Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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The Time Magazine cover story this week is "What Animals Think--- New Science reveals they're smarter than we realized"
Our mutt can count on command, by paw slaps or barking, any number from one to ten. When we're getting ready to leave home, he gets all happy and excited cuz he knows that we always give him a treat as we're leaving. When we return, we might get a polite tail wagging, if he's in the mood. How about your doggie? What's his/her best trick? |
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#2
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[QUOTE=dominick;282301]The Time Magazine cover story this week is "What "
Our mutt can count on command, by paw slaps or barking, any number from one to ten. That's a great trick. When I was a kid my Mom tought our farm dog to count. All the cousins thought Pete was brilliant. But it was a trick Mom would hold up her hand with say three fingers. She would ask Pete to count the fingers. He would bark. On the third bark Mom would lower her hand and award Pete with hugs and pats. Cousins never did figure it out. But I do agree dogs are very smart for the most part. |
#3
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As an adult, the only dog I ever loved as part of my own family was an Australian shepherd named Tober who died a few years ago at nearly 19 years old. He was the most intelligent, protective and compassionate creature I've ever encountered.
He knew the words for each of his specific toys. Without any change in your tone, you could ask him to bring you his squeaky, or his frisbee, or whatever and by golly he knew. He knew his property boundaries without fences. I had to train him for this one, but he was an enthusiatist student. He loved to retrieve and loved the water. We lived on a river when he was younger. He would watch where you threw something in the river for him to retrieve and he judged the current and knew to run along the bank and jump in ahead of the river current to retrieve in the moving water. Amazing. Simple amazing dog. I had a cat that used the toilet instead of the litter box. |
#4
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Our girls know when it's time to eat. If you forget, they wil sit in the floor in front of you and bark. They also do that at 8 PM when my wife gives them an evening treat. When they have to go out, they go to the door and sit and look at you and if you don't see them, they will start barking. Might not be the sharpest knives in the drawer, but we think it's kinda cute. Also, I might add, they are the cutest dogs ever.
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Greg A pessimist is an optimist with experience. "In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm and three or more is a congress." - John Adams |
#5
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If I spelled out R-I-D-E or jingled the keys Bart ran around in circle and then went to the garage door.
When we went out for breakfast or lunch, he would wait by the door and check our hands to see which one of us had the doggie box. When it was dinner time, he would sit and bark at the wife until he was fed. When it was time to go out, he would go to the door and look at me with the ready to go face. If he wanted to go out at other times he would come over and sit next to me and nudge me with his nose. He had a happy face, a sad face and an old man face. I loved them all and miss them all. He waits at the rainbow bridge for his daddy. Z
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Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#6
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Most of the dogs that have been in my life have been much smarter than me. When I do something goofy they always look at me as if to say, "I told you so!"
My little Yorkie learned to use a litter box. He wasn't embarrassed. He thought all dogs did that. He watched television and knew the names and my hand-signals for all types of animals. His vocabulary was quite large and I could speak to him in sentence form and he would know what I said, for the most part. It would amaze my guests. He had the music memorized for all the tv commercials featuring dogs and cats. As soon as he would hear the music he'd come running and barking knowing that a cat or dog would be on the television screen. Of all the dogs I've owned, he was the best at communicating with humans.
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#7
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#8
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My Old English was truly awesome. He was my best friend, pillow, blanket, cuddle toy, confidant. Sleeper was never on a lead -- totally hand/voice trained. When I went shopping, he would sit in front of the store and wait for me to get done. He would never move from his spot.
I don't know how, but he always knew when I had a migraine even before I opened the door -- no happy jumps, no noise. He would simply lie on the floor beside me and never make a sound. The funniest thing he ever did was when my boy friend and I would argue, he would herd us together until we were face to face. Kind of hard to be mad when you were literally nose to nose with a dog sitting there and looking quite pleased with himself. He never nagged for food or being let out. At the most, he would let out a very little whine to remind you he needed you. He did have one bad trait -- he could pass very smelly gas on cue (he didn't digest cheese too well even though he adored eating it). It was one of those things men think is really cute. And, no, I didn't teach him to do that -- my ex did. I had to put Sleeper down when he was 13 because of bone spurs. He's been gone for 22 years and I still miss him.
