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Burkes

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Everything posted by Burkes

  1. Yep, I spray Cotex on them in the morning and all is good
  2. Not sure which behaviourist you are using but can recommend Heike Hahner out at Braidwood. We have used her for some of our rescue dogs with more serious issues.
  3. I went for the first two days. I Really enjoyed the first day and it sent me away with lots of things to think about in regards to our rescue and what out carers are providing our dogs. The second day I didn't enjoy at all. I felt like I learnt more about his son Jamie than anything else. I found him a tad arrogant and he spent a bit too much time bagging out everyone else too. He clearly knows his stuff but I wouldn't go again.
  4. Sorry, can't link cos I am on iPhone, but if you go to www.bestfriends.org and download the resource toolkit at the bottom of the page it has heaps of great tips on anything doggy including settling in a new dog.
  5. Do you have other dogs? You could sprinkle the food out over the lawn so he has to take longer to find it all.
  6. Targeting gets them thinking about the task, rather than reacting, and it's simple so it's worth getting creative with it. One exercise I use in my reactive and aggressive dogs classes is to have two dogs target cones spaced some distance apart. We can bring them in closer over time. For safety, leash length can be set appropriately. You have to keep them busy with this, no idle time. Take them out of the car, do the exercise (however many reps you have decided the dogs will do before they get bored), then back in the car. I've also used a wire mesh fence for protected contact. Have the dogs target the fence post on opposite sides of the fence. Use only where appropriate (for e.g dog is advanced in behaviour mod, but has a bite history). Don't do the "he's really good today, so I'll push it too far" thing! Ahhh, thats a good one. Thanks Aidan. I have a new 7mth old dog in foster care who is not aggressive but has no manners with other dogs and can escalate when she is told off. She started off barking at everything that moved but now we have got it to her just barking at other dogs. I've been using targetting as a distractor for the first couple of days just to teach her to ignore other dogs. It seems to be working.\ She is also massively active so it is helping to tire her out
  7. Oh, thanks for those ideas Megan. My dogs love targetting but I have never really known how to go beyond the touch nose or paw to object. We did get to post it notes on walls but since then I haven't known what to do. I think they are good ideas whatever you use them for. We do have to face facts that not everyone will go and see a behaviourist so anything that will help them is great.
  8. There is a Michelle Toon who has quite a few posts on the ACDR page when you first started it. She talks about her rescue group being full so maybe it is her?? But yeah, all admins should be able to do everything on the page. If you need a hand you can flick me an email and I'll see if I know the answer - i do the ARF page so have played with a few things. Dallas
  9. Yeah pretty handy eh! But yeah, hope I never have to use it.
  10. I'm planning to go for the Friday and Saturday. Haven't been before so hope I get something out of it.
  11. News article: Sydney Morning Herald - 29 December 2011 Kevin Hayes feels like the luckiest man alive. Three years ago the 43-year-old from Melbourne lost the $5000 Canon EOS 5D Mark II DSLR camera his wife bought him for his birthday, and he had all but given up hope of getting it back when he found out about the website stolencamerafinder.com. The site helped him track the lost or stolen camera to a man who works at a Sydney tattoo parlour a few weeks ago and NSW Police have since collected it. Hayes expects to have his camera back any day now, and NSW Police confirmed the story when contacted by this website. Every photo you take with your digital camera contains hidden information about the images (such as the settings used to take it) and the camera (such as the make, model and unique serial number used to identify it). This is known as "exif" data. The stolencamerafinder site is able to crawl the net for photos that were taken using virtually any given digital camera (except Sony models) and this has enabled people to track down many stolen cameras. Matt Burns, a 30-year-old software engineer from Bristol, England, said he created the site in 2009 but it wasn't until about April this year, when Burns improved the site while on a holiday in Cambodia, that its popularity surged from 30-50 hits a day to around 50,000 unique visitors a day. "I've been contacted by a police officer in the US that said they used my site as the initial evidence that ultimately caught a burglar with $20,000 of stolen property," said Burns, who now works on the site full-time. "I'm working closely with the police and CEOP in the UK. They have been able to use my site to track down the creators of indecent images of children." 