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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • September 28, 2011 • 13 PET PLACE MARKET Self-Service Dog Wash 15 Different Lines of Cat Food 24 Different Lines of Dog Food Raw Food Small Animal Supplies Much, much more! 425.888.8828 Mon - Fri 10am - 7pm Sat 10am - 5pm Sun 10am - 4pm Your Local Pet’s Place Since April 2007 213 Bendigo Blvd. N. North Bend 528681 ‘Like’ us on Facebook www.petplacemarket.com 528840 Voted 'Best Veterinarian in the Valley' VETERINARY HOUSECALLS myhomevet.com 425.766.8333 TREUTING Mike Treuting, DVM 528985 32020 SE 40th St, Fall City 425-222-7220 www.svah.com e-mail: [email protected] Teri Weronko, DVM 528984 Not to hurt our humble animal brothers is our first duty to them, but to stop there is not enough. We have a higher mission - to be of service to them wherever they require it. - St. Francis ‘A part of all proceeds goes to support WorldVets in its continuing work around the globe’ Award winning formal grooming Scissor finishing • Hand Stripping Custom Coloring and Creative Grooming Show ad for $5 off your 1st grooming. (new clients only) Open 7 days a week Early and late appointments available. 425-888-3120 www.snoqualmievalleypetparlor.com 8103 Falls Avenue • Snoqualmie 528990 Calling All Dogs Dirty We have an incredible love of dogs and 45 years of combined experience. GROOMING CHOICES INCLUDE: Stylish, trendy, traditional and unique dos. $5 OFF Full-Service Groom New clients only. Must present this ad. to our Professional Dog Grooming Shop 301 West North Bend Way • North Bend 425.888.8100 529036 pets Valley Health • Care • Diet • Training • Play Chili cook-off to help Valley Animal Partners Do you have a home-made chili or dessert to brag about? Flaunt your talents at the Valley Animal Partners’ chili dinner and dessert auction, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., Saturday Oct. 15, at the Eagles Lodge in Snoqualmie. The cook-off will be judged by Snoqualmie Mayor Matt Larson and former Mayor Fritz Ribary, and auctioneer Craig Bennett will preside over the dessert auction that follows. Tickets are $10 for adults, $7 for seniors, and $5 for children ages 6 to 12. Kids under 6 are free. Advance tickets are avail- able at U Dirty Dog and the Pet Place Market in North Bend. All funds raised provide help for seniors, disabled and low- income people in the Valley to get their dogs and cats spayed or neutered. For more information, visit valleyanimalpartners.com/chili_ dinner_and_dessert_auction . When owners disappear, rescuers step in to give energetic Alaskan Malamutes a new home BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Bruno, a 170-pound Malamute, is not impressed with the newcomer. The wolf- like dog strains at the end of his leash, growls, howls and stares the stranger down. If he hadn’t looked like a huge stuffed toy, it might have been completely intimidating. Intelligent brown eyes, enormous paws, and a dense fluffy coat all made Bruno seem more huggable than threatening, Even big dogs get second chances Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo At 170 pounds, Bruno seems to dwarf his owner, Jim Ross. Alaskan Malamutes seem like they might make good guard dogs, but their friendly nature is more that of a lap dog’s. SEE SECOND CHANCE, 14

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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • September 28, 2011 • 13

PET PLACE MARKET

Self-Service Dog Wash•

15 Different Lines of Cat Food•

24 Different Lines of Dog Food•

Raw Food•

Small Animal Supplies•

Much, much more!•

425.888.8828

Mon - Fri 10am - 7pmSat 10am - 5pm • Sun 10am - 4pm

Your Local Pet’s Place Since April 2007

213 Bendigo Blvd. N. • North Bend

5286

81

‘Like’ us on Facebook

www.petplacemarket.com

5288

40

Voted 'Best Veterinarian in the Valley'

VETERINARY HOUSECALLS

myhomevet.com 425.766.8333

TREUTING

myhomevet.com 425.766.8333 myhomevet.com 425.766.8333 myhomevet.com 425.766.8333

Mike Treuting, DVM

5289

85

32020 SE 40th St, Fall City425-222-7220www.svah.com

e-mail: [email protected]

Teri Weronko, DVM

528984

Not to hurt our humble animal brothers is our first duty to them, but to stop there is not enough. We have a higher mission - to be of service to them wherever they require it. - St. Francis

‘A part of all proceeds goes to support WorldVets in its continuing work around the globe’

Award winning formal groomingScissor fi nishing • Hand Stripping

Custom Coloring and Creative Grooming

Show ad for $5 off your 1st grooming.

