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The Happy Wag

MRIs for small animals available at VT in June

This news brief from the New River Valley made me happy:

The Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine's Veterinary Teaching Hospital will offer a new outpatient advanced imaging service for small animals starting in June.

The new service will provide weekly outpatient appointments for MRIs, CT scans and ultrasounds. If veterinarians think their patients need the advanced testing, they can make an appointment with the teaching hospital.

When we had a dog being treated at Virginia Tech two years ago, they had to take her to the people hospital in Montgomery County to have an MRI. Good to know small critters will have their own imaging equipment now.

Bethel Baptist Church partners in PET program

William Watson, RVSPCA executive director, and RVSCPA employees William Green and Nathan Miller assist Ann Richards of Manna Ministries in unloading food donated for the PET program.

William Watson, RVSPCA executive director, and RVSCPA employees William Green and Nathan Miller assist Ann Richards of Manna Ministries in unloading food donated for the PET program.

Bethel Baptist Church's food pantry has become the third partner in the Roanoke Valley SPCA's Pets Eat Too program.

Bethel's pantry joins Manna Ministries and the Local Office on Aging in distributing donated cat and dog food to elderly and low-income families in our area. The donated food, collected for the RVSPCA by retailers including Ukrops on Franklin Road and Black Dog Salvage on 13th Street in Old Southwest, allows families, especially seniors, to keep their beloved companions.

For the rest of the month of April, Black Dog Salvage will give a 25 percent discount to customers who bring in six cans or an 8-pound or larger bag of food for the PET program.

A chip in the shoulder

The Roanoke Valley SPCA is sponsoring a microchip clinic on Saturday, April 25, from 10 a.m. to noon.

The tiny chip is inserted under the pet's skin between the shoulder blades. That sounds worse than it actually is. Even my paper-thin-skinned greyhounds barely flinched when they were chipped. 

At the moment of chip insertion, I believe my kitty, Thai, gave the vet a very dirty look, similar to this one.

But hey, he's a cat. That's just how he rolls.

The chip can ensure that your pet finds the way home if he or she ever becomes lost. As careful as we all try to be with our pets, sometimes they just slip away. If your pet is found, that chip becomes your pet's identification card, allowing any animal control officer anywhere to be able to reunite you with your wayward fur baby.

Prove that you adopted your best buddy from the RVSPCA and the fee for the chip is only $15. For all other critters, the fee is $25. If you adopted your pal from the RVSPCA in the last two years, you have no worries; your critter is already chipped.

Friday round up

Lots of pet-related news to share with you today:

Big savings for small donations:

Black Dog Salvage, the architectural salvage store located at 902 13th Street at the Memorial Bridge in Old Southwest, is now a permanent drop-off location for pet food donations for the Roanoke Valley SPCA.

The RVSPCA collects donated pet food to distribute to needy families through Manna Ministries and Meals on Wheels. The expected need for families in the Roanoke area is 40,000 pounds per year.

To kick-off the food drive, the store is offering a 25 percent discount on all merchandise to customers that donate 6 or more cans or 8-pound or larger bags of food at the Black Dog.

The store is chock full of relics and antiques from commercial salvage and it's also the home of the Memorial Bridge Marketplace that features home and garden accessories from vendors and local artisans.

Call 343-6200 for more information.

Quick Take Pets

Photographer Kevin Hurley is offering 20-minute portrait sessions for pets for a sitting fee of $49 today and tomorrow. Hurley will donate $25 of each sitting fee to three local non-profit groups: the Roanoke Valley SPCA, St. Francis Service Dogs, and the Roanoke Dog Park.

The studio is located at 1360 Maple Avenue SW. Call 345-3055 for an appointment.

Adoptathon at PetSmart

The Roanoke Valley SPCA will have adoptable pets at the PetSmart store at Valley View on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

 

Doggy curfew in Campbell County

Finally, if you live in Campbell County, you should be aware that you are required by county ordinance to keep your dogs confined to your home or yard for a five-week period, beginning April 13 and ending May 15, from sunrise to sunset, Monday through Friday.

According to the public safety news release, the ordinance is intended to assist in identifying and capturing stray dogs.

Beagles and other hounds engaged in lawful hunting, the news release says, are exempt while they are hunting or training, but they need to have proper identification, specifically the owner's name and telephone number, attached to their collars while they are out.

During the confinement period, any such wayward beagle or hound picked up as one of the usual suspects will be returned to the owner without penalty.

