All posts by Suzanne

Barn Hunt: To Smell A Rat

Barn Hunt Test
Guided by Ron, Emma smells a rat!

The first-ever Barn Hunt Trials in New Mexico (that’s the U.S. state south of Colorado between Arizona and Texas) were held in Albuquerque in March 2014. What fun to see our Standard Schnauzers in four trials hunting for rats, one of the tasks for which they were bred. I researched this new dog sport and wrote about it in my July 2014 column in the AKC Gazette.

The Barn Hunt Association (BHA) was founded by Robin Nuttall, a long-time dog trainer, as a fun sport to test her dogs’ working abilities, starting with her Doberman Pinschers. Unlike AKC conformation shows, neutered or spayed dogs may compete, and unlike AKC performance sports such as obedience or rally, bitches in season may also compete, but they must be last in their group and wear panties while in the ring. Even handlers in wheelchairs are welcome in Barn Hunt competition, although when I tried it in a husband-propelled wheelchair, it was extremely awkward because of the narrow passageways and height of the bales obstructing my view of my dog.

According to BHA’s easy-to-navigate website www.barnhunt.com (includes a map showing affiliated groups and a calendar of BHA events), “the purpose of Barn Hunt is to demonstrate a dog’s vermin hunting ability in finding and marking rats in a ‘barn-like’ setting, using straw/hay bales to introduce climbing and tunneling obstacles in the dog’s path.” Scores depend on locating rats within the allotted time, surmounting required obstacles, and dog/handler teamwork. Handlers announce when dogs alert to the rat’s location; a false call is one of several disqualification possibilities.

The sport “is for any breed or mix of dog who loves to hunt and who can fit through an 18-inch wide gap between two hay bales. It will test speed, agility, and surefootedness.” We saw many large  Working breeds, Terriers, Sporting breeds, and others, in addition to the expected earth dogs. Size divisions are under 13″, up to 18″, and over 18″.

Indoor or outdoor rings contain straw bales inside totally fenced, level enclosures. Rat Wranglers handle the rats–actually well-treated pets in ventilated pipes/tubes hidden anywhere in the ring. Equipment includes several ten-inch-long, light-colored, schedule-40 PVC pipes, 4 inches in diameter, sealed with a snap-in metal drain at one end and a screwed-in clean-out plug at the other. Rows of 5/16″ airholes are drilled about an inch apart into the pipes.

Trials begin with a Rat Instinct (RATI) test for dogs without BHA titles. Dogs travel down an 18″-wide bale passageway to three tubes: one empty, one containing only rat bedding, and one containing bedding plus a rat. Dogs have one minute to identify the rat-containing tube correctly and for the handler to announce the find. You can see a You Tube video of an instinct test and a novice run at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-nJtxfweXQ.

Like other performance sports, BHA titles, which are transferable to and recognized by AKC, require three qualifying scores in timed trials. Awarded titles are Rat Novice (RATN), Rat Open (RATO), Rat Senior (RATS), Rat Master (RATM), and, similar to AKC advanced performance titles, Rat Champion (RATCH), RATCHX, and RATCHX2. As title level advances, difficulty increases by height of stacked bales for dogs to climb, number of tunnels dogs must traverse, and number of rats dogs must locate. Each successive performance level gets harder with the number of rat-containing tubes, empty tubes, ratless bedding-only tubes, and time.

In Albuquerque, Judge Lori Oakley showed each disqualified dog the rat’s location, let dogs smell the rat, and praised him/her, making every dog leave the ring feeling like a winner.

Ivory (GCH CH Wustefuchs Ivory Mesa CGC RATN RATO) found the rats with great enthusiasm in the Rat Instinct tests and two trials, scoring High in Trial in one.She went on over the summer to complete her Novice title and her Open title, usually finishing in the top of her class and sometimes even for the trial. She now is competing for her RATS, the senior level that is even more difficult because the dog and handler must find an unspecified number of rats between one and five, and the handler, who doesn’t know how many rats are hidden, must also announce when the dog is finished hunting.

