Bully Max Canine Muscle Building Supplement and Vitamins for Dogs, Boxers, Pitbulls, Rottweilers

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The benefits dogs can get from Bully Max is a better immune system (which means your dog will be safer from infections), an improved metabolism, and improved vision. Bully Max muscle supplements for dogs are also excellent for proper bone nourishment as well as strengthening tendons. This muscle builder for dogs is vital for muscle recovery, burning fat, improving your dogs skin and coat.
and over all growth.

Bully Max: provides the following powerful benefits:

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HOW TO BUILD A WHELPING BOX TO SAVE YOUR PUPPIES


Here is a very basic Whelping Box that is easy to make and will save the lives of your new born puppies.

  • Step 1: Cut the 4X8 piece of ply wood in half.
  • Step 2: Cut the 8 foot 2X4 into 8 pieces. each piece should be 1 foot long
  • Step 3: screw each foot long piece into every corner from the bottom of the 4X4 piece of ply wood. Each corner should look like it has an "L" shape on the bottom of it when finshed.
  • Step 4: Cut the remaining piece of ply wood into the following dimentions. 6 inches X 4 feet.
  • Step 5: Screw the 6 inches X 4 feet pieces of ply wood onto the "L" shape support pieces on all four sides. You should now have what looks to be a sand box turned upside down.
  • Step 6: Add screws through out the whelping box in all areas that need secured.
  • Step 7: Cut a square in the center of the 4X4 piece of ply wood leaving a 6 inch ledge that goes around the entire box.
  • STEP 8 OPTIONAL: Lay news paper down on the floor and put the box over top of it.
You are now finished with your whelping box. When the mother lays in this box the puppies will not be able to get smashed in the corners or sides of the box. They will have a tunnel to crawl through when the mom is laying down. Many puppies are killed when put in normal boxes or swimming pools because they get trapped behind the mom in the corners and get crushed. With this box your pups will not be able to get smashed when they crawl behind her.

Copyright www.kinnemankennels.com
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Korean scientists clone pit bull

Hyung-Jin Kim Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea -- Bernann McKinney says her beloved pit bull "Booger" saved her life when another dog attacked her, then learned to push her wheelchair while she recovered from a severe hand injury and nerve damage.

He died in 2006, but now he's back -- at least in clone form, after the birth last week of puppies replicated by a South Korean company.

"Yes, I know you! You know me too!" McKinney cried joyfully Tuesday, hugging the puppy clones as they slept with one of their two surrogate mothers, both Korean mixed breed dogs, in a Seoul laboratory. "It's a miracle."

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The five clones were created by Seoul-based RNL Bio in cooperation with a team of Seoul National University scientists who in 2005 created the world's first cloned dog, an Afghan hound named Snuppy.

It is headed by Lee Byeong-chun, a former colleague of disgraced scientist Hwang Woo-suk, whose purported breakthroughs in stem cell research were revealed as fake. Independent tests, however, proved the team's dog cloning was genuine.

Lee's team has since cloned some 30 dogs and five wolves, but claims Booger's clones, for which McKinney paid $50,000, are the first successful commercial cloning of a canine.

The procedure, which costs up to $150,000, is drawing criticism from animal rights groups which oppose cloning pets. They say it can lead to malformed offspring and exploitation of surrogates and egg donors, as well as unfounded claims that the new animal is an exact copy of the original.

"It's fraught with animal welfare concerns and it does not bring back a loved one," said Martin Stephens, vice president for animal research issues at The Humane Society of The United States, based in Washington.

"A dead animal's DNA does not guarantee the offspring will be identical to the deceased. It takes more than just genes to create an animal," said Stephens, who is a biologist.

He said the cloning process also subjects hundreds of dogs and cats to invasive procedures as egg donors and surrogates. According to a report released by The Humane Society in May, 3,656 cloned embryos, 319 egg donors and 214 surrogates were used to produce just five cloned dogs and 11 cloned cats who were able to survive 30 days past birth.

