Saturday, November 16, 2024

November: A Time of Thanksgiving

Hi and Happy Fall with all its fading beauty. