From a New York Times best-selling author, an important and heartfelt exploration into the world of lost dogs and the power of reunion One in six dogs go missing at some point in their lives, leaving bereft owners to search high and low, hang missing posters, check shelters, and hope for good news. But amid these grim statistics, countless happy endings are forged. Tails wag again. Best friends are reunited. In Where the Lost Dogs Go, Susannah Charleson, author of Scent of the Missing and a trusted chronicler of the human/animal bond, dives headlong into the world of missing dogs. The mission to reunite lost pets with their families starts with Susannah’s own shelter rescue, Ace, a plucky Maltese mix with a mysterious past who narrowly survived months wandering lost. While Susannah formally studies animal behavior, lost-pet search tactics, social media strategies, and the psychology of loss, Ace also steps up for training. Cheerful and resourceful, Ace has revealed a nose for the scent of lost pets, and together they help neighbors and strangers in their searching. In Where the Lost Dogs Go, readers take to the streets beside Susannah to bring home a host of missing pets. Along the way, Susannah finds a part of herself also lost. And when unexpected heartbreak shatters her own sense of direction, it is Ace—the shelter dog that started it all—who leads Susannah home. Inquisitive, instructive, heartrending, and hopeful, Where the Lost Dogs Go pays tribute to the missing dogs—and to the found—and to the restless space in between.
Some horse facilities are set up in the business of buying and selling horses. They typically are not breeders and do not breed their own livestock, nor do they specialize in any one breed of horse or riding discipline.
By way of welcome Dawn snatched up a newly-cut thorn bush, and with this offering, he cantered over to her. The thorns became enmeshed at once in the filmy dress she was wearing. Gleesomely Dawn galloped around and around her, ...
A celebration of feline idiosyncrasies shares lighthearted explanations of such perplexing behaviors as getting stuck in trees, delivering kills to the doorstep and landing on their feet, in a volume complemented by evocative black-and ...
... 101 Ceratopteris thalictroides, 116–117, 124, 145, 164 chain sword, 121 chelating agents, 84 chemical filtration, 47 cherry shrimp, 181,235 chip clip, 223 chloramine, 28 chloride, 84 chlorine, 28 Christensen, Claus, 23 cichlid, 163, ...
Advance Praise for Decoding Your Dog: Kudos to the Veterinary Behaviorists! Decoding Your Dog is a welcome addition to the voices supporting science-based and benevolent dog training. Read this book and your dog will thank you for it!
部分視力依然受損,我跟他的主人說,可能要好幾週或好幾個月,視力才有可能會改善。我們讓灰灰出院,他的主人帶著灰灰和皮下注射液一起回家。我指示他們要在灰灰每一餐的食物中加入磷結合劑,而且只能吃高蛋白質罐頭,每天都要服用貝那普利和脈優錠。
First Ever Guide to Hunter, Jumper, and Halter Obstacle for the Miniature Performance Horse! This great book will help owners train their horses and correct common mistakes.
At the highest level, my friend Delia Daniels, an artist at traditional Spanish high school, uses banks and slopes so imaginatively and skilfully that when a horse is strong and well-balanced enough he naturally offers her piaffe and ...
The Yorkshire veterinarian's sequel to All Things Bright and Beautiful focuses on his induction into the RAF during World War II, his trips back to Yorkshire, and his recollections of animals that he has cared for and people who have ...
However, the excitement of facing the challenge of the canyon, and witnessing the unparalleled beauty for the first time, created a magnetic force that tugs as strongly today as it did when Major John Wesley Powell made his first ...