Anonymous wrote:I am from 10:29, 22:28 with the 13 yo with PRA. Wanted to add that we are military and have moved 5 times with this dog. He’s done fantastic with new homes and with travel/ hotels as well. We have a collapsible kennel we travel with and he’s quite comfortable retiring to that in hotels and whenever.
I know everyone says don’t move furniture… and we don’t, once we’re in (much), but he figures it out super fast. But l I don’t think that part is as much of a crisis as it seems at first. Dog is happy to have his people, his toys, etc. New back yards are also pretty interesting for him, it seems. Could be personality but he just doesn’t seem to mind and more than that, seems pretty happy all around.
Anonymous wrote:I had a cat who survived being hit by a car and was blind as a result. Here are the things I found helpful. Don’t move furniture, they can memorize placement of furniture and can get around better if the doesn’t change. Helps to have colors of floors and walls different (dark vs light colors), if they will be able to have some ability to see color differences, keeps them from banging into walls. Gates around steps.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve looked at some of the “halos” for blind dogs to keep them from bumping into things, but they’re almost all for smaller breeds. My dog is a greyhound, so he’s 75 lbs and has a very long snout. I’m honestly not sure those will work on him.
Anonymous wrote:When your dog is sleeping and you walk up to them, pat the floor about a foot way from their face and talk gently so the patting wakes them and your voice tells them who is near. Do that before you pet.
:at, pat, pat:: "Hi Rosie"
at, pat, pat:: "Hi Rosie"