tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-59359693512460606202024-02-20T17:50:34.261-08:00Ahwatukee-Pet-Blog-ThingOn pet sitting and animal care, Ahwatukee, small business and economic development, and anything else that happens to fall between.Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-66091892187620867452008-07-08T07:12:00.000-07:002008-07-08T12:35:16.634-07:00zoiks!<p>The last two weeks have been <strong>packed</strong> for me - as soon as the temperature hit 115, half the population of Ahwatukee suddenly got the urge to bolt out of town and of course needed a pet sitter. So I've had a full dance card the past two weeks straight, and just as I finished gigs with five clients over the July 4th weekend, a slew of new ones are coming in. I've had to turn away at least three new clients as I've blocked off a week at the end of July for my <em>own</em> family vacation.</p><br /><br /><p>Not that I'm complaining: this is the second best job I've ever created, next to being a full-time stay-at-home parent (and that is no longer an option since they're all in <em>school, bwAH HA HA HA!!!</em>). And like any small business owner, I'm thrilled to see it taking off this way: it validates of my philosophy and practice, makes a lot of my early frustration laughable, and also puts food on my family.</p><br /><br /><p>So as I print out new client forms for my next two meet-and-greets, here are a couple of threads for your perusal.</p><br /><br /><p><br /><ol><br /><li>Area animal shelters are full, if not overfilled. <a href="http://www.maricopa.gov/pets/" target="new">Maricopa County Animal Care and Control</a> reports they are receiving about <em>200 strays per day</em> (see item 3 below), and other shelters have to turn away animals because there is simply no more room. Ahwatukee Cat Rescue has had to scale back our stray cat operations (as opposed to feral cats, whom we trap, neuter, and release) as <strong>any new strays brought to the shelter are likely to be euthanized</strong>.<br /><br />Your takeaway on this? <a href="http://www.maricopa.gov/Pets/Adoptions/Default.aspx" target="new">Go adopt some critters</a>.</li><br /><br /><li><a href="http://localfirstaz.com/" target="new">Local First Arizona</a> is an organization devoted to homegrown, independent Arizona businesses (and of which Ahwatukee Pet Sitting is now a member). They appear to embrace the sort of local economy ideas I've been spouting about for years.<br /> <br />From their website: "When you shop at a locally owned business, 45 cents of every dollar stays in Arizona - versus only 13 cents of every dollar spent at a national chain! Put your money where your house is." </li><br /><li><a href="http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2008/07/07/20080707petforeclosure0707.html" target="new">' Foreclosure pets' filling Valley shelters</a>: Monday's AZ Republic ran a front page story on another effect of rampant home foreclosures: a population explosion among homeless pets. The latest addition to the Ahwatukee Cat Rescue Foster Home is one such foreclosure pet, a sweet & sour long haired female cat who'd been frequenting friendly back yards the next neighborhood over (props to the people who fed her for those months). We took her in as a foster and searched for her people, but no one came forward. She's just one of thousands of family pets who have been left to fend for themselves - the shelters are overloaded.<br /><br /><strong>Now go <a href="http://www.azhumane.org/artman2/publish/findapet/petsearch.shtml" target="new">adopt</a> one, or two, or five....</strong></li><br /><li>I've finally gotten around to reading Cesar Millan's latest book <em>Be The Pack Leader</em>, which I highly recommend to any current or prospective dog owner. I find Cesar's work to be of great benefit not only as a professional pet sitter but also as a parent and a business person as well. Plus, he has a few memorable quotes like this one: <br /><br /><blockquote>Humans are the only species on earth that will follow a totally unbalanced, unstable leader.</blockquote><br />And that explains plenty.</li><br /><br /><li>Did I mention that you can <a href="http://azrescue.org/how_to_adopt.php" target="new">adopt one or more homeless animals</a> <em>right now?</em> </li><br /></ol><br /></p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-3351913788568535212008-05-23T08:08:00.000-07:002008-05-23T08:27:24.210-07:00desert pet care tips (reprise)<p>We got lucky, weird, or both this past week: our first official hundred-degree day, followed by a thick blanket of soaking thunderstorms three days later, cooling us down into the 70s. Seasonal transitions here in the Sonoran desert are rarely boring....