DOG-GONE IT!

DOG-GONE IT!
Malay Mail, 10 Mar 2006

HERE are some of the Shah Alam City Council (MBSA) dog licensing regulations that will be amended and enforced from April 1:

* Dog owners will have to pay RM20 for a dog license (covering processing fee and microchip) instead of RM60 annually.

* The annual dog licensing fee will be fixed at RM20. Senior citizens aged 56 and above will only pay RM10 and the fee will be waived for the handicapped (provided they show their disability card during applications).

* Owners with intermediate terrace houses can keep dogs provided they have the written consent of their neighbors (to their left and right). However, existing licensed dog owners DO NOT need such consent.

* Existing licensed dog owners who acquired their licenses from other local authorities shall continue to use those licenses until they expire.

* Rottweilers are no longer banned in Shah Alam. However, those who want to adopt this breed as pets must obtain special approval from the State Veterinary Department.

* There are seven breeds of dogs that are banned in Shah Alam — the Akita, American Bulldog, Dogo Argentino, Fila Braziliero, Japanese Tosa, Neopolitan Mastiff and Pit Bull Terrier/American Pit Bull/Saffonshire Bull Terrier.

This is definitely good news for dog owners in Shah Alam area. Owners with intermediate terrace houses can keep dogs provided they have the written consent of their neighbors (to their left and right). However, existing licensed dog owners DO NOT need such consent.

Dog Park – Good news for dog lovers

The Datuk Bandar said City Hall had also identified a 0.4ha site at a corner of the park to be turned into a place where dog lovers could bring their pets to while they exercised in the area.

“They can exercise with their dog. We will have to fence up the place in case the dogs are unleashed. We will contract out the place, so users will pay for the services rendered by the provider,” he said.

Full Article

Haug: ‘We are behind where we want to be’

The above statement by Mercedes Motorsport Boss sound worrying for Mc Laren. Mercedes engine has played some part in causing the Mc Laren to lose the championship in 2005 and another slow start in 2006 season due to poor engine will have great effect again on the title chase again . To win the championship, playing catch up is difficult and tough for the drivers. To win, F1 team need to lead from the start of the season like Alonso in 2005 or like Mika Hakkinen in 1999. We do hope that Mercedes can work the engine ready for the first race in Bahrain and reliability is at least the aim they need to achieve. Renault has won in 2005 where reliability and consistency played a big part in the victory.

We shall hope for the best.

Haug: ‘We are behind where we want to be’
Thursday February 16 2006

Mercedes motorsport boss Norbert Haug has admitted that McLaren are lagging behind in their preparations for the 2006 F1 season.

In the first two days of this week’s Valencia test, McLaren have failed to match the front-runners, lacking either pace or reliability.

On Tuesday, the Woking team’s two drivers present failed to get within a second of the P1 time, while the following day Kimi Raikkonen showed pace but not reliability. The Finn, who was P2, suffered yet another engine failure.

And although everyone at McLaren and engine partner Mercedes is well aware of the problems, Haug fears they won’t have enough time to solve them before the season starts in March.

“Some teams are ahead of us, which we wouldn’t mind but only if we had another month to prepare,” Haug told Motorsport Aktuell magazine.

“We have not had a dream start. We are behind where we want to be.”

He added: “We are doing everything possible in order to be competitive for the first race in Bahrain.”

Article Source

One of the family – Dogs

An article of dogs ownership published by Star last month where I was one of the person interviewed.

One of the family
By ELIZABETH TAI
The Star, 24 Jan 2006

Patches, a two-year-old Shih Tzu, is one lucky pooch. Not only does he have a well-made bed area (complete with fluffy pillows) and a basket full of toys, he has his very own chef too.

“My pastor thinks I’m mad,” said Ten Siew Yung who once held a birthday party for Patches at her pastor’s house with friends and relatives. Actually, her friends and relatives think so too, but Ten is used to it by now. She just laughs it off and says that she’ll do anything for “Patchy Boy”.

That includes preparing well-balanced home-cooked meals made out of the finest organic ingredients for Patches.

