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The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋

~ a basenji, a shiba, and their human companions

The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋

Tag Archives: labrador retrievers

FILM: Play Dead

31 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

australian shepherd, border collies, borscht films, dog movies, horror, jack russell terrier, labrador retriever, labrador retrievers, miami, papillon, zombie movies

Film: Play Dead
Directors: Andres and Diego Meza-Valdes
Performers: Haylee (Haley), Diva, Kimmy (Princess), Cruiser (Robocop), Nemo
Breeds featured: Terrier mix, Australian Shepherd, Papillon, Labrador Retriever, Jack Russell Terrier, Border Collie
Production Information: Borscht Films, 2011 (USA)

While dogs have appeared as pivotal characters in zombie films (most notably in our knowledge is Chips in the remake of Dawn of the Dead), we had never heard of a zombie film that assumed the dog’s perspective — until this short film. We were really excited to receive our DVD copy of Play Dead just in time for Halloween. If you’ve ever wondered what would happen to urban pets in the event of a zombie apocalypse, this film might not whet your appetite, but it should stir your imagination. More frightening than zombies who eat humans are what humans are willing to eat in times of survival…

Thumbs up to the directors for their adept manipulation of genre conventions, combining zombie films and dog movies in entertaining, often hilarious ways. Miami appears in all its lurid glory, represented by a diversity of people and pets. The production company apparently gives back to the city by hosting a film festival that highlights regional talent.

You can experience the whole film online. Warning: mild but vivid gore as befits the genre.

Enjoy, and make sure to watch through the end credits!

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The House of Two Bows keeps a running index of movies blurbed on the site, annotated by breed. If you’re interested in writing a guest blog for a dog film, contact for details.

One transport, nine dogs, 6400+ miles

24 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by M.C. in Human escapades, Sightings, Taiwan reminiscences

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

animal rescue, animals taiwan, china airlines, labrador mixes, labrador retrievers, mutts, rescue transport, SFO, taiwan dogs, TPE, traveling with pets, tugou

On August 10th, I helped transport nine rescue dogs from Taiwan to their new homes in California on behalf of Asians for Humans, Animals, and Nature (AHAN). Suffice to say, it was one of the least lonely trans-Pacific trips I’ve taken in quite some time!

10 August 2012 Kelly, Henry, Mei Mei

I really didn’t have to do much other than arrive at the airport a little earlier than scheduled, wait and watch as the local rescue crew prepared the dogs for flight, then claim the dogs on the other side.

Assembling at the China Airlines rest area

Each dog traveled in a separate crate. Each crate was clearly labeled with the identity of the dog, a packet of their medical records for their adopters, and a spigot for a water bottle attachment. Each dog would also have their crates lined with absorbent pads and a crate mat.

Preparing the crates

The lids and bases of each crate were secured with zip ties.

Securing the crates

China Airlines opened up a separate counter in a more convenient corner of the airport to facilitate check-in. They’re not usually my airline of choice when traveling to and from Taiwan, but since they are the most economic choice for rescues, I took one for the team.

Check-in729

Each dog had to be weighed and tagged separately, which was perhaps the most tedious part of the process, especially when there are many dogs to account for! Most of them were charged as one extra piece of luggage, but some of the larger dogs exceeded normal weight limits, so they had to pay a little more.

Angie?

The two Labradors, Angie and Miso, fit in that category, as well as Hobbit, the three-legged hound. Apparently, hacking a limb off was not sufficient to dodge overage fees. Joking, joking… (The more serious version of how Hobbit lost his leg is forthcoming.)

Hobbit getting his tummy scratched

Again, the rescues took care of all the fees. While all this was being sorted out, the volunteers bade farewell to their charges.

Mei Mei

Hobbit and Liza

Mio and her very concerned ears

While most of the dogs were quite gregarious and had no problem expressing their friendly personalities, I was most drawn to Mio, the one lying on the floor in the picture above. Her size, her airplane ears, and her reserved demeanor reminded me a bit of Bowpi. There was a lot of stimulation at this busy airport, but she was taking it all in stride.

Final farewell

Finally, it was time to secure all the crates and send them along for X-ray and inspection. This is where everyone loses it as they watch the crates disappear through the machine and down a long conveyer belt to the loading corridor.