Clancy (CH Asgard Navigator Wustefuchs CGC, CD, UCD, RN, RA, RATN), who took second place in the fourth trial, discovered the rats early on, but it took us awhile to understand his subtle alert to their location. Clancy announces he has found the rat with a very quick wag of his tail. He, too, generally qualified with winning placements.

On the other hand, Emma (CH Asgard Mesa Mist Wustefuchs CGC, CD, UCD, RN, RA, RATN) clearly thought “This is boring—YOU show ME the rat.” She eventually got with the program later in the summer and completed the requirements for her Novice title (RATN) at our National Specialty Dog Show in Pleasanton, California in October 2014 by falling from a higher straw bale onto the rat tube with a fraction of a second to spare before time was called (my graduate-school advisor would have dubbed this “efficiency”).

Go to the BHA website, find a Barn Hunt in your area, and sign up to participate. I guarantee you and your dog will have a lot of fun. You don’t need extensive training like you do for obedience or agility trials—on the job training is available in the Instinct tests that are run first thing in the morning before the actual trials start. Just take your dog and let him do what comes naturally. It’s fun for your dog, and you’ll enjoy seeing how the various breeds approach hunting rats!

Copyright © 2015, Suzanne T. Smith. All rights reserved.

Dog-related Charities

Not long ago, a friend asked me about dog-related charities that he and his wife, childless except for their dogs, could remember in their wills. That got me thinking about the incredible service dogs out there, so I wrote about this subject in my January 2013 column in the AKC Gazette.

Over the years, numerous news stories have featured dogs who sniffed out illnesses, including a Standard Schnauzer whose nose could detect cancer. Back then, I thought “How interesting,” but I didn’t tumble to our Standard Schnauzers—Murphy (Rainbow Bridge1999 at 14), Emma, and Clancy—sniffing and nose-nudging my left breast. Then in 2005, a phone call after a routine mammogram informed me I had left-breast cancer. Surgery turned up five small slow-growing malignancies; my surgeon thought they had begun growing at least twenty years before detection (there are two morals to this story–get your mammograms, and pay attention when your dog is trying to tell you something!).

In the USA, the Code of Federal Regulations for the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (www.ada.gov/pubs/ada.htm) defines a service animal as “any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability, including, but not limited to, guiding individuals with impaired vision, alerting individuals with impaired hearing to intruders or sounds, providing minimal protection or rescue work, pulling a wheelchair, or fetching dropped items.”

The Act gives persons with disabilities the right to be accompanied by their service animal anywhere the general public is allowed. Additional federal laws protect people with disabilities partnered with service animals from discrimination in housing (the Fair Housing Amendments Act: www.ada.gov/cguide.htm) and on aircraft (the Air Carrier Access Act: www.disabilitytravel.com/airlines/air_carrier_act_details.htm).

Service dogs help those with visual or hearing impairment live near-normal lives. The late Nancy Aronstam (Stone Pine Standard Schnauzers) worked tirelessly for Guide Dogs for the Blind Inc, San Rafael, California (www.guidedogs.com).

Assistance Dogs International is a coalition of organizations that provide trained service dogs (www.assistancedogsinterrnational.org). Their website states: “Service Dogs…can be trained to work with people who use power or manual wheelchairs, have balance issues, have…autism, need seizure alert or response, need to be alerted to other medical issues…, or have psychiatric disabilities.” These dogs can retrieve objects out of their person’s reach; pull wheelchairs; open and close doors; turn light switches off and on; bark to indicate help is needed; find and lead another individual to their person; provide balance and counterbalance to assist ambulatory persons in walking; provide deep pressure; and many other individual tasks needed by a disabled person.