</p><br /><br /><p>So enjoy the brief taste of Pacific northwestern weather while it lasts - another day or two, probably - and remember that once this cold front passes it will be the beginning of the Sonoran Summer. Meaning, of course, intense ultraviolet rays for fifteen hours a day, every last strip of shade a little oasis, and that northeastern or midwestern hellhole you had to go visit over the winter holidays is looking just a little friendlier as July looms on the calendar. </p><br /><br /><p>So once again I redirect your attention to DesertUSA's summary of <a href="http://www.desertusa.com/mag07/sept07/pet.html" target="new">Desert Pet Care Tips</a>. Last year they waited until September to post this excellent resource; fortunately it's still on their website.</p><br /><br /><p>The only thing I'd add to the article is that when considering shaded areas in your yard: <span style="font-style: italic">measure it</span>. Mark off the area that you think provides shade with chalk or lawn stakes at least three times during the course of a day: morning, midday, and late afternoon. The nice shady spot on the patio at nine a.m. may become an open barbeque pit at one p.m. <span style="font-weight: bold">Don't guess, make sure your pets have shade all day</span>.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-70430684248536505872008-05-21T09:11:00.000-07:002008-05-21T09:57:04.476-07:00More about Pumpkin and Behrendt's commentary<p>Ahwatukee Foothills News readers wrote back with a vengeance after Emily Behrendt's misguided and misinformed commentary. The majority of <a href="http://www.ahwatukee.com/sections/letters/" target="new">letters</a> in the print edition of last Wednesday's (May 14) AFN set the record straight on Behrendt's factual errors regarding pit bulls and rottweilers, animal mistreatment, and inbreeding in particular. One writer cited <a href="http://badrap.org/rescue/" target="new">BadRap.org</a>, which is not linked from AFN's website.</p><br /><br /><p>The 5/14 print edition of AFN also featured a full page ad in memory of Pumpkin from Deloris Delluomo, the woman who rescued Pumpkin three years ago. Deloris could have been bitter and lashed out at Maricopa County Animal Control or at the judge who ignored her pleas to find an alternative to killing Pumpkin. Instead she turned her anger and grief to fuel her longtime mission of working toward the benefit of homeless animals: </p><br /><br /><blockquote><br /><span style="text-style: italic"><br />...What I have learned in all these years of fighting for animals is this: We can build bigger and better shelters, where larger numbers of pets can be housed and killed, we can educate children in schools, we can neuter and spay until we're blue in the face, and try to convince those who already have too many pets to adopt just one more.<br /><br /><br /><br />But as long as pet owners fail to act responsibly by having their pets neutered and spayed, as long as consumers continue to encourage breeding by buying rather than adopting or rescuing, and as long as legislators fail to regulate responsibly by enacting breeding laws, no one wins....<br /></span><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold">...Today my resolve to fight for these abandoned and helpless animals is stronger than ever and I will continue to do so... in memory of Pumpkin.</span><br /></blockquote> <br /><br /><p>I couldn't have said it better.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-82472731412254576892008-05-11T16:51:00.000-07:002008-05-21T08:34:29.231-07:00bad dogs or bad people?<p>If you've been following the story of <a href="http://www.ahwatukee.com/news/pumpkin_3147___article.html/delluomo_dog.html" target="new">Pumpkin, the pit bull terrier who was euthanized Thursday</a> after attacking an Ahwatukee woman and her two Yorkshire terriers, you probably have a strong opinion one way or the other. By the owner's account Pumpkin was an average dog, gentle with her family and never previously prone to attacks. The victim of the attack differed, and in the end a Phoenix Municipal Judge ruled Pumpkin had to die.</p><br /><br /><p>I do not want to diminish the severity of either the injuries sustained by the victims - one of the Yorkies nearly died, and their owner faces a long recovery from her wounds - or the loss of Pumpkin to her family. But I believe <a href="http://www.ahwatukee.com/articles/pit_3131___article.html/bull_dangerous.html" target="new">this commentary by Emily Behrendt</a> in the Ahwatukee Foothills News needs to be rebutted, and unfortunately what I have to say about it is inappropriate for the comments section of that online paper.