Because I’m an overly sympathetic dork, I couldn’t help but be touched by the tears of these volunteers who had invested so much time and obvious care into these pups. My help barely amounted to anything — I was just a name, an escort for all these canine passengers. Witnessing the genuine connection of these volunteers to their fosters, I was resolved to see the task through as conscientiously as I could.

Of course, during the flight, everything was out of my hands. I couldn’t even see when the dogs were loaded, and there was no sound that would have alerted any of the passengers that a whole pack of dogs was currently traveling along in the cargo hold.

But upon landing in San Francisco, they surged back to mind. After a 12 hour flight, the dogs were surely getting stir-crazy, and I was eager to get them through. I had to go through immigration myself, then to the baggage pick-up area where I looked for the appropriate signpost.

Animal Carrier Pick-Up Zone at SFO

It took some time for all nine crates to come out. I paced the row and spoke to them calmly, though I doubt any of them connected me to the beginning of the trip. How I would have loved to glimpse their thoughts as they were unloaded one by one from the plane, descending into a new world of difference that they could surely feel down to every whisker, muscle, and nerve.

Four crates, waiting for five more

I have to admit, not everyone smelled like a dream. Some passersby had rather unflattering things to say about the stench emanating from some of the crates. Just as well that they not linger to close — the dogs surely had enough to take in without suffering the probing eyes of curious rubberneckers. Nevertheless, I was impressed that the majority of the dogs had not soiled their crates. In an effort to share in the dogs’ bodily experience, I had attempted to hold it for the entire duration of the trip, as well.

I couldn’t make it.

Henry really wants to get out

So I was sympathetic to the few pups that couldn’t, either.

I flagged over two porters to assist with the crates. This was the only part of the process that was “off the books,” as it were — the porters need to be tipped at least $10 a head, and since we’re talking about moving around live animals, we don’t want them irate! The rescuers back in Taiwan had already accounted for this, and a special hongbao, or red envelope with money, had been packed for this purpose.

Getting organized, Hongbao for the porters

Just the cost of doing “business” …

Ramon and assistant move the dogs at SFO

Everything went extremely smoothly. All the adopters were assembled in the greeting area, and there was a palpable shift in the atmosphere as the dogs rolled out to meet their new families. I stepped out of the way at this point and watched the AHAN coordinator sort things out. Faces lit up, voices keened, limbs gestured in excitement.

Greeting new pets at SFO

The families were eager to get their new pets home, as they were instructed not to release them until they were back in a secure area. So the crowd dispersed rather quickly and I barely got a chance to meet everyone! There wasn’t even time for a group shot, since I had touched down in the evening, and it was getting late by the time I made it through customs. Luckily, I was able to hitch a ride back to the East Bay with Mio’s new owners.

Stowed

All in all, a smooth transport — just as easy as if I was getting in my own car and driving a dog across the state. Frankly, the only hitch occurred right at the customs gate, when the officer wanted to niggle my conscience for importing rescues when “PETA already has dogs for adoption.”

I’ve outlined my stance on such protectionist impulses against overseas dog adoption many times already on this blog (see here, here, and here, for example), so my resolve was unshaken by the officer’s pointed critique. However, it took incredible effort for me to maintain a cheery grin at his offensive suggestion that American adopters would be better off with PETA as a domestic option than an entire, global network of animal charities.

He was also mistaken if he assumed that the foreign is so easily separated from the domestic, as the same rescue groups that work with Taiwanese rescues also help domestic dogs.

The fact of the matter was that these dogs had already been chosen by their adoptive families, who were fully apprised of their circumstances. The motivations for what ultimately stirs an adopter’s heart and moves them to choose that dog as the one they want to help above all others are varied, emotionally complex, and often irrational. I didn’t have it in me to explain or argue all this with the officer who was surely not seeing this for the first time, and who was really just doing his job.

All I could say was, “The dogs are with me. They needed homes. I just want to get them home.”

He didn’t pester me too much more, and waved me through.

Mio sniffs about

And that is how nine Taiwan tugou came home.

Hoping to see some of them at next year’s Taiwan dog reunion!

Sightings: Everybody has a Chuckit except us

22 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by M.C. in Bowdu the shiba inu, Sightings

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

chuckit, dog toys, german shepherds, GSD, labrador retrievers, rat terrier, shiba inu, swedish vallhund

20 August 2012 Smug mug with ball

24 April 2012 Swedish Vallhund

7 June 2012 German with orange ball

30 June 2012 Happy ball22 June 2012 Mika

Hmm, why yes… it does appear that everybody has a Chuckit (or at least their special orange balls) except for us!

