I am so sorry to hear about Buddy. Glad to hear he is still the happy dog he always has been. That means he will continue to lead a happy healthy life regardless of his sight.![]()
I am so sorry to hear about Buddy. Glad to hear he is still the happy dog he always has been. That means he will continue to lead a happy healthy life regardless of his sight.![]()
Our goal in life should be - to be as good a person as our dog thinks we are.
Thank you for the siggy, Michelle!
Cindy (Human) - Taz (RB Tabby) - Zoee (RB Australian Shepherd) - Paizly (Dilute Tortie) - Taggart (Aussie Mix) - Jax (Brown & White Tabby), - Zeplyn (Cattle Dog Mix)
Thank you all for the encouragement! I found this article online...
"It is also important to realize that it is OK to grieve about your pet's vision loss, but you must not put your sad feelings in your dog's head—they aren't really there! Your dog is not suffering. They adjust well to their vision loss, and it is by far hardest to deal with on the owner's side. Your dog's job description has not changed. Your blind dog is happy as long as its routine is stable. From your dog's point of view, life continues to be great-- you are there as always, and they just need to use their other keen senses a bit more to get the same information they used to view."
And I think that describes the situation perfectly. He will still always be my beloved silly boy... but I do miss those hi-fives he used to give me. He always obeyed me because of the hand signal, not my voice command. Hi-five was our favorite trick. And looking back, I remember how in the last several months he started sitting up on his hind legs and using both front paws...maybe because he couldn't see my hand very well? Now he completely ignores my hand. Anyway...enough of my rambling; I'm thankful I still have him.![]()
Owned by my baby and heart-dog Lolli.
If each pet we love takes a part of our heart and replaces it with a part of theirs, my heart is a very strange collection of pieces, but I wouldn't have it any other way
Some people believe holding on and hanging in there are signs of great strength. However, there are times when it takes much more strength to know when to let go, and then do it. --Ann Landers
I'm just seeing this now. I'm sure this is a shock for you. I'm glad you got him right in to the vet.
Blind dogs learn to navigate from the water bowl. So you should try to never move that. Then, moving furniture will take him time to adapt to. Most folks move furniture at Christmas time, to make room for a tree, so you may need to reconsider what you want to do, in December. And any holidays where they host a big dinner, often furniture gets moved around then, as well.
If you have a fenced in yard, and you are confident there are no holes from ground hogs and such, you can buy a ball with a bell in it. Buddy can still hear fine, and will quickly catch on to the new game of 'fetch.' Of course, it helps if he USED to play fetch, one of my dogs just watches the ball, then looks at me: you threw it, you go get it.
If you took him for walks around the neighborhood, you can also still do that. You need to watch for the sewer grates, a dog normally will walk around those, you will want to be sure you move the ensure his feet don't fall in the holes.
.
Thank you! I'm going to start a new thread for ideas for helping him.
Owned by my baby and heart-dog Lolli.
If each pet we love takes a part of our heart and replaces it with a part of theirs, my heart is a very strange collection of pieces, but I wouldn't have it any other way
Some people believe holding on and hanging in there are signs of great strength. However, there are times when it takes much more strength to know when to let go, and then do it. --Ann Landers
Copyright © 2001-2013 Pet of the Day.com
Bookmarks