</p><br /><br /><p>They might be amenable to my opinion that pit bulls and rottweilers are not, as Behrendt suggests, inherently dangerous animals and unfit as pets. Too many pit bulls and rotties are brutalized as puppies in order to turn them into attack dogs or worse, and these breeds are selected for this because they have the characteristics that make that sort of abuse a success. Personally, I'd like nothing more than to see some of the people that "raise" their dogs to be killers put into a cage with one of their prize students for a few hours or days.</p><br /><br /><p>What would probably get my comment booted from the AFN website is my contention that Pumpkin attacked those two Yorkies for the simple reason that something she sensed from them set off some of her more primal instincts, marked them either as prey or as weaklings that needed to be driven out for the good of the pack, and acted accordingly. This isn't a trait limited to pit bulls, rottie, dobermans, or any of the dogs that scare us as a society: <em>it could have happened with any dog</em>, particularly a purebred.</p><br /><br /><p>Two anecdotes to illustrate this: I knew a rottweiler named Max owned by a bar owner in Scotland. My girlfriend at the time worked there, and sometimes I'd come pick her up at the end of her shift. Max was there, wagging his tail, greeting every customer with his playful nature. As he got used to me he'd put his paws up on the bar when I sat down and demand that I scratch his ears before I touched my pint.</p><br /><br /><p>But every so often someone would walk into the bar that would set Max off. His whole affect changed dramatically: he'd put his paws up on the bar in an aggressive stance, bare his teeth and growl at the newcomer, and would not back down until that person left. The bar keeps would simply tell the man (it was always a man) that Max didn't like him and that he'd better leave. Upon seeing Max, they did so without argument.</p><br /><br /><p>I could not tell you what it was that set Max off, but his owners knew how to deal with his reaction: remove the source of his agitation. Once the man left, Max would return to his usual jolly self.</p><br /><br /><p>More recently - two days ago to be exact - I was walking a pair of elderly miniature schnauzers and an eight year old Jack Russell terrier who thinks she's eight <em>months</em> old. As a pair of Maltese or similar little white dogs came around the corner my three charges began growling and pulling at their leashes as if they wanted to rip the throats out of the other two. The smaller of the schnauzers, who suffers from severe degenerative hip problems and could fit in my pocket, might have done so if I hadn't had a good hold on her. As soon as the other owner and I got clear of each other my three defenders of the sidewalk got back to the business of happily sniffing the bushes, as if the other two dogs had never existed.</p><br /><br /><p>The dogs we keep as our household friends and companions are descended from predators, and all retain some degree of that proto-canid nature. We may never understand what sets one dog off and not another, but we have to recognize that they all have that potential. We have no right to single out particularly strong breeds like pit bulls, rotties, shepherds, etc., as Behrendt does, because any dog can snap for Dog knows whatever reason. <strong>Particularly the purebred ones.</strong></p><br /><br /><p>Therein, I believe, lies the problem. Pure breeding limits the genetic health of any creature, and dogs are no exception. I've said before that the best dog you can possibly have is the mutt you adopt from the pound, because s/he will not only appreciate you taking hir home but s/he will be genetically more robust than a purebred.</p><br /><br /><p>I refrain from posting my comments on AFN because I don't believe I'm articulate enough to write it in a way that won't leave at least a few people thinking I'm suggesting the Yorkies deserved to die because Pumpkin responded to them as prey. I am certainly not saying that. What I am saying is that we have to stop patronizing not only the bad breeders who damage their dogs but the ones who damage the entire species by limiting their gene pool and virtually insuring they will have mental and/or physiological problems at some point in their lives</p><br /><br /><p>We single out pit bulls because they are strong and scary. We single out rottweilers because they are big, black, strong and scary (see the Big Black Dog post). We need to recognize that dog ownership carries a responsibility to the species itself in the form of not perpetuating the madness of pure breeding and to accept that dogs sometimes just lose their shit.