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Iams Home 4 the Holidays is at the New York Stock Exchange Today!

December 23rd, 2010 Comments off

2009

To raise awareness for pet adoption, the folks at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) have invited some of my Home 4 the Holidays buddies to ring today’s closing bell! This is the 5th year that we’ve participated in the bell ringing—and you can watch it today LIVE on the NYSE web site!  Live steaming will start at 3:59 PM EST.

Representing Iams Home 4 the Holidays on the NYSE podium will be our friends from the Helen Woodward Animal Center and Bideawee. Joining the group will be our Adoption Angel Jack and his pooch Jane (Jack adopted Jane from Bideawee). Rounding out this group are Yeechin and Neelam, two of my teammates from Iams (I am SO jealous that they got to go!)

My good buddy, Nancy Taylor (who runs Bideawee) will also bring some of Bideawee’s adoptable orphans. They’ll be down on the trading floor prior to the bell-ringing looking for perspective pet parents. Last year, all the orphaned dogs and cats that came for the bell ringing were adopted by folks on the trading floor (after going through Bideawee’s standard adoption process, of course). I hope that happens this year, too!

Someone will be taking photos—and I’ll post them here as soon as I get them.

Livestreaming of the closing bell begins TODAY at 3:59 PM EST. The bell gets rung at 4:00 PM EST. Be sure to set whatever alarm you have handy so that you can tune in and see the NYSE go to the dogs (and cats)!

More details are on the press release on the NYSE site.

Oh how I wish I could be there!

[Edited at 3:39 pm to add photo of Jane]

Jane going to the NYSE (swiped it from the Iams Facebook page).

[Edited at 4:34 pm to add this link]

A fabulous video clip on CNBC: Lend a Paw for Pet Adoption!

Mother’s Day!

May 10th, 2010 Comments off

A belated Happy Mother’s Day to all moms out there!

My friend, Jen, pointed this sweet Cheezeburger poster out to me today. This so reminds me of my relationship with my mom!

Just call me fluffy!

funny pictures-MOM LOVES YOU
see more Lolcats and funny pictures

P&G Acquires Natura Pet Products

May 6th, 2010 1 comment

You’ve probably already heard about this, but in case you haven’t here’s the press release:

P&G Expands Further in ‘Super Premium’ Pet Food Segment

 CINCINNATI, May 5, 2010 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –The Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE: PG) has signed an agreement to acquire Natura Pet Products, Inc., a privately-held pet food business based in Davis, California.

 This move enables P&G to expand into the attractive “holistic and naturals” segment of the pet food category, complementing P&G’s current Iams and Eukanuba brands and helping the Company advance its overall growth strategy of “reaching more consumers in more parts of the world more completely.”

 Natura’s brands include Innova, Evo, California Natural, Healthwise, Mother Nature and Karma. These brands are sold in a limited number of pet specialty stores and through veterinarians, mainly in the United States and Canada.

 ”These outstanding brands and the great employees of Natura Pet Products will complement our Eukanuba and Iams brands very well,” said Dan Rajczak, senior vice president of P&G’s global pet care and snacks businesses. “This acquisition gives us a strong position in the holistic and natural pet food segment. It will enable us to enhance the health and well-being of even more dogs and cats and represents an exciting new source of growth for our business.”

 ”It’s time for the right company to take our brands to the next level of growth. P&G is that company,” said John Rademakers, founder and owner of Natura Pet Products. “We know that P&G will honor our history as they capitalize on their strengths to build these brands.”

 Natura Pet Products employs about 140 people, mainly at its production sites in San Leandro, California and Fremont, Nebraska. P&G is targeting to close this deal in about a month, subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory clearances. Specific terms of the deal are not being disclosed.

National Hairball Awareness Day

April 30th, 2010 Comments off

Are you on Twitter?  Today (Friday April 30) at 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, Romeo the Cat will conduct a “Twitterview” with cat expert Dr. Plotnik. If you want to “listen” in, follow @RomeoTheCat and @TheCatExpert with hashtag #NHAD.

Tweet! Tweet! Meow!

4-Questions on Hairballs

April 30th, 2010 1 comment

RomeoTheCat.com and National Hairball Awareness Day

Did you know that today is National Hairball Awareness Day?

Once upon a time, I had a roommate who shared his life with a long-haired cat named Miss Kitty. Miss Kitty didn’t like me. I know this because she told me so in very subtle, cat-like ways. She had a habit of leaving hairballs on my bed. It was not a pretty sight. Even less beautiful was the horrible noise she would make, in the middle of the night, right beside my pillow, as she coughed up one of her famous furballs, just before she would smack me with her paw so that she could laugh at me.

Today, in honor of Miss Kitty, I’m joining Romeo the Cat to celebrate National Hairball Awareness Day.

Rasputin is too cool for hairballs!

Long-haired cats, like Rasputin, can be prime candidates for hairballs.

What are hairballs?

