Saturday, January 19, 2013

Vanilla the Cat Reunited With Owners After 9 Long, Lost Years




They say cats have nine lives, and for one Siamese cat yesterday in San Francisco, after nine long, lost years, he was finally reunited with the people he shared his first life with.
Vanilla the cat went missing from his owner, Dara Gerson, nine years ago in Sausalito, Calif., and was presumed to be lost forever. Despite Gerson's and her daughters' efforts to find him, posting signs around the neighborhood and searching for days, the cat was nowhere to be found.
"We lived in Sausalito and my older daughter was holding the cat, and somebody had a dog that scared the cat and the cat ran out of her arms," Gerson told ABCNews.com. "We put up posters and asked everyone in the neighborhood and never found him. But we never gave up hope. I'm a pretty intuitive person and assumed he was still alive."
Vanilla was indeed alive, and had somehow over the years made his way across the Golden Gate Bridge to a home in Noe Valley, about six hours away from Gerson and her family.
READ ALSO: Missing Dog Reunited With Family After Four Years
The cat had been living with a gentleman who was recently diagnosed with dementia. In early December, the man's caretaker contacted the San Francisco Department of Animal Care and Control about what to do with Vanilla. The man was being admitted to the hospital and wouldn't be returning to the house, so he wouldn't be able to keep looking after the cat.
"We don't know how he got Vanilla at all, but we took him into custody because his then owner wasn't able to take care of him," said Kristen Hall, a worker with Animal Care and Control.
"Whenever an animal comes in, we scan them for microchips. Vanilla had a microchip and it did not match up to the person he had been living with, which was the man that had been hospitalized. But it matched up to Dara, who had the same cellphone as all those years ago."
Since losing Vanilla, Gerson had moved to Topanga, Calif., but luckily had never changed her cellphone number that she registered to Vanilla's microchip. She was elated to hear Vanilla had been found all these years later.
"I just got a call. It was the best Christmas present our family got," Gerson explained. "We got a call from an officer at the animal control and asked if I was the owner of a cat named Vanilla. And I was like, 'Well, yeah, a really long time ago.' We were literally jumping around and screaming and going bananas. We were absolutely devastated when he went missing."
No one knows exactly where Vanilla has been all these years, and are unfortunately unable to ask his most recent owner for any clues.
"We can't find out what the backstory is because the gentleman just isn't available for that memory," Animal Care and Control deputy director Kat Brown said.
But thanks to the technology of microchipping, which implants a chip the size of a grain of rice containing the owner's information between the animal's shoulder blades, along with a little bit of fate, the beloved pet is now home. All the way back over the Golden Gate Bridge with his original family.
"It is definitely an awesome story," Gerson said. "You don't ever really hear about pets getting reunited with their owners after nine years. The amazing thing, he was so awesome then, and he's still just as awesome now. I had another child that's been born since we had him. He was so amazing with our older daughter and he still has the coolest demeanor."

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Top 10 Dogs! (US)

In the US, a poll was taken by the American Kennel Club to see which purebred dog breeds were the most popular. The Labrador Retriever again got 1st place for the 20th time in a row!!

1. Labrador Retriever

2. German Shepherd Dog

3. Yorkshire Terrier

4. Beagle

5. Golden Retriever

6. Bulldog

7. Boxer

8. Dachshund

9. Poodle

10. Shih Tzu

Here is the link to the source: Top Ten Dog Breeds 
Picture from www.Dailypuppy.com 

Thursday, May 31, 2012

DogVacay

By SUE MANNING | Associated Press – Wed, May 23, 2012
Yahoo News
LOS ANGELES (AP) — When you travel and have to leave your dog behind, you can call a kennel, hire a pet sitter — or find him a new friend online.
The website DogVacay debuted in New York and Los Angeles in March and, just in time for the summer travel season, is now available throughout the United States and Canada.
The site lets pet owners look up hosts in the area who will care for a dog in their own homes, giving a pet the food, exercise and attention you would give if you stayed home — sort of a doggy version of couch-surfing, for an average price of $25 to $30 a day.
Hosts are checked out and interviewed by DogVacay and every owner and dog is encouraged to meet the host.
The Santa Monica-based company was founded by Aaron and Karine Nissim Hirschhorn. In two months it has grown to over 4,000 hosts in two countries and from five employees to 13, Hirschhorn said.
Valerie Steiger's Shih Tzu mix named Joey was just 3 months old when she had to leave for a two-week Thailand trip in February. Joey has been back four or five times since, said Steiger, whose job as a life coach keeps her on the road.
Her host has a couple of dogs and Joey enjoyed them so much, he was depressed when he got home and didn't have any playmates, Steiger said.
"She was wonderful. I was talking to Joey (through a cell phone app) from Thailand. She took pictures of Joey on an iPhone, she took a video of him zipping around with his buddy. I didn't ask for any of that. She just did it," Steiger said.
Steiger has used kennels in the past. And there are good ones, she said, but dogs are still kept in crates or cages for several hours each day. "It's like they are in jail."
Knowing where her dog is and what he's doing is important to her because "this is my baby. I'm leaving my baby behind," Steiger said.
Hirschhorn and his fiance went on a trip to visit family in 2010 and left their dogs Rocky and Rambo in a kennel. "Rocky came back a little off. She was not acting herself. She was sheepish and hiding under the desk. She is normally a happy, happy dog," he said.
There had to be something better, they said. They let everyone know they were going to start dog sitting. "Business was booming. We got multiple calls a day," he said. They watched more than 100 dogs during eight months.

Article from http://news.yahoo.com/doggy-couch-surfing-website-lodging-dogs-203356650.html

Guinea Pigs

You can visit RSPCA to learn more about Guinea pigs!
Picture from www.aspca.org

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Welcome!

Welcome! Join Us with your email (at right) >>>>>> To learn about animals and pets!

Monday, May 28, 2012

Sunday, May 27, 2012

We're Back!

We're back on Lucky Pets News! Sorry that we've been away for so long, but it's about time to be back on the site!! Hope you've been taking good care of your pets!!