Showing posts with label jack russell terrier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jack russell terrier. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Jack Russell who is allergic to grass has special 'doggy boots' made

This Jack Russell has to be dressed in specially made boots for walkies to protect his delicate paws because he is allergic – to grass.




Eight-year-old Jaxs suffers a painful reaction if he comes into contact with even a single blade of grass. It causes huge clumps of fur to fall out and leaves Jaxs with huge sores on his sensitive paws.

But Jaxs' life was transformed after a local vet suggested his owner Maria Domanic fit him out in 'doggy boots'.


Retired care worker Maria, 59, from Kingsbridge, said: ''He absolutely loves the boots. Initially he was a little tentative but now he's become very protective of them.

''I never really put two and two together with the allergy.

''One day, I took him to the vets and had him tested, which showed he was allergic to grass, as well as milk, protein and oats.

''He's so happy to finally be able to run around the field with other dogs.

''The allergy proves very painful for him and he would sometimes gnaw at his paws after walks."

Little Jaxs has become so attached to the boots, which are made of canvas and attached using velcro, that he even picks them up in his mouth before walkies.

Maria said: ''As soon as I get the lead he runs off and gets his boots and if another dog comes round or anyone tries to pick them up he will run off and protect them. He even sleeps with them in his basket."

"I've had a few people make some odd comments branding me 'cruel' and 'disgusting' for dressing him up in clothes," she said. ''I have to explain it's for his own good."

http://www.thisisdevon.co.uk/Jack-Russell-allergic-grass-special-doggy-boots/story-12867668-detail/story.html

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Jack Russell chases mountain lion up tree

A 150lb mountain lion found it was no match for a Jack Russell terrier which trapped it up a tree on a farm in the US state of South Dakota.


The dog's owner, Chad Strenge, heard frantic barking near the family's farm in Colman, Moody County.


He discovered the large male lion, also known as a cougar, clinging to the top of a tree while the 17lb terrier Jack barked from the bottom.

Mr Strenge used a shot gun to knock the mountain lion from the tree before he chased it - assisted by his dog Jack, and shot it dead.

"He trees cats all the time," Mr Strenge told The Argus Leader newspaper. "I suppose he figured it was just a cat."

Professor Jonathan Jenks, who tracks cougar migration patterns, said hunters usually required two or three hounds to chase mountain lions up trees.

He said the cougar was probably not hungry enough to attack Jack.

"It very well could have lost a territory and decided to take off from the Black Hills and head this way," he told The Argus Leader.

Arden Petersen, of the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks department, said that no charges would be filed for shooting the animal.

People in South Dakota have the right to kill mountain lions which they feel are a threat to themselves, their livestock or their pets.

The lion was taken to South Dakota State University, where it will be studied.

It is not the first time a potentially dangerous north American wild animal has been brought to heel by a family pet.

In 2006, a ginger cat - also called Jack - chased a black bear up a tree in West Milford, New Jersey.
When the bear eventually climbed down, Jack the cat chased it up another tree.

The bear only escaped when Jack's owner called him into the house.

Jack Russell chases mountain lion up tree

A 150lb mountain lion found it was no match for a Jack Russell terrier which trapped it up a tree on a farm in the US state of South Dakota.


The dog's owner, Chad Strenge, heard frantic barking near the family's farm in Colman, Moody County.


He discovered the large male lion, also known as a cougar, clinging to the top of a tree while the 17lb terrier Jack barked from the bottom.

Mr Strenge used a shot gun to knock the mountain lion from the tree before he chased it - assisted by his dog Jack, and shot it dead.

"He trees cats all the time," Mr Strenge told The Argus Leader newspaper. "I suppose he figured it was just a cat."

Professor Jonathan Jenks, who tracks cougar migration patterns, said hunters usually required two or three hounds to chase mountain lions up trees.

He said the cougar was probably not hungry enough to attack Jack.

"It very well could have lost a territory and decided to take off from the Black Hills and head this way," he told The Argus Leader.

Arden Petersen, of the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks department, said that no charges would be filed for shooting the animal.

People in South Dakota have the right to kill mountain lions which they feel are a threat to themselves, their livestock or their pets.

The lion was taken to South Dakota State University, where it will be studied.

It is not the first time a potentially dangerous north American wild animal has been brought to heel by a family pet.

In 2006, a ginger cat - also called Jack - chased a black bear up a tree in West Milford, New Jersey.
When the bear eventually climbed down, Jack the cat chased it up another tree.

The bear only escaped when Jack's owner called him into the house.