There are millions of homeless dogs and cats in the U.S., Stephens said, and "we don't need new sources to compete with animal shelters and reputable breeders."

McKinney, 57, a screenwriter who taught drama at U.S. universities, contacted Lee after her dog died of cancer in April 2006. She had earlier gone to U.S.-based Genetics Savings and Clone but it shut down in late 2006 after only producing a handful of cloned cats and failing to produce any dog clones.

The Korean scientists brought the dog's frozen cells to Seoul in March and nurtured them before launching formal cloning work in late May, according to RNL Bio.

"The cells' status was indeed bad as they had been stored for a long time," Lee told The Associated Press in a phone interview.

"But the scientific technology has also developed compared with when we cloned Snuppy. There is no room for any doubt over whether they are real clones," said Lee, whose team has identified the puppies as Booger's genuine clones. His university's forensic medicine team is currently conducting reconfirmation tests.

Lee said the five clones, which share identical white spots below their necks, were all healthy though their weights vary slightly.

McKinney said she was especially attached to Booger because he saved her from an attack by another dog three times his size. She suffered severe injuries to her left hand and damaged nerves in her leg and stomach, and spent part of her recovery in a wheelchair.

McKinney said Booger acted as more than a canine companion as she recuperated. He pulled her wheelchair when its battery ran out, opened her house door with his teeth and helped her take off her shoes and socks, even though she never trained him to do so.

"I believe that Booger was an angel that God rented out to me for short period of time," she said. "And he knew I would be lost without him, so he sent me some more. He sent me five more mini- Boogers."

She said she has named the clones Booger McKinney, Booger Lee, Booger Ra, Booger Hong and Booger Park, after herself and the South Korean scientists who achieved the cloning.

McKinney said she will take three of the cloned dogs to her home in California, where she lives with five other dogs and three horses. She plans to donate the others to work as service dogs for the handicapped or elderly.

RNL Bio charges up to $150,000 for dog cloning but was paid a third of that by McKinney because she is the first customer and helped with publicity, said company head Ra Jeong-chan.

Ra said his firm eventually aims to clone about 300 dogs per year and is also interested in duplicating camels for customers in the Middle East.

Pit bulls need positive PR

"I recently read your answer to a woman whose husband had a pit bull that didn't get along with their Shar Pei. I now have three pit bulls, all rescues, and while it's not a breed I really wanted, these are some of the most awesome, smart and gentle dogs I have ever owned. As every stray around the boonies seems to end up here, I worried about having pits. I have worked very hard training and socializing them, and they are welcome places where most dogs aren't allowed. Clyde has even been invited to train to be a therapy dog.

"I know some bad pits, but I've seen bad dogs from almost every breed. What I mostly see are bad owners. I was wondering: What is your general opinion of pit bulls?"

The following text is from a World War I U.S. propaganda poster titled "Watchful-Waiting": The Germans have their "Wincht am Rhein," the English play "Lord Save the King," the Frenchmen sing their "Marseillaise," while the Russians chant their "National Hymn." Our spirit shuns this warlike ring: Peace breathes in what we proudly sing: "The Star-Spangled Banner." And long may it wave, o'er the land of the free and home of the brave. By these colors we stand ever true. Three Cheers for the Red, White and Blue.

Above that text was the image of an American Staffordshire terrier, a pit bull, wrapped in the American flag.

Needless to say, times have changed.

The American Staffordshire terrier used to be the all-American dog. Abroad, pit bulls served with U.S. soldiers, utilizing their superior hearing and sense of smell to warn of mustard gas, shell raids and other lurking dangers, including the presence of enemy spies -- as was the case with Sgt. Stubby, the pit who single- handedly captured a German spy and dragged him to camp by the seat of his pants. For his service, he became the only pooch to be promoted to the rank of sergeant.

At home, pit bulls helped the government promote and sell war bonds. Their mugs were featured in Buster Brown ads -- the reliable, sturdy, all-American shoe. And they starred alongside children in Hollywood productions, most notably Petey in "The Little Rascals." In fact, they earned the nickname "nanny dogs" from their intrinsically gentle way with children.