Hairballs are a common problem in cats. Although they rarely cause serious problems, they can cause the cat obvious discomfort. In addition, they cause messes that can be difficult and inconvenient for the cat owner to clean up. While long-haired cats appear to have more problems with hairballs, nearly all breeds of cats (with the exception of Sphinx cats) can develop them. 

The act of grooming for cats involves ingesting significant quantities of loose hair. For the most part, this hair moves through the digestive tract and is excreted. Sometimes, however, the ingested hair forms a mass in the stomach too large to continue passage into the intestinal tract, especially in animals with longer hair, and is expelled orally as a hairball. Some cats show signs of distress during the process. Some cats may also vomit for several days prior to a hairball. 

Frequent hairballs rarely present true health problems, but may cause major inconveniences to cat owners, and may occasionally be the cause of a cat being relinquished for adoption.

Is there help for cats with hairballs?

The first, and most basic, step to help reduce the risk of hairball formation in cats is frequent brushing. By brushing away loose hair, you can reduce the amount of hair your cat will ingest. Therefore, you also reduce the chance that the hair will gather in the digestive tract.

 Some cats groom themselves and their housemates. Therefore, it’s a good idea to brush all the cats in your house. Baths or professional grooming during a change in season help by ridding the cat of the loose hair from normal, seasonal shedding.

Iams Hairball CareWhat about hairball diets?

Nutrition — provided through a specially designed diet — is another way to decrease the likelihood of developing hairballs. Dietary fiber is usually the way special diets accomplish this. Eukanuba Hairball Releif

Most special diets contain one type of fiber to help move bulk through the intestines (nonfermentable). Nonfermentable fiber, such as cellulose, isn’t broken down by the normal bacteria in a cat’s intestines. Instead it passes through the digestive tract, helping other material, such as hair, move along as well. Other special diets contain a combination of nonfermentable fiber and another type of fiber (moderately fermentable). Moderately fermentable fiber, such as beet pulp, helps move bulk and helps provide nourishment to intestinal cells which, in turn, helps maintain intestinal health.

Iams Active Maturity Hairball Care Because of the special fiber content, these diets are most effective if they are fed as the sole diet. Mixing with other foods can dilute the fiber that help reduce the risk of hairball formation.

Likewise, switching between a special diet and another cat food may decrease the benefit.

Iams Indoor Weight & Hairball CareAnother way that nutrition can help reduce the likelihood of hairball formation is by promoting skin and coat health. High-quality diets containing animal-based proteins, such as chicken, and a combination of fats — more specifically, a ratio of certain fat components (5-10 omega-6 fatty acids to 1 omega-3 fatty acid) —have been shown to promote healthy skin and coat. Feeding a diet that provides these ingredients can help keep skin and hair healthy and, therefore, may reduce the risks of excessive shedding, ingestion of hair from grooming, and, consequently, hairball formation.

Hairballs. Not a pretty topic. I’m glad that National Hairball Awareness Day is not an entire week!

And to all my favorite feline friends out there, are you a “Miss Kitty?” Do you leave hairballs where your human friends will find them?

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

DISCLAIMER: This is my personal blog, and I am an employee of P&G Pet Care, North America. When I speak of company business (the nutritional benefits of Iams/Eukanuba products, et cetera), I am the voice of my employer. The personal things I post about my life, my dog, or my opinions are my own and do not necessarily represent the corporate position of my employer. Information posted on my blog (or on the Internet for that matter) should NEVER be substituted for the guidance and advice of your veterinarian or your animal behavior professional.

Your Daily Cute’s Dorian Wagner at BlogPaws 2010

April 13th, 2010 4 comments

While at BlogPaws this past weekend, I pulled out my video camera and put several people on the spot when I interviewed them. Here is the first of (hopefully) 4 video interviews.

Dorian Wagner (a wonderful anipal) of Your Daily Cute talks about her pets, her online work, and the importance of pet bloggers. 

A big THANK YOU to Dorian for being such a good sport!

Real Men Neuter Their Best Friend

February 23rd, 2010 Comments off

Today is SPAY DAY! Why should you get your pet spayed or neutered? 

Spayed females won’t GO INTO HEAT. This means:

  • No need to deal with pet-sized sanitary napkins or stains on furniture or carpets (gross!).
  • No worries about Fife running away to find her Rover or attracting unknown male suitors to your yard.
  • No more noisy late nights. There are few things more calculated to keep you from getting a good night’s rest than the plaintive meow-yowl of a female cat in heat. The pacing alone totally gets on my nerves. Have you HEARD the noise they make when they actually mate? And they always do it at 3 AM.

Neutered males won’t ROAM FROM HOME. This means:

  • No more one-night stands. Intact males often go looking for one-night stands—they have a strong desire to escape and roam (like the bad boy in a trashy romance novel.) This “pets gone wild” attitude can increase his chances of injury by other animals or cars.
  • It also provides opportunities for him to eat bad garbage or drink contaminated water.
  • And then there’s the time and the legwork you’ll have to invest in creating and distributing “have you seen?” posters when you have to go look for your roaming Romeo. Not to mention the natural stress you’ll feel because he’s lost.

