Friday, September 21, 2012

Hunting Dogs Safety

Hunting Dogs Safety

With hunting season upon us, it’s important to make sure hunting dogs are ready for action.  Prepare your dog for the season by visiting your veterinarian for a wellness check and ensure your pet’s vaccinations are up-to-date.  Also, be sure that your dog is on a monthly dewormer such as HEARTGARD® Plus or Interceptor® as they can very easily pick up worms in the wild and transfer them to your family members.  Below we’ve listed some things to look out for and some tips on how you can keep your dog healthy this fall.  If you have any questions, please contact the Mountain Home AFB Veterinary Treatment Facility at 828-2221.  Our knowledgeable staff can address your questions or schedule an appointment for your dog.

Poisoning:

Lead Shot/Bullets:  Aside from the trauma caused by gunshot wounds, the lead found in pellets and bullets may lead to lead poisoning if left in the body.  If your dog is shot, seek veterinary care immediately.  If the bullet fragments or pellets cannot be removed, check blood levels regularly to ensure that chronic lead poisoning doesn’t occur.  Signs of lead toxicity include behavioral changes, gastrointestinal signs (vomiting, diarrhea), and neurologic problems (including walking drunk, seizuring, and blindness).

Clay Pigeons:  Pigeons contain coal tar and heavy metals such as lead, zinc, copper, and nickel, and can result in toxicity if ingested.  If you have a “mouthy” hunting dog known to ingest toys or rocks, beware.  Make sure they’re not eating scattered pieces of clay pigeons, as poisoning can result in liver, brain, and kidney damage
Mushrooms:  Because hunting dogs are exposed to the great outdoors, they’re more likely to ingest a mushroom in the field.  While most mushrooms are generally non-toxic, certain types can be very dangerous.  One of the most dangerous found throughout the United States is the plain looking Amanita phalloides or death cap mushroom.  Because proper identification of mushrooms is extremely difficult, consider all ingestions of unidentified mushrooms as toxic until proven otherwise.  Depending on the type of mushroom ingested, symptoms include vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, depression, tremors, and seizures, with ingestion usually leading to liver and kidney damage.
Safety tips:
·         Hunting dogs are more likely to run through barbed wire or lacerate themselves by running through dense brush.  Therefore, it’s important to keep your dog in a blaze orange chest protector vest.  This will protect vital organs from injury and can also save on expensive vet bills.  You may also want to consider training them to wear booties in order to protect their pads.  An alternate to that is by toughening their pads in advance with a product such as Pad-Tough, which the Base Veterinary Treatment Facility routinely stocks.
·         An excited hunting dog that is not wearing an electronic shock collar, can take off after a scent, possibly leading to hours of searching for your companion.  Make sure identification tags are well secured onto your dog’s collar in addition to having them microchipped to ensure a happy reunion.
·         Rarely, a genetic abnormality in Labrador retrievers, called “hunting dog hypoglycemia,” can result in an acute drop in blood sugar resulting in the collapse of a normally active dog.  Making time for frequent water and snack breaks throughout the day is important.
·         Heat stroke is always a big risk early in the hunting season.  Excited dogs combined with higher air temperatures can increase chances of heat exhaustion.  Keeping a canine first aid kit handy along with a thermometer is important in case of an emergency.  If you notice your dog constantly panting, make sure to take frequent water breaks and water dips in ponds without blue-green algae.  When in doubt, always play it safe and give your dog a break to cool off.
·         Make sure to scope out the area where you are hunting.  Have the phone number for a local veterinarian, emergency veterinarian, and Pet Poison Helpline programmed into your phone in the event of an emergency.
·         Ensure your dog is vaccinated against Leptospirosis.  Leptospirosis is a bacterial disease which can be spread in animal urine.  It can be in streams or stagnant water.  It spreads to animals upon ingestion of the contaminated water or by direct contact with the urine.  It is a zoonotic disease meaning that it can also be spread to humans as well. 

 Visit us at our webiste http://mhafbfun.com/vet/index.html

Monday, September 17, 2012

Cooking With Rino #27

Casa di Montagna’s
Italian Poached Salmon and Shrimp with White Wine Sauce
Makes 2 Servings

Salmon:
1.      In an 8-quart pot, bring water to 175o-185oF.
2.      Add vinegar and salt to water and maintain the same temperature.  Water should taste like the ocean. 
3.      Maintaining water temperature, add salmon and poach for 8 to 10 minutes.
4.      Carefully remove salmon from water and set aside to drain and hold.

Shrimp and Sauce:
During poaching of the salmon, prepare your sauce and shrimp.
1.      In a 12” frying pan, melt butter; add garlic and shallots and cook until shallots are slightly translucent.
2.      Add white wine and cook for 2 to 3 minutes so that most of the wine is cooked off.
3.      Add cream cheese to butter/wine mixture cook until completely melted.
4.      While stirring mixture, add parmesan cheese, heavy cream and lemon juice; bring sauce to a boil, then lower heat and allow sauce to simmer.
5.      Add Tabasco, black pepper and Old Bay to your sauce.
6.      Next, add shrimp and chopped parsley to your sauce.  Keep on low temperature until shrimp are heated.
7.      Place salmon on serving plate and top with sauce and 4 shrimp.  Garnish with lemon and parsley sprig.

