Posts for June, 2009

Forum Anyone?

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Today we launched our first piece of our community implementation – a fully functional forum. You can connect with other dog owners and members of MPP with ease now. Take a look, there are a number of categories ranging from dog travel and health to sports and training! If you have a question or a problem, see how other dog owners like you solved it. Mix your newly found knowledge on the forum with the articles section on our blog and you’ll be a “proffessional” dog owner in no time!

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Your Dog’s Behavior

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Let’s not kid ourselves, your dog can never be perfect and nor do you want him to be! It’s the little abnormalities and quirks in their personality that make them, well….them. So let’s get our expectations straight – we want a well-behaved, well-mannered, respectful dog, not a perfect one. The key to ensuring a happy, healthy family intermixed with humans and dogs is to set strict, realistic expectations as well as establishing clear communication, both ways.

Although dogs are seen as domestic animals, they do still have natural instincts which is where common misbehaviors come from. For example, aggressive behavior, territory marking, and guarding are your dog’s early instincts to acquire food. Whereas digging and chewing are simply the result of boredom or stress (digging can also be a way of trying to cool off).

It’s important for you to recognize these behaviors as natural and innate, when your dog chews down a leg of your coffee table he is not thinking “Grrr, she left me cooped up, home alone!” Dog’s just don’t think that way, he was most likely bored. Although, your dog does need to learn the difference between appropriate and inappropriate behavior and the only way to do that is for you to be the strong leading force of your household.

  • Remember it’s harder to break habits than make habits.
  • Set strict boundaries and don’t waver, you don’t want to develop bad habits, both in your dog and your leadership.
  • Ignore or reprimand (a look of disappointment, and a stern “Bad Dog” is usually enough) unwanted behavior.
  • Praise and reinforce good behavior with treats, toys and tons of attentions.
  • Make sure your dog knows that he is loved by his family and is welcome as a part of the pack.

Remember that dogs are extremely smart, no matter how fluffy, ditsy or clumsy your dog is, they learn quick in a strict, unwavering environment. Bad behavior can be made much worse with poor training or handling. Overly harsh punishments or physical force is never effective and only deteriorates the trust and bond you’re trying to develop.

Preventing Behavioral Problems

Prevention is always better than having to treat it. The key to preventing bad behavior is getting an early start on training. If you don’t have time to teach your puppy basic obedience and manners we recommend you look into enrolling your puppy in some obedience class and keep practicing with him. Keep mentally stimulating your dogs to develop their pragmatic problem solving and impulse control.

For the weeks prior to your dog turning 16 weeks old, take him absolutely everywhere and expose him to as much as possible (careful, your dog won’t have their full set of vaccines yet). This will take the excitement and fear out of the unknown, once you cull the excitement your dog is a lot more predictable and controllable. Introduce your dog to all types of sights and sounds, cars, boats, planes, playgrounds, fireworks.  Lastly, you introduce him to all kinds of different dogs so he can learn good manners and play behavior.

Stopping & Treating Bad Behavior

Providing your dog plenty of physical and mental stimulation is crucial to keeping your dog well-mannered. The more mental and physical stimulation your dog gets the less likely he’ll have the urge to be destructive.

If you leave your dog along at home all day with nothing to do you’re just inviting bad behavior and destruction. If you can’t find a way to amuse your pooch, he’ll find ways of his own weather you approve or not. We recommend looking into some sort of pet-sitter, dog walker, or even a doggy daycare. This will provide a bit of stimulation and if you send him to a doggy daycare you will also be further socializing your dog.

Although, this may not work for all dogs, some dogs suffer from more sever conditions such as separation anxiety. There are many ways to reduce the severity and even completely rid your dog of separation anxiety:

  • Talk to a reputable trainer or behaviorist.
  • Desensitization
  • Teach Independence
  • Train your dog by gradually leaving for longer periods of time the coming back and praising the dog.
  • Medicine

We recommend the non-medicinal route of treatment. It will take a bit of time but with constant work with your dog you can easily break your dog away from his separation anxiety.

In Conclusion

Your dog’s misbehavior comes from his innate instincts and become more prominent when he gets bored or stressed out. Training and socializing your dog early on  as well as stimulating your dog both mentally and physically is the key to preventing and treating your dogs behavioral problems. More severe cases may require outside help such as a behaviorist or trainer. Just remember, physical force is never acceptable and will always make matters worse. Lead through

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Quick Patch: Aesthetics & Simple Functions

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Based on some input from a couple of our users via the support desk we’ve patched up a couple things. We fixed the issue with the login form not submitting when you hit enter (In Internet Explorer and FireFox), this should allow you to get in and check your dogs’ health alot quicker! Also, we made a change to the Add a Dog page. We got a couple complaints about the date-pickers and not knowing what date is selected for your dog’s birthday; thus, we added a little line of text right above the birthday date-chooser to show you what date you have selected. If you feel something should be changed or fixed, let us know! We do listen to you!