There are HEALTH BENEFITS for spayed females, including:

  • Prevention of uterine and, ovarian cancer and a possible reduction in the risk of breast cancer.
  • Prevention of pyometra, an infection in the uterus common in older, unspayed females.
  • Don’t use the risk of weight gain as a reason NOT to spay or neuter. Pets get fat because we give them too many calories and not enough exercise. There may be a link between hormone changes and weight gain, but we are the gatekeepers on calories and without an over abundance of calories there can be no weight gain.

Neutered males get HEALTH BENEFITS too. They include:

  • Prevention of testicular cancer.
  • Can help prevent development of perianal tumors and some diseases of the prostrate.
  • See bullet point above about weight gain.

Pets can get time off for GOOD BEHAVIOR:

  • Your unfixed male furball will probably become increasingly protective of his territory as he ages. This can include aggression towards other animals–especially other males, and especially when the other male enters your furball’s territorial boundaries. Territorial aggression can cause fights, which can lead to injury and vet bills and possibly a legal summons. Neutered males tend to be less aggressive.
  • That same unfixed male furball likes to mark his territory with pee. Females will also mark turf—especially when they’re in heat. Spaying/neutering reduces hormone levels which can reduce territorial marking.  
  • A “false pregnancy” can cause an unsprayed female to go through behavioral (and physical) changes associated with pregnancy—which can sometimes be very unsettling for the pet’s human.
  • Neutered males tend to be less likely to exert dominance over your friends and family members. So you don’t have to apologize as often for Rex humping your neighbor’s leg.
  • IMPORTANT: Just because you neuter him or spay her doesn’t mean you still don’t have to teach them good manners. Spaying and neutering is not a replacement for training.

It’s a GOOD NEIGHBOR policy:

  • Spaying and neutering reduces number of animals on the streets.
  • Roaming pets can prey on wildlife or other pets, can cause car accidents, and can frighten children (or adults—have you ever come face-to-face with a Great Dane looking to get laid?)
  • Roaming Romeos get into your neighbors’ garbage and use your neighbors’ yards for potties—when you’re not there to pick up after them (as all responsible pet owners do). The noise they make with their late-night one-night stands keeps hard-working folks from getting a good night’s sleep. Invoke the no-roaming clause: roaming behavior can be effectively stopped with neutering.

It can be more COST EFFECTIVE. Spaying and neutering:

  • Costs less than the cost of having a litter.
  • Costs less than vet visit due to pet fighting while roaming.
  • Can help keep municipal animal control costs down due to reduction in orphaned pets.
  • Can’t afford the cost of spay/neuter surgery? Did I mention that today is national Spay Day? Many animal welfare groups have programs providing reduced cost spay/neuter services to celebrate. Check with your local groups to see what’s available to you.

SEX ED? The BIRTH module is on YouTube:

So many people say they want their dog or cat to have a litter so they can show their kids the miracle of life. There are lots of videos on YouTube showing the miracle of pet birth, so there’s no need to breed puppies or kittens to provide this lesson to your kids. And a video is so much less work for you!

Help fight OVERPOPULATION in your own backyard:

  • There are different estimates as to how many pets are euthanized in shelters each year due to lack of homes–the number ranges from 6 to 12 million. That’s 16,438 to 32,877 orphan pet euthanized EACH DAY. Do you want to be part of this terrible statistic? Spay and neuter your pets. Talk to your family, friends and neighbors and help them to understand why this is so important to do.
  • Two really great tools illustrate how an unspayed female pet and her mate can be a population explosion waiting to happen. Check out “Did you know?” (for cats and for dogs) on SpayUSA. Get educated about pet overpopulation!

IT’S YOUR CHOICE

In my opinion, people have a right to decide whether to spay or neuter their pets. But when you decide not to do it, I firmly believe you also take on the responsibility of not adding to the population of orphaned pets.

And if your four-legged female is pregnant, then as that female’s human partner you are responsible for providing:

  • The best possible nutrition for mom and the babies.
  • The best possible veterinary care for mom and the babies
  • Mom with help and care during all phases of the pregnancy.
  • A consistently clean and warm space for mom and her babies.
  • Proper socialization for the babies according to their needs
  • Homes for the babies with people you are certain will properly care for them and for re-homeing them, if things don’t work out. 

In my opinion, it’s easier and more practical to spay and neuter. 

Lastly, it’s NOT JUST DOGS AND CATS!

Spaying and neutering is not just for dogs and cats—rabbit reproduction speeds are no joke! Talk to your veterinarian about spaying and neutering for other pets too.

MORE INFORMATION

ThankYouMom.com

February 17th, 2010 2 comments

If you’re watching the Olympic Winter Games, then you’ve been seeing P&G commercials. This one is my favorite:

Something else I’ve been watching is P&G’s ThankYouMom.com. One of my favorite pages says, “Get the latest updates straight from the Olympians’ biggest fans–their moms!”  Blog posts from Vancouver! Gotta love that!

Munch on CNN

February 16th, 2010 Comments off

January 1, 2010

January 1st, 2010 1 comment