Historically, pit bulls have been the dog of choice for the tough patriot -- Teddy Roosevelt and George Patton -- as well as the soulful observer -- Helen Keller and Mark Twain.

So what happened?

Part fear campaign, part smear campaign, first the media, then America, systemically turned against this once beloved dog. And just as the media have the influence to elect a president, they have the power to ban a breed. Today, many insurance companies will not issue homeowners insurance on a home that will put a roof over the head of a dog that even "looks like a pit bull."

The truth is, nearly 4.7 million people suffer dog bites in the United States each year. Approximately 16 of those cases are fatal, and pit bulls are statistically responsible for about four of those, according to the Center for Disease Control.

My opinion? There's no such thing as a bad breed. All dogs have the potential to be great pets, depending on your needs. And any individual dog that displays aggression should be kept out of homes and neighborhoods with children and other animals.

There are too many dogs, of all shapes and sizes, out there biting people, and the vast majority of those are family pets biting family members. Media hype surrounding pit bulls turns a molehill into a mountain, creates an atmosphere vulnerable to empty legislation and distracts from the real problem: We lack a system that holds pet owners and providers accountable for the actions of those pets.

Until that becomes the point of discussion, the pit bull's best chance is a little positive PR. Tune in to Animal Planet for the series "Animal Witness." Its inaugural episode, "The Michael Vick Case," detailed the inhumane treatment Vick's dogs suffered as prisoners in the underground world of dogfighting and showed the remarkable recovery many of those dogs have made, in large part due to their natural disposition prevailing against enormous odds.

Woof!

Dog trainer Matthew "Uncle Matty" Margolis is co-author of 18 books about dogs, a behaviorist, a popular radio and television guest, and host of the PBS series "WOOF! It's a Dog's Life!" Read all of Uncle Matty's columns at the Creators Syndicate Web site at www.creators.com, and visit him at www.unclematty.com. Send your questions to dearuncle.gazette@unclematty.com or by mail to Uncle Matty at P.O. Box 3300, Diamond Springs, CA 95619.

A FEW TRAING TIPS FOR YOUR PITBULL

How To Train A Pitbull- The Secret To Raising A Gentle Pitbull by Michael Hutchins


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When "Rocco", our 8 month old Pitbull started getting out of control, we wished that we knew how to train a Pitbull. Unfortunately, my wife laura and I had waited until "Rocco" was close to full grown, to begin out Pitbull puppy training. Luckily, we took the advice of a professional Pitbull handler, and we applied the secret to raising a gentle Pitbull.

When I say that "Rocco" was out of control, I don't mean he was vicious. In fact, "Rocco" was more likely to "kill" a person with "kindness", than any other method.

When Laura or I would return home from work, "Rocco" would almost knock us over in his delight! And, at over 80 lbs, "Rocco" was our worst nightmare with his habit of jumping.

"Rocco" had also developed a chronic barking habit. He would bark at just about any, or everything. He would even bark at people INSIDE their cars. And cats? Forget about it!

"Rocco" would go nuts!

Frankly, Laura and I were clueless about how to train a Pitbull. The problem became so severe that we were strongly considering putting "Rocco" up for adoption.

Luckily, we ran across some information written by a professional Pitbull handler. We uncovered the reasons for Rocco's behavior, and what we could do to change it. Basically, we learned about 4 strategies for raising a gentle Pitbull:

1) Begin the training process at the youngest possible age- one word commands can begin at 8-10 weeks.

2) Give your Pitbull puppy PLENTY of exercise.

3) Don't isolate your Pitbull for long periods of time.

4) Give your Pitbull puppy ample opportunities to socialize with other dogs/people.

When Laura and I first began applying some of the many techniques we learned in the guide, it was challenging. "Rocco" was stubborn and set in his ways. The guide went in to great detail on obedience training for Pitbulls of all ages, and after about 3 weeks we noticed a dramatic improvement in his behavior. No more jumping, and limited barking!