Friday, March 17, 2017

Shih Tzu behavioral issues.


Gittik thinks that she is a guard dog. She has refused to ever admit that she is a Shih Tzu and her size does not allow her to actually, physically save the household. 

This is her alert pose. 

Lately in her rage of anger while guarding against the kids on the street, the birds that chirp, rain, wind, house help, etc...she has gotten violent towards the cat. Please note that our cat is about 13 years old the most humble animal i have ever known.

Every time the poor cat comes in her way or in her sight while she is guarding, she attacks her! Two months ago she left her wounded. 

We do not know what to do.

I do realize one thing, she and the cat got along quite well till Guz came along...that is when she started to not like the cat.

How we eat and drink!

Gittik not very happy that a steak was made and she isn't invited to the Tea Tray.

She had to reach the same level to 'discuss' the matter.

Trying to drown her sorry in some wine.

After not being given human food and drink, she shows us how upset she is.

Guz through the ages!

It has been a while that i posted; just got caught up with life i guess. To make up for the lost time, please meet Guz overtime. He is now turning two on 20th March.

He has been a pure joy and is the total opposite of Gittik. It amazes me how two Shihtzu dogs, raises in the same household can have such opposite personalities; much like siblings.

More on their personalities later for now enjoy the pictures!

 When Guz came over with his brother to meet us. The other guy was adorable but Guz won our hearts. See how Gittik was not very happy at the back.

This was his normal pose and it got him the name 'Baby Seal'.

Gittik finally took to him.

They actually became the best of friends. Guz followed her everywhere; still does.

He has always been a bit of a scardy cat.

On their visit to my Moms place. Gittik all confident and him staring at her.

This is when he was just a tiny baby and couldn't jump on the bed, so i used the laptop bag to give him some support.

His first and favorite toy. He calls it Boo and is very possessive about it. 

All grown up (in size only - not in mind) and celebrating one of our birthdays. He carried the Balloon rather well. 

So i scolded him! he was being naughty and look at him. Hiding his face. 

Enjoying a get together and sitting on one of our laps.

Finds the most interesting things to sit on.

Still a baby Seal!

Monday, April 4, 2016

The Curious Case of Biggie & Gitty


Forgot to introduce Guz Guz

Have been totally MIA...

Stumbled upon my own blog after a while and realized that Guz Guz was never introduced. Guz has been with us since a year now and is a little over a year old. 
This past year has been full of stories and learning. Hopefully will share that with everyone soon enough. 

For now, meet Guz; the family he came from and his youth ;)

  




He is now a big boy! Much bigger than Gitty, unfortunately not as smart but a sweetheart nonetheless. 

More to come!


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Surviving Parvo...

What a month March was! What a fighter Gittik is! 

(I am still writing my memoirs of this survival tale and will also add pictures)

Day 1: It all started with Gittik not wanting to eat, which was alright since she had always been very picky about her food and was in great spirits and hyper as always.

Day 2: She still didn't eat! This is when i got slightly concerned but her energy levels were fine.

Day 3: She had a few nibbles and threw up at night. My concern grew even though the vomit was not much, just a drop of whitish yellow. My husband saw it and said its nothing and that some dogs cleanse their stomachs by rejecting anything that's not suited.

Day 4: She threw up in the morning. This time it was brownish. We were heading out to work so decided that we will take her to the vet in the evening. By the time we got back from work, her energy was also low. Called her usual vet (This Dr. Ahmed Raza in Lahore where we live) who as usual was busy and very difficult to get a hold off so we took her to a Vet in a nearby area. He saw her, said she has some gastric issues and injected her with some medicines and told us we need to come back every day for three days for treatment at the clinic. I think he also gave something for us to give her at home.

Day 5: She threw up a lot!! And it was dark brown and all very liquidy. I panicked again and insisted we take her to the vet right away. We took time off from work (said will come in late) and took her back. He put her on an IV to get her liquids in and injected her again. After her IV finished, we brought her home and she was quite down.

