONSISTENLY NEARLY
INSTANTLY SUCCESSFUL FREE WWW Wits' End Dog
Training Method Manual Forums <{): ~ ) >
> I have no idea where she got it from).
Perhaps she got it from your bedroom, malinda?:
http://www.employees.org/~shore/trashedbedroom2.jpg
You might wanna ask janet or matty HOWE to manage
and supervise your doggys so they won't steal STUFF
from your garbage?
> I think it would be kind of an effort
> to tip one of those over.
You mean instead of just trainin them not to do it?
--------------
Welcome to REALITY you miserable lying dog abusing mental case:
From: lucyaa...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
22 Jul 2005 13:13:04 -0700
Subject: Re: For Handsome Jack Morrison:
Collars - belated reply
Melinda Shore wrote:
> In article <fii2e19ad371r3kq9t1nvkbfrmog2v3...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> shelly <scouvre...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > you're being disingenuous. i have no desire to
> > train my dog not to raid the trash or counter surf.
> > i've no doubt i could train her not to do either,
> > but i simply don't care enough to be bothered. so,
> > what, exactly, is your point?
>
> I do have a desire to have my dogs not raid the trash or
> counter surf, and guess what? They don't. Being dogs,
> however, they had to learn.
But you have no desire to train your dogs not to
ruin your bedroom in your absence, obviously.
http://www.employees.org/~shore/trashedbedroom2.jpg
It's what the trained dogs of our friend Melinda
have done, when left alone at home.
Lucy.
> --
> Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - s...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Prouder than ever to be a member of the reality-based community
----------
BWEEEEEEEEEEAAAHAHAHAHHAHAAA!!!
Thurs,Jun 16 2005 4:17 am
Subject: Re: Puppy Wizard - Re****t, Day Two
HOWEDY malinda,
Melinda Shore wrote:
> In article <robin4joy-49BEBF.23045015062.....@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Robin <robin4...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> [nothing of value]
"Success!" is what Robin wrote, malinda.
Robin wrote that she CURED her 12 year old dogs
separation anXXXIHOWESNESS NEARLY INSTANTLY
using her FREE COPY of The Amazing Puppy Wizard's
FREE WWW Wits' End Dog Training Method Manual <{);~ ) >
> jeebus but you're a selfish, inconsiderate dimwit.
That so? Didn't you want to know HOWE she done it, malinda?
> Plonk.
-----------------
HOWEDY matty,
Rocky wrote:
> Robin said in rec.pets.dogs.health:
> > Jerry, you give the lying dog abusing punk thug coward
> > mental cases too much credit for the ability to influence
Naaah, The Amazing Puppy Wizard was just BAITING
these lying dog abusing punk thug coward mental
cases again <{); ~ ) >
> You really are a piece of work.
INDEEDY, matty. Robin studied and followed the
INSTRUCTIONS in her FREE COPY of The Amazing
Puppy Wizard's 100% CONSISTENTLY NEARLY
INSTANTLY SUCCESSFUL FREE WWW Wits'
End Dog Training Method Manual and RE****TED
her 100% NEARLY INSTANT SUCCESS RIGHT
HERE on The Amazing Puppy Wizard's FREE
WWW Wits' End Dog Training Method Manual
Forums And SCHOOL Of HARD KNOCKS And
HUMAN BEHAVIOR RESEARCH LABORATORIES,
matty <{); ~ ) >
You're settin in it <{); ~ ) >
> Keep this out of the health groups, 'kay?
Dogs DIE from separation anXXXIHOWESNESS, matty, JUST
LIKE HOWE your own DEATHLY ILL dog Rocky is DYIN from
STRESS INDUCED AUTO-IMMUNE DIS-EASE aka The Puppy
Wizard's SYNDROME, on accHOWENT of you're a lyin dog
abusin punk thug coward MENTAL CASE, matty, and you
can't post your lies and idiocy here abHOWETS
nodoGgamenedMOORE <{); ~ ) >
> --
> --Matt. Rocky's a Dog.
BWEEEAAAHAHAHAHHHAHAAAA~!~!~!
From:
Human_And_Animal_Behaviour_Forensic_Sciences_Research_Laborat...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
22 Mar 2007 16:55:39 -0700
Local: Thurs, Mar 22 2007 7:55 pm
Subject: Re: Musher dog beater, Ramy Brooks (www.ramybrooks.com)
HOWEDY malinda you pathetic miserable stinkin pathological
lyin dog abusing punk thug coward active acute chronic long term
incurable mental case,
"Melinda Shore" <sh...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message news:etr16h
$ms...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In article <14618-460094F2-...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Judith Althouse <judyaltho...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> Thanks for posting this information.
