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Monday, January 28, 2013

In a Dog's Heart by Jennifer Arnold

Jennifer Arnold has come to a unique understanding of the human-dog bond over the two decades she has spent raising and training service dogs for Canine Assistants. She developed a methodology—Choice Teaching—that pairs scientific and behavioral knowledge about dogs with gentle incentive and encouragement to extraordinary effect. 
Here Arnold shares
• how to choose the puppy that’s destined for you and what to have on hand before you bring that puppy home
• best practices when it comes to teaching your dog essential and even lifesaving commands• what to stock in your doggie first-aid kit• how to keep your pet safe from dangers at home and in the outside world• how to help your dog overcome anxious behavior, from separation anxiety to thunderstorm phobia• the challenges and rewards of adopting an older dog 
Throughout the book are captivating stories of the extraordinary ways in which dogs prove themselves worthy of our care and devotion—and how we can, and why we should, help them achieve what they so deserve.
This seemed to me to be a book for first time owners of dogs. I'm always curious about these books and want to see if I can glean things that I may have not thought of before. However, after reading the chapter, "Keeping Our Dogs Healthy", I would not recommend this book to a first time dog owner. I don't just sort of disagree with what was said, but disagree to an extent that it bothered me.

One of the things I disagree with is soy. She says that dogs can become vegetarian if you provide a complete protein in the diet. This is true, however she suggested soy as the substitute. Dogs cannot completely digest soy, so therefore it is not a good substitue for the protein. Second, she actually advocated synthetic preservatives. That was the huge NO to me. Ethoxyquin, a common synthetic additive and is used as a pesticide and a agent in making rubber. It is not allowed in any human foods we consume. BHA is also commonly used and is allowed in human food, however, it is currently under attack and is on a possible list of those that may be removed one day. She made the point that natural preservatives have a much shorter shelf life and that you should be aware of dates and how often the foods either sold or refreshed on the shelf. That is true, but not a reason enough for me to even consider the synthetic preservatives over natural, especially ethoxyquin.

She also suggested that the brands she listed and any others who are large dog food companies are safer than a local brand. Not sure what those local brands are since the ones I see are all big or med companies. She suggested that the big brands are safer because they manufacture the food and ingredients. This is false. Big companies buy from other companies parts of their ingredients like most packaged foods. Some of these companies they buy from are very bad. There have been recalls because some of these ingredients were manufactured in China and had rat poison (which is legal in China) traces in the ingredients. There is also a recall of some treats because of antibiotic residue which is not allowed in America, but is, again, in China. So what she claims is completely not true and the foods she recommends are ones I stay away from.

The other thing in that chapter she attacked was raw diets. It is a huge commitment to do a raw diet but it is not dangerous as she suggests. Her biggest complaint was the possibility of salmonella poisoning (I'll specifically talk about that one although it can apply to other things she said). Samonella is a consideration especially if you have small children or do not like washing your hands and dog bowls. Second, you can get that same poisoning from even dry dog kibble. There was a recent recall of dry dog food and treats because it contained salmonella. It's one of the reasons very small children are discouraged from handling/eating any dog food. So, again, her reasoning is faulty if that is her main complaint. It is false to suggest that commercial foods are extremely safe in comparison. She had suggested learning from a nutritional veterinarian about cooked home diets (I actually have consulted one about raw food diets). I think she should have done the same before writing that whole chapter.

Sorry for climbing on my soapbox. Not the forum for that, but a book review. So, let me continue on with that...
*gets off soapbox*

I also have to question her methodology she supposedly created called "Choice Teaching". It is a good methodology, but not one she created. It is basically positive reinforcement. Karen Pryor has a great website and training articles that are great for anyone wanting to learn this method of training. I do like what she says and how she trains, it's just not original. She also bashes dominance training. I don't disagree with her about that, but I could do with a little more information and less bashing is all. It wasn't her examples and then what she thought was wrong with it but how she continually bashed one particular well-known person. It was the continual bashing that got old quickly.

