Thursday, December 30, 2010

Monday, December 27, 2010

Marathon snow





we won't be running very far today...

Saturday, December 25, 2010

RIP Splash

















He was a published author. He inspired a president. He barked at members of Congress and foreign dignitaries.

Splash, Vicki and Edward M. Kennedy’s beloved Portuguese water dog and a constant presence at the senator’s side, bounding and romping through the halls of power, has died.

The death of the 13 1/2-year-old curly-haired canine is eliciting fond tributes, fit for the passing of such a famous fixture of official Washington. Splash, after all, hobnobbed with Elton John, leapt around the Oval Office, and once growled at Joe Biden and Paul Wellstone when the senators wouldn’t stop talking during a Democratic caucus meeting.

Edward Kennedy, who died of brain cancer in August 2009, was famously devoted to Splash. The lawmaker with a booming voice cooed like a baby around the dog, whether sailing with him off Cape Cod or holding him by his feet during an important meeting in his Capitol Hill office. Kennedy was especially fond of starting his mornings by hitting tennis balls off a racquet for Splash to fetch.

Edward Kennedy bought Splash from a breeder because his son, US Representative Patrick J. Kennedy, is allergic to dogs and Portuguese water dogs are considered hypoallergenic. He and Vicki Kennedy fell in love with Splash’s boundless vim, and later purchased two more Portuguese water dogs, Sunny and Cappy.

The dogs were also a disarming presence for many who met the legendary senator. Johnston recalled once leading a nervous group of community health center directors to meet with Kennedy in his ornate Senate office, decorated with family memorabilia.

“They were expecting some formal meeting with the senator, and then he comes in with the dogs jumping and yelling and having a great time,’’ Johnston said. “They were enthralled.’’

Splash was undoubtedly the most famous dog in the storied family.

Paul Sarbanes, the Maryland Democrat, was so charmed when Splash barked at Biden and Wellstone that he made the dog an honorary member of the Senate Democratic caucus. President George W. Bush honored him with the gift of a rawhide dog bone. “From Barney to Splash,’’ the president’s note read.

In 2006, Splash, with some help from his owners, wrote a children’s book, “My Senator and Me: A Dog’s-Eye View Of Washington, D.C.,’’ which chronicled his experiences in the Capitol — riding the tram, sitting in on committee meetings, and following Kennedy everywhere except to the Senate floor, where dogs are prohibited.

Splash was widely credited with inspiring President Obama’s decision last year to accept as a gift from Kennedy a Portuguese water dog of his own, which the president’s daughters, Malia and Sasha, named Bo.

Kennedy had been quietly lobbying the president to choose a Portuguese water dog for his family, a campaign the senator tacitly acknowledged during a period of fevered speculation about which breed the Obamas would choose.

“We love our Portuguese water dogs, and if the first family decides to go in that direction, we know they’ll fall in love, too,’’ Kennedy said in a statement in February 2009.

Johnston said yesterday that he will always remember Kennedy with Splash, Sunny, and Cappy at his side.

“The dogs,’’ he said, “were very a much part of him.’’


Wednesday, December 22, 2010

The Doctor's Dog Will See You Now


Walk into psychiatrist Drew Ramsey's office in Manhattan and you'll likely be greeted by Gus, a four-year-old shih tzu. After escorting you through the waiting room, he may hop onto the ottoman and go to sleep or sit beside you on the couch.

Therapists use 'canine assistants' to comfort and cheer up their patients. WSJ's Christina Tsuei sees how psychiatrist Drew Ramsey teams up with his four-year-old shih tzu Gus.

Some patients pat Gus while they talk to Dr. Ramsey. A few talk to Gus instead. And if they get emotional, Gus provides physical comfort that therapists can't offer. "We can't hug patients, but patients can hug Gus," says Dr. Ramsey, who began bringing his dog to his office two years ago. Now, he says, "I think about Gus the way a cowboy thinks of his horse—he's part of the job."

A small but growing number of psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers and other therapists are bringing their dogs to work in their private practices, where they help calm patients down, cheer them up and offer a happy distraction with a wagging tail. The job is similar to what therapy dogs do when they visit at hospitals or nursing homes, but these "canine therapy-assistants" often work full days and get to know the patients just as well as the doctors.

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Mimi Ritzen Crawford for The Wall Street Journal

New York neurologist Gayatri Devi, who specializes in memory disorders, brings Lola, shown, and Wolfie to the office.