'No recourse, no insurance' Hayes, the head of learning and development at a Melbourne firm, was in Canberra on business three years ago. He was walking down the street carrying his camera in a day pack that was attached to another bag, but within about 20 seconds of him walking, he realised his camera bag was missing. "There was no recourse, there was no insurance – immediately after the camera was stolen within half an hour I was down at the local police station in Canberra reporting it missing and so on, but after that it was a matter of getting over it," he said in a phone interview. Hayes said losing the camera "was quite an emotional thing" and his wife was unimpressed. It took him two years to throw away the boxes for the lost camera and buy a new one – a cheaper model. He said he resigned himself to "having learned a very expensive life lesson" but a few weeks ago he mentioned in passing on the Whirlpool forum that he had a camera stolen. One of the other users of the site told him about stolencamerafinder.com, and he immediately went on to the site and used an old photo he had taken with the stolen camera to search for other photos published online that were taken with the same camera. 'Oh my god, I've found it' The search came up with the Flickr account of a Sydney tattoo artist who had been using the camera to take photos of his work. The Flickr account listed the man's name and the address of his shop. "I was absolutely stunned – I was upstairs in the computer room, ran downstairs to my wife ... and said 'oh my god I've found it, I've found the camera'," he said. "It was just the most incredible feeling – I just couldn't believe it to be honest, that it was as simple as just typing in a serial number." The man who was in possession of the camera, who Hayes has decided not to name, had even published a photo of himself on Facebook posing in the mirror holding the camera. Hayes collected the evidence and approached Canberra police for his incident number from three years ago, and then passed all the information along with his original receipt on to Melbourne police, who forwarded it to NSW Police in Dee Why. "Amazingly, the bureaucracy kind of worked," said Hayes. The man in possession of the camera admitted to NSW Police that he had it, saying he bought the camera from a friend for $1000 but did not know it was stolen. "The police believe he doesn't know who stole the camera," said Hayes. NSW Police confirmed the man "legally" bought the camera. The tattoo artist surrendered the camera to NSW Police last Wednesday and Hayes expects it to be back in his possession soon. "If he had said I don't have that camera, that effectively would have been the end of it," said Hayes, adding police told him they wouldn't be able to obtain a search warrant without proof the man still possessed the camera, or knowledge of its exact location. "If he had been so minded he could've said I gave away that camera six months ago or I lost it myself, and that effectively would've been the end of the investigation." Amazingly, the tattoo artist even surrendered a new lens he had bought for the camera after the original one it came with broke. "I'm anticipating that I will be able to arrange for the camera to get back to Melbourne in January," Hayes said. In addition to Hayes, there are many other examples of people tracking down lost cameras using stolencamerafinder.com. "One of the more interesting stories came from South Africa," said Burns. "After having his camera stolen, Nik decided to sell the charger in the local classifieds. He then told the guy that bought it about my site. A few days later, the guy that bought the charger rang him back because he realised he had bought the stolen camera." Burns said he created the site after he was burgled about four years ago and lost a pair of point-and-shoot cameras. His girlfriend had just broken her leg and didn't use the deadlock, so insurance didn't cover them. "The thought that our cameras with priceless photos on them were just going to be sold in a pub somewhere for peanuts left me pretty mad," said Burns. "I'm a software engineer and had a little head-scratch as to how I could track the cameras down." Burns had his solution after learning that more and more cameras were recording their serial numbers on photos. He created the site in 2009 but it didn't take off until earlier this year. "In September 2010 my girlfriend and I sold most of our possessions (including the flat!) and went on a 11 month trip around the world that we had been planning for years," said Burns. "In April 2011 we spent a few weeks in Cambodia where my girlfriend was teaching in a school for poor children. While she was doing that I dusted off a very tiny netbook I had with me and made some improvements to the way Stolen Camera Finder works." The popularity of the site surged when it was picked up by blogs and Twitter users. Burns hasn't ever needed to do any marketing, and operating the site is relatively inexpensive as it is hosted on Google App Engine. He said his site was a very database-intensive application but running it online, in the "cloud", provided a seamless experience. Burns said he now has multiple web crawlers being run by his community and on Amazon's cloud-computing architecture. The site doesn't work with stolen mobile phones because there are no phones that store their serial number in photos, Burns said. There are privacy implications – you could feasibly use the site to stalk people by finding all of their photos around the web. But Burns said he was not exposing any information that wasn't already public, and it was a bit like punching your name into Google and finding all the websites that mention you. "After I was burgled I bought myself my first DSLR [camera] and have since become a keen photographer," said Burns. "If I didn't get burgled I probably would never have written the site either. Looking back, it was one of the best things that's happened."