Every morning before going off to work – Ten is a private tutor – Ten throws some quinoa grains into the rice cooker, lightly steams meat and vegetables and then adds some healthy supplements, which she makes herself, to the meal.

Ten Siew Yung and her dog, Patches. Ten prepares Patches’ meals carefully, ensuring that they’re organic and nutritious.

Patches eats only organic chicken – after it’s been put through the ozonizer to remove toxins. Sometimes Ten gives him some fish oil, home-made yoghurt, or liver treats which she makes herself.

Ten created Patches’ menu after much research from books bought from the Internet. She cautions against feeding dogs food scraps as it is not well-balanced and contains ingredients that are harmful to dogs.

Her obsession with Patches’ nutrition came after he had an operation which shortened his intestines.

“A lot of dogs die young of diseases, and I wonder if it’s to do with the food that they’re given,” said Ten. She wanted to prevent that from happening to Patches and threw herself into research.

After breakfast, Patches will be taken to his dogsitters’ place (she pays her a monthly fee) so that he will not be alone while she is away at work.

“I know that they can be left alone but my heart is just not at peace when he’s alone,” she said and then laughed, sounding almost embarrassed.

Ten didn’t think that she’d become the kind of dog owner she is today.

“I lost a dog when I was young and I was very affected by the incident. He was poisoned and he died on the vet’s table,” said Ten. After the incident, Ten vowed not to have dogs, so when a good friend gave her a Shih Tzu puppy, she was reluctant to keep him.

She promised her friend that she’ll “try it out” for a week.

“For some reason, we developed a strange bond. He seems to understand what I say,” she said. The trial period is long over, and now the two are inseparable.

Fruit of urbanisation Pets as surrogate children? It’s nothing unusual, said Deputy Chairman of the Malaysian

National Animal Welfare Foundation Dr S. Sivagurunathan.

Before, pets are kept because of their usefulness – as guard dogs or mousers – but now many are regarded as members of the family, appearing in family photos and boasted about by proud human parents to their friends.

Urbanization coupled with affluence and education has played a large part in this shift.

More people are now living in the cities, and as city folks, their lives are busy. Parents choose to have pets keep their children company while they’re away at work. Singles, some living alone, seek companionship from the unconditional love of animals. Families are becoming smaller, so pets fit in well. And as Malaysians become wealthier, they spend more on their pets.

“This happens throughout the world. All big, metropolitan cities are going through these changes. It’s not a Western or Asian culture thing,” said the veterinarian.

And as pets become family members, owners treat them as such, extending their life, giving them better food and preventive health care.

“Veterinary practice has changed tremendously for the past 30 years,” said Dr Sivagurunathan. For one, old age animal management is a big part of the veterinarian’s work.

“For the past 10 years, more modern veterinarian clinics are coming in and sophisticated equipment are now being used for diagnostic purposes,” he said. All this, again, is not unusual.

“The vet practices have to improve to meet the needs of the public,” he said.

The same for pet services. Pet shops are springing up, and the last few years saw the birth of department-store-like pet shops such Pet Safari at Ikano Power Centre in Petaling Jaya and Pets Wonderland which has several branches in PJ and Kuala Lumpur.

There are also more “exotic” pet services: A look at the notice board outside Pet Safari and one can see various services being offered, from the usual grooming services to hand-drawn pet portraits and homemade organic cookies for pets.

However, Malaysia has certainly not reached a stage where pet spas and pet cafes are the norm. For one, many dogs are still barred from parks, which is something that frustrates dog lover Khoo Boo Gee.

Khoo, who created popular pet websites koi.com.my (he is also an avid koi enthusiast), puppy.com.my and kitten.com.my, didn’t let that stop him, however. Since 2000, the businessman has organised gatherings at Central Park, Bandar Utama, Petaling Jaya, which are attended by thousands of dog lovers and their dogs. Also, he created “K9 Trekkers” (www.puppy.com.my/k9trekkers) – every Saturday morning, dogs and their owners will go jungle trekking at Gasing Hill, Petaling Jaya.

