blind dog

Made with Love. Bandanas for Dogs with Special Needs

Made with Love. Bandanas for Dogs with Special Needs

I think these new bandanas that Catherine from Blankets in Bloom has come up with is a wonderful idea.  So much so, I had to order one for Gidget and share with you today.

Catherine loves to help dogs in her own special way by using her talent of sewing.

Wanting to help dogs with special needs she came up with the idea of a bandana that states a dogs special need if they have one to help alert others when out in public.

I know personally, for me, I worry that kids may approach Gidget’s back with rough hands or try to pick her up.  With a bad back, I have to be careful about that with her.

I’ve also been concerned since she has had seizures and that she may have an episode while out in public, that people will give her the space she needs.

So I loved the idea of stating these special needs on a bandana when Catherine emailed me and asked me what I thought.

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It’s also another way in which I can educate others about Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD) spreading awareness of the options available.  And that there are options for dogs with seizures too.

The option is great if you have a dog that is blind or deaf also as that is hard to know when you approach a dog.

Of course, if you don’t have a dog with special needs, you can also just get a fun, snazzy bandana with your dogs name on it, in whatever colors you like.  Catherine will custom make one for you.

If interested, check out her Etsy sight today!  A percentage of all profits goes to help dogs in rescue.  Now that is pawsome too!

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Special Needs Pet Feature: Dixie

There are so many caring pet parents out there who take care of special needs pets. To bring more attention to these joyful animals, and extraordinary people, this is a new feature to my blog. If you care for a special needs pet and would like your pet featured, please email me through my website contact.  Send a photo and I will forward the questionnaire for your pet to be featured in an upcoming post.

 

What is your pet’s name?
Dixie (her papers say Cindy’s Dixie Doodle)
Owner – C. Hope Clark, owner FundsforWriters.com
How old is your pet?
15
Where did you get your pet?
My husband purchased her from a breeder as a surprise for me.
What is your pets physical challenge?
Dixie went blind from glaucoma. She started with migraines, and lost most vision in one eye literally overnight. We fought to save her vision in the other eye, working closely with a canine ophthalmologist, but we lost the fight. She’s also 90 percent deaf, which happened within a year of her losing her sight. Cause unknown. All of this happened to her at the age of 12-13 as well as losing her life-long spaniel-mix partner that died at the age of 17. She had a string oftraumatic events happen to her in terms of a few months, especially at so late in life
 
She endured depression for several months. We made her walk around the house, however, and find her way. We had to learn how to keep the furniture in its place and keep things picked up from the floor, like shoes and such, or she’d trip over them. She learned to follow the walls and maneuver around the house in a very short time. She can still go up steps, but of course will not go down. But she adapted well. We have a bed in three rooms so she can find a familiar place to rest. She’ll patrol the house sometimes, just checking out where people are. She might be slow, but she’s steady. She has slowed more this year, and her favorite spot is on the sofa “watching” movies with my husband who has been known to  talk to her about the quality of cable television.
What is your pets favorite thing to do?
She has found her voice back, and we are delighted. She’s learned to bark since she cannot always find her way to the kitchen fast enough to suit her, and cannot find her way fast enough to the door to ask to go out. When it’s dinner time, she barks in the kitchen. When it’s time to get out of bed, she barks. When she is thirsty, she barks. She might not be able to see or hear, but she can sure communicate when it’s time to eat, drink, wake up or go outside. She’s regained some life.
What is your pets favorite thing to eat?
Venison and rice. She has lost all but 5-6 teeth now. Since she has some food allergies, we struggled years ago finding what she could eat. My husband fills the freezer with venison each fall, and he’s created a veterinarian-approved recipe we call rice-a-deer. The minute we start browning the meat, Dixie comes alive, barking until it’s done and a sample put in her bowl. She loves it best when it’s fresh cooked.
What do you love most about your pet?
She’s a cuddler in the bed and still loves to ride in the car. She may not see, but she can stick her nose to a vent and imagine what’s outside. She travels frequently with us. Just this past year she visited family for Christmas, the beach, an apple orchard, a pumpkin patch, along with numerous trips around town.
What has your pet most taught you?
Patience. She’s also taught me to appreciate life and health, because it can change overnight when you least expect it.
 
Anything else you’d like to share?
Animals with disabilities can give love back to owners as much as and even more so than healthy animals. They adapt and turn lemon into lemonades better than most human beings.  We can learn from their positive outlook.
Personally, I just wish she could still see her squirrels and ducks outside. I had a window box built in my study with steps, so she could jump up and watch the wildlife around the lake. I’m a freelance writer, and she used to sit in my lap, sleep at my feet or sun on the window seat – my steady companion as I worked hard. Today she’s happier in her bed or on the sofa, sleeping most of the time as she relaxes in the senior season of her life. But we have memories as I’m sure she does, too. And now, she’s earned the spoiled pampering she receives.
Thank you, Hope for sharing your beloved Dixie with us.  I appreciate your honesty about wishing Dixie could see the squirrels as you know how much she loved seeing them.  I still have pangs of wishing Frankie could walk on her own so I understand having those feelings.  And I also know, like you, I would not trade one moment I have with her.  They give us so much as is evident with your Dixie.