If you're one of the millions of dog owners whose pet lives outside in an igloo style doghouse, give your dog a some warmth for Christmas.
A Colorado heated pet bed manufacturer has developed a heat pad that will fit any size of the round doghouses.
K&H Manufacturing calls it the Igloo Style Heating pad and it fits in any size Dogloo? or Indigo? doghouse.
The pad's half-round shape covers half the floor surface allowing the dog to naturally choose when it wants warmth. An internal thermostat will maintain a cozy 102? surface temperature when in use.
K&H heated pads are waterproof, easy to clean and are UL and CUL Listed and recommended for year round outdoor use.
They come with a 5 1/2 foot steel-wrapped, abrasion-resistant cord and a limited one-year warranty.The warmth provided by the pad is not only for comfort, but it is recommended by veterinarians for active dogs to soothe muscles and for older, arthritic dogs to improve circulation.The Igloo Style Heating pads can be found at PETsMART and internet retailers like drsfostersmith.com or totalpetcomfort.com.
The Oxford Princeton Programme Scheduled to Exhibit at Three of the Largest Tradeshows with the Energy Industry
The Oxford Princeton Programme Inc, the world's leading provider of training solutions to the energy, commodity and derivative industries, announces its participation in IP Week, E-World and GasMart. The Oxford Princeton Programme has regularly attended each show over the past four years.IP Week is the leading annual oil and gas forum comprising a comprehensive program of conferences, seminars, exhibitions and social functions, including the industry's largest Annual Dinner and Annual Lunch. Coming from energy companies all over the world, over 2,000 oil and gas professionals attend IP Week. The tradeshow takes place February 14-17, 2005, when attendees can find The Oxford Princeton Programme in stand eight in the Council Room. E-World expects more than 30 exhibitors and more than 10,000 attendees this year.
Thirty-one conferences and workshops will take place over the three-day tradeshow informing 2,600 participants about current subjects in the energy and water industries. Conference...
The Oxford Princeton Programme Scheduled to Exhibit at Three of the Largest Tradeshows with the Energy Industry
Animal Behavior: What is My Dog Saying?
Animal Behavior: What is My Dog Saying?by C. Bailey-Lloyd Dogs are quite amiable creatures. Much like our human counterparts, their speech is often amplified by their body movements and facial expressions. If you haven't done so yet, carefully study your dog's eyes. Watch his eyebrow motions.
Often times, we don't hear them speaking because we're too busy not paying attention to their eye motions. When your dog is facing you and his eyes shift suddenly back and forth, he's telling you that he wants something. Whether it's, "...hey, Mom - let's play,", "...come follow me, I want to show you something," or "...I need to go pee;" well - that's up to the individual animal himself. Sometimes, dogs will look at you from the corner of their eye, will loudly yawn and fall to the ground. This is an obvious sign that they're bored and they want attention.
Your attention. Some dogs are rather bold with their sign language and will literally come up to you and place their paw on your...
Animal Behavior: What is My Dog Saying?
"Put Your Commands On A Diet"
"Put Your Commands On A Diet"By Can a dog understand our language? If so, how much of it? The question poses possibly as many answers as there are dogs. Certainly the boundaries of a canine's lexicon vary, according to his age, environment, training and inborn intelligence.
The average house dog is thought to develop a functional vocabulary of close to a dozen-and-a-half different words by the time he reaches five to six years of age. Additional phrases containing up to three key words can boost this total to a potential of about thirty.
While impressive, such a hefty vocabulary brings little to the average dog's trainability.
In fact, the more the dog's vocabulary can be pruned, the better. Contradictory? Hardly. Our spoken words, though meaningful to us, are simply sounds to the dog. Heard initially, they express about as much to him as gobbledygook would to us. Only by demonstration and constant repetition can he be made to understand how each word applies...
"Put Your Commands On A Diet"
televisions Dog training Add Warmth To Your Pet's Dogloo Doghouse 