> *Thanks?* The guy is a ****head
The ***"****HEAD"*** didn't BEAT his dog and GET
BUSTED for it like HOWE your hero ramy done, malinda.
> who has no participation here beyond showing
> up here every March trying to stir up anti-Iditarod
> sentiment.
You mean he posts every year when the IDIOTarod injury /
death figures and incidents of cruelty are published <{): ~ ( >
> If you want to talk about what happened
The NON "**** HEAD" DOG ABUSER BEAT
HIS DOG an got CAUGHT, malinda <{}: ~ ( >
> that's probably a good thing
Then HOWE COME do you DEFEND it?
> but do it in a new thread.
You mean where the ORIGINAL TEXT won't be noticed, malinda?
You got a very long posted case history of hurtin
intimidatin an murderin innocent defenseless dumb
critters an LYIN abHOWET it.
LIKE THIS:
From: <DelusionalDimensionsRecoveryDDR @[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Subject: Re: Mu****ng Teacher
Date: Tue, 4 Mar 2008 19:44:07 -0500
HOWEDY meat terri you pathetic miserable stinkin rotten
lyin animal murderin child abusin punk thug coward active
accute chronic life long incurable malignant maliciHOWES
mental case,
Subject: Mu****ng Teacher
"Terri" <Te...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:Xns9A56B2C515F197544444@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Not a term I'd have ever thought I'd use personally,
You mean, on accHOWENTA you know NUTHIN abHOWET
teaching? OR on accHOWENTA you know NUTHIN abHOWET
mu****ng OR dogs, for that matter?
> but that's exactlywhat I got to do today.
INDEED? Pehaps you been teachin the wrong STUFF?
> Today I taught a 6th grade class currently studying both the Iditirod
The Idiotarod is CRUEL to dogs, meat terri <{}: ~ ( >
> as well as reading the book " Woodsong" by Gary Paulsen.
> While they're doing this, they're completing detailed maps
> about Alaska as well as studying the Iditirod trail.
>
> I held open discussion afterwards and they
> came up with some pretty amazing input.
Did the kiddies learn that mushers KICK and BEAT their
dogs with whips and shock and strangle them for discipline?
LIKE THIS:Subject: Re: Musher dog beater, Ramy Brooks
(www.ramybrooks.com)
Dog beatings and whippings are common. During the 2007 Iditarod,
eyewitnesses re****ted that musher Ramy Brooks kicked, punched and
beat his dogs with a ski pole and a chain. Jim Welch says in his book
Speed Mu****ng Manual, "Nagging a dog team is cruel and ineffective...
A training device such as a whip is not cruel at all but is effective."
"It is a common training device in use among dog mushers..."
--------------------
Did the kiddies learn that runnin dogs in races like that causes
them to BLEED from both their MHOWETHS and a$$HOWELS,
meat terri?
> In Gary's book he mentions at first he fed his dogs kibble.
You mean he didn't know that commercial dog food is GARBAGE?
> * He says the corn in the kibble
You think dogs native to Alaska eat CORN?
> breaks down into sharp point which can cut the intestines
CITES PLEASE, meat terri?
> which is what I gathered is the reason Storm
> was bleeding rectally on the trail.
THAT'S INSANE, meat terri. The dogs BLEED on accHOWENTA
they CAN'T STOP to **** and have to do it on the run. They come
in BLEEDIN from BOTH ENDS <{}: ~ ( >
> ( We only read two chapters today.)
Will there be a chapter on mushers GETTIN BUSTED for cruelty?
LIKE THIS?:
HOWEDY malinda you pathetic miserable stinkin pathological
lyin dog abusing punk thug coward active acute chronic long term
incurable mental case,
"Melinda Shore" <sh...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:etr16h $ms...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In article <14618-460094F2-...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Judith Althouse <judyaltho...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> Thanks for posting this information.
> *Thanks?* The guy is a ****head
The ***"****HEAD"*** didn't BEAT his dog, malinda.
> who has no participation here beyond showing
> up here every March trying to stir up anti-Iditarod
> sentiment.
