Loki is doing well. Quite unmannered but is learning really quickly. Our first walk he showed that he was reactive to other dogs and that he didn’t really like walking. I have purchased a harness which I use alongside his collar and this has worked out better. I’ve also started de-conditioning training by offering treats when he shows no reaction when walking. Bless him – a lot for one week.
Benny
Hi, it’s been over a year since we got Benny from you and we just wanted to say thank you and to let you know what an amazing boy he is.
He was very nervy when he first arrived and the first week with us was quite eventful! We would find him walking on the worktops looking for food or he would be standing on the dining room table without you even noticing. He managed to prize his way into a tightly sealed dog food bucket and proceeded to eat everything that was inside. He was then bouncing off the walls for about an hour afterwards!
He settled really quickly though. He is really chilled out and is such a loving boy. He loves being outside, lying in the garden, watching out for squirrels and any flying bugs. He has three walks a day and loves to play with some of the other big dogs that live locally. It’s taken a while but he is off his lead and loves a good run around. But I think his favourite time of day is having a cuddle on the sofa in the evening.
He really is a gentle giant and we feel we have really lucked out to have such a loving, beautiful boy, he brings us so much joy. He has grown so much in this past year and is not only part of our family but part of the neighbourhood, everyone knows and loves him.
We cannot thank you enough for allowing Benny into our lives, he is a very special boy and we all love him dearly.
Thank you again,
Kindest regards,
Lisa, Simon, Mason & George Bennett
Toby
Dear Mutts,
I thought you would like an update on Toby – known to you as Santa, who was found in Saffron Walden at Christmas. We took him home in January.
He has been a wonderful companion to us and is very loving and funny with his antics. He is a happy little chappie now, very much loved.
Thankyou for such a wonderful dog. Stay safe in these troubled times.
Linda and Toby
Orla Update
Hi Mutts,
As it’s Orla’s first Gotcha Day, I just wanted to thank you again and wish you all well.
Sadly Orla never got to the Italian campsite this year but has done every inch of the field paths around Cambridge. She knows a few basic tricks but has yet to master recall (I have since learned a lot about the Saluki !).
Thank you again; keep well and here’s hoping for better times in 2021.
Sue, Nick & Orla xxx
Ivy at home.
Dear Mutts,
Ivy is very settled here with us now and certainly feels this is her home. She’s such a gentle sweet dog with her family. She’s a brilliant addition to the family.
However, she certainly barks at any visitors to the door and passers by. Lockdown has probably not helped this. She’s already getting better with meeting people now measures are easing. We took her to the beach the other day which she thought was very exciting. Clearly her first visit to the seaside! She was also brilliant with seeing so many other people and dogs.
We’re slowly working at training her which is making some progress with recall. She loves her balls but we still struggle with getting her to drop them for us to throw again! This is our next training focus.
Thank you for letting us take her home with us. She’s much loved and she loves us back too.
Best wishes
The Wood family
Orla at home
Hello,
I hope you are all managing to keep well at this time!
I have my people at home all the time at the moment as they are (were!) supply teachers. I love this but I can tell Sue is bored because she won’t just let me chase squirrels but makes me learn things- I make sure that the clicking sound is followed by something good! I am doing very well, though, despite a point-blank refusal to ‘Fetch’, and have won the sofa battle…
I am very happy here and get tasty bones.
Love to you all,
Orla xx
Ross enjoying his home
Hello, this is Ross again, still having a great time. My master tells me that these times are difficult but he makes sure that we get our walks, we are down the river walk at 7.00 am walking and ball chasing for an hour. We were going out about 1.30 pm for a 90 min walk but now the weather is hotter we go out at 6.00 pm for an hour or so, so I am exercising him well.
In the evenings we sit on the settee together, with his arm over me gently stroking my chest, while he reads.
Sadly there may not be any holidays this year, and I do miss going out in the car, but he tells be that we will make up for it when we can.
Best regards Ross.
Orla is settling in.
Dear Jill and other Mutts staff,
Just to let you know that ‘Órla’ is settling in very well, sleeping quietly all night in her bed in the kitchen and doing her business in the garden.
She enjoys her walks, especially the quarry, where she can go off-lead as there is only one narrow, closed entrance. She has a retired Greyhound friend called Blaze, who is only her age and fancied himself the fastest thing in there until she ran him into the ground. After zoomies, she tends to walk with us- pure affection, nothing at all to do with my treat bag full of sausage.
Hunstanton proved interesting for her; after initially freaking out at the sea from a distance, she dragged me down to have a look at it!
She has a lovely nature and is much admired by all who meet her, although tall men may have to offer a piece of sausage before being allowed a tail wag.
Best wishes and Happy New Year to you all,
Sue & Nick
Orla/Tanya
Dear Jill and other Mutts staff,
Just to let you know that Orla is settling in very well, sleeping quietly all night in her bed in the kitchen and doing her business in the garden.
She enjoys her walks, especially the quarry, where she can go off-lead as there is only one narrow, closed entrance. She has a retired Greyhound friend called Blaze, who is only her age and fancied himself the fastest thing in there until she ran him into the ground. After zoomies, she tends to walk with us- pure affection, nothing at all to do with my treat bag full of sausage…
Hunstanton proved interesting for her; after initially freaking out at the sea from a distance, she dragged me down to have a look at it!
She has a lovely nature and is much admired by all who meet her, although tall men may have to offer a piece of sausage before being allowed a tail wag.
Best wishes and Happy New Year to you all,
Sue & Nick
Ross at home
Hello, my name is Ross and I used to live at your rescue centre. Then at the end of March, I was rescued by a senior couple called Ian & Jenny. I did not know how my life would change but it is great, we go playing ball every morning down the river walk and I have made lots of doggy and people friends. Then we work our way up into the park where there are Oak trees and guess what- squirrels, which I can chase but sadly there are too many trees for them to climb, so I have not caught one yet but it is really is fun. We also have a normal dog walk in the afternoons – again on the river walk but the opposite way and sometimes I get country walks and we go out in the car which I love.
Where it is safe, I am loose so I can enjoy freedom. I have just come back from my 3rd small holiday in 6 months, this time 4 days in Derbyshire. We stayed at a farmhouse and did lots of walking,mostly on the lead as there were often livestock about. We even saw some deer at Chatsworth but I could not play with them as again I was on a lead.
I am told that I have one more night away in a nice hotel near Bury St. Edmunds, then that is all for this year. I still get taken out for Sunday lunch to dog friendly pubs and sometimes cafes during the week. Life is so very busy so I am often pleased to crash out on the settee in the evenings with my master alongside.
Love Ross (a happy dog)