When asked if dog parks – a park where dogs can frolic freely – could become a reality in Malaysia, Khoo answered frankly: “Not easy. Unless someone is willing to do it on a charity basis, whereby it’s not a commercial concern. Because if it is, the park will not make money.

“If the park were to come from the Government it may be quite tough, because the Government has to consider the public, and we are a multiracial society.”

However, Khoo believes that if dog owners were to become more responsible, things will improve.

“It’s very important that when you own a dog you should cause minimum inconvenience to people,” he said.

“For example, if I live in a housing estate and let my dog roam without control, it may intimidate people. If this keeps happening, people will complain to the council and they may tighten the rule on dog ownership.

“However, if people keep their dogs on a leash, and ensure that they don’t cause inconvenience to other people, in the long run, people will accept the presence of dogs. If everyone move in this direction, things will improve.”

Not a perfect picture Dogs like Patches may live a princely life, but there are many animals that are not as lucky. Kept by irresponsible owners, their lives are one of misery.

When Sheena, a German Shephard, was found starving and sitting by a bowl of contaminated water in August last year, the public was outraged. But when her owner was fined a measly RM100 in October, they were aghast.

This only strengthened the resolve of animal lovers and organizations like Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to have the Animal Ordinance 1953 amended.

(Section 44(1)(d) of the Ordinance penalizes those convicted of animal cruelty with a maximum RM200 fine, or a maximum six months’ jail term, or both.)

“That legislation should’ve been changed a long time ago,” said Dr Sivagurunathan.

In the past, when farm animals were abused, they were charged RM120, he said.

“Today, the same legislation is used for companion animals which is wrong, where cruelty is viewed with much more severity. It has to be changed, it has to be done, and I think it will be done,” he said.

Dr Sivagurunathan, however, is optimistic that change is coming. The fact that the media chooses to highlight animal abuse cases and the hue and cry from the public when such cases are highlighted shows that animal welfare is growing fast among communities, and that’s a good sign, he said.

“People are becoming very sensitive to life,” he said. “We’re going to be a developed nation by 2020, so obviously our mindset must change. It’s no use having big cities without developing the mind,” he said. “And if animal welfare is becoming a part of our concern, we’re moving towards a developed status,” he said, quoting Gandhi: “The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”

Owners lose dogs due to fireworks

Every year during the Chinese New Year holiday, many dog owners lost their dogs due to fire crackers. In spite of the ban on fireworks, many still play fireworks during the CNY and the fireworks these days are much more advance and louder.

Many dogs, by nature, fear loud noise such as thunder and fireworks and there is a great tendency that they are runaway whenever they ear these loud noise. Hence it is important to restrain your dog or keep them indoor during these period.

I was just told last week that one of the fellow owner of a protection dog ( a malinois) he recently purchased at RM 26,000 lost his when neighbour play fireworks which is too loud for the dog to handle. Many of these protection dogs are trained to get used to loud noise such as gun shot and yet they run away out of fear. Fireworks these day are so powerful and continue to blast for about a minute and continue blasting surely post a great threat to the dog. No wonder they will run away if they can.

Related article on the STAR

The Star, 4 Feb 2006

KUCHING: The Year of the Dog started badly for dog owners here, with several of them searching anxiously for their lost pets.

They said their dogs had run away from home, frightened by the noise of firecrackers and fireworks.

Some went to the animal shelter run by the Sarawak Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SSPCA), off the Kuching-Serian road, to look for their missing pets.

“They came crying, saying they had lost their dogs,” said Elizabeth Lim, who is in charge of the animals at SSPCA.

“They wanted to check if their pets had been caught and sent to the animal shelter by the local authorities or by some good-hearted people.”

She said once dogs panicked, they might hide anywhere – in a drain, a corner of a building or under a bridge.

She advised owners not to limit their search to the immediate neighborhood as there were cases in the past where dogs had taken shelter in the houses of strangers several kilometres away.

Happy Chinese New Year to All, The Year of Dog

I have been away to Hokkaido for a while and did not get a chance to blog. Would like to take this opportunity to wish all a very happy and prosperous Chinese New Year , the year of Dog.