FILM: The Queen (guest blog by Jen)

11 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

corgis, diamond jubilee, helen mirren, labrador retrievers, pembroke welsh corgis, queen elizabeth ii, stephen frears

In honor of Queen Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee, celebrating 60 years as England’s Monarch, The House of Two Bows is pleased to present a guest post by Jen of Volunteers 4 Paws. Enjoy!

Film: The Queen
Director: Stephen Frears
Performers: Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen, James Cromwell
Breeds Featured: Pembroke Welsh Corgi, Labrador Retriever
Production Information: Miramax/Pathe/Granada, 2006 (UK)

The epigraph reads, “Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown,” a quote from Henry IV, Part II.

Stephen Frears’ The Queen concentrates on one small part of the Queen of England’s now 60 year reign (Diamond Jubilee!) — the days following the death of Princess Diana in 1997. Helen Mirren brilliantly portrays the stoic Queen Elizabeth II. The ever dignified James Cromwell does an uncanny Prince Phillip and Michael Sheen plays a convincing Tony Blair.

The Queen sticks to tradition, preferring to view Diana’s death as a personal family tragedy. Her instinct to protect her grandsons (Princes William and Harry) takes massive precedence over helping Britain, and the rest of the world, cope with Diana’s death.

Frears beautifully directs a hidden story line with the Queen and a stag. She encounters a beautiful, highly sought after stag when her car gets stuck in a creek. She begs the Stag to leave, shooing it as she can hear stalkers (hunters) in the distance.

A poignant scene follows later in the film. The Queen has found out that stalkers have killed the impressive stag and she takes it very much to heart. Still, the Queen does not let one of subjects see her emotion, turning away to shed a tear for the fallen prized stag.

This is a film that begs to be interpreted by its viewer. Though everyone speaks and the events are clear – there is a lingering question — can we ever really know a person? The Queen is shown at the end of the each day struggling to make sense of it all. Is she just like us? She has a family, she faces hardships, she has feelings and above all she is a fallible human.

One thing that makes her quite human is her attachment to her dogs.

The Queen’s most well known dogs are, of course, her Pembroke Welsh Corgis. She has kept Corgis for 60 years.

The film shows the Queen doing quite normal things like camping and bringing her dogs along.

She speaks to them, walks them frequently and includes them in her matters of State.

The Queen meets with Prime Minister Tony Blair

Where she goes, they go.

The film also shows the Queen with three black Labrador retrievers, although much isn’t said about their significance or level of favoritism the Queen pays them. In one scene, she loads them into her old and rickety Land Rover, asking them if they are ready for “walkies.”

Real attention is paid to the involvement of the dogs in the Queen’s every day life, whereas in other films the dogs play a minor role, a comedic role, or some other negligible function. Though these Corgis and Labs weren’t on Frears’ billing, they seem to play quite a hefty role in how the Queen lives daily. Pretty cool… considering her profile and lifestyle.

With all the current focus on “The Royals,” this film is a must-see. It seeks to humanize the figure head of the British monarchy. Is the Queen just like you or me? Or does she lead a life we will never fully understand – and we therefore have no business criticizing in time of tragedy like that of the loss of “The People’s Princess?” I suppose it is up to your interpretation.

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Following up on Jen’s observations, I tracked down the DVD and rifled through the audio commentary track with director Stephen Frears and screenwriter Peter Morgan. It seemed to me that they were less sensitive to the role of the dogs in the Queen’s daily life than we were, as they themselves were taken aback by the presence of the Labradors. “The Corgis haven’t been dyed black, right?” “No, those are Labradors. I suppose it’s a different kind of walk, isn’t it?” they joke to each other. They also pointed out an amusing goof, where two Labs enter the Land Rover in one scene, but three Labs exit the vehicle.

two in......three out!

Nevertheless, no film about the Queen would be complete without some reference to her famous canine companions. Thanks again to Jen for her astute review!

The House of Two Bows keeps a running index of movies blurbed on the site, annotated by breed. If you’re interested in writing a guest blog for a dog film, contact for details.