Day 6: Woke up, took her to the Vet, did the whole IV and injection routine and came home. Husband left for work and i decided to stay in with her. After a while, she went to her excretion corner (this one corner in the house with her newspaper where she takes her Number 1 and 2) and started to put pressure in order to do potty. She was making sounds as she was putting pressure so i went to see and i saw she was struggling to get it out, when suddenly she managed but it was all liquid with the most horrid smell. It was the smell of Iron i think and the liquid-y stool was dark brown. After i picked her up and quickly cleaned her and went to investigate the stool with my nose covered and breath held i realized that it had blood in it. To be sure i took a white tissue and pressed it against it and sure as hell, it was blood. This is when shit hit the roof. I knew she was very VERY ill. I called my husband and was frantic. He rushed home. We took her to the vet; he gave her more medicines and another IV. Said it’s probably Parvo Virus and that we just need to keep her hydrated.

Day 7: No more bloody stool at night but i could not sleep. Gittik was so weak and that smell just won’t go from my head. In the morning, i had to go to work so my husband stayed home and took her to the vet for the IVs and medicines. He left for work at noon and the house help was asked to baby sit (2 people watching over her) till we got back. Around 2 pm, they called and said that she had another bloody episode. I ran from office, drove like a mad person and rushed home, crying throughout. Akbar also rushed from work, we got home and although they had managed to clean the blood and stool the house smelt of hell and poor Gittik was all covered with blood and stool and unable to even lift her head. What was worse was that this vet we were taking her to had no other explanation or plan of action. We were just in shock and just unable to even think. Then i remembered how one of my cousins who also has a Shih Tzu had taken her girl to the veterinary hospital when it was unwell and had highly recommended this vet Dr. Zia there. I got his number from her and called him, by this time i was frantic. He said he wasn't at the hospital (which is more than an hour’s drive from where we live) but will be in your area by 5 pm and could see her in a mutually agreed upon place. 

At 5 pm, we took her to an area half way that we had agreed to meet. He checked her and said she needs medications immediately and what the other vet had been giving were not correct not sufficient. We tried all the pharmacies but found none so we drove to the nearest hospital; us in our car, him and his wife (also a vet) following us. We got the medication from the hospital pharmacy and he got to work. It was night time by now so hardly any light, we held up our cell phones for light. It was something else. While he was mixing concoctions and potions to save our baby Gitti, she had another episode of the blood. It was in the car and it was painful to see her suffer. This gave him more clarity to the situation. He added some more medication to the bunch and put in a branula in her paw (arm) and one intravenous, then another, then another that we had to monitor for 3 hours and then taught us what to do for the rest of the night to keep her stable. 

In 2 hours we both learned how to put in an Intravenous branula, how to tape it, how to mix various medicines and injections into different types of IVs, how to take out an air bubble and the works and then keep at it for the rest of the night.

He then suggested we get her an x-ray (the digital ones, with more visibility). For this we had to go to this special area where they do these with Gittik and her blood in the car and her IV on. So we went, got there by 10 pm to find there was no electricity, waited. Got her abdomen X- Ray-ed, and then the internet in the place won’t connect so we waited further to get that working so we could email the vet so we could ensure that it’s nothing that needs instant surgery.

When he saw the ultra sound, he said that although it was bad but didn't seem to be what he thought would need immediate surgery. So we were good with the routine for the night and should bring her to the Veterinary hospital first thing in the morning for further testing and x-rays). We went home, cleaned Giitik, made her a bed with our softest blankets and put her to sleep with her IV on. Then we changed, cleaned the car, got the blood out and showered ourselves.

Day 8: 
We both slept (or didn't sleep) around her all night, constantly checking on her, making her comfortable and changing the IVs as told. At 8 am, we ventured out again. We picked up my father in law as well. Got the hospital at 9:30 am. She was taken to and operation room to keep her away from the other animals there and in peace. The same routine of medication carried on and Dr. Zia explained to us that the X- ray showed signs that there was internal bleeding also. While there she had another bleeding episode but luckily all the students there helped with it and cleaned her and calmed me down inthe process too.