(new clients only)

Open 7 days a week Early and late appointments available.

425-888-3120www.snoqualmievalleypetparlor.com

8103 Falls Avenue • Snoqualmie

5289

90

Calling All DogsDirty

We have an incredible love of dogs and 45 years of combined experience.GROOMING CHOICES INCLUDE:

Stylish, trendy, traditional and unique dos.$5 OFF Full-Service Groom

New clients only. Must present this ad.

to our Professional Dog Grooming Shop

301 West North Bend Way • North Bend425.888.8100

5290

36

petspetspetspetsValleyHealth • Care • Diet • Training • PlayHealth • Care • Diet • Training • PlayHealth • Care • Diet • Training • Play

Chili cook-off to help Valley

Animal PartnersDo you have a home-made

chili or dessert to brag about? Flaunt your talents at the

Valley Animal Partners’ chili dinner and dessert auction, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., Saturday

Oct. 15, at the Eagles Lodge in Snoqualmie.

The cook-off will be judged by Snoqualmie Mayor Matt

Larson and former Mayor Fritz Ribary, and auctioneer Craig

Bennett will preside over the dessert auction that follows. Tickets are $10 for adults, $7

for seniors, and $5 for children ages 6 to 12. Kids under 6 are

free. Advance tickets are avail-able at U Dirty Dog and the Pet

Place Market in North Bend.All funds raised provide help

for seniors, disabled and low-income people in the Valley

to get their dogs and cats spayed or neutered.

For more information, visit valleyanimalpartners.com/chili_

dinner_and_dessert_auction .

When owners disappear, rescuers step in to give energetic Alaskan

Malamutes a new homeBY CAROL LADWIG

Staff Reporter

Bruno, a 170-pound Malamute, is not impressed with the newcomer. The wolf-like dog strains at the end of his leash, growls, howls and stares the stranger down. If he hadn’t looked like a huge stuffed toy, it might have been completely intimidating.

Intelligent brown eyes, enormous paws, and a dense fluffy coat all made Bruno seem more huggable than threatening,

Even big dogs get second

chances

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo

At 170 pounds, Bruno seems to dwarf his owner, Jim Ross. Alaskan Malamutes seem like they might make good guard dogs, but their friendly nature is more that of a lap dog’s.

SEE SECOND CHANCE, 14

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM14 • September 28, 2011 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

North Bend Ace Hardware330 Main Ave. S. in Mt Si Village

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LARGEST PET & LIVESTOCK SELECTION IN THE VALLEY!

DOG AND CAT SUPPLIES

HARDWAREThe helpful place

• Cat / Dog Food• Pet Accessories• Poultry and Livestock Feed• Grooming Supplies• Large and Small Animal Supplements• Small Animal / Fish Food and Supplies• Equine Feed / Grooming and Supplements

TASTE OF THE WILD®

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We would like to take off IAMS and Eukanuba and replace it

with more pictures of our Best Seller: Taste of the Wild (below).

If you could add in the info below that would be great.

BEST SELLER

Complete Line of Taste of the Wild:

High Prairie Canine Formula

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Wetlands Canine Formula

Rocky Mountain Feline Formula

.

We would like to take off IAMS and Eukanuba and replace it

with more pictures of our Best Seller: Taste of the Wild (below).

If you could add in the info below that would be great.

BEST SELLER

Complete Line of Taste of the Wild:

High Prairie Canine Formula

Pacific Stream Canine Formula

Wetlands Canine Formula

Rocky Mountain Feline Formula

.

SMALL ANIMAL SUPPLIES

Wild Bird Seed Suet

Kaytee Hamster Food

Insight Bird Toy

Hamster Wheel

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Tetra Fish Food

5290

48

FOUR PADS

6 ct. wee wee Pads XL $10.99 (801727)

30 ct. wee wee Pads $24.99 (801726)

12 ct. wee wee Diapers $22.99 (821991)

K9 Advantix II ADV35175 4-pack large dog

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Advantage II $47.99medium dog

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Field Trips and Toursall year ‘round.