FILM: Porndogs (this review rated PG)

28 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bad movies, dachshunds, doberman pinschers, dog movies, labradoodles, labrador retrievers, marilyn chambers, porndogs, ron jeremy, shar pei

Film: Porndogs: The Adventures of Sadie
Director: Greg Blatman
Performers: Marilyn Chambers, Dustin Diamond, Heidi Fleiss, Paul Rodriguez, Paul Ogata, Too $hort, Ron Jeremy & Tera Patrick
Production Information: Watermark Pictures, 2009 (USA)
Breeds featured: Labrador Retriever, Shar Pei, Doberman Pinscher, English Bulldog, Labradoodle, Rhodesian Ridgeback, Dachshund, Chihuahua

WARNING: I kept my screencaps clean for this review. The links are mostly safe, but may become NSFW if you click too far. The film itself is unrated, but it should be evident that it’s not recommended for all audiences. Or any audience, for that matter, “mature” or otherwise.

There was a brief period in the history of American cinema during which it was believed that hardcore pornography could be screened in mainstream theaters as legitimate film art. In this history that might have been, Marilyn Chambers was a true star, a smartly cast “heroine” whose feathered blonde innocence both plays into and subverts the very notion of all-American feminine purity. Despite the success of her X-rated films such as Behind the Green Door (1972) and Insatiable (1980), neither Chambers nor the so-called “porno chic” genre she helped create were able to survive the sexual freeze brought upon by the frighteningly real advent of AIDS and 1980s cultural conservatism. From her former heights, Chambers plummeted…

… and Porndogs was where she ended up, a title which has the dubious distinction of claiming her last performance.

The summary from the box:

The story is simple. Sadie, the most beautiful yellow lab in the whole wide world, lives an idyllic, pampered life in the suburbs. One day, she comes into heat and has no idea what to do with her new found feelings and urges. When she learns that her loving owners are about to have her spayed, she runs away to the big city where her erotic adventures begin.

Marilyn Chambers gives voice to Sadie. Frankly, I wish she had taken this to her grave. I think this film is a waste of time and brain cells, and I’m revolting against sacrificing any more of my life to this most unworthy piece of crap, so I’m going to keep this short.

In more capable hands, this had the potential to be clever satire. I mean this sincerely. Maybe if the cinematography or staging had attempted to gesture meta-cinematically towards the aforementioned history of American pornography, or said something semi-interesting about the way that humans anthropomorphize our pets, or even the place of dogs themselves in contemporary society, the film would have been watchable. I’m not exactly holding Porndogs to unreasonably high standards by hoping for an updated Mooch Goes to Hollywood, after all.

Instead, you just get PAIN, personality-less pooches, and flaccid, ad-libbed jokes that drag on forever. My god, the film is 80 minutes long! I’m particularly unforgiving of poorly-done racial comedy. Case in point:

Sadie: What, uh, happened to your face?
Master Dong: You no worry about my face.
Sadie: Oh, I’m sorry. It just looks so… different.
Dong: Me no different. You — me — same, same.
Sadie: We are?
Dong: Absorrutely. You know? Me, Shar Pei. We both Asian.
Sadie: But I’m not Asian!
Dong: You yellow Lab, no?
Sadie: Well, yes.
Dong: Well, we both yerrow!

That’s some pretty limp writing there.

Other notable encounters include a Doberman Pinscher (voiced by Too $hort), a world-weary, street-hustling Ridgeback mix (voiced by “Hollywood madam” Heidi Fleiss), a sado-masochistic Dachshund who introduces Sadie to his world of “special” toys, and finally, a Labradoodle (Dustin Diamond, yes that Dustin Diamond of Saved by the Bell) whose shaggy, surfer-dude congeniality wins over our sexy Sadie.

I have very little to say about the [voice] acting. It is awful. All of it. Not even the few famous names, like the iconic Ron Jeremy, could have saved this dud.

As for what was seen, which can no longer be unseen… Actually, a lot of it isn’t any worse than what dog owners have to put up with from their own dogs (even the neutered ones), though yes, much of the “action” shots go overboard and become downright disgusting. There aren’t really any humans in the film, so at least you don’t have to worry about the filmmakers exploring that kind of pornographic terrain. Audience members unfamiliar with the biological reality of canine anatomy will be quickly initiated into that realm of knowledge. But hopefully you have more compelling reasons driving you to see this film, as I thought I did. Here at The House of Two Bows, we simply want to blog as many dog films as we can. In the end, I realized that I’m just not juvenile or bored or stupid enough to give this film any favorable points for consideration.

