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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 1
- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time
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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 4
- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time
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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 8
- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time
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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 7
- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time
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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 9
- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time
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- Petside.com's Top Ten Pet Movies of All Time- 10
- Petside.com's ranking of the Top Ten pet movies of all time. This list includes the funniest, saddest and all-around best pet movies ever made. Read on to see if your favorite made the list!
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- Coping with Loss Pt. 2: Pet's Passing
- The word euthanasia, meaning good death, makes people wince. Ending a pet's life is a difficult and personal choice. Families caring for a suffering pet can get help in deciding whether and when to make this choice, and support afterwards.
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- Coping with Loss Pt. 3: Recovery and Grieving
- Grieving and recovery from the loss of a pet applies to the entire family: adults, children and other pets. "A pet's death hurts so much because pets are a source of unconditional love and appreciation. When a pet dies, we lose a part of ourselves," says Enid Traisman,M.S.W., C.T, C.F.S., and Director, DoveLewis Pet Loss Support Group.
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- Pets with Disabilities Series: Deaf Pets
- When you stop and consider how similar animals are to humans, their capacity for love, their ingenuity (usually when food is involved), their survival instincts and intuition about people, it should come as no surprise that in the face of adapting to a challenge like hearing loss or deafness in an animal, one of our greatest resources for understanding their new needs and recognizing the extent of their capabilities lies in the fundamental realities of life as a deaf adult, who can see, move, think, love, laugh and thrive as well as anyone else.
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- Pets with Disabilities Series: 2- or 3-legged Pets
- Pet owners fondly refer to their animals as their four-legged friends, but sometimes they come with only two or three functioning limbs. Sometimes animals start out with four, and then accident or illness results in paralysis or sufficient damage to render some of the legs useless.
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- Feline Sense Series: Touchy Feely
- Whenever you touch your cat, you may not realize that the skin underneath all that fur is quite sensitive. And the fur that covers kitty is specialized sensory hairs. Researchers have not figured out much regarding how the hairs on kitty's body are used except for the whiskers - who many people do not even realize constitutes itself as a type of hair on felines.
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- Feline Sense Series: A Matter of Taste
- This is to test the home page DL section - Don't forget to feed your cats!
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- Feline Sense Series: Nosing Around
- For the felis catus - the scientific name for domesticated or house cats - all of the feline senses are rather acute, but their sense of smell is perhaps its main source for identifying individuals, objects and prey in its surroundings. Read on to learn more about how your cat's sense of smell impacts their day to day world.
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- Feline Sense Series: Anatomy of a Cat Eye
- It's a myth that cats can see in complete darkness. The part of the feline's retina called the "tapetum lucidum," acts like a reflector in the eye and bounces light to the back of the retina, thus the appearance of "glowing" eyes which a cat exhibits at night when their eyes are struck with a beam of light, such as car headlights.
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- Kitten Life Links
- DOWNLOAD: Kitten Life Vaccination Timeline Cutest Kittens Slideshow How to Check a Kitten's Health Before Adopting Vaccinations for Kittens Through Adulthood Consider Protecting Your New Kitten with Pet Insurance Kitten Training Tips 5 Things to Know Before you Adopt...
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- Your Kitten: 2 Years Old
- Nighttime behavior, adult pet diets, illness symptoms, and correcting behavior issues.
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- Your Kitten: 1 1/2 Years Old
- Maintaining your kitten's health, young cat food needs, poison control, and leash-training cats.
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- Your Kitten: 1 Year Old
- The adult cat personality, proper food storage, annual checkups and booster shots, and training adult cats.
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- Your Kitten: 12 Months Old
- How to tell if your kitten is overweight, changes in diet, hyperthyroidism, and pack rat disorder.
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- Your Kitten: 11 Months Old
- Cats and emotions, food management, common injuries, and introducing cats and dogs.
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- Your Kitten: 10 Months Old
- Managing hyperactivity, common feeding errors, infections, and teaching tricks.
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- Your Kitten: 9 Months Old
- Territorial behavior, nutrition and joint care, hospital stay causes and costs, and discouraging bad behavior.
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- Your Kitten: 8 Months Old
- Calming aggressive behavior, safely introducing adult cat food, healthy skin and fur, and training equipment.
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- Your Kitten: 7 Months Old
- Dominant behavior, changing food needs, maintaining healthy eyes, and daily playtime ideas.
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- Your Kitten: 6 Months Old
- Beginnings of sexual behavior, overeating and portion control, spaying and neutering, and traveling safely with kittens.
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- Your Kitten: 20 Weeks Old
- Declawing facts, digestion issues, Bordetella, and kitten socialization.
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- Your Kitten: 19 Weeks Old
- Different kitten personalities, natural and holistic pet foods, hairballs, and mealtime habits.
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- Your Kitten: 18 Weeks Old
- Appetite loss, proper play toys, preventing fleas and ticks, and sleeping arrangements.
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- Your Kitten: 17 Weeks Old
- Your kitten's level of understanding, appearance of weight loss, dental care, and taming pet jealousy.
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- Your Kitten: 16 Weeks Old
- Feeding table scraps, teething and chewing tendencies, final vaccinations, how to control spraying behavior.
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- Your Kitten: 15 Weeks Old
- Proper nutrition for growth, indoor verses outdoor kittens, fecal flotation tests, and playing safely with children.
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- Your Kitten: 14 Weeks Old
- Pet food allergies, decoding the purr, Chlamydophila felis, and training kittens not to eat houseplants.
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- Your Kitten: 13 Weeks Old
- Mental and physical development, homemade diets, signs of an allergic reaction, and ending excessive meowing.
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- Your Kitten: 12 Weeks Old
- Kitten learning capabilities, how to read food labels, second vet visit and shots, and stopping clawing behavior.
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