You mean he posts every year when the IDIOTarod injury /
death figures and incidents of cruelty are published <{): ~ ( >
> If you want to talk about what happened
The "NON **** HEAD" DOG ABUSER BEAT
HIS DOG an got CAUGHT, malinda <{}: ~ ( >
> > that's probably a good thing
> Then HOWE COME do you DEFEND it?
> > but do it in a new thread.
> You mean where the ORIGINAL TEXT won't be noticed, malinda?
> You got a very long posted case history of hurtin
> intimidatin an murderin innocent defenseless dumb
> critters an LYIN abHOWET it.
---------------------------
> *Um...quite frankly, this is the first time I've ever heard of this
> before.
INDEED?
Perhaps you should stick to teachin sumpthin you KNOW?
THAT'S HOWE COME schools got a curriculum, eh, meat terri <{}: ~ ) >
> Maybe someone might care to expand on this a bit?
O.K., meat terri <{}: ~ ) >
The MUSHERS are nuthin more than dog abusin puppymillers
who PROFIT off of their competitions and PUPPY SALES, like
handsome gentleman jack morrison the anonymHOWES tommy
sorenson of sorensons's Retriever PUPPY MILL.
They breed HUNDREDS of puppys to get their team of a dozen:
From: sh...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Melinda Shore)
Date: 9 Nov 2007 15:18:13 -0500
Subject: Re: Photo's, Virginia Puppy Mill Pups
article <U83Zi.963$2I3....@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
tiny dancer <tinydancer...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> As a breeder? Way too many dogs to care for properly,
> way too much over-breeding, hence puppy mill.
One of the fastest, most successful working sleddog kennels
has several hundred dogs, with between 60-90 puppies every
year.
-----------------------
> HOWEDY malinda you pathetic miserable stinkin lyin
> animal murderin punk thug coward active acute chronic
> life long incurable malignant maliciHOWES mental case,
> "Melinda Shore" <sh...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message news:fiacd6$97s >
> $...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > In article <FISdnd7MJP2_L9XanZ2dnUVZ_vCkn...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> > MauiJNP <jmh1...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >>breeding is for professionals.
> > I think the professional/amateur distinction is irrelevant,
> > here. There are a lot of smart, knowledgeable hobbyists
> > working hard to produce great dogs.
> Yeah, like diddler, lyin frosty dahl, and tommy
> sorenson aka joey finnochiarrio aka not so gentle,
> not so manly jackass, not even morrison, aka BIG
> DADDY aka DOGMAN, the pathetic miserable stinkin> lyin animal murderin
> punk thug anonymHOWES COWARD,> self professed EXXXPERT professional
> Retriever
> PUPPY MILLER and SHOCK COLLAR SALESMAN?
> > Coincidentally, at the moment I'm listening
> > to an interview with Martin Buser,
> Buser is a four-time Iditarod winner and PUPPYMILLER.
> > and one of the things he said is that you're better off spending
> > $2500 for a dog you've seen and know something about and
> > like than you are breeding your own litter and gambling against
> > the odds that you'll be able to breed a better dog than you can buy.
> LUCKY THING he's got LOTS of PUPPYS FOR SALE!
> > That's a bet you'll almost certainly lose.
> INDEED?
------------------------
BWEEEAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~!
> The Teacher also needs educated.
The "TEACHER" is a UNEDUCABLE miserable stinkin
rotten lyin animal murderin coward and mental case <{}: ~ ( >
> That led quite nicely into reminding them of the total daily
> calories mu****ng dogs expend, why they need fat, and why
> even in the winter dogs need access to water.
Naaaah?
> They thought snow would be enough and I was happy to
> dispel the notion in the hopes it would be applied to their
> own base of dog owner knowledge.
PERHAPS you can TEACH them ***WHERE*** dogs in
the Arctic find WATER when the temp is -60F, meat terri?
> Also discussed was the fact that the bones in the _raw_ meat
> fed to the team in the movie were vastly different than bones
> from cooked meat.
That's INSANE, meat terri. There is NO benefit for dogs eatin BONES.
Bones can BREAK TEETH and splinter in their intestines <{}: ~ ( >
> I got an op****tunity to teach the danger of cooked bones
While it's TRUE that cooked bones splinter more EZily
there AIN'T NO justification for feedin dogs BONES.
> and the reason chocolate is dangerous to dogs.
Where in the Arctic do dogs find CHOCOLATE?
> Yay!
"Yay!", meat terri? You been blowin your ignorameHOWES
smoke up 6th graders arses and teachin them BULL****.