This is a pile of shit that you DON’T want to bother picking up…

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FILM: Quill (Kuīru)

21 Wednesday Sep 2011

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

クイール, dog movies, guide dogs, japanese film, labrador retrievers, labs, quill, sai yoichi, seeing eye dogs, 導盲犬

Film: Quill [Kuiiru クイール]
Director: SAI Yoichi 崔洋一
Performers: KOBAYASHI Kaoru 小林薫, SHIINA Kippei 椎名桔平, Rafie ラフィー (adult Quill), Chibichibiku チビチビクー (baby Quill), Beat ビート & Chibiku チビクー (puppy Quill at 3 and 7 months, respectively), Eri エリ (senior Quill)
Production Information: Quill Film Partners, 2004 (Japan)
Breed(s) featured: Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever (briefly, at the training center)

Meet the face that launched a thousand puppy sales.

This is the face of Quill, a Labrador Retriever with a curious birthmark and selected by his breeder to be a seeing eye dog. Despite some initial resistance from the directors at the training center (since candidates usually come from pre-approved breeders), he is enrolled into their guide dog program. The film follows Quill through his early socialization with a foster family, his adolescent training period, and his brief working relationship with his one and only master before tragedy ends his career as a personal guide dog. Instead, he lives out the remainder of his adulthood at the training center as an ambassador and demonstration dog, finally returning to the foster family who shared his first year in the world, and sees him through to his final hours.

WARNING!! SPOILERS AHEAD!!

For a dog film, it’s relatively understated and unsentimental (though the soundtrack leaves much to be desired). Given the director’s background working alongside revered “art” director OSHIMA Nagisa and his own brutal work in films like Blood and Bones (released the same year, starring Beat Takeshi) Sai seemed a surprising choice to direct… a dog film. But inspiration often comes from unlikely sources. Quill works because Sai is adept at teasing out character quirks, especially from flawed personalities. This is relevant to the blind, cantankerous, yet civic-minded Mr. Watanabe (KOBAYASHI Kaoru) who is paired up with the title character when he begrudgingly trades in his white cane for a guide dog after trainer Satoru Tawada (SHINA Kippei) convinces him that he’ll be able to get more done with Quill at his side, rather than fumbling along with his cane.

I also have to give props to the choice in casting Kippei Shiina as the guide dog handler. Since the training process itself is already in danger of being portrayed in an overly fictionalized manner (more about this in a second), it’s reassuring that they at least chose one actor whose body language conveys cool confidence and ease around the many dogs with whom he shares scenes (rather in contrast to Kobayashi). As a handler, Tawada-san is firm, but not harsh. Authoritative, but not authoritarian, if that makes sense. He observes the dogs just as much as they are trained to watch their masters, and this crucial detail makes all the difference in persuading me that the dogs bond to their people over the course of working — not just as “living props,” but as canine actors who adapt to their environment, even when it’s a movie set.

This is a detail that a lot of dog film directors overlook when casting and filming. Audience eyes aren’t just on the dog. Particularly for audiences who know and are already intimately familiar with that relationship, they’re looking for the ways in which the dogs and the humans behave together, as it’s that mutual chemistry that gives emotional drive to the story.


For this film, its charm and novelty was that its main canine star was both cute and functional. The idea of a seeing eye dog is still relatively fresh in Asia. The Kansai Guide Dog Training Center, where this was partially filmed, was erected in 1988, and currently manages to train about 15 dogs a year. The Taiwan Guide Dog Association was only founded in 2002, just two years before Quill hit my corner of the world, and unfortunately, sparked a boom for Labrador puppies who grew far too large for most small urban apartment dwellers. Consequently, the lengthy training sequences serve double duty: they work to reveal something about the characters, and also to familiarize audiences with the idea of a highly trained working companion dog.


In the end, I think the film does a good, though not perfect job straddling both documentary and dramatic functions. What I find to be the most strange, I suppose, is the way that time elapses in the film. A lot of training procedures that are most certainly quite specialized and tedious are elided or simplified for the sake of moving the plot along. The one gem of a training philosophy to be extracted from this film is that the more you learn to listen to your dog, the more your dog will listen to you. If an audience member picks up any training tricks from this film (and there’s very little offered up for meaningful mimicry) it’s probably this dumbed down notion that it’s easy, almost effortless, to turn any “ordinary” Labrador into a highly specialized working dog.

