Tyreese D Puppydog

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Merry Christmas from Tyreese D Puppydog

Hi 'Reeses' Fans!

Have a Wonderful Christmas, and I hope Santa Paws stops by your home and brings lots of puppy toys and treats for all you good puppies.

I hope you like my little Christmas video message I made.

Sniffs and Tail Wags

Tyreese

Friday, December 07, 2007

Letter to Santa Paws


Dear Santa Paws,

I have been a good Puppy this year, and here is my list of presents I would like to find under my tree and in my stocking on Christmas Morning:

A Rope Pull Toy
A Squeaky Toy
A Catnip Mouse... I like those a lot!!
Some nice Treats
Some Cookies
A NylaBone... yummy to chew!
A small stuffed animal to play with me n Brown Dog!!!

Thank you Santa Paws for reading my little letter

Sniffs and Tail Wags

Tyreese

Thursday, December 06, 2007

At Disney World, family's pets get to wish upon a star, too



Hi 'Reeses' Fans,

Check out this cool place for Puppies to Stay in Florida!!

Walt Disney World is going after pet owners who might want to stay at the resort if they know their dogs will be coddled with bedtime stories or their cats treated to snacks such as tuna on Ritz crackers.

"We will be able to provide wonderful experiences for pets," said Dennis Dolan, president and chief executive officer of Best Friends Pet Care Inc.

Dolan's Norwalk, Conn., company just got a contract from Disney to operate the resort's five existing kennels and to build a boarding center where dogs and cats can stay in two-room suites with patios and get all the pampering they have come to expect.

Walks? Sure. Runs on an obstacle course? If they wish. Ice cream snacks. Bottled water. Supervised socializing with other pets. Elevated beds with lambs-wool bedding. If special bedding is desired — even orthopedic beds — those, too, will be available.

For dogs used to curling up on a child's bed and drifting off to sleep as a parent reads a bedtime story, bedtime stories will be available. For those conditioned to nap in front of a TV, televisions can be provided. And they won't be playing just any TV shows; they'll have dog movies, like The Adventures of Milo and Otis or Homeward Bound.

"A lot of people leave their televisions or radios on at home during the day to keep their pets company. This is really an idea that came to us from our clients who wanted a more homelike setting for their pets," said Best Friends spokeswoman Debra Bennetts. "What we provide is luxury suites. … It's really for that person who wants to make sure that their pet is being pampered the way they get pampered at home."

Cats will get a different kind of pampering. Their "condos" will come with lofts. Their TVs will play videos of birds. They can have aquariums to watch.

Dolan said luxury boarding for pets has been emerging for years, and he considers his company to be one of the innovators. Best Friends has 44 other boarding centers nationwide. Most of the luxury features are available at most of them.

At those other Best Friends centers, basic boarding fees for dogs range from less than $25 to more than $40 a day, depending on the local market and the size of the dog. Luxury features, such as 10 minutes of cuddle time, can be purchased separately for $2 to $12 per feature or in packages that add $12 to $38 a day to the cost.

The company has not yet set its Disney World luxury rates. Current Disney fees run from $10 to $20 a night, depending on the pet. Those basic rates will go up after Best Friends starts taking over operations in January, perhaps starting at $20 a night, though the level of service will increase, too, Disney spokeswoman Zoraya Suarez said.

The vacation market has been waiting for such pet pampering, according to Rod Caborn, a spokesman for Ypartnership, a Maitland-based marketing firm that specializes in travel and tourism. Among the findings of the firm's 2001 survey on pets and travel: 22 percent of dog owners said they "avoid travel with overnight stays" if hotels and resorts don't allow pets.

"This appears," the survey concluded, "to represent a substantial market opportunity for hotels and resorts that provide 'suitable' accommodations."

The luxury pet-boarding center at Disney won't open until mid-2009. It will also offer day care and grooming services. It will be open not only to the pets of tourists but to the pets of Disney employees and local residents as well.

Neither Disney nor Best Friends officials would discuss terms of their contract.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Christmas Gifts for Good Puppies


In good and bad times, owners pamper pets with holiday gifts
By DAVE CARPENTER | The Associated Press


CHICAGO - Coco's Christmas was doggone good last year.

