baby is the STAR!! look at his little legs!! look at his focus around barking dogs & another dog in the other lane!! wow!!!
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baby is the STAR!! look at his little legs!! look at his focus around barking dogs & another dog in the other lane!! wow!!!
Had to post a closeup crop of that one pic bc I’m absolutely in love with the pure joy in her expression.
📸 blue poodle studios
canam ! i was not supposed to go but my team had someone drop out so i drove down with my boss. the dogs all traveled super well in the crates, we did plenty of stops. i ran my girlfriends dog for half the time and was box loader the other half, learned a ton and definitely enjoy flyball a lot more.
my dogs did so well, Albus didn’t come in much but he did a little and i got him a new custom collar (for $40, a steal), seph settled nicely and tugged. juni settled in the xpen and had some lovely ob work. albus got to run with everyone ! so happy with them
6 days left
insane
Thyme had his first intro to beginner flyball :)
Wasn’t sure how this would go. Noise sensitive vs love of run and jump. Love won!
BABY!!! BOY!!!!!
Mimi Bekhechi, vice president of Peta, the animal rights charity, told The Telegraph: knee ligaments and other serious injuries … it’s cruel and unnecessary.
“New research must put an end to these horrible agility races, as the best interests of the dog should outweigh the fun of any human.”
PETA is now going after flyball, and no doubt will also go after other dog sports, like agility. Animal rights groups wont stop at just greyhound racing and dog sledding, they want all dog sports banned, and ultimately, all pet ownership ending.
The study doesn’t even conclude that flyball is cruel.
The scientists analyzed records of 260 dogs that suffered an injury called a cranial cruciate ligament rupture (CCLR), which is similar to a previous cruciate ligament rupture in humans, and compared them to more than 1,000 healthy dogs.
Researchers at Washington State University found that 31 dogs (12 percent) playing flyball injured their knees at some point compared to 75 (7.5 percent) in the control group.
This is a 70% increase in risk, but when the researchers also considered other factors such as race, age, weight, and neutral status, the flyball doubled the odds.
CCLR is treated with surgery and rehabilitation and 90% of operations are successful with dogs returning to normal after about four months.
And yet the same study also found that:
Short walks of less than 30 minutes through mountainous or flat terrain were also associated with an 80 percent and 70 percent chance of knee damage, respectively.
Basically, any kind of activity could increase the risk of injury. Flyball has no greater risk than a dog going on a walk or running around playing. Unless you plan to lock your dog up in a cage and never let it move, then you can never eliminate injury risk. Dogs that compete in flyball enjoy the sport just as much, if not more than their owners. There’s nothing cruel about a dog having fun just because there’s a small chance they could get hurt.