</p><br /><br /><p>Get well, Yorkies and Yorkie owner.</p> <br /><br /><p><strong><em>Rest in peace, Pumpkin.</em></strong><br /></p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-82649306554432926072008-04-23T08:38:00.000-07:002008-04-23T09:22:48.351-07:00Black Dog<p>Not the Led Zeppelin tune, but the ugly and/or scary looking mutt at the pound. According to a recent <a href="http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5g9SYCbI-YZhTr_cP93bmRcqkx7MgD8VUI1J80" target="new">AP article by Emily Zeugner</a> that ran in Sunday's AZ Republic, animal shelters nationwide have a hard time finding homes for big black dogs (BBDs). </p><br /><br /><p>There aren't any good statistics on this, but the national <a href="http://www.aspca.org/" target="new">ASPCA</a> hears the same story over and over again: BBDs don't get adopted, and too many of them wind up euthanized. Shelter workers cite a number of logistical difficulties - they don't photograph as easily as lighter colored dogs, their expressions are harder to read - but the bottom line is that people find them scary.</p><br /><br /><p> Last week I had a client with two dogs, one of whom was a big black lab. She had been adopted as a puppy, survived both Parvo and Valley Fever, and now she has diabetes and cataracts. It takes a rare (too rare) type of person to keep caring for a dog with so many problems - a lesser person would have given up on this dog a long time ago, and I doubt she'd have made it out of the next shelter alive. </p><br /><br /><p>The question I ask myself is, if she'd been a smaller and lighter colored dog, would she face the same odds? I doubt it. We have a cultural image of big black dogs as Hellhounds, and I think we project our own worst intentions of malice and mayhem onto them. (For the record, the BBD I sat for last week is a complete sweetie.)</p><br /><br /><p>I propose a national service corps of BBDs as part of a larger program of behavioral therapy for all Americans. If they can help us face up to our own fears, especially the fears of our own shadows, we'll all be much happier and healthier as a people - and the dogs will get to live. Until that happens, go to the <a href="http://www.azhumane.org/" target="new">Arizona Humane Society</a> or the nearest <a href="http://www.maricopa.gov/pets/" target="new">Maricopa County Animal Care & Control center</a> and meet one in person. Then adopt one or two!</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-86004424535134362382008-04-23T08:28:00.000-07:002008-04-23T08:36:46.322-07:00"Well, I'm back"<p>I've always found Sam Gamgee's words at the end of the <span style="font-style:italic;">Lord of the Rings</span> trilogy to be an excellent starting point for rebounding from the inevitable slips and pitfalls of my life. That plus Kilgore Trout's creed from Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s 1996 novel <span style="font-style:italic;">Timequake</span>: </p><br /><blockquote>You were sick, but now you're well, and there's work to do.</blockquote><br /><p>So after several months of bloglessness, partly due to spending more time pet sitting than writing (and partly due to my own inertia), I am declaring myself both Back and Well.</p> <br /><p>Or something like that.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-13114265257760894452007-09-15T20:37:00.000-07:002007-09-15T20:43:55.783-07:00Desert pet care tips<p>A little late for some of the hot weather related items, but still pertinent: <br /><a href="http://www.desertusa.com/mag07/sept07/pet.html">Protecting your pet in the desert</a> (from DesertUSA)</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-68612124029852835622007-09-01T08:48:00.000-07:002007-09-01T10:13:54.972-07:00Hello, Petty Tyrants!<p>It's a good thing I've been offline for the last week or so, because what I wanted to post yesterday would have come back to bite me. My 'net connection mysteriously reappeared this morning after a night's sleep allowed me to cool down some.</p><br /><br /><p>I've been spending most of my available time marketing the pet sitting business, both on the web and in the real(ish) world. The online part has been a lot easier, partly due to my web builder background and work-from-home preferences but also thanks to a few maddening obstacles I hadn't completely anticipated.