The 5-year-old Shih Tzu got a stocking full of treats and found a pink wool sweater, pink mohair sweater, black fur-trimmed parka and hiking boots waiting under the tree last December. This year, her owner is eyeing a $120 set of pearls with a sterling silver bone clasp along with plenty of edible goodies for the pooch who has almost everything.

"It's an expression of love," said Shannon Fay, a 38-year-old Chicagoan. "She's part of the family."

Pets rule at the holidays, especially dogs, and that helps keep many retailers' registers ringing.

U.S. retail sales may be weak, energy prices way up and housing prices way down, but experts say pets largely defy such economic indicators. Caring owners are no more likely to stiff their beloved animals for the holidays than Santa is to leave rocks in every stocking.

Overall, Americans are expected to spend an estimated $48.7 billion on their pets in 2007, nearly twice the amount of a decade ago and growing at more than 7 percent a year, according to Packaged Facts, a consumer research company in Rockville, Md. Already, spending exceeds the gross domestic product of about 120 nations.

In other words, whatever Fido wants, Fido gets — and then some, particularly in upscale areas.

"It's kind of recession-resistant where we're at," said Steve Coghlan, co-owner of Spoiled Rotten Pets in Chicago's posh Lincoln Park neighborhood. "People are going to spend on their pets no matter what. They're not going to cheat their dogs."

That's especially true when it comes to the holidays. Fifty-six percent of dog owners and 42 percent of cat owners bought holiday gifts for their pets last year, according to a survey by the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association.

Doug Poindexter, president of the World Wide Pet Industry Association, another trade group, says the gift-giving trend reflects the growing humanization of pets in this country.

"If you're going to do it for your child, you're probably going to do it for your pet as well," he said.

Buying Christmas or Hanukkah gifts for the kids — the furry kind — isn't what it used to be. Walk the aisles of a well-stocked pet store at the holidays or cruise Web sites and there is abundant evidence of how enterprising American businesses are trying to part pet lovers from their cash.

High-end, luxury items are increasingly popular. A prospective pet pamperer can find everything from organic cookies and doggie basketball jerseys and jackets to $70 treat jars, $399 temperature-controlled pet carriers and $499 cashmere pet beds.

At Barker & Meowsky, a particularly creative Chicago pet store, the range of products could cheer up any sour puss: Catnip cigars, dog antlers, elf outfits, faux fur cat sleeping bags, plush-toy musical menorahs, Christmas scarves and even some real bling: a $250 crystal-encrusted dog collar made from python skins with a matching $190 leash.

Pet owners love to indulge in fun products for their four-legged family members, according to owner Alice Lerman.

"A sense of humor is so important," she said. "And it's got to be wrapped, it's got to be sealed, it's got to be just like you were giving it to a person. That's a really common request that we get."

Some humans, perhaps sniffing a possible promotion, even get Secret Santa gifts for the boss' dog.

Elsewhere, there are all manner of gifts — themed gifts such as rawhide canes and cat stockings; healthy gifts such as dog energy nutrition bars; gifts for the socially conscious such as organic cotton leashes with proceeds supporting African refugee camps; eco-friendly gifts such as biodegradable poop-pickup bags; and gifts for weak-armed dog owners such as tennis-ball slingshots.

Doctors Foster and Smith, a well-known pet supplier, features 16 pages of gift products in its fall catalog. Even Dr. Marty Smith, co-founder of the Rhinelander, Wis.-based business, marvels at how gift-giving has taken off — and how some people "go through our catalog and seem to get one of everything."

"For a dog that hasn't had a rawhide bone in a while and gets one, this is a good Christmas," he said. "One or two gifts is more than enough for every pet."

Derrick Carter knows that, but he can't help overdoing it for his four dogs at the holidays.

"They give me a really, really incredible amount of love and companionship," the 38-year-old music producer said. "So, they give me something, I give them something."


Have you been good this year???

Sniffs & Tail Wags

Tyreese