Trixie

Harder work than the pupper. I hope they are not undoing your work :shake:
I want to say no...but honestly? I'm going to vent a little because in this space, you understand what Im talking about, and that it's not me ragging on them...it's the frustration of having put in all that time and money and not having back-up from the rest of the family unit.

It's more like...rules when I'm home, and rules when I'm not.

The one place it's being actively undone is the front window. I have come home to hear human barking amid dog barking. FRUSTRATING! I spend all morning using "All done"(shamas) and "Off"(trixie) to stop the window barking...and I come home to hear a human joining them instead of managing them. So I walk in to two wound up dogs. and have to drop commands to end the barking the second I walk in at 10:30pm. Sure my neighbours appreciate THAT 5 nights a week :/ If the same commands were used all day, and re-enforced with food, it'd stick.

Hubby won't even walk her, because without the Halti, she's too strong. He only walks Shamas, who is calm, and slow now. And he doesn't seem to believe in walking on less than a 6 foot lead---which gives her all the momentum in the world to dig in and drag him wherever she pleases. Which is part of why I can't use a harness on her. If she dug in on a harness, on a 6 foot lead, she'd be unstoppable....you'd just see her dragging people along behind her like an untrained, unsocialised pet of someone who wants a friend but doesn't put in the time. I keep telling him to shorten the lead....you can't lead a dog on 6 feet of leash. It will go wherever it wants, unless it's taught verbal commands. I'm working on verbal commands, but we aren't there yet.

AB walks her, but uses Halti. Because the goal with AB is to have Trixie at the heel at all times. Walks with AB are working walks with breaks. That's going pretty well, except for forgetting to give a command when they see dogs. I keep reminding them--3 seconds from when you see the dog to when Trixie decides what to do about it. You have 3 seconds to tell her how to behave. If you don't tell her, she'll bark and jump, and carry on like an untrained brat. Tell her "leave it" and walk by...or if it's too much, and she's stalking, have her "sit..just watch" so she can process her feelings. Tell her SOMETHING

I'm using a combination loose-fit Martingale, and retractable/lose martingale and 6 foot lead held with 3 feet to walk her. I'm working on loose leash manners. She HAD them. At 6 months. Before she learned how strong she was, and that she could dig in and refuse to move. Now, there are times I actually have to take the handle on her tactical collar and shift her with a combination of gently pulling the collar and moving into the space she's occupying. I can't just allow her to dig in to sniff like that, because of her tendency to find chicken bones and eat them. It's a literal safety issue. I've considered muzzling, but given her poor reaction to Halti, I doubt muzzling would go over well. She'd "walk" down the street on her hind legs, pushing her nose along the ground. Or smash me around the legs with it. Or just sit and sing her song of sadness.

Unfortunately, she's not working for treats. Half the time, she sniffs the hand, then ignores it; even with chicken weiners which she loves. She only works for treats if she feels like playing that game today. She's also not working for tug. And she's ignoring me half the time, for the far more interesting squirrels, leaves, cars, dogs, and world in general. Front leading harness stresses her out, we've tried a few types now. Back harnesses give her too much pull power, and collars don't seem to allow for much communication...so I'm pulling a blank in trying to get through to her. Even the clicker doesn't interest her. I mark the behavior, and she acknowledges that I did, and continues on, grinning. Seems the positive re-enforcer is simply the marking of the behavior...the treat is irrelevant. Good for my budget...but bad for trying to get her attention.
 
Walking the dogs today, and we passed this enthusastic dog on the other side of the road...I heard the comments first..."She's beautiful!" and "Look at her!"

Next thing I knew, the owners of the enthusiastic dog were offering stud services for Trixie!

Obviously I told them no. For starters, she's still a puppy herself. But on top of that, I've just raised puppies TWICE. That was crazy enough....I'm not getting into raising 3-8:scared::speaktothehand:

No thank you. Not to mention pregnancy, risks, expenses.....possible trauma if it goes badly

Of course, being non-confrontational, as I am, when they pushed the issue, and told me to look them up if I changed my mind I said sure. and we left. With our beautiful girl who if I have anything to say about it will not be having puppies.
 
Well, that explains the offer-- Trixie's started her second period.

She's also licked a sore paw into a full blown infection, so she's on another 4 medications. Allergy pills, antibiotics, medicated shampoo soak2x/week, and isocream 2x/day

I never found the injury, neither did the vet...but I did find a grass seed a couple of days into licking...so I suspect that was the culprit?

Unfortunately, I was in the middle of a seizure cluster followed by a very bad reaction to the rescue medication prescribed by the urgent care..so I didn't have the presence of mind to take her in until the foot blew up red and angry:sad:

So what should have been a $150 visit was a $600 visit instead
 
Trixie is well on her way to healing.i can't see the redness in the paw now. I have an appointment with neuro on Sept 20. I expect he'll increase the topi.ax....as I'm still having small amounts of seizures.

Trixie actually woke me today just as I was about to go into one. Left me with a headache but at least I didn't seize....
 
Sorry to read that you are still having small amounts of seizures, will the possible increase in medication make you feel drowsy? It might be helpful to you if Trixie did recognise you were about to go into a seizures. :hug:
 
Sorry to read that you are still having small amounts of seizures, will the possible increase in medication make you feel drowsy? It might be helpful to you if Trixie did recognise you were about to go into a seizures. :hug:
Yes, drowsiness is a side effect. Though I'm more concerned with the verbal side effects....missing words in sentences and having to reframe speech. And the forgetting to eat.
 