Oakey's to open pet funeral home

Bereaved owners of the departed -- be they dogs, cats, fish or fowl -- will soon have a funeral home of their own.

Rezoning for a pet funeral home and crematory, the first of its kind for the region, was approved Tuesday night by the Roanoke City Council.

"It might be because I'm a big animal lover, but we just saw a need," said Sammy Oakey, president of Oakey's Funeral Service & Crematory.

The funeral home will be at 5416 Airport Road Northwest. A June opening is planned.

The funeral home will offer caskets, urns, plaques and memorial keepsakes designed for animals. The home will offer a cremation service, but has no plans for a cemetery.

The goal, according to information presented to the city council, is to "serve pet owners with the same care, dignity and respect that they do with human remains."

Oakey's will handle arrangements for all pets up to 200 pounds. "We won't be able to do horses or anything," Oakey said.

-- Laurence Hammack

Poser pooches wanted

I take a lot of pictures of my pets. Judging by how slow my husband's PC is lately, I would say I take way too many photos of my pets. But you have to snap a bunch to get a couple of good ones, and mine are never quite frame-worthy, really.

If you would like to have a nice portrait of your pet that is indeed worthy of a frame, and you like to help local nonprofit groups dedicated to the love of pets and people, then check out this deal from Kevin Hurley Photography.

On March 6 and 7, you can book a photo sitting for your pooch or kitty for $49. I guess you could also book your fish, parakeet or turtle, but I would think you could probably photograph your own turtle no matter how slow your shutter speed. I mean, not a lot of action there.

For your $49 photo session, you will recieve one 5x7 and two 3x5 prints, and Hurley will donate $25 of the fee to one of three local organizations of your choosing: the Roanoke Valley SPCA, St. Francis Service Dogs or the Roanoke Dog Park.

Sittings are by appointment only and you have to be prepared to pay in advance, and there is no refund for a missed appointment. Call 345-3055 to book a sitting and for more details.

And thanks to Christa of Black Dog Salvage for letting me know.

Beat the heat and stop the litters

Spring is coming and with it comes the season of love for kitties. Soon all the cats that still have all the kitten-making parts intact will be in heat and looking to hook up, which means thousands of little kitties will be looking for homes.

Not a good thing at all.

You can fix this problem by calling for an appointment to get your kitty spayed or neutered at the SCPA of Martinsville-Henry County on Feb. 24 for the bargain price of $25. That fee includes a rabies vaccine, so it's a great deal.

The "$25 on the 24th" services are provided through a partnership with Forsyth Spay/Neuter Clinic, Planned Pethood, Angels of Assisi, South Central Spay/Neuter and Merial as part of the ASPCA's Spay Day USA campaign.

The program will be able to alter 150 cats by appointment.

The SPCAM-HC is located at 132 Joseph Martin Highway in Martinsville. Call 276-638-PAWS for an appointment.

Ten pets eligible for free adoptions this Saturday

Titan is waiting to be adopted at the RVSPCA.

Titan is waiting to be adopted at the RVSPCA.

If you were thinking about adding a pet to your family, you might consider taking advantage of a one-day-only event a the Roanoke Valley SPCA.

The first 10 pets adopted at the RVSPCA on Saturday will have the adoption fee waived.

The non-profit, no-kill shelter found out today they can participate in the Hill's Science Diet "Change the Life of a Pet Day" this Saturday, Jan. 24.  That means the pet food company will reimburse the RVSPCA the adoption fees for the first 10 pets on this day only, so adoptive families can take a critter home for free.

The program is being sponsored nationwide by the pet food maker teamed with actress and adopted-pet advocate Kyra Sedgwick.

Normal adoption fees will apply for the rest of the adoptions on Saturday, and all the typical adoption procedures will be followed, including the application and screening process, for the 10 pets that Hill's Science Diet will cover. No pets can be placed on hold, so it's first come, first home.

All pets adopted from the RVSPCA are up-to-date on shots, spayed or nuetered, and microchipped, and all are sent home with a starter kit that includes food and tips on making the pet happy in his or her new home.

Even if you aren't able to take advantage of this generous offer from Hill's Science Diet, the adoption fees are very reasonable, especially considering the pets have already been fixed, chipped and vaccinated.

Click here to visit the RVSPCA Web site, which includes photos of adoptable pets and a quiz you can take to help match you with the ideal animal.

Adopting a pet should not be a rash decision, and really shouldn't be influenced solely by a bargain deal. But if you were already considering opening your heart and home to a new pooch or kitty, this is a great way to get off to a good start.