  12. Ohhh, I love the one in the canal. So great to hear he has found his forever home - even though his foster home looks pretty awesome too
  13. Here is a dodgy photo, I'm at work so only have this one that I pulled off facebook. The dog door is on the right of the sliding door. I was cleaning so had the dogs outside and had the sliding panel in the dog access part so they couldn't use it. Otherwise you take that bit out and they come and go through the bottom half of the door. PS - Don't look at the nose art on the glass - thats why I was cleaning
  14. No snook these are temporary so no cutting, you open the sliding door and the doggy door slots in, in between the door and the frame, you can step over it I guess if the opening is big enough.. I don't think you can step over it?? Mine is a full height piece of door that slots into your door track. So you can use it in the glass door in the summer or sliding door in the winter. The bottom half of the door is the dog part and the top half is glass. I would imagine that if you can step over it you may as well leave the door open? Ahhhhhh, but you still have a big piece of open door?? Why not just leave the door open? I'm confused :D
  15. No snook these are temporary so no cutting, you open the sliding door and the doggy door slots in, in between the door and the frame, you can step over it I guess if the opening is big enough.. I don't think you can step over it?? Mine is a full height piece of door that slots into your door track. So you can use it in the glass door in the summer or sliding door in the winter. The bottom half of the door is the dog part and the top half is glass. I would imagine that if you can step over it you may as well leave the door open?
  16. I have a Pig in Mud dog door in my sliding door. There are heaps on threads on them. Anway, it is the expensive one but given that I have four large dogs I wanted it to be strong. A great decision based on the way they throw themselves through it at top speed.
  17. Oh great, I was hoping I would find out what happened to him - he is such a cutie! Before I started fostering I didn't like scruffy dogs at all, now the scruffers are my favourite. Have just joined the page so I can see how he is going.
  18. Yep, I have a foster dog who jumps 6ft fences. I built an internal fence about a metre out from my fence with pickets and chicken wire. It has kept my girl in. I plan to plant screening plants in between the two fences so it will also protect the plants while they are growing. And eventually I hope the hedge will act as a fence - but maybe she will get a home before then:)
  19. Wasn't she special......!!!! We are still talking about her and her complaint that her dog kept "shouting at her". . Hahaha, she was C-Razy!! It was like she had never seen the show and hadn't listened to the last 20mins of him talking about how we humanise our dogs. Totally cringeworthy!!
  20. I went to the Sydney showed and loved it. Probably didn't learn anything new but for me it was all about those 'oh yeah, I should probably do that again' moments. He is very entertaining. The poodle lady at the Sydney show made it for me though:) #youhadtobethere
  21. Wow, dog body language is something we could study forever and never really understand. I wonder what the vibe is that he gives off that makes them not want to include him when outside. Weird. Good news that he is good with the kitties and well behaved inside though. haha, they always think that we will escape out the bathroom window. Thanks for the updates. PS, loved the photos of the Peinic!!
  22. Dusty and Sharon with ARF Foster dogs Ticket, Gracie and Hunter
  23. And 11 years later...........they are still just as cute!!
  24. They are beautiful Shell and I bet they gave your Grandfather a lot of comfort. Such gorgeous shots
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