</p><br /><br /><p>In Ahwatukee there isn't a lot of publc space for publicizing small businesses. Signage is pretty much confined to brick-and-mortar stores, billboards, and anything you can legibly place on a moving vehicle. Sign walkers are usually tied to a nearby physical place of business, and in our recent spate of 110 humid degrees it'd be inhumane.</p><br /><br /><p>That leaves the more direct methods of marketing. Direct mail is out of my reach right now, and may always be. I could take a cue from landscapers and leave business cards on cars windows and front doors, but that's a little more labor-intensive than I can manage right now even without the swelter factor. Besides, if I am to target the advertising to pet owners, I need to do better than slap marketing materials into places where they are neither wanted nor needed.</p><br /><br /><p>So, the postering campaign. Any sort of public display can easily be ignored by those with no interest, so I figured if I could post a few flyers in common public areas then pet owners could take or leave the information as they like. From the outset I've been aware of the City of Phoenix's no-postering ordinance, so there was no way I was going to slap the flyers onto city-owned property. The Pecos Community Center had no such public spots for commercial advertising either, and I wouldn't want to post signs in our parks even if it was legit to do so.</p><br /><br /><p>Since Ahwatukee neighborhoods tend to use cluster mailboxes rather than individual ones, I looked through the <a href="http://usps.com/" target="new">Post Office website</a> for any regulations or prohibitions on posting on the cluster boxes. I found none, although usps.com is not exactly the most usable site on the planet</p><br /><br /><p>I did a few test runs in my own neighborhood at first to see if there was any reaction from our regular letter carriers. Everything seemed kosher, and I even got a few calls from prospective clients. After an out-of-town trip last weekend, I started postering in a few surrounding areas.</p><br /><br /><p>Thursday afternoon I got a call from a woman who claimed to be a Post Office employee who informed me that use of USPS facilities was "against the law" and that I would be fined if I did not take them down. I told my anonymous caller that I had checked for postal regulations and had not found anything prohibiting me from doing so, but if she could tell me which "law" was in question here I'd be glad to comply.</p><br /><br /><p>My attempts to get more details from her were met with bureaucratic evasions and indifference, which in itself led me to believe that she really was from the Post Office. I tried returning her call to see if it was really a USPS number, but all I got were busy signals. On the fourth or fifth try the phone rang about a dozen times before shunting me to an automated system that simply asked for a security code. By then I'd figured it was not worth it to tangle with a vast federal bureaucracy that still had not discovered voice mail yet managed to determine that packages over thirteen ounces were a threat to homeland security and must be placed directly in the hands of a postal clerk.</p><br /><br /><p>Less than two hours later I had another call, this time from a sour-sounding woman who said she lived in one of the neighborhoods in which I'd postered. She asked if I'd gotten permission from the Homeowners Association to put up my signs. I told her that I had not but had spoken to the Post Office about it and would be taking down the flyers at their request. Before I could inform her that the HoA had no jurisdiction over USPS property (even if they'd like to think they do) she commented that "it makes the neighborhood look <em>terrible</em>".</p><br /><br /><p>She hung up before I could lose my, um, cool. My head was racing with thoughts of quasi-suburbanites trying to grow grass lawns in the hot desert, leaving unused backyard swimming pools uncovered in August, running sprinkler systems at noon or hosing down pavements to the point where the storm gutters were running for blocks, the endless stream of contractors' trucks parked on sidewalks ... and I was the one ruining the neighborhood.</p><br /><br /><p>HoAs are following the life cycle that labor unions went through in the 1970s. Starting as a collective force for a common interest, they've become creatures more interested in their own growth than in their original mission. They manage to do so by maintaining the illusion that they somehow preserve property values when in reality they may do more to lower them in the long run. Good thing I didn't print my flyers in Sedona Red....</p><br /><br /><p>So in the course of this week I've not only posed a threat to national security but also been pegged for sinking property values. I had no idea my little pet sitting service was such a force for evil and destruction.