Category Archives: Pets

Why Single Women with Cats Stay Single….

Love this….

From BBC Comedy…

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Cross-Eyed Opossum To Predict 2011 Oscar Winners

Now, I’ve seen everything…

BERLIN — Heidi, Germany’s beloved cross-eyed opossum, is taking a page from Paul the Octopus’ playbook: the marsupial will attempt to pick this year’s Oscar winners.

Leipzig Zoo Director Joerg Junghold told Germany’s RTL television on Friday that Heidi will be appearing on the “Jimmy Kimmel Show” alongside the Oscars on Feb. 27.

He isn’t revealing much about the show but says: “quite similar to Paul, it will be about tips.” He says Heidi will be filmed in Germany over the next few days for the U.S. show.

Junghold says Heidi’s appearance fee will be donated to an animal protection charity.

Paul correctly predicted the outcome of all seven German games at last year’s World Cup plus the Spain-Netherlands final from an aquarium in Oberhausen. He died in October.

via Cross-Eyed Opossum To Predict 2011 Oscar Winners.

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Don’t Be Fooled by These 12 Common Pet Myths – Paw Nation

Interesting article…

Not sure I agree with all of it….

For centuries, people created fanciful stories to explain puzzling animal antics. Many of these myth-understandings about cat and dog behaviors linger on, even though modern veterinary and behavior experts have uncovered scientific explanations for these issues. Here we lay 12 common myths to rest.

More:   Don’t Be Fooled by These 12 Common Pet Myths – Paw Nation.

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GoodGuide’s Dog Food Ratings: Which Products Are Best and Worst?

Good information that I wanted to share….

Link, as always, at the bottom to full article….

GoodGuide rated 543 dry dog food products, which also included useful information for consumers on dry dog food. Below are its top-five best and worst products. In order to avoid repetition of a particular brand (Science Diet monopolized the top 31 slots, while

Kibbles ‘n Bits accounted for 7 of the 10 worst), we’ve skipped ahead to the next best or worst brand.

The Best Dry Dog Food

Science Diet Adult Healthy Mobility (7.4)

Innova Senior Dry Dog Food 15 Lb (7.3)

California Natural Lamb Meal & Rice Adult Large Bites Dry Dog Food, 15 Lb (7.1)

Eukanuba Large Breed Puppy (7.1)

Evo Turkey & Chicken Formula, 28.6 Lb (7.0)

 

The Worst Dry Dog Food

Beneful Playful Life (5.6)

Ol’ Roy Dog Food Krunchy Bites & Bones, 40lb (5.2)

Purina Little Bites Dog Food (5.1)

Nature’s Recipe Adult Lamb Meal & Rice Recipe (5.0)

Kibbles ‘n Bits Wholesome Medley (4.9)

You can view all the top-rated dry dog food (in descending order) here and all the poorly rated dry dog food (in ascending order) here.

via GoodGuide’s Dog Food Ratings: Which Products Are Best and Worst?.

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Do We Really Need More College Grads?

This opinion piece by Matthew Biberman on AOL is really thought provoking and worth looking at…

Here are a couple of excerpts and a link, which I encourage you to use, to the full article:

 

First, the problem. The issue is not just that we need to hand out more college diplomas. What we need to do is produce an adult population that is more educated and more employable, and the troubling fact is that many students in college today come away from the experience without having learned much of anything.

In their new book “Academically Adrift,” researchers Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa have provided us with a sobering picture of higher education in America today. According to their findings, after two years of college, 45 percent of students fail to show any improvement in “critical thinking, complex reasoning” or “written analysis.”

All is not gloom and doom. Arum and Roksa then go on to note that the number of students showing no improvement drops to only 36 percent when the study was repeated with seniors.

I would suggest that we accept these numbers but then fashion a different lesson from them. The message we take away should not be that colleges are failing half of the students who are there.

 

The deeper truth is that many of these failing students simply should not be in college in the first place.

Why? Because they’ve been waived through high school. And now colleges — which really should turn these students away — are eagerly accepting them in order to bank their tuition dollars. Indeed, given the reality of the current recession, student enrollments at many American public institutions are now being capped not by entrance requirements but rather by fire marshals.

 

 

 

 

AND:

 

 

 

 

Why? Because college isn’t for everybody, and college doesn’t offer the training necessary to do everything. In fact, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 17 million college graduates have jobs that don’t require a college education. (There are more than 100,000 janitors with at least a bachelor’s degree.)

