Chesapeake Bay Retriever Puppies For Sale In South Africa

just by simply filling out the form below.  Your information, including a link to your website, your phone number, and e-mail address will be displayed on all the appropriate listing pages on the site.  If you would prefer to NOT leave certain contact information, that’s completely fine.  Just leave those fields blank on the sign up form.  Our free listings are 100% free and will remain so forever. If you currently have a “free listing” and wish to upgrade to our new “Featured Breeder” listings, it’s a simple and easy transition.  Just fill out the form again, making sure to use the SAME e-mail address you used when you signed up for your free listing.  Make sure you check the “Featured Breeder” check-box and once you complete the payment and submit the form your listing will be automatically updated! * to upgrade your listing! You spoke and we listened!  Due to many requests, we are now proud to offer a premium listing option for serious breeders who want their contact information to stand out from the crowd. 
Our new “Featured Breeder” listings will increase your visibility, website clicks, and contacts from prospective buyers by up to 1,000%.  Bullmastiff Puppies For Sale Washington StateOur coveted “top spot” listings currently receive OVER 2,000 referrals from our site EVERY MONTH!  Lowes Water Resistant Laminate FlooringA “Featured Breeder listing” puts your business right in that Top Spot!Car Seat Clinic Santa Fe Nm The benefits of a “Featured Breeder” listing include automatic “Top Spot” placement on every page your listing appears.  This will lead to increased visibility and increased referrals.  Your listing also stands out due to our tested “color scheme” that automatically draws visitors eyes to your listing. 
As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words: Featured Breeders can expect to see up to a 1,000% increase in referrals, and for the low price of $10 a month. To sign up as a “Featured Breeder” simply fill out the form below, making sure to check the box “Featured Breeder” and once you submit the form you will be re-directed to our PayPal page where you can complete the payment.  Please e-mail us with any questions!Posted January 1st, 2008 by Many cruisers are now choosing to take their dogs and cats with them. Here are some suggestions of how to make the experience more pleasurable for both of you. Put an ID tag on your dog or cat! Consider having an ID microchip implanted in your pet. The chip, which is about the size of a grain of rice, is inserted at the scruff of the neck and contains a number linked to a national registry. Get a personal flotation device (PFD) for your dog or cat, available at most boating stores for $20 to $80. Regardless of how good a swimmer your pet is, a sudden dunking can cause panic.
Tip: get a brightly colored life jacket with a handle on top, this will them much easier to see and retrieve. Get the dog or cat used to wearing the PFD before setting out. Teach your dog basic safety commands, such as stay, sit, on boat, off boat, or the all time favorite "do your business". If you can teach your cat these commands, well, you're a genius, let us know how! Make sure there are no hazardous or dangerous materials within your pet’s reach. Get seasickness medication for your pet if necessary. Some of the same medications used for humans, such as Benadryl and Dramamine, also work for pets, please consult your vet before giving your pet ANY medications. If you plan to venture to foreign ports with your dog or cat on board your sailboat or power boat, check the regulations well in advance. Many countries have quarantine or health laws that apply to "foreign" animals. If you haven't already, get your dog or cat used to being around the water. Introduce them to the boat (and boats noises) a little at a time.
The best way to introduce your pet to boating is to spend some time together on the boat when it’s tied up to the dock. Training goes something like this: An hour on the dock, a few hours and start the engine (to adapt them to the noise and vibration), a quick trip around the marina, a daysail, a weekend overnight, you get the idea... Practice swimming and rescue drills with your dog.Trained the dog to paddle to a swimming platform or ladder, so they could be helped back on board. Figure out your plan well in advance. "What would I do if. . ." Fill in the blank, then make a plan. Don't forget to practice your drills on a nice day, when it's "fun," so everyone knows the procedure. While docked, rig up a self-rescue system, such as a coiled line or carpet strip hanging into the water at each corner of the boat, to make it easier for an overboard cat to climb back on. A fishnet with a long handle is also helpful in scooping up a drenched cat or small dog. Dogs: A piece of AstroTurf, or a box of sod can work as a substitute when landfall is not possible.
Some people just train their dogs to go on the boat deck, though this is difficult and often dangerous while underway (not to mention, yuck). The problem isn't where to go, it is getting your dog to understand it is OK to go. This can be really tricky to do with an older dog. Start training on the boat as soon as possible. You can guess the drill. Start by putting the piece of fake sod where they normally go to the bathroom, and you know, put some on it. We never said it was going to be easy :) Then start moving the Astroturf in different areas, get them to go on the fake sod. This can take awhile. Bring the fake sod to the dock, get them to go on it there. Until finally you move it on board the boat, and get them to go there. That training command, "do your business", comes in super handy here. Cats: Use an anchored litter box or use the "head" (the toilet on a boat). Training a cat to go in the toilet requires tremendous patience, but believe it or not, it can be done.As the SPCA in northeastern B.C. warns about a recent jump in dog disappearances, one owner believes illegal dog fighting is to blame.
Brad Tanner's family dog, Choco, vanished on Feb. 21 from his property east of Cecil Lake. He says his friend's pit bull was taken from their yard that same day."I believe these abductions of our dogs are directly related to the uprising of dog-fighting rings in the [northeast B.C.] region," Tanner wrote on a crowdfunding page.He claims that the night before Choco was stolen, a middle-aged woman was seen trying to coax another dog, which was guarding a flock of sheep, into a white SUV. When someone questioned the woman, she said she was rescuing the dog to take it to the SPCA, but could not say where the shelter was located. When the witness called the dog's owner, the woman — reportedly spotted by other people in the community driving slowly past their rural properties — drove away, according to Tanner. The North Peace SPCA has issued a warning to pet owners amid a "definite increase in missing dogs," branch manager Candice Buchamer told CBC News. "We actually had one report of a dog being thefted right out of the unlocked garage attached to the house, so they're very brazen people."
She said larger breeds, "anything that has kind of a bully or fight-style appearance to it is where we’re seeing a big increase in those going missing," reported CJDC. Buchamer is gathering recent numbers to compare to previous years, like in 2014 when 100 dogs were reported missing, and have not been found, according to CBC.Buchamer said dogs were taken from outside Walmart and gas stations in Fort St. John, as well as residences in Rolla, Cecil Lake, and Farmington. She told Energeticcity.ca that some of the stolen dogs were discovered "mutilated in a manner that would suggest they were ripped apart by another animal."However, the society has not been able to prove the existence of illegal dog fighting in the region, and the RCMP told CBC it's not investigating such activity. But Tanner hopes to raise $10,000 through a GoFundMe page as a reward to "bring forth people with viable information that the RCMP can use to prosecute." He said any remaining money would be donated to the SPCA in Fort St. John.