Now if you think I hated this book (aside from the nutrition chapter) then you are wrong. I actually loved the stories she had about the canine companions. The dogs who assist people with disabilities and how they came together. This is where the book shines. It also had a great story of one of the Vick dogs that I really enjoyed. I actually think she should have made it a book about those stories and have her positive training tips for the average dog owner. I think the book may have then made it to one of my fave dog books. However, as it is, I have to say that I have to give it 2 stars. The stars are for the stories because they are stellar. I can recommend it for those stories which are quite moving and will often put a smile on your face.
I received this book from the First Reads program at Goodreads and no compensation for my review was given.

14 comments:

  1. I totally disagree with the author too. First, while I know dogs can go veggy based it does take a lot of effort and not all dogs CAN go veggy. Second, you should be able to read and identify every ingredient in your dogs food. This isn't hard as there are a lot of companies that make organic foods now :)

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    1. Absolutely true. :) What was strange is that she seemed to have less problem with them going veggie than any other homemade diet. I could be wrong, but that is how it read to me.

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  2. Wow, I feel like I need to go take a class on my dog's diet because I did not know half the things you mentioned Melissa and I have two dogs. Dog owner fail! We've played around with several different types of dog food because Gatsby and Griffin have SUPER sensitive stomachs and we needed to find one that didn't make them sick. I think I would really enjoy the canine companion stories though, maybe I can just skip all the diet sections:)

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    1. Necessity is the mother of research for me. :) Had to research as I had 3 dogs with different problems. All at once! :P I think you are a great puppy parent!

      Oh and I do think you'd love the stories as much as I did!

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  3. oh interesting, it looks like you can have a lot of different opinion during this book. I didn't know most of that so it"s nice. Well my dog seems perfect with his food for now.

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    1. I promise I'm not trying to guilt anyone. If she would have presented it as opinion and NOT as fact, I would have less of a problem with what she said.

      Also, remember her section as well as my criticism also has to do with American regulations and practices. A food I wouldn't touch here is one I might happily buy in France.

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  4. Like Jenny, I'm a bit overwhelmed by all the info that makes me feel like I've been abusing my dog since day one, hah. He is a reasonably healthy, happy little bouncing ball, but I could probably do better in caring for him. I'll probably seek advice elsewhere, though. :)

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    1. Apologies for that. It was because she presented opinion as fact and that really upset me. She placed herself in a position of authority and so should have done the research to back up what she said.

      I don't ever want to judge what another feeds. Even someone who feeds foods I feel are "bad" might have a good reason for doing just that. I'm only judging what and HOW she said these things.

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  5. I thought that is one of the dogs main purposes... to help clean up what gets left on the floor? Besides, the kidlets are only trying to help with the feeding. ;D

    So cute. :D

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  6. I do not think this is the book for me. Nope not at all

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  7. I have a new puppy and this is something I need to read. House training a dog is hard!

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  8. Oh, I'm not one to really go get dogie books. Although maybe I should...But the girls seem happy and mostly healthy, so I think we might be on a right track somewhere. ;) Thank you.

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  9. I'm a huge dog lover and we went on a raw diet for awhile. My dogs loved it, but when the second child came and we moved it just got to be a bit much. But they loved it! They were on it about a year or so and never had any trouble with them being sick or anything. I hate that crap in a can. If it tastes as bad as it smells they should just have our leftovers. I asked my mom (she's 40 yrs older than me) if they fed their dogs dog food (she lived on a farm). She said they ate what the rest of the family ate. There wasn't any such thing as dog food. I keep that in mind when I'm looking at the ingredients on all these organic foods for them. How could she possibly want her dogs to have something synthetic over real? Sorry, I don't like her.

    Heather

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  10. I think the things you point out as bad are VERY important. I don't have a dog currently but even our human food (and cat food) we don't rely on big names as being something we can trust. We need to know Every. single. ingredient. And what it is and does. I wouldn't touch this book with a ten foot pole just because of her poor advise regarding that and the synthetic over organic. (Not that I would get it anyway since I don't have any dogs...)

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