> Some of them knew but a great deal many did not.
They're KIDS, meat terri. What kinda school system would
hire a pathetic miserable stinkin lyin rotten ignorameHOWES
like you to teach kids, meat terri?
> They also were astonished to learn that Standard Poodles once
> ran in the Iditrod and suggested a few other breeds they
> thought might be able to compete. They were recommending the
> Pitbull until they remembered the scene where the dogs are
> spla****ng through the freezing cold water.
Seems Poodles LIKE that, do they, meat terri?
> The class impression of Gary at first was, and I quote:
> "He's dumb".
Naaah. He's a DOG ABUSER, like yourself.
> However, they've decided to reserve judgement until
> they've read the entire book. What prompted this was the
> description of blood coming from Gary's dog, Storm.
That's NORMAL when dogs are ABUSED, meat terri.
> From that came discussions of responsibilities from
> caring for animals to how to think ahead and to be prepared.
Oh? Oh, you mean LIKE THIS:
Subject: Mojo's last day-a year late
I'll warn you right up front this is not a story that will
end up with you feeling anything good. I know this because
I've been living with this almost a year. The difference to
me right now is that I'm finally able to write about it having
taken this long because I knew I'd have to re-live it once
again and up until now, I couldn't.
Mojo died a year ago on the 21rd of June.
He did not die well.
I won't go into the details that led us to that last day here
as I already have written of that on my LJ. If you do want to
read it just ask and I'll post the URL.
Luke's death in January of the same year is also there and will
show the vast contrast between what happened with each dog and
why Mojo's death has been so difficult for me and pretty much
destroyed any hope of any real closure for my husband and I.
These dogs lived with us daily, close to us in ways that no
other two dogs have been. They'd been through a catostrophic
hurricane with us, they'd both had medical problems we'd
dutifully taken care of for much of their lives and they've
traveled literally, thousands of miles with us. We'd all lived
together in a 26 foot long travel trailer at times and that in
itself is pretty darn intimate in the "living with the dogs"
department.
We could read each other's moods and sometimes didn't even
have to speak to them and they'd know what we wanted just
by their observations of our body language. It was unique,
even more so than our previous canine crews.
We'd only been back in Idaho,in this town for @[EMAIL PROTECTED]
3 months when
we first took Mojo in to a new vet. I liked him a great deal
and was impressed with him. He was an older guy yet very willing
to listen to me and best of all, he and Mojo seemed to hit it off
immediately. He had always been partial to the big dogs, GSDs in
particular.
In the next few days we'd be forced to think the unthinkable
that we all have to when we outlive our dogs but since I'd
been through this three times before I knew all the questions
to ask beforehand. Or so I thought.
The vet and I had discussed in great detail what we'd be doing,
what we'd be using, where my husband and I would be, what we'd
observe, what would be happening at what point in time-everything.
No surprises. Just as peacefully and as perfect as when we'd put
Luke down six months earlier.
As hard as that was, as much as I will always miss him just
as much as all my other beloved dogs, I left there feeling
closure and the deep belief and comfort that I'd done the
right thing by him. I felt as a responsible dog owner that
could proudly look in the mirror and believe I did the right
thing for Luke.
The day we took Mojo in to say goodbye however, we weren't
greeted by the vet I'd met and talked to and gotten to know
but by his associate, whom I'd never met before. In retrospect
I should have stopped everything right then and there but I didn't.
I trusted he'd do things exactly the way the other vet and I
discussed and I believed everything that took place when it
was Luke's turn would happen that day with Mojo.
And I think also that mentally we'd prepared ourselves for it
so well it never occurred to us to go back. We were ready and
Mojo was ready. I've always abided by one simple rule with all
my dogs and that is that when the time is right, when life is
too painful for them to enjoy;
then my promise, my duty is that I will allow them to go with
dignity, quietly and stress free; to a place where there is no
pain. I _owe_ them that at the very least.
That day we sat on the floor with Mojo, his favorite red plaid/
sheepskin blanket under him and hand fed him his favorite treats-
beef, chocolate, whatever. He received his first shot to relax
him and as he drifted off and dozed a bit the vet and his assistant
began to administer the final shot. We expecting the exact same
thing that had happened with Champ, Darcy and Luke...to begin
seeing his breathing slow, his eyes close and his body to fully
relax until a check on his heartbeat showed he was really and
truly gone while listening to the love in our voices to
comfort him. That didn't happen.