At some point, students have to decide to do something, and the ethical thing to do here would be to make them cross this bridge before we saddle them with an insane amount of college tuition debt.

The point I am driving at is that real solutions will only materialize after we acknowledge that a large chunk of that 45 percent not learning at college should not be there.

Even more sadly, these students wouldn’t be wasting their time and money if their high schools had encouraged them to consider pursuing additional education outside of going the conventional, liberal arts college route.

But for that to happen, we need to change our approach to the problem.

Obama should have talked less in generalities and more in specifics. He should have told us that our high schools need to offer more vocational training and that these sorts of programs need to continue in community colleges.

If he can get a standing ovation for telling children at home that they need to help Uncle Sam and become a teacher, he could have mentioned a few other jobs that are just as rewarding. We need mechanics, and electricians, plumbers and builders too.

 

 

As I said, thought provoking…

MORE:  http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/26/opinion-do-we-really-need-more-college-graduates/

 

 

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Aisle Not: Why One Woman Quit Grocery Stores for a Year | TakePart – Inspiration to Action

I would love to be able to get to this point…

I hate the professional Food Industry almost as much as the Pharmaceutical Industry….

Both have greatly contributed to the unhealthy, over-weight lifestyle so many Americans now lead…

If you haven’t seen “Food, Inc”, buy it or put it on your NetFlix list today.  It’s a real eye-opener.

One year ago, Carla Crownover kissed grocery stores goodbye.

She had just seen Food, Inc., Participant Media’s documentary on the seedy underbelly of the food industry, and she wanted nothing to do with the conventional food system that feeds the majority of Americans.

She pledged to abstain from grocery stores for 365 days and to go on a quest to find out where all the food she eats comes from. The end result? “I’ve learned a lot,” she told readers on her blog, Austin Urban Gardens.

TakePart caught up with Crownover recently, fresh after her one-year mark, to learn more about what it’s like to live off the food grid.

Prior to seeing Food, Inc., Crownover was already a conscientious eater. “I shopped the perimeter of the grocery store and didn’t buy many products in boxes or cans. I didn’t want to eat anything that had been manipulated to cook faster, or be ‘instant,'” she explains. “I had dropped diet sodas from my diet a couple years ago, and was leery of foods manipulated to have a long shelf life.”

When she sought out more information from Food, Inc., the film shocked her.

“Everything about factory farming [in the film] disgusted me. The feedlots packed full of animals standing in their own waste bothered me on several levels. I like to eat beef, but I don’t want the animal to have to live a horrible and unhealthy life so that I can have a steak.”

She saw genetically engineered chickens in the film that were too big to stand and never saw the light of day. “The chickens I get now from a local farm are free range up until their last moment,” she says. “The farmer once told me, ‘We like to believe they only have one bad day.’ And I loved that.”

via Aisle Not: Why One Woman Quit Grocery Stores for a Year | TakePart – Inspiration to Action.

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Tucker Carlson on Michael Vick’s Animal Cruelty

It’s not often I agree with Tucker  Carson, or any conservative commentator, but I think he has a point here…

Even a stopped clock is right twice a day…

And I feel pretty strongly about animal cruelty…

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Would You Put Your Pet In Your Will? – Paw Nation

Something to think about for those of us whose pets are our children….

If you think stories of people choosing to bequeath some (or all!) of their hard-earned loot to their four-legged kids is a solely American trend, think again.

According to a new survey conducted in the U.K., close to 1.5 million Brits plan to leave money to their pets. I found this stat intriguing because my husband and I have been talking about setting up a trust for our own boys.

It all started a few months after my father’s sudden death–when we realized that we had absolutely no game plan for them. At the time, I was mired in estate issues because my dad hadn’t anticipated dying at 54, which got me thinking about how wildly unpredictable life can be at any age: What if something equally catastrophic happened to both of us? Who’d take in the boys?

By “our boys,” I mean our beloved pets, Felix and Balthazar. Ask anyone who knows me well and they’ll say that my dogs are like children to me. As I began thinking about what could happen, the more I had to acknowledge that there were few people in our lives who could truly meet our expectations as their keepers.

According to Rachel Hirschfeld, an attorney who specializes in animal law and founder of the New York County Lawyers Association’s Animal Law Committee, over 500,000 companion animals were euthanized this year because their pet owners died, moved into nursing homes or assisted-living situations, or otherwise were no longer able to care for them, and left them behind without enforceable plans. I knew we had to act.

via Would You Put Your Pet In Your Will? – Paw Nation.

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