Of course, not all dogs are similarly responsive, nor are they given the benefits of working with a full-time handler. The fictional democratization of the guide dog training process, as it were, is precisely what imperiled so many Lab puppies after the film’s highly successful run all throughout Asia, such that the subsequent release of any dog film, particularly one featuring purebred dogs, is boycotted by animal lovers hoping to stave off the “Quill effect.” At least, this is one of the films to which such boycotts are pegged in Asian countries; pet ownership wasn’t necessarily in popular reach when 101 Dalmatians was released in either 1961 or 1996, which is the title that generally gets referenced for cautionary linkages between dog films and purebred fads in the Western world.

Finally, I was a little dissatisfied with the treatment of Quill’s final years. Audience members who had already read the best-selling novel and knew portions of the story from the TV series that preceded the movie are not at all surprised by the eventual death of Mr. Watanabe, though their last goodbye is no less tragic. This sequence is very moving and portrayed with appropriate succinctness, keeping melodrama at bay.

I’m not sure if I can say the same for Quill’s death, which is drawn out over the final 3 minutes of the film. The CGI rendering of the accident that cripples the poor senior dog and the weepy dialogue was really too much for me, in combination with the all too perfectly scripted karmic circularity of Quill returning to the “puppy walkers” of his childhood. “It was like he never left our home,” narrates the woman who had been his first foster parent.

But the whole point is that Quill had left, and had a long lifetime of experiences at the training center, with the Watanabe family, then back at the training center after the family surrendered him following Mr. Watanabe’s death. Quill had been in his prime when he was ended his career as a personal guide dog, but he did not retire from the center until he was 12 years old. Maybe nothing nearly as dramatic happened in those intervening years, but by collapsing an entire seven years of his life into 5 minutes, we lose sense of just how long a dog lives, and just how large of a responsibility that may be. Though it was beautiful and fitting that Quill was assured such a perfect safety net in his senior years, the end seems too much like a fairy tale. They really wanted to give the audience a final chance to turn on the waterworks. Coupled with the glowing, larger-than-life flashback to Quill’s newborn visage right before the credits roll, it just seemed a bit like polishing off a hearty meal with a gulp of cotton candy. I’m not sure how they could have concluded the film to do justice to the lives portrayed, but in my opinion, the puppy parting shot wasn’t it.

Or maybe I’m the only one in the whole world who would dare resist the face of a Labrador puppy.

Acknowledgments go to Michael W., who sent me this DVD several years ago. Sometimes it takes that long to watch the films that I have in my possession, but I do get around to them all eventually. Meanwhile, Quill doesn’t appear to be available as a US release. YesAsia.com currently lists a Thai region-free DVD available here.

Edit: Fixed a couple instances where I typed La-BO-rador, even though I know that’s not how it’s spelled. Thinking in Japanese, I guess.

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SIGHTING: Rowf & Snitter!

28 Saturday May 2011

Posted by M.C. in Sightings

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

fox terrier, jack russell terrier, labrador retrievers, plague dogs, terriers

Random sighting:

Real life Rowf & Snitter!
Photo taken 26 May 2011

It’s Snitter (terrier) and Rowf (lab), like live action Plague Dogs! I think that’s a Jack Russell though, not a Fox Terrier as the original Snitter is supposed to be.

The pair still caught my eye.

Real life Rowf & Snitter!

I just need to stick Bowdu in the picture to get the whole trio, including the fox.

What’s in the hole?

25 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by M.C. in Bowpi the basenji, Sightings

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

jindo, labrador retrievers

The ground squirrels or something have been awfully active at the local parks lately…

What's in the hole?
Photo taken 24 January 2011

At this same park, I once saw a dog stalk a hole until the squirrel got stupid enough to stick its head above ground. Prey located. Two powerful swipes of the dog’s forepaws into the dirt, a quick lunge down the shallow hole to snatch the thing, a crunch and a vigorous shake and a high toss into the air… and it was pretty much over. The dead or dying squirrel landed in a twitching lump right in front of Bowdu, who surprised me by gingerly sniffing it for a couple seconds then walking away. The other dog leapt in to claim her prize, and continued to worry the carcass as we walked away from the scene…

Rodent-killing is usual fare for some dogs, but not mine, so it caught me by surprise. I admit that I yelped when I saw the body fly up in the air, because it all happened so fast, I barely had time to process that this dog had just caught and killed something that just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

IMG_0345

Bowdu has caught a single house mouse before, but it wouldn’t surprise me if Bowpi develops into a greater hunter. She’s eager to poke her nose into other dogs’ finds (if not their behinds). I think she’s fast enough to snag one if she cornered something and it attempted to dart away.