Fall City425.765.7883

www.baxterbarn.org

Field Trips and Tours

NatureEducation

PreservationFarm Animals

Find us on Facebook

5290

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Chicks still available!

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Professional in-home pet services for cats, dogs, reptiles, birds and pocket pets including medication administration and health monitoring.

Becky EakinWorking as a local Veterinary Technician

425-281-1538zumiszoopetting.com 52

8992

though, and it turned out he, like most Malamutes, was all talk. After a couple more “woos” and a sniff, he settled down on the grass with his people, Jim and Connie Ross. Most of his act was intended to impress Roxy and Clyde, the two Malamutes he was visiting, anyway.

“It’s all about the show, the drama,” Connie explained.This way of demonstrating to others who is (supposedly) in

charge is a strong trait in Alaskan Malamutes, or “Mals.” Establishing dominance may be part of Mals’ DNA, because many owners believe the breed is descended from wolf ancestors.

“Hence the ‘woos’ and the howls,” said Michelle Reaves, a vol-unteer with the Washington Alaskan Malamute Adoption League (WAMAL).

Michelle belongs to Roxy and Clyde, both rescues from WAMAL in the past two years, and she says its unusual to hear a bark out of her 86-pound female or her 102-pound male, but they talk all the time, in clipped howls called woos.

“If he gives out a bark, it turns almost instantly into a woo,” Michelle said of Clyde.

It’s easier to imagine these imposing dogs as the rescuers, not the ones needing rescue, but Michelle said that WAMAL takes in about 100 Mals each year, some surrendered by owners who can’t give them the exercise or space that they need, some abandoned.

Roxy fell into the second category. WAMAL found her on the street, with a litter of five week-old puppies.

“Somebody quit on her when she had a litter,” Michelle says, tight-lipped. That was about a year ago. Michelle had been volunteering with WAMAL as part of her community service work to finish her degree. She fostered some animals, and did transports, and had already fallen in love with the breed.

“Clyde was pretty much hook, line, and sinker for me,” she said, explaining that she’d adopted Clyde in May 2010, when all she was supposed to do was take care of him for a short time, then send him on to his new home. After she found out that an older male Mal at the new home had rejected Clyde—only 72 pounds when he was rescued—and he’d been sent back to the kennel, she started the process to adopt him.

“So Clyde is a foster failure,” Michelle jokes, “and someone called Roxy a transport failure. I was supposed to transport her from the

volunteer who brought her here to the kennel… She never made it past crawling in my lap and being brought home.”

Roxy still tries to crawl into her lap sometimes, even at 86 pounds. Usually it’s when she’s been corrected for disobeying her training, something she does periodically to test her place in the pack.

“We are their pack, and there is definitely a pecking order,” says Bruno’s person, Jim.

Maintaining the spot at the top of the pecking order is critical for Mal owners, because “These two are independent thinkers,” Michelle says. “They’re not like the retrievers and a bunch of the other breeds that are fully intent on pleasing their people. These guys will ignore you just as fast as anything else, and they might come when they feel like it.”

That personality trait is both a strength and weakness for the dogs. Mal owners love them for all their quirks, but people new to Mals may not be prepared for the hazards of living with a big willful dog, clever enough to create his own fun when no one’s around.

Most owners just laugh off the misadventures, but some of those misbehaving Mals end up with WAMAL.

“The expectations are not what they should be,” says Michelle. Connie puts it more directly. “People adopt these dogs as puppies,

and then they get huge like this, and I don’t think people realize what the food bill’s going to be, and the vet bill, or how much power they really have.”

Life with an Alaskan Malamute is not for everyone, but for the right people, life without one is unimaginable.

For more information about WAMAL, or to donate or adopt, visit www.wamal.com, or send e-mail to [email protected].

SECOND CHANCE FROM 13

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo

Michelle Reaves, left, takes firm hold of Roxy, who’s been trying to prove that she’s the boss of Bruno, who leans on “dad” Jim Ross.