He performed an Ultrasound (while we were in the ultrasound room, Gittik walked a little after days to take a pee. That is when we realized that perhaps she had not urinated since she fell ill either since we hadn't seen it) and found that her Liver was effected along with other organs.

We were told that next 24 to 48 hours for her are critical. she had lost too much blood, was extremely weak and things didn't look too good either. He drew some blood out and told us to give it to the lab for testing and call him when the results are back at night. We left for home by 5 pm. Got home and I went to work with her medication routine again and Akbar went back to get her lab work back.

(A few of her IVs)

The reports showed that she had low red blood cells (which was obvious). We mailed it to the vet  and he said to bring her back again tomorrow to the hospital and in the meantime stick to the medicine and IV routine.

Day 9:

Monday, August 25, 2014

After Parvo: A very hungry Shih Tzu with hair loss

Gittik (our Shih Tzu) recovered from a nasty Parvo infection. We almost lost her; she was on various antibiotics and IVs and what not for three weeks (will post about that also now that i have recovered from the shock of it all) in March. Fortunately, she has recovered quite well apart from a few minor issues.

1. She developed massive human like hunger and ate herself to (almost) obesity (we were at fault too because she had turned into a skeleton and we wanted her to get back to normal and let her eat) till we realized that she was lazy and a total bum. I put her on a diet and she is back to her normal self...Phew!

(Images of her belly - extremely full)

2.She lost hair! When she fell ill, we shaved her and the hair didn't grow back. Its not that she is bald, but the coat has diminished and the skin is pink. She was not itching much so we know it was not a rash and kept hoping that it'll come back. However 5 months later, the little hair she has is about an inch and half long and thinned out radically (the only place it didn't thin out is on her face), some parts have no hair, the skin is pink and scaly (its like she has dandruff). 

The vet initially gave her vitamin E which she has been on for 2 weeks and a shampoo to bathe her with every 3 days(we have to apply it and leave her for 5 to 10 min before washing it out). On our last visit to the vet 2 days ago, he further prescribed another shampoo called "Polytar", Vitamin E with Selenium (that is only available from GNC) and an anti fungal called "Fluconazole" to be given for every 4 days (10 pills - This he gave because i insisted that it has to be fungal. i think). He says its a side effect of all the medication and that the hair will grow back. I will keep everyone posted on whether this works or not!

Friday, May 31, 2013

Love!

Look at that face. My heart melts each time.


Model much?

My Posers!!

Big the the perfect cat walk!

Giiti after a lot of partying

Big not interested!

Friendly we be

Friendly Much?

It is so interesting how both these adorable creatures are so smart. they will find a way to tolerate one another for as long as they both need something. They sit together, peacefully...for a certain time till all hell breaks loose.




Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Giiti discovered her tail!!

At the age of 3 months Gitti discovered her tail. Se would do this for hours. Luckily, it kept her attention away from us and the furniture. She was adorable. Her coat was darker and now at almost 8 moths it has become much lighter.



Drum Rolls for....Gittik!!

Giiti when she came to us. Two months old. A little baby. Slept a lot but had a lot of energy too. Cried the first few days as well.









Meet Mr. Big!!

I found Big in 2003. She has been my most loyal companion ever since. Very wise, she is. 








Monday, May 27, 2013

Spy vs. Spy!

On a normal day, Mr. Big and Gitti are always out to get one another, just like spy vs. spy from MAD magazine.


The House Pets or the House Owners?


Meet Mr. Big (10 year old persion female) the Cat and Gittik (aka Gitti and G.T.T.I. - 7 month old Shihtzu) the Dog!

My husband and I are not sure whether they are the pets or we are. This is a daily debate in our lives and will be sharing some of it with you.

By the way, in this picture, due to the excessive heat, the dog and cat (normally arch nemesis)  enjoy the breeze of the air conditioner on our bed while we stay off and take pictures.