Accompany entree with rice pilaf and fresh roasted asparagus.  Enjoy!

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Practice Makes Perfect


Practice Makes Perfect
by Joshua Brown, OAP Assistant Director

Honing in and practicing your hard skills is necessary for the avid recreationalist.  We rely far too often on our unpracticed skills.  This accounts for knot tying, swimming abilities, utilizing maps and compass, packing a backpack, basic First Aid, CPR, and more.  Sure, we train or take classes at one point during our lives, but how many of you can say you are still proficient in those skills you learned in a classroom three years ago?  Now is the time to change that, to get out the maps, find a piece of rope, sign up for a new First Aid or CPR course, and start practicing.

We all go to work every day or have other daily tasks we hope to accomplish.  I like to think most of us are pretty proficient at those jobs.  Repeating tasks over and over makes us more familiar and, hopefully, more proficient at accomplishing these tasks.  Take this into our world of recreation.  How often do you actually get to go rock climbing, mountain biking, rafting, etc.?  All these activities have risks involved that tend to rate much higher in the consequences department, so you want to be at the top of your game when participating in these activities.  In other words, you don’t want to dust off your mountain bike for the first time of the season, and take a five-day trip to Moab to test you and your bike’s skills.   

Read up on your skills of choice.  Look for classes or training opportunities to fill your “toolbox” with as many tools you can.  I promise your next adventure will benefit from it.  The moral of the story is practice makes perfect, and no matter how perfect you think you are, practice more.  Tie knots while watching your evening TV.  Pack and carry your backpack before you take the dog out for the morning walk.  The more we keep these skills fresh in our minds, the better you will be able to accomplish the tasks at hand.  Like always with any recreational activity, tell someone where you are going and when you plan to be back.  Good luck on your next adventure. 

Friday, September 7, 2012

Nickelodeon Family Fun for Free




On 21 September join us for a FREE evening of active fun for the whole family! From 5-7 p.m. the Youth Center will have a variety of activities throughout the Youth Center and grounds. There will be children’s circuit training with staff from the Fitness Center, “Set Your Child Up For Success” screenings and evaluations, sumo suit wrestling, inflatables, a dunk tank, DJ, snack bar specials, and door prizes. 

Read a little history on our multi-programmed event…

Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play
Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play is an annual event designed to encourage kids and parents to turn off the television and play, especially outdoors. The main goals of this event are to influence kids to be active, putting kids and their health first.

In 2009, Nickelodeon actually stopped playing shows and posted this message to promote their message:
“Today is Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play! Turn off your TV, shut down your computer, put down the cell phones-yes, YOU! And GO ALL OUT! We’ll see you back here at 3 p.m.!”

Boys and Girls Club Day for Kids
Boys and Girls Clubs (BGC) of America celebrate the importance of establishing stronger relationships between adults and youth by leading the BGC Day for Kids effort. The goal of this event is to spend meaningful time with children. Research shows that when adults spend meaningful time with kids, it helps them develop a positive self-image, sense of belonging, usefulness, and purpose. While children are happy with the amount of time their parents spend with them, many wish the time together was focused, rich in shared activities and not rushed. BGC challenges you!

  • Recognize the importance of spending time with the special kids in your life  
  • Encourage youth to participate in fun and healthy activities  
  • Serve as a role model by initiating active play  
  • Listen and be supportive when young people need someone to talk to  
  • Active play is a vital part of developing a young person’s cognitive, physical, social, and emotional well-being

Monday, September 3, 2012

Fitness Tip #16


Gun Slinging Fit-to-Fight Tip #16
by A1C Rochelle Caindoy

Summer is at an end, and fall is right around the corner.  September is here which means the beginning of school for the kids. Even though the holidays will soon be here and bikini season is at an end doesn’t mean you can’t plan ahead for next year’s summer season. Keep exercising and stay on a healthy diet so that when spring creeps around the corner it will be a breeze to stay in shape!
Before you workout, make sure you perform your dynamic stretching also known as a warm-up. Once you are thermally ready, after about 5-10 minutes, you are ready to workout. Please note that these exercises should not be done unless you are in good physical/medical standard and have cleared all medical conditions which may become worse by doing these exercises. If you have any questions about these exercises, the Gunfighter Fitness Center Staff will be happy to answer or demonstrate them for you.
Here’s our full-body workout prescription.
·        Crunches - 2-3 sets/10-15 reps (abdomen and obliques)
·        Push-ups - 1 min
·        Lunges - 1 min
·        Right oblique crunches - 2-3 sets/10-15 reps
·        Push-ups - 1 min
·        Jumping Squats - 1 min
·        Left oblique crunches - 2-3 sets/10-15 reps
·        Push-ups - 1 min
·        Butt Kicks - 1 min
Deep-Dish Apple Pie