Even some medical doctors have put their pups to work. Lacey, part golden retriever, part spaniel, entertains waiting patients at New York plastic surgeon Janis Di Pietro's office, though she isn't allowed in the procedure room.

Lola and Wolfie, mutts aged three and 17, put elderly patients at ease for New York neurologist Gayatri Devi, who specializes in memory disorders. "Coming to this office can be unnerving for dementia patients, but when they see a dog, it's disarming. They feel comforted and safe," she says.

Research shows that a few minutes of stroking a pet dog decreases cortisol, the stress hormone, in both the human and the dog. It also increases prolactin and oxytocin, hormones that govern nurturing and security, as well as serotonin and norepinephrine, neurotransmitters that boost mood. One study found that five minutes with a dog was as relaxing as a 20-minute break for hospital staffers.

"It's chemical, not magical," says Rebecca Johnson, who teaches a popular course in animal-human interaction at the University of Missouri and has conducted much of the research.

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Michal Czerwonka for The Wall Street Journal

Child psychologist Aubrey Fine has used animals in his Claremont, Calif., practice for 30 years. Shown are his two golden retrievers, Magic and P.J.

While there are no set requirements for having an animal assistant, most dogs who work with doctors have been trained in obedience and as therapy dogs. The Delta Society offers such courses to human-and-pet pairs nationwide, as do other organizations.

Interacting with a dog can work wonders for some patients. Early in his practice, child psychologist Aubrey Fine treated a 9-year-old girl who was painfully withdrawn and refused to speak until his golden retriever, Puppy, laid her head in the girl's lap. The girl slowly began patting Puppy, smiled and spoke to her as her astonished parents looked on.

For the past 30 years, Dr. Fine, who practices in Claremont, Calif., has used dogs and other animals to help treat children disorders such as autism, attention-deficit/hyperactive disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder. Learning to walk and interact with the pets helps the kids learn to maintain focus, eye contact and communication. "With some children, I use the dog as an external form of biofeedback," to help them learn to regulate their behavior, says Dr. Fine, who edited the "Handbook on Animal-Assisted Therapy," a key textbook in the field.

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Mimi Ritzen Crawford for The Wall Street Journal

Psychiatrist Drew Ramsey with his fouryear-old shih tzu, Gus, in his Manhattan office.

"You never have a problem getting a child to go see Dr. Fine—they want to go," says Velene Lima, whose daughter, Angela, now 24, has been a patient since infancy, when a brain tumor left her with multiple challenges. "She would be bouncing off the wall when she was young, but with Dr. Fine, she'd be calm. Those dogs mean everything to her."

Some therapists report that their dogs act differently with different patients, depending on their conditions.

"I call them 'seeing heart dogs'—because they can see into people's hearts," says Lois Abrams, a marriage and family therapist in Los Alamitos, Calif., who practices with her two cavalier King Charles spaniels, Duke, 11, and Romeo, eight. Duke lies on the floor next to patients with anxiety disorders and sits on the couch close to those who are depressed.

Once, Duke jumped up and sat next to a patient she hadn't realized was depressed. "When I asked if she was, suddenly the woman poured out her heart to me," says Dr. Abrams. "My three-year-old dog knew more than I did."

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Sandra Barker

Sandra Barker and High Anxiety ('Hi' for short) visit a patient at Virginia Commonwealth University Health System.

How can dogs be that sensitive to human emotions?

Experts speculate that people give off tell-tale scents under certain physical or psychological conditions that only dogs can detect.

That acute sense of smell also enables specially trained service dogs to recognize when seizures, diabetic comas or heart attacks are imminent in humans. Some dogs can even detect the presence of cancer cells in lab specimens—much like detecting traces of contraband or explosives in luggage.

That still doesn't explain some of the things dogs seem to intuit. Sandra Barker, director of the School of Medicine Center for Human-Animal Interaction at Virginia Commonwealth University, recalls taking a therapy dog to visit a patient who was paralyzed from the neck down. When the patient blinked "yes" to invite the dog on the bed, the dog nestled around his head. "How did that dog know that was the only part of his body that had any feeling?" Dr. Barker marvels.

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Erin Morgan

Anita Sacks an assistant professor of psychiatry at New York University's Langone Medical Center, with her chocolate lab, Deacon.

Anita Sacks, an assistant professor of psychiatry at New York University's Langone Medical Center, "prescribes" dogs for some patients. From a psychoanalytic perspective, dogs offer the kind of unconditional love that some people didn't get from their mothers, which sets them up for life-long attachment problems, says Ms. Sacks,who practices with her chocolate lab, Deacon.