In the year of dog does not mean that one has to get a dog to enjoy good feng shui and good luck. Getting a dog is a long term commitment. A small breed dog can live up to 14 years of age and one that get a dog must be willing to spend time to train their dogs, play with them, walk them and take well care of their welfare and good health throughout their life time. Hence, please think carefully before you get one. If you are not ready for the commitment, you may want to consider buying some dog music box instead 🙂

dog music box
Picture taken in a big Music Box Store in Hokkaido recently

Dogs not just toys for luck

Dogs not just toys for luck
By MEERA VIJAYAN
The Star, 24 Jan 2006

JOHOR BARU: The sudden demand for canines this coming Year of the Dog has got animal lovers worried.

Chartered accountant and animal lover C. Kunathasan, 54, said dogs are not “toys” that one buys for good feng shui.

“People who don’t genuinely love dogs but just want the luck that dogs may bring should consider buying statues of dogs instead.

“If the dog is neglected after the Chinese New Year, then it becomes animal abuse,” he said.

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) Selangor branch chairman Christine Chin said she had mixed feelings about the rise in the number of dogs bought or adopted recently.

“We are happy that there is so much attention on dogs this year, but we are also concerned that people may be buying dogs for the wrong reasons,” she said.

“For instance, when the movie 101 Dalmatians came out several years ago, it created a huge demand for Dalmatians.

“Two years later, we saw so many of those Dalmatians surrendered to the SPCA.” She urged pet shop operators to caution prospective buyers about the responsibilities that come with keeping a dog.

Chin said the SPCA receives almost a thousand animals a month, with 80% of the animals brought in by their owners who did not want them any more.

On people who want a dog just for luck, she warned: “Going along the same lines, if you buy a dog for luck and discard the dog later, you will be throwing away your luck, too.”

Full Story

Purina ProPlan launched new Dog Food Sensitive Skin and Stomach Formula on Malaysia K9 Day

Purina ProPlan recently launched their new Sensitive Skin and Stomach formula Dog Food on Malaysia K9 Day at Central Park, Bandar Utama.


Purina Laun ched Sensitive Skin and Stomach Formula

Purina Laun ched Sensitive Skin and Stomach Formula

Purina Laun ched Sensitive Skin and Stomach Formula

The main ingredient of the dog food is Salmon. This new dog food is extremely suitable if you have a dog that has either a sensitive skin or stomach. More information on the dog food can be found by downloading it here.

Malaysia K9 Day 2006 – Demonstration by K9 Security

K9 Dog Trainers from K9 Security joined us on the Malaysia K9 Day to perform some very good demonstration on protection dogs using a total of 5 dogs. Four Malinois (Belgian Shepherd) and on black German Shepherd. Some of the demonstration performed include:-

1) Body attack by Malinois
2) Hold and Bark Demo
3) Escort with Malinois
4) Some Dog Obedience Works


puppycom logo purina logo

Some of the pictures taken are as below:-


Demonstration on protection dogs

Demonstration on protection dogs

Demonstration on protection dogs

Demonstration on protection dogs

Demonstration on protection dogs

Demonstration on protection dogs

Microchip for dogs may be a must

Microchip for dogs may be a must
NST, 9 Jan 2006

KUALA LUMPUR, Sun Microchip implants in pet dogs could become compulsory in 2008 if City Hall has its way in amending current laws over animal licensing.
“If a dog runs away, or if other individuals claim ownership of a dog that is not theirs, this is where the microchip can be enormously helpful,” said Dr Norhayati Shaari, head of City Hall’s Vector and Pests unit.

The microchip implant costs RM18, plus RM10 for the veterinarian’s service in injecting the chip. An annual RM10 licence fee will also be levied for registration purposes.

Norhayati said since the launch of the programme in April last year, 131 microchips had been inserted into dogs.
Most of the dog owners who have participated were from the Internet dog community portal website, www.puppy. com.my.