Grant will provide litter control

A grant from PetSmart Charities should mean there will soon be fewer unwanted puppies and kittens in Franklin County.

The foundation recently awarded more than $15,000 to offset the cost of spaying and neutering the pets of low-income families, according to a news release from the county's Humane Society. The grant should provide a fix for 312 pets. 

According to the news release, applicants for this Spay Neuter Assistance Program (S.N.A.P.) will be required to prove Social Services eligibility and residency in Franklin County.  Pet owners who meet all the requirements will be charged $10 for the sterilization surgery and a rabies vaccine. 

The $10 fee will be put back into the S.N.A.P. program to “spay it forward” to provide an additional 79 surgeries, so that should remove almost 400 critters from the dating scene.

The first round of appointments will be limited to one cat and one dog per family.  Interested pet owners are asked to call the Humane Society’s Planned Pethood Clinic at 489-3491 to schedule an appointment.  The discounted procedures will be limited to the first 391 pets but may be extended if enough donations are received to sponsor additional surgeries.

“We are happy that PetSmart Charities has made it possible for us to be able to offer this program to Franklin County residents,” Donna Essig, president of the Franklin County Humane Society, is quoted in the news release.  “We hope that these targeted sterilizations will have a major impact on the numbers of puppies and kittens being brought to area shelters next spring and will reduce the number of homeless or feral animals in our area." 

When I shop at PetSmart, I always kick in an extra buck when I check out for the PetSmart Foundation to help homeless pets. I'm happy to know that at least a couple of dollars will be put to good use here in our area.

Vets are there if you need them

This is my column  that ran in Monday's Extra section. On Christmas Eve last year we had to take Coral to the Emergency Vet Services to have a nasty wound stitched up. As much as I really enjoyed meeting all the folks who worked there, I hope we don't make that visit a holiday tradition.

But it is a great comfort to know that if we need them, they are there.

I am including a couple of photos that did not run in the newspaper. One is of the clinic cat, Nim, and the other was a patient at EVS when I was interviewing the vets. In the small world that is Roanoke, the three-legged kitten mentioned in the beginning of the article belongs to Morgan Jones who works in the Sales and Service department here at the paper. She sent me a photo of Abra and said he is doing much better now and weighs almost 2 pounds.

Please have a safe and happy holiday!

After-hours vet is a gift to pet owners

A collie-shepherd mix with back pain. An elderly cocker spaniel struggling to breathe. A Boston terrier puppy with swollen anal glands.

Those were just three of the five animals needing treatment at Emergency Veterinary Service of Roanoke on a recent Saturday night. They also had a three-legged kitten with severe diarrhea and a tiny Chihuahua, the loser in a battle with a bigger dog, ripped open from one shoulder to the other.

And they called it a slow night.

Just like in an emergency room for humans, the furry patients were triaged and treated according to the most urgent need by the veterinarians on duty, which on this evening included Tanya Woloshin, Myshelle Van Ore and Maureen Noftsinger, the clinic's medical director.

The Chihuahua required surgery. The spaniel needed an oxygen chamber. The kitten was kept for observation; the puppy and the collie mix were treated and released.

After that, the staff waited for the next worried pet parent to come through the door during the graveyard shift of veterinary medicine.

"Everyone who works here is very passionate about animals and emergency and critical care medicine," Noftsinger said. "We get accused of being all about the money, but that's not why I am here away from my family on holidays. It's really all about the animals."

Emergency Vet Services, founded and owned by Roanoke-area veterinarians, is at 4902 Frontage Road, off Peters Creek Road near Interstate 581, and is open during the hours a typical vet's office is closed: 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. Monday through Thursday; 6 p.m. Friday to 8 a.m. on Monday (Saturday morning walk-ins are limited to referrals from other vets).

The clinic is open Christmas Eve and all day and night on Christmas.

"We are very busy on the holidays," Noftsinger said. "We usually have a wait [to be seen] on the holidays. Christmas is typically a very heavy time for us."

After-hours vet care can be expensive; the emergency fee is $70 in addition to charges for any treatment administered.

"We aren't subsidized by anyone, and I think a lot of people think that we are," she said. "Unfortunately, in order for us to be able to be here, we have to charge for our services."

We found that out last Christmas Eve, when my husband and I took Coral, one of our greyhounds, to EVS to be treated for a deep, ragged gash in her side. We didn't think it could wait until our vet's office opened more than 36 hours later.

A year after Noftsinger put nine stitches in Coral's side, she has only a small, Harry Potter-like scar to show for her injury.