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-83225599367705944682007-08-04T09:58:00.000-07:002007-08-04T11:03:41.685-07:00Speaking of localism...<p>after I wrote the last post I read the lead "story" in Friday's <a href="http://www.azcentral.com/community/ahwatukee/" target="new">Ahwatukee Republic</a> section of the AZ Republic. Colleen Sparks' "Why leave Ahwatukee?" read like a PR piece written by a local chamber of commerce or homeowners association, and in fact much of it consisted of quotes from a member of the Foothills HOA board.</p><br /><br /><p>The reason I cite this article is that on the surface it discussed some of the reasons we live in, as Colleen put it, "the world's largest cul-de-sac". Ahwatukee Foothills may be the poster child for Phoenix's Urban Village model: technically part of the City of Phoenix, but in practice nearly a self-contained municipality. Having retail stores and services here within our political and geographic boundaries is an essential requirement for this sort of semi-isolation, and Sparks' article focuses on the fact that we have enough of those to keep shoppers and homeowners relatively happy.</p><br /><br /><p>But what she only barely touches in the piece is that while we have almost no lack of shopping and services here, it seems most of it is in the form of chains and big boxes rather than locally-owned businesses. She did mention a few local businesses, but the front page photo says it all: the HOA board member, standing outside a Blockbuster with a Starbucks cup in his hand.</p><br /><br /><p>I don't want to suggest that Sparks is not a good reporter. In fact, she generally does a good job covering our quasi-burb for the Republic, and the end of the piece covers a lot of what's genuinely great about our piece of the city. Furthermore, her blogging conveys a real sense of place - see her recent blog entry on the <a href="http://www.azcentral.com/members/Blog/ColleenSparks/4575" target="new">closing of the Coffee Plantation store at 48th & Warner</a>. My point is that to be a place in itself, Ahwatukee needs to move beyond the big box strip mall model and grow more locally-owned businesses.</p> <br /><br /><p>I don't expect our nominally local news supplement to be much of a booster behind this, as I suspect there isn't a whole lot of prospective advertising revenue from the likes of, oh, say, Ahwatukee Pet Sitting. But we have to start pushing Ahwatukee's economy to the next level, and we can do a lot better than patting ourselves on the back for having our own supermarkets.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5935969351246060620.post-22222933860578747292007-08-02T06:25:00.000-07:002008-04-01T16:16:06.598-07:00Navigating the flash floods of localism<p>One thing I'm trying to do while growing this business is to buy goods and services from other local businesses whenever possible. It's pretty well established that money spent with locally-based businesses puts more money into local economies than money spent at national chains.</p><br /><br /><p> I've preached Localism for over fifteen years, sometimes to a fault, Here in Ahwatukee it can be hard to practice, especially since a lot of the would-be local businesses seem to be outside our urban village limits. Maybe that's just the relatively short time I've lived here, but as I drive through our commercial areas I see mostly Big Boxes.</p><br /><br /><p>In my line of work part of keeping local is a no-brainer. I work with veterinarians by neccessity, and with the exception of a certain national chain that will remain nameless here, vets tend to be locals. I'm not going to exclude a certain veterinary practice in Elliot Park from my service area just because it's part of that national chain, but I'm focusing on the neighborhood-based clinics.</p><br /><br /><p>I didn't do so well on this front yesterday: I had flyers to print, and took advantage of KinkEx's online printing services instead of taking my flyers over to a neighborhood copy shop. The truth is, it was a lot more convenient and efficient - I uploaded the files, paid by credit card, and picked them up when I was in the area. The nature of this particular service will set a high barrier to entry for smaller, independent copy centers - at least for a while.</p><br /><br /><p>To make up for it, I'm taking my Applied Laziness experiment over to Laloo's this morning and pump some local dollars into a local croissant and coffee.</p>Jon Druckerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11423102000414296851noreply@blogger.com0