Dr. Ramsey thinks their appeal is simpler. "Like Freud said about cigars, sometimes a dog in the office is just a dog in the office," he says. "They're just nice to have around."

He also thinks Gus is good for his own mental health. "Much of psychiatry is about loss and depression, so when I get a break, it's great to have him there to take for a walk."

What do dogs get out of working with patients?

HEALTHCOLjp4
Herb Abrams

Lois Abrams, a marriage and family therapist, with Duke in a chair and Romeo on her lap"Lots of cookies," says Dr. Barker, whose Lhasa apso, High Anxiety, or Hi for short, helped out in her practice treating trauma survivors for nine years before retiring.

And many dogs seem happiest when they have a job to do—whether it's herding, guarding, patrolling or engaging in supportive listening. What's more, patients bring presents. "Gus got a Freud chew toy," Dr. Ramsey says.

Not every dog is cut out for the health-care profession. Dogs that are highly energetic, territorial or demanding could be disruptive to a practice. Temperament is more important than any particular breed, says Dr. Barker, who says the Virginia Commonwealth program has included pit bulls, Great Danes and everything in between as therapy dogs.

As a rule, dogs are better suited to therapy than other animals. "Cats like relationships on their own terms," says Dr. Johnson, who is president of the International Association of Human-Animal Interaction Organizations, a nonprofit working to advance the nascent science of understanding between humans and animals.

[HEALTHCOLjp5] Ashley Talbott

Ashley Talbott, a fourth-year medical student at Virginia Commonwealth University's School of Medicine, with Berkeley.

But other animals can serve other roles. Besides golden retrievers and black labs, Dr. Fine has worked with guinea pigs, bunnies, birds and bearded lizards. He recalls one lizard that had a severed tail and chronic constipation, which helped some children relate to her even more closely. "She was one of the nicest lizards I have ever met," he says.

Of course, some patients are allergic or frightened around animals. Most doctors who practice with dogs inform patients before the first visit, and put the pup elsewhere for part of the day if necessary. But most find that practicing with a dog is a draw for patients, not a deterrent.

Animal-assisted therapy is still in its infancy. But research is expanding and interest is growing steadily. Some universities now offer undergraduate courses. VCU's School of Medicine offers a course in human-animal interaction for fourth-year medical students and another for psychiatry residents.

"When you have psychiatrists who say, 'I want to leave my practice and come and work with you,' you know it's an area of great interest," says Dr. Barker.


Monday, December 20, 2010

Please sign!

Make all shelters NO KILL in the USA
Targeting: The U.S. Senate and The U.S. House of Representatives
Started by: Melinda Vickery


















It's about time we all stand up and let it be heard that we want NO KILL shelters only! We need to support no kill shelters by adopting from them AND help out our local no kill rescues. Shelters need to use these rescues for the over flow of animals go to them instead of being euthanized. Please sign this is you agree there is no excuse for killing these animals.



"This mission and passion is to educate, enlighten and inspire all of us to know that there is a better way. That the status quot is a betrayal to our kindred spirits. The mass systematic shelter killing of the innocent loving souls, whose only crime is that they are unable to find a loving, caring home, is immoral, unacceptable, and unnecessary. With compassionate dedication we will and must finally end this injustice, for only then shall we find true redemption."

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Monday, November 29, 2010

dear Stella,

there was a new dog





at Thanksgiving this year...







and a very nice boy to play with

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Sunday, October 24, 2010

very patient pooch!

unfortunately this...

























reminds me a little too much







of this

Thursday, October 21, 2010

still the best sniffer













Drones, metal detectors, chemical sniffers, and super spycams — forget ‘em. The leader of the Pentagon’s multi-billion military task force to stop improvised bombs says there’s nothing in the U.S. arsenal for bomb detection more powerful than a dog’s nose.

Read More http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/10/19-billion-later-pentagon-best-bomb-detector-is-a-dog/#ixzz1327FkRaB

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Friday, October 1, 2010

on the east coast, finally!


Park Spark Project




The Park Spark project is the transformation
of dog waste into energy (methane)
through a publicly fed methane digester

as an interactive
urban intervention
that questions our current waste system,
and at the same time creates
an opportunity for others
to participate
in the (re)imaging of the byproduct energy (methane).

Thursday, September 30, 2010

4 years seem like forever



Give me my Stella...

and when she shall die
take her and cut her out in little stars
and she will make the face of heaven so fine
that all the world will be in love with night
and pay no worship to the garish sun.