Seizure dogs assist persons with epilepsy (4pawsforability.org). Hairless or short-coat dogs provide soothing heat for people with chronic pain like fibromyalgia or arthritis (pawsforcomfort.com). Autism service dogs are trained to help calm their owners, minimize emotional outbursts, and help advance social skills (autismservicedogsofamerica.com). Diabetic alert dogs (dogs4diabetes.com) sense chemical changes in persons when blood sugar gets low. Trained service or therapeutic companion dogs (soldiersbestfriend.org) help our military veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or traumatic brain injury (TBI).

At http://www.akc.org/dogowner/training/therapy/index.cfm is a summary of the AKC’s new Therapy Dog program, explaining the difference between service and therapy dogs, how  to earn the ThD title, and contact information for national and regional therapy dog organizations.

Our furry friends help strengthen immune systems, lower blood pressure, soothe emotional distress, elevate mood, relieve depression, increase seratonin and dopamine levels, reduce anxiety, combat stress, listen without judgment, absorb tears, provide fun and companionship, and most important, give unconditional love.
Shouldn’t we give back by contributing time or money to any of these dog-related charities that train dogs to help us?

Copyright © 2013 Suzanne T. Smith. All rights reserved.

Rabid Fox Bites New Mexico Woman

Gray Fox
Gray Fox (Gary M Stolz, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

Lincoln County, New Mexico, April 24, 2015:  A rabid gray fox bit a 78-year-old Lincoln County woman in her leg yesterday. The fox tested positive for rabies and was euthanized. The fox was infected with a never-before-seen strain of rabies that was identified by genetic sequencing.  Paul Ettestad, New Mexico’s public health veterinarian, said discovering a new rabies strain is out of the ordinary. The new strain, similar to that found in bats, is unique.

Lincoln County in southern New Mexico is the locale of the historic Lincoln County Wars that erupted in the 1870s between ranchers and the owners of a general store. William Bonney (a.k.a. Billy the Kid) sided with the ranchers, ultimately slaying not only the deputy who killed his friend, but also several other lawmen and ranchers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_County,_New_Mexico).

The bitten woman underwent the painful series of shots for preventive treatment. Rabies is a preventable viral disease in mammals; it is usually transmitted by the bite of infected animals such as bats, raccoons, skunks, and foxes. Rabies in humans is usually fatal when untreated, so starting preventive therapy as soon as possible after being bitten is critical to recovery. The last human death from rabies in the United States occurred in 1956, according to the Centers for Disease Control, although I saw another source that stated one to three human rabies deaths per year is normal for the US.

Dr.Kerry Mower, wildlife disease specialist for the New Mexico Department of game and Fish, warned that wildlife acting sick, fearless, aggressive, or friendly should be considered a threat and avoided. “The public should be vigilant and stay away from any animals behaving strangely.”

An article in the Albuquerque Journal (4/24/15) gives guidelines for protecting yourself, your family, and your pets from rabies:

  • Stay away from wild and unfamiliar animals. Do not attempt to feed, approach, or touch wild animals (alive or dead). Teach this important message to your children. Rabid animals may show no fear of people and may seem friendly or show aggression.
  • Make sure pets are up to date on rabies vaccinations and wear current license tags on their collars.
  • Consider rabies vaccination for horses and other valuable livestock to protect them from wild rabid animals that may attack them.
  • Keep pets on a leash at all times.

The incubation period for the virus to establish itself is from one to three months, but if you or your pet is bitten by a rabid animal, begin preventive therapy at once. Symptoms include fever, headache, and muscle weakness. If a bite happens, call to report it to your state’s Department of Health, your local Department of Game and Fish office, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, Atlanta, Georgia, (404) 639-3311.

An interesting fact about the gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenterus) is that it is the only member of the Canidae family (dog family) that can climb trees.

© Suzanne T. Smith 2015

Recall of Dog Chew: Metal Contamination

This is from Mike Sagman, Editor of Dog Food Advisor:

On May 27, 2015, PetSmart announced that Himalayan Corporation of Mukilteo, Washington, is recalling specific lots of its Himalayan Ruff Roots All-Natural Dog Chews due to possible metal contamination.