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Army/embassy brat - traveled too much to mention Moved here from SF Bay Area (East Bay) "There are only two ways to live your life: One is as though nothing is a miracle; the other is as though everything is a miracle." Albert Einstein |
#9
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Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#10
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Our miniature (17 lbs so not all that miniature) poodle is very smart - he has trained his humans to pick him up and CARRY him outside to the fenced portion of the yard in the morning and before bed. He will only walk to the porch if you open his leash drawer. Otherwise, He just patiently waits on the couch. Oh, except in tomato season. He likes to take a couple of bites out of the ripe tomatoes that are low on the vine. For 2 years I was blaming rabbits or squirrels or raccoons, until I caught him in the act.
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#11
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I couldn't love him any more..They say a dog is only as smart as their owner, so that should explain everything...giggle..He follows me around like we are attached at the hip....He is adorable....Oh, this is the first dog we have owned that watches TV
Last edited by jebartle; 08-11-2010 at 10:16 AM. |
#12
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Our dog Lolli Pop likes to watch animal programs on TV. She especially enjoys the dog training programs, but sadly, never learns anything from them.
Lolli will watch and get excited about anything on TV which is "non human". She loves the dancing M and Ms.
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Barefoot At Last No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. Saving one dog will not change the world, but surely for that one dog, the world will change forever. |
#13
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Barefoot,
Your dog is trying to get you to learn something from the animal programs. When will you catch on? Watch for her smile when you finally get it. |
#14
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It amuses me when people say that humans are the only animals with the capacities of intelligence, love and free will.
My former Norfolk Terrier loved to bound out the back door when he was a puppy. I installed a doggie gate between our sunroom and the back door until I could fully train him not do do this. When I thought he was trained to stop at the gate (when it was open), I quit closing the gate. One day I went up to the mailbox and as I was walking back down the driveway, I saw him standing at the full-length window next to the back door watching me. I planned to correct him when I got inside. However, when I turned the door knob, I heard his little puppy paws scrambling as fast as they would go across the sunroom floor. When I got the door ajar so I could see him, he was standing at the open gate facing me, tail wagging as fast as it would go. "Look what a good dog I am," was written all over his face and body language. Looked a lot like intelligence and free will to me. And since he didn't realize I had caught him in the act, all I could do is reach down and pet him and say, "what a good dog you are!" I also saw him once go behind the TV and look inside it trying to find the dogs on TV. He has long since passed away, but I still love him dearly. My Shih Tzu, Bogey, I confess, is not the brightest banana in the bunch. But he's the sweetest, most cuddly and loving dog, not to mention adorable. |
#15
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She did some things that I would not exactly call "smart". I would take her a few times a month to a lake about 5 miles from where we lived near the Reno, Nevada airport.
This was Virginia Lake which is surrounded by homes and apartments and is near a number of shopping malls so it gets a lot of traffic. [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tN_CbhDHVY[/ame] On the way back from walking her around the lake she was still full of her normal boundless energy. I had a car with a hatchback seat which I would put down when I took her places. She chased her tail in the back of the car. Caught it. Chomped down and proceeded to bleed heavily. She kept on chasing her tail while bleeding. Needless to say, the car's windows around the letdown hatchback seat looked like something out of a Quentin Tarantino movie. The blood was splattered on every window with some all over me as well. She stopped bleeding after a short time but I still had 4 miles to go home before I could clean and tape up her tail. She also often got away from me while walking around Virginia Lake a couple of times so she could chase the couple of around ducks and geese off of the shore where they were basking in the sun. She would chase them into the lake and have to swim twenty or more feet to the shore. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 08-09-2010 at 10:38 AM. |
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