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Pet Travel, Made Easy by GoPetFriendly!

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Being a pet lover, you know that taking a vacation can be hard and taking your dog on the vacation can be even harder! It seems that you have to make hundreds of phone calls to find a dumpy hotel that will accept your entire family.

The frustration stops here. About two weeks ago a new website launched by the name of GoPetFriendly.com (GPF). GPF makes sniffing out those hard-to-find pet-friendly accommodations, activities and services a walk in the park.

GPF provides up-to-date pet policies on 30,000+ pet-friendly campgrounds, hotels, restaurants, and bed and breakfasts as well as dog parks, beaches, stores, pet-sitters, malls and many other pet-promoting businesses across Northern America.

GPF takes pet friendly travel to the next level. They have a Road Trip Planner that allows users to plan out longer trips and creates waypoints along the way with pet friendly hotels and other stops.

As if that isn’t enough of a resource for you to get going on your trip, they provide user reviews, community forums, airline pet policies, and constantly monitored and updated information. So what are you waiting for? Tell Rover to get packing!

Check out www.GoPetFriendly.com

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Bug Fix: Adding a Dog / Popup Menus

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Pop menus and drop down menus weren’t disappearing when you clicked off of them, they should all be fixed now – if you find any that still aren’t functioning correctly please submit a bug report.

When you added a dog it took you to a blank page with odds and ends vaccines listed out completely unrelated to your dog. We have solved this problem and it now functions correctly by taking you to your dogs actual health portfolio.

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We Launched!

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

We’re very excited to have you on the site! You’ll find that we have tons of resources for you to explore with your pooch. Make sure you take look at our tutorials; they will take you on a walk through MyPuppyPlanner’s vast sea of features.

Also, if you need any help, have a question, or found something that isnt quite right, head on over to our support desk and let us know!

Other than that, have a blast and watch for you dog’s picture on our home page – they can be the dog of the day at any time!

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Logging In & Retrieving a Password / Username

Friday, June 19th, 2009

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Logging in is even easier than creating your account. On every page (when logged out) there is a “Login” box in the upper right hand side of each page.

Fill out the username and password boxes in the “Login” box then click the login button.

Viola, you’re in your account!

If you have forgotten your password or username you can easily retrieve them by clicking the link just below the login form on each page (when logged out).

Clicking this link will open a popup window which will ask you for a couple pieces of information so we can figure out what account is yours. To get your username, fill out the form on the right. To get your password, fill out the form on the left.

After you’ve submitted the form we’ll send an email to you with your username or new password – it’s as easy as that!

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Rating & Adding a Vet

Friday, June 19th, 2009

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Adding a vet is just as easy as finding a vet; from the “Schedule Vet Appointment” page, click the “Add a Vet!” link at the bottom of the page.

This will bring up a popup window with a form asking for information on the vet. The only things that are required are the city, state, zip, phone and office name – the normal information.

As you fill out the vet’s information our system will correct capitalizations and telephone formatting. You can see a preview of the vet’s information in the box in the upper right corner.

When you’re done filling out the vet’s information, click “Okay” and the vet will then appear under the zip code you provided for the vet!

To rate a vet you must go to their vet profile and you will see their current rating in the top right corner.

To rate the vet mouse over the stars and click the rating you want to give the vet.

Viola, the rating has been updated to include your rating!

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Introduction

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Next>>

Welcome to MyPuppyPlanner.com, we’re glad you care about your dog’s health! We’ve put together a series of tutorials to get you started in MyPuppyPlanner.com. These tutorials will be updated as the site evolves and changes so you can keep checking back after each large update (not aesthetic / bug patches) for a brand new updated version of the tutorials.

These tutorials will soon be accompanied by video versions, we’ll announce when we’ve got them finalized and ready for your attention.

These tutorials are broken down into key courses:

More to come, stay tuned.

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Getting Started

Friday, June 19th, 2009

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Getting started on MyPuppyPlanner.com is easy. You just need a couple things:

  • A computer with internet, if you’re reading this you’re off to a good start!
  • 10 minutes

First, we’re going to create an account. Having and creating an account on MyPuppyPlanner.com is completely free. Here’s how to get yours:

On every page (when you’re logged out) there is a “Login” box in the upper right side of the page with a “Create An Account” button, just click that and you’ll be taken to the registration page.

On the registration page you’ll have to put in some information about yourself, nothing too personal. There are two pages to the registration form, one is your personal information and the other one is your account information.

Once you’ve entered your username you can check if it’s available by clicking “Check Availability”.

Sometimes the reCaptcha at the bottom of the page is hard to read, you can click the refresh button as many times as you want until you get one you can easily read. By the way, this is used to deter robots from spamming our site and keeping the website performance fast.

Once you submit the form you will be taken to a page that explains that you will not be able to log in until you verify your email. You can verify your email by clicking the link we send to you (if you don’t receive the email within a couple minutes check your junk folder or contact us). Once you click the link your account will be activated and you’ll be ready to log in!

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