He suddenly began thra****ng around wildly and screaming loudly as
the vet kept trying to stick the needle in his vein. As out of it
as he was then he still managed to half stand up, still screaming
loudly in pain.
I couldn't move. I was absolutely horrified and paralyzed.
My husband finally found the presence of mind to ask "What
is happening, what's going on?, I thought this was going to
be peaceful"! The vet screamed back at him:
"IT NORMALLY IS! HIS VEINS HAVE COLLAPSED!"
The rational part of me realizes the vet was horrified as well
and the yelling and defensiveness was part of that but the other
part of me, the white hot angry part was so upset that Mojo was
hearing all of this disturbance in our voices I wanted to punch
the guy right in the face.
Instead I grabbed him by his coat collar and pulled his face
close to mine but I couldn't say anything.I was in shock.
My concern for only Mojo kicked in then and my husband flat out
told the vet to leave right now that we needed some time with
Mojo to settle him and calm him down.
The vet left and we spent the next 15 to 20 minutes crooning
to Mojo, petting him and comforting him until he became calm
and dozed again, his head in lap and our arms around him.
The vet returned with a different syringe that contained
something of a different color and I swear to you that his
face was ash white. I have no idea what we looked like but
I have no doubt ours were too.
The final shot was administered and we spent the next ten
minutes with tears streaming down our faces and our bodies
wracked in sobs not because Mojo was gone but because he'd
gone like that and we felt responsible.
The gift of going without pain was ours to give him and we
failed him. And in doing so we also would never receive the
closure we needed as well.
After that, we got up and left him there on the floor with
his blanket and walked out like zombies. I don't throw up
as a rule of thumb unless I have a bad stomach virus because
I hate it so much which means I've thrown up about 3 time in
the past 30 years.
That day, I made it as far as the car door then I threw up
all over the parking lot then again when I got home.
I literally was so overwhelmed by what had just happened and so
emotionally drained like nothing I'd ever experienced before.
To this day my husband and I have never sat down and gone over
the minute details together because we were there-we don't need to.
We have discussed it indirectly, hugged each other and cried buckets
of tears. To be brutally honest I've been more affected by this than
by losing my Mom last fall because she at least went very peacefully,
unlike Mojo. You can be very sure when it's Taffy's time this is
something I will be discussing with the vet and if there's a backup
plan for this sort of thing you can be damn sure it will be in place.
I never ever want to see another animal I love go through this
again in my life. Had I known this would happen, I'd have taken
him out and put a bullet through his head myself to guarantee it
would be painless and quick.
I'd much rather live with that image than the one I carry around.
It took me six months just to be able to drive down that street
without being aware or looking at the window where it happened
and I haven't been back in to talk to that vet whom, I recently
learned, sold the practice to someone else.
I probably should have gone back within a few weeks or so
but now too much time has elapsed for me to feel comfortable
doing that.
I've never heard of anyone else having this happen and maybe
if I had I'd have somehow been able to prevent it but I'll
never know for sure.
So that's what happened last year when Mojo died and it's why
I have had such a difficult time with it as well a big reason
as to why I've disappeared a lot from the newsgroup for long
periods of time.
Often I've logged on here but see that someone has recently
lost a dog and it's just too hard so I quietly leave. I do
want ya'll to know though that my silence doesn't mean I'm
indifferent to your loss, it's just brings back too many bad
memories of my own.
So this part of the healing process has begun, it seems.
RIP Mojo
--------------------
Mojo lived and died his entire BRIEF life (Mojo 2/26/1996-6/21/2006)
in STARK RAVIN TERROR, thanks to meat terri's IDIOCY and ABUSE.
> What a great day. Teaching the most well behaved class I've ever been
> had as well as getting to talk about dogs, read about dogs and watch a
> movie about dogs. Does it get any better than that?
You're a MENTAL CASE.
> I think not!
Well then, HERE'S PROOF:
Please send protest emails and forward this alert.
From the Sled Dog Action Coalition, http://www.helpsleddogs.org
Contact information, email blocks and sample letter are below.
Please help the dogs by sending protest emails to organizations that
sup****t the Iditarod. These dogs are helpless victims of profoundly
inhumane treatment and cannot speak for themselves.
What happens to the dogs during the Iditarod includes death,
paralysis, penile frostbite, bleeding ulcers, bloody diarrhea,
lung damage, pneumonia, ruptured discs, viral diseases,
broken bones, torn muscles and tendons, sprains, torn
footpads and anemia.