The five veterinarians employed at the clinic work 12-hour shifts on nights, weekends and holidays, 365 days a year.

"It's a hard job because of the hours and the clients that can be difficult," Noftsinger said. And by clients, she means the humans who bring in the patients.

"I had an 80-year-old man try to punch me," she said. Due to the late hours the clinic keeps, Noftsinger said they also deal with pet owners who are inebriated as well as agitated.

Noftsinger said the staff members know they are dealing with pet owners under the worst circumstances, when they are worried about their sick animal and the unexpected cost of the care. That anxiety can be exacerbated by the general stress of the holidays.

"We do as much counseling with the owners as we do taking care of the animals," she said. "We are dealing with delicate issues, sometimes euthanasia, and that can be very traumatic. There are definitely times when we have all broken down in a room with a client."

By contrast, Noftsinger said most canine and feline patients are cooperative with the care they receive.

"I really think they know we are here to help them," she said.

Sometimes counseling can be as simple as a visit from Nim, a calico tabby who has been the clinic's resident cat for the past three years. Noftsinger said the friendly feline can be a comfort to forlorn clients.

"She seems to know when people are upset," Noftsinger said. "She just comes by and struts her stuff. Sometimes when people are checking out, she will just sit on the counter and talk to them. She's a perfect clinic cat."

But even when tensions are high and emotions are raw, Noftsinger said helping people deal with their pets' problems is rewarding.

"We are trying to help the animals and the people that love them. It's cool to see the relationship that people have with their pets," she said. "They are members of the family."

The staff tries to assess an animal's needs over the phone with the owner, but Noftsinger said it is nearly impossible to properly diagnose a problem that way.

"Basically, our philosophy here is that if you are concerned, bring [the pet] in," she said. Calling ahead, however, is a good idea so they can be prepared, especially in trauma cases.

Noftsinger said they most often treat animals for bite wounds, injuries from being struck by vehicles, and stomach illness.

"Vomiting and diarrhea is absolutely the most common thing we see here," she said. "We see a lot of it, every single day."

What steps can owners take to minimize the chances of having to make a late-night trip to the animal ER?

"Vaccination is big. Using a leash is big, and [don't] feed pets what they are not supposed to [eat]," Noftsinger advised.

NOTE: The Dec. 8 Happy Wag column included a recipe for peanut butter dog biscuits. A reader pointed out a typographical error in that recipe. It should call for a teaspoon of baking powder, not a tablespoon.

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About this blog

The Happy Wag blog is a resource for pet parents in the Roanoke Valley, a local community forum of news and information about pets. Newsroom manager Nona Nelson's family includes four pets: retired racing greyhounds Dexter and Coral and former stray cats Thai and India. Read more about Nona and this blog

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    • Pam Hubbard: Hey, thanks for the post Nona! BTW, he had that same look when the vet suggested he drop 5 lbs - ha!...
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Get out!

Sunday, Aug. 16, from 4 to 7 p.m.

Bark in the Park

Dog wash held to benefit the Roanoke Valley SPCA in conjunction with a Salem Red Sox/Kinston Indians game. Cost includes a ticket for you and a ticket and bath for your pooch. $20 for dogs under 20 pounds, $30 for 21 and over, $8 for each additional person; dog washes for season ticket holders are $10 for pocket pooches and $20 for big sweeties. Game starts at 6:05 p.m.

Tickets on sale July 27.

Lewis Gale Field at Salem Memorial Ballpark, Salem.

 

Saturday, Aug. 29, from 5 to 9 p.m.

Bark for Life

Fundraiser for Roanoke Valley Relay for Life, part of the American Cancer Society. A one-mile walk led by human and canine cancer survivors, followed by a variety of contests and games. Dog baths and massages will also be available. Roanoke City Police K9 unit will perform a demonstration. A Wall of Hope will be built of purchased paper bones in remembrance of loved ones, human and pets. 

Call 774-2716 or go to www.barkforlife.org to register.

Six Wags Dog Park, Apperson Drive, Salem.

Saturday, Aug. 29, from 6 to 9:30 p.m.

Harvest-Fest concert

Blue Ridge Vineyard in Eagle Rock presents the band Exit 162. Friendly, leashed dogs are welcome to accompany adults. Part of the proceeds will benefit the Ruritans. Admission is $5 for adults. Food and beverage available for purchase. 

For more information and directions, go to  www.blueridgevineyard.com, call 798-7642 or e-mail blueridgevines@ntelos.net