IMG_0346

That other dog in the above two pictures is not Bowdu, nor is she a Shiba. Rather, it’s the most Shiba-like Korean Jindo I’ve ever met. From a distance, I mistook her for a Japanese Akita, but I was corrected. I guess the difference is in the carriage of the tail, her leanness, and other details that I have not developed an eye for. She was accompanied by another Jindo that was more like Jindos I’ve seen in the past — a squarer muzzle and a thicker build. I didn’t get a good picture of the other one, though.

Story of a puddle

01 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by M.C. in Bowdu the shiba inu, Bowpi the basenji, Sightings

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

aggression, canine body language, dog parks, labrador retrievers

The intermittent winter rain has left large puddles at the dog park, which Bowdu adroitly avoids…

IMG_9747
Photo taken 31 December 2010

Bowpi is also careful to avoid splashing through the mud, even in the midst of a chase.

IMG_9750

She appeared puzzled that some dogs would choose to lie in the middle of such filth — ON PURPOSE, even!

IMG_9752

Bowdu also thought this was not right, so he came over to boss around the doofy Labrador.

IMG_9756

At this point, he started growling/vocalizing at the Lab. It wasn’t an “attack” growl by any means. It was one of his low, communicative arrrrarRUUruus that lots of other dog owners often misinterpret as aggression. I’d agree that he’s being offensive, maybe the equivalent of another driver leaning out his window to tell you your music sucks or you’re driving like a granny. But he was “just” being a jerk, and not a violent psycho who’s likely to explode in a figurative fit of road rage.

Bowpi was acting as the rubbernecking sidekick, completely harmless though somewhat in the way.

IMG_9755

Note that both Shiba and Basenji avoided stepping directly into the puddle. Bowdu got in there a bit, but mostly he’s leaning in (like Bowpi) to get his message across. In fact, their feet didn’t even need to be wiped off when it was time to return to the car.

The man with the Chuck-It thought Bowdu was being rude, and told him to knock it off. He didn’t appreciate that Bowdu was trying to lecture his oafish Lab on the error of his ways, and how totally inappropriate it is to muck around in rain puddles when cleanliness is so much more dignified.

Bowpi’s attention was diverted to the angry yelly man. This is why I say she’s not really that shy. Even when strangers aren’t super friendly, she’s still bold enough to check them out, though sneakily and preferably on her own terms.

IMG_9757

As soon as the Labrador acknowledged the know-it-all Shiba’s advice and stepped away from the puddle, Bowdu came bounding back, mission accomplished. Chuck-It Man glared at me some more while Bowpi chased his dirty, drippy ol’ Lab, quickly overtaking him and looping back up the hill towards me.

IMG_9758

I’m so glad that Shiba Inu and Basenji are dogs that usually take pride in their cleanliness.

LINK: Genetics — Pet Project

25 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by M.C. in Health, Links

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

aggression, canine genome sequencing, genetics, labrador retrievers, shiba inu, yukari takeuchi

I was alerted to an article on Nature.com from a Shiba Inu Forum poster entitled, “Genetics: Pet Project.” It looks at some current projects related to canine genome sequencing that are motivated by problems in canine temperament and behavior. It is also hoped that these types of problems might offer suggestions for new applications to human genetic problems, even if the specific genes don’t map neatly across species.

The whole article’s pretty interesting. Here’s one paragraph that caught my attention:

At the University of Tokyo’s Laboratory of Veterinary Ethology, Yukari Takeuchi has collected DNA samples from 200 Japanese shiba inu and 200 labrador retrievers to look for the genes underlying the former’s aggression and latter’s lapses in concentration. It could help solve a practical problem, she says. Distracted retrievers do not make good guide dogs, and knowing the gene variant responsible could help breeders to limit the trait in their stocks.

This passage is footnoted with a citation to a recent article by Takeuchi et. al which I think could be worth a glimpse, as food for thought.

On a related note, the list of Dog Genome Resources hosted by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) in Bethesda, Maryland is worth taking a look at as well.

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