Dog beatings and whippings are common. During the 2007 Iditarod,
eyewitnesses re****ted that musher Ramy Brooks kicked, punched and
beat his dogs with a ski pole and a chain. Jim Welch says in his book
Speed Mu****ng Manual, "Nagging a dog team is cruel and ineffective...
A training device such as a whip is not cruel at all but is effective."
"It is a common training device in use among dog mushers..."
Iditarod dog kennels are puppy mills. Mushers breed large numbers of
dogs and routinely kill unwanted ones, including puppies. Many dogs
who are permanently disabled in the Iditarod, or who are unwanted for
any reason, including those who have outlived their usefulness, are
killed with a shot to the head, dragged, drowned or clubbed to death.
"Dogs are clubbed with baseball bats and if they don't pull are
dragged to death in harnesses....." wrote former Iditarod dog handler
Mike Cranford in an article for Alaska's Bush Blade Newspaper.
Most Iditarod dogs are forced to live at the end of a chain when they
aren't hauling people around. It has been re****ted that dogs who don't
make the main team are never taken off-chain. Chained dogs have been
attacked by wolves, bears and other animals. Old and arthritic dogs
suffer terrible pain in the blistering cold.
Most Internet service providers allow people to send up to 50 email
addresses at a time. For your convenience, the addresses have been
divided into groups of 50. Please email the first group first.
Individual email addresses are given under the sample letter. The
groups contain addresses for the Iditarod sponsors, promoters, and the
sponsors of the 111 mushers who signed up for the 2008 Iditarod. Email
blocks with semicolons are on http://www.helpsleddogs.org/sponsors.htm
SAMPLE LETTER (Please personalize the letter.):
Dear Iditarod Sup****ter:
Please end your organization's sup****t of the Iditarod dog sled race.
For the dogs, this event is a bottomless pit of suffering. What
happens to the dogs during the Iditarod includes death, paralysis,
penile frostbite, bleeding ulcers, bloody diarrhea, lung damage,
pneumonia, ruptured discs, viral diseases, broken bones, torn muscles
and tendons, sprains, torn footpads and anemia. At least 133 dogs have
died in the race. No one knows how many dogs die after this tortuous
ordeal or during training. For more facts about the Iditarod, visit
the Sled Dog Action Coalition website, http://www.helpsleddogs.org
.
On average, 53 percent of the dogs who start the race do not make it
across the finish line. According to a re****t published in the
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, of those
who do finish, 81 percent have lung damage. A re****t published in the
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine said that 61 percent of the
dogs who complete the Iditarod have ulcers versus zero percent pre-
race.
Iditarod dog kennels are puppy mills. Mushers breed large numbers of
dogs and routinely kill unwanted ones, including puppies. Many dogs
who are permanently disabled in the Iditarod, or who are unwanted for
any reason, including those who have outlived their usefulness, are
killed with a shot to the head, dragged, drowned or clubbed to death.
"Dogs are clubbed with baseball bats and if they don't pull are
dragged to death in harnesses....." wrote former Iditarod dog handler
Mike Cranford in an article for Alaska's Bush Blade Newspaper.
Dog beatings and whippings are common. During the 2007 Iditarod,
eyewitnesses re****ted that musher Ramy Brooks kicked, punched and beat
his dogs with a ski pole and a chain. Jim Welch says in his book Speed
Mu****ng Manual, "Nagging a dog team is cruel and ineffective...A
training device such as a whip is not cruel at all but is effective."
"It is a common training device in use among dog mushers..."
Jon Saraceno wrote in his March 3, 2000 column in USA Today, "He
[Colonel Tom Classen] confirmed dog beatings and far worse. Like
starving dogs to maintain their most advantageous racing weight.
Skinning them to make mittens. Or dragging them to their death."
During the race, veterinarians do not give the dogs physical exams at
every checkpoint. Mushers speed through many checkpoints, so the dogs
get the briefest visual checks, if that. Instead of pulling sick dogs
from the race, veterinarians frequently give them massive doses of
antibiotics to keep them running.
Most Iditarod dogs are forced to live at the end of a chain when they
aren't hauling people around. It has been re****ted that dogs who don't
make the main team are never taken off-chain. Chained dogs have been
attacked by wolves, bears and other animals. Old and arthritic dogs
suffer terrible pain in the blistering cold.
Please end your organization's association with this horrific race.
Sincerely,
--------SNIP SPONSORS-------------


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