Khoo Boo Gee, general manager of Hileytech Sdn Bhd, which operates the website, says that at least 50 members have signed up for the microchip plan since the launch of the programme last month.

“We have 13,500 members on our forum. Although only 50 have signed up so far, we expect the numbers to grow,” he said.

Norhayati believes that microchips offer more than just identification of stray dogs or missing pets.
“In the case of dog attacks, some owners refuse to acknowledge ownership of the animal but with a microchip there will be accountability,” she said.

Norhayati and Khoo were speaking at the 3rd Malaysia K9 Day 2006, organised by puppy.com.my and sponsored by Purina PetCare (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd at Central Park, Bandar Utama today.

City Hall officially launched their dog microchipping campaign, which is expected to continue until the end of 2007.

Malaysia K9 Day was launched as an annual event by the Deputy Youth and Sports Minister in 2004.

Malaysia K9 Day 2006 – Demonstration by the Police K9 Unit

Malaysia K9 Day was successful held on January 8th at Central Park, Bandar Utama recently. The event was attended by more than 4000 dog lovers. As usual, one of the highlight of the day include the Demonstration by the Unit K9 of the Malaysian Police Force.


puppycom logo purina logo

This time around, the Police K9 Unit peformed a different demonstration that include 5 police dogs running through a series of obtacles and finally a fire ring. Some of the pictures as as below:-

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Other demonstration include crime control and arrest with the use of a German Shepherd Dog. The Police K9 Unit also performed a demonstration on complete search on a vehicle for drug. When the suspect tried to run away, the police dog went after the suspect until he surrendered.

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Police K9 Unit

Malaysia K9 Day 2006

More pictures and description to follow.

Hip Dysplasia in Dogs

In recent time, we have observed that several dogs ( up to 10 so far ) that attended our dog training classes has Hip Dysplasia problem. It occur mostly to big dogs and in our case, quite a number of them are Golden Retrievers. Hip dysplasia is considered a hereditary condition and dogs with Hip dysplasia should not be used for breeding again. We feel sad to see dogs grown up to have Hip dysplasia and those who wish to acquire large dogs should pay more attention to Hip dysplasia problem and should take action to check more before acquire one. Precaution to be taken should at least include the following:-

– Buy only from reputable breeder

– Check with the breeder on whether the Sire and Dam (father and mother) of the puppies has Hip dysplasia problem or not. It is important to view the Sire and Dam to confirm this. Ask for X-ray record of the hip of the Sire and Dam if there is any.

– Buy directly from the breeder and strike an agreement with the breeder that in the event the dog has Hip dysplasia, they should either replace a dog for you or compensate you for medical treatment require. Medical treatment on Hip Dysplasia are generally expensive.

Brief description on Hip Dysplasia

Hip dysplasia can result in a painful dislocation (subluxation) of the hip joint or an irregularly formed ball and / or socket. Eventually the dog develops degenerative joint disease, or arthritis, and a chronically painful hip. It is important to note that you may not be aware of your dogs discomfort. The problem has been present since the dog was 2-4 months old, and your pet has learned to live with the pain. Dogs with dysplasia usually do not cry out in pain. They either limp on the sore leg, or are less active than usual. Often, if both hips are painful, a dog will hop like a rabbit while running or going up stairs or stand up slowly, especially in the morning. Once the discomfort subsides after surgery, the dogs personality and activity level improve dramatically. I am often told by pet owners that their dogs play and act like puppies again.

Read More on Hip Dysplasia Here

Logmein.com – the best way to access your office PC or Home PC from anyway in the world

If you are looking for ways to access your office PC or home PC remotely to perform some basic functionwith having to pay any fee, you should look at www.logmein.com where the free version allow you to login your computer remotely and perform function just like you are sitting in front of that PC.

Log Me In

Sign up and installation is easy and I have tried to connect to the host PC and found that the connection is as such that it is almost as good as you are sitting in front of the host PC. It is simply an excellent service.

The Pro version which is a paid version allow you to synchonize file, transfer and backup file securely, allow others to access your PC temporary and more. The service cost USD 69.95 per year.