To learn which products are affected, please visit the following link:

Himalayan Dog Chews Recall of May 2015

Please be sure to share the news of this recall alert with other pet owners.

 

Tularemia on the Rise

Tularemia, a once-rare disease, is on the rise in the United States as the weather warms and dogs are out and about with their humans. Both dogs and people can be infected with tularemia.

Originally discovered in 1937 by the Japanese, Tularemia is named after a particularly widespread 1911 outbreak in Tulare County, California. Not limited to Western states, Tularemia is especially prevalent in the Midwest, although it is found in every state except Hawai’i.

Tularemia, a.k.a. deerfly or rabbit fever, affects more than 250 species worldwide, including dogs and their humans, cats, deer, rabbits, and other warm-blooded wild animals. It is caused by two strains of the bacterium Francisella tularensis. The common North American strain, Type A, has a mortality rate in humans of 5% to 35% if left untreated. The less virulent Type B, more common to Eurasia as well as North America and associated with water-borne infections and aquatic animals, has a more complex life cycle than does Type A.

As I wrote in my column in the October 2012 issue of the AKC Gazette, “F.  tularensis is transmitted by fleas, deer flies (Chrysops discalis), mosquitos, and four kinds of ticks: Pacific Coast tick (Dermacentor occidentalis), American dog tick (D. variabilis), Rocky Mountain wood tick (D. andersoni), and Lone Star tick (Ambylomma americanum). Incubation period after a bite by an infected carrier is one to fourteen days. Other means of spreading the infection include eating or handling infected animals, drinking or swimming in contaminated water, or inhaling  aerosolized bacteria. Hunters should wear gloves while dressing game. Human to human transmission of Tularemia is rare.”

Dogs and cats can contract Tularemia from carrier insect bites; those who are allowed to hunt, either alone or accompanied by a person, can be infected by eating or carrying infected birds, rabbits, and other rodents. Cats are more susceptible to Tularemia than dogs, as are puppies and kittens; the resultant fever is greater in these animals than in adult dogs.

Human Tularemia infection can occur from flea, tick, or fly bites; from eating undercooked deer, rabbit, or other game meat; and through broken skin by direct contact with an infected animal or its carcass. Hunters, beware!   F. tularensis is a particularly tenacious bacterium that can exist in frozen rabbit or deer meat for over three years (time to clean out your freezer!). It can live for weeks at very low temperatures in water, moist soil, hay, straw, or decaying animal carcasses. It is also a virulent bacterium, with as few as five to fifteen bacteria producing the disease.

Dogs are more resistant to Tularemia than humans. In dogs, Tularemia symptoms include loss of appetite, listlessness, low  fever, and sometimes jaundice. Lymph nodes enlarge and abscesses form in liver and spleen in severe cases, and death can occur rapidly. Cats are more susceptible to Tularemia than dogs, having higher fevers; puppies and kittens are affected more severely than adults. Diagnosis is by blood tests, although antibodies may not develop immediately. Unfortunately, diagnosis is more often by necropsy because of the animal expiring before Tularemia is suspected. There is no proven effective treatment for the disease in dogs, although streptomycin, gentamicin, tetracycline, and chloramphenicol have been used successfully in some cases.

Humans may die from severe forms of Tularemia. Humans usually develop enlarged lymph nodes, with lesions at carrier insect bite sites. If F. tularensis bacteria are ingested either by eating undercooked game or from unwashed hands after handling an infected animal or carcass, further symptoms can include vomiting, diarrhea, and intestinal pain.

Treatment for humans with tetracycline and chloramphenicol have been associated with relapses in people. A vaccine previously available to high-risk people such as laboratory personnel is under review for animals and humans.

There is no home pet care for Tularemia; diagnosed pets require immediate veterinary care. Also, diagnosed animals should be handled carefully with gloves because the infectious disease is transmitted easily to humans. Recovery in dogs and humans confers long-lasting immunity to Tularemia.

 

© Suzanne T. Smith, 2015