I hope there is someone who can remind you to eat? Not pleasant side effects for you, how long do they last after the seizures?
The forgetting to eat is a side effect of the topimax. I don't get hungry. I managed to get into a routine during work hours, where I buy a banan, 50-100g of Mild Genoa, and a drink at lunch....so Iknow I at least eat that much. But I'm forgetting breakfast and mid-day meal still. So there are days where that "lunch" at 5-6pm is the first I eat.

The verbal side effects usually happen throughout the day if I'm having a bad epilepsy day. Since I dont Grandmal, but rather have partials/petit-mal....I'm not sure if the verbal issue is an aura, a type of seizure, or a side effect of the epilepsy. I know that it's worse when the epilepsy is...but I dont know how it corelates.
 
I know it is not the same but I forget to drink. The verbal side effects must be concerning but you do know they are only temporary when you have having the partial/petit Mal, do you have clusters, long gaps between? Have you had them all your life? An acquaintance of mine had them when a child and they came back when he was in his early thirties but have gone again.
 
I know it is not the same but I forget to drink. The verbal side effects must be concerning but you do know they are only temporary when you have having the partial/petit Mal, do you have clusters, long gaps between? Have you had them all your life? An acquaintance of mine had them when a child and they came back when he was in his early thirties but have gone again.
I started having grandma's when I was 5. When I was 16, scans were done....there was talk of surgery...but the Dr's couldn't find a physical source. No tumor, scarring to be removed to magically cure me. So my medication was adapted as the years went by, for the best possible outcome. For me, the best possible outcome is minimally invasive seizures activity, with minimal side effects from medication.
I can work, live, and function as long as I pay attention to my quirks. The small things, like forgetting what I'm doing partway through doing it. Losing vocabulary. Headaches, and needing more sleep. The more pronounced the quirks, the more likely I am to seize

I cluster every few years. Takes a few weeks to get back on track. I'm usually back to normal by the time I actually see my neuro and he tweaks my doseage
 
I am sorry you have to go through that, however, you seem to be managing it well, though much better for you if you didn't have it. I had an adored dog who was epileptic.
My dad's dog, Cameron was epileptic. I always thought it sort of ironic...I moved out, and after years of waiting for a dog but not getting one because he didn't the resources after caring for me.....his first dog was epileptic. But at least he was knowledgeable to care for him...
 
We're putting aside the idea of service dog training Trixie. She's developed protective tendencies. Not aggressive. But protective. That's not the neutral we were trying to foster.

Training will continue, but the idea of public access around specialized dogs....no.

I feel that we'll need a halti or other strength mitigator for a good year or two as we teach her not to lunge. And socialization in wide open spaces or empty stores.

She's lunged towards a couple of joggers to play a man who looks like hubby to kiss, and more concerning....a lady with a tire iron with unknown intent. I always catch it quick. I'm used to shamas. But I'm looking for a long muzzle regardless, in case it develops.

As a rule, she's extremely friendly. She seeks attention.

In all cases, she lunged at people walking/running AT us.

This morning when two aggressive humans were coming up on our house as we were entering it, she did not go fully in. She turned, sat in the door, and watched them pass. Then she came in.

This is no service dog. This dog needs a different kind of training. She needs more obedience work
 
She's a great PEt. She greets us enthusiastically, throws her water bowl at us, naps with us, and is generally a good dog.....

Except for the picking up everything she she shouldn't have and laughing at us because she KNOWS that now we have to play either chase or trade with her lol!IMG_20230911_084134_498.jpgIMG_20230912_230853_829.jpg
 
Shamas and Trixie have both decided that they love the blender.

Trixie isn't keen on the vet food for her UT, but it's working. Her ph is down to 6.5. And all other levels good.

Problem is. She's only eating as much as is required to shut up her belly. Some days less than 2 cups. Also, she's not drinking enough.

Vet suggested adding water to her food. That turns her right off with this brand.

But what DOES get her interest is a little rice, a little meat, some kibble, and water....blended into a slurry and poured on as gravy.

I figured it out Saturday, after she swiped a chicken nugget that fell off the pan as I pulled it out of the oven.....concerned about possible burns, and with vets closed till tomorrow, I decided to make her soup for dinner so she didn't aggravate any potential irritated insides. She's shown no symptoms past initially throwing up the offending nugget.....else I'd have had her into emerge. Since then I've been either blending meals, or topping small amounts of kibble with equal amounts of slurry. 16968916204719056308168148704784.jpgthis is a mix for the next few days. Turkey, carrots, rice, kibble.... pulsed in the blender. I was thinking an actual meal recipe would be good. Need to go hunting. Told hubby just add a tbsp or two, some water, and stir into kibble.

The rice is to soothe the tummy. Vet always suggests rice and bird meat.
 
Have you tried gelatine. On the megaesophagus webpage they suggest giving the dogs Knox blocks. Use unflavoured gelatine powder made up with water and chicken/beef/fish stock. I give Homer plain jelly cubes made with unflavoured gelatine and plan water. He gobbles them up.
 
I'll look into that. I've also asked the vets office for recipes suggestions since this puts her human food intake to about 20%, and really we want it no more than 10 ....especially as she's on prescription food.

But no point paying for prescription food if she won't eat it, and at least with the slurry she eats it. :wasntme:
 
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