~ Willie the Shakes (& us)



Stella byStarlight 12.29.1993-9.30.2006

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

90 years today!




happy birthday to you,
grandMa



Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Hope


thinking good thoughts







and walking another mile



for our friends Murphy and Riley again today...

Thursday, July 22, 2010

this is not helping...

I can't say for certain what is causing cancer in our dogs
and in us
but I can say with absolute certainty


this























and this

aren't helping...

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Driftwood Art



Tom Loback is an artist and sculptor in New York City.
For the last 5 years,
he has been creating
driftwood sculpture
on the banks of the
Hudson River
from
96th St.up to 125th St.
along the beautiful and
panoramic Cherry Walk.

Cherry Walk runs along
the Hudson River
(also known as the North River) without the railings and roads that keep folks from their river elsewhere in Manhattan.

Over the years Tom has created well over 1,000 driftwood sculptures using the driftwood that the Hudson River brings. He neither binds nor alters any piece of driftwood for his art. The work is absolutely accessable - no rope or guard keeps the viewer from the art. Each completed piece lives out a life of its own. Sometimes this is a day, sometimes a piece lasts years. There's a sensation to working outside a studio, 'en plein air', as the impressionists did that can't be found in the studio.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Boston or BUST !!
























we're off to walk with the BIG dogs!!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Monday, May 31, 2010

Heroes...





New York, N.Y. (Sept. 15, 2001) -- Golden Retriever SAR dog, Riley, is transported out of the debris of the World Trade Center.
U.S. Navy Photo by Journalist 1st Class Preston Keres.


Monday, May 3, 2010

Seriously...







Consider how

Arizona’s new immigration law affects a young

O’odham woman.

On her reservation in Arizona, which is divided by the U.S.-Mexico border. About nine O'odham communities are on the Mexico side. Because of existing immigration laws, tribal members are forced to produce passports and border I.D. cards to reach the other side of the reservation.

“On countless occasions, the U.S. Border Patrol has detained and deported members of the Tohono O'odham Nation who were simply traveling through their own traditional lands,” according to the O’odham Nation website. “Border officials are also reported to have confiscated cultural and religious items, such as feathers of common birds, pine leaves or sweet grass.”

As appalling as that is, worse is the image she paints of Mexican immigrants crossing the border, who were found sometimes collapsed from exhaustion on the lands of her O’odham family on the U.S. side.

Knowing this, her family members didn’t pull out shotguns or call Border Patrol.

They would leave out food and water for whoever would be crossing through their lands.

One important thing missing from all the news coverage around Arizona’s new immigration law is the voice of the first people of this country (as always), who never detained and deported the “illegal” immigrants who first landed on their shores

(though many probably wanted to).

Now the descendants of those immigrants are the ones deciding who’s allowed to stay.


Saturday, May 1, 2010

May-be So... it's FREEZing!!


"May is the pious fraud of the almanac."

~James Russell Lowell

Thursday, April 29, 2010

how cold is TOO cold?



maybe big slabs of ice might be a consideration...

























according to popular opi
nion on "the nets"













not that a golden can always be reasoned with!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Happy Birthday Ellas!



you will always be






my favorite old dog





and you will always be
Ella Fitzgerald
Ella Fitzgerald Pictures

my favorite singer





Ella Fitzgerald Feingold 4. 26. 1978 – 6.2. 1992
Ella Jane Fitzgerald 4. 25. 1917 – 6. 15. 1996

Sunday, April 25, 2010

crying over more spilled OIL

a new oil spill and a new Dawn television ad
are saturating the airwaves this month.






The commercial was filmed in May 2009 at the
Los Angeles Oiled Bird Care and Education Center
featuring staff from San Pedro's
International Bird Rescue & Research Center.

IBRRC has been using DAWN for three decades
to safely clean birds and other wildlife of oil.

This campaign helps both wildlife groups with much needed funds.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

on heroes













"He liked to sing to the cows.
As a child ... he'd strike off on a bicycle. ... only to be found five miles away on the side of the road.
He was singing to a bunch of cows.
They were all lined up inside the fence."

Glenn later joked,
"It was an extraordinarily touching occasion. ...
I really felt that a very special bond had
been established.








Certainly I've never encountered so attentive an audience before."







Glenn Herbert Gould 9. 25. 1932 – 10. 4. 1982

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Speech!



looks like another happy birthday...














a few words please?




Roger Edward Feingold:
birthdate April 7, 1942

Master of the pianoforte and first of three efforts
by Laura
and Edward Feingold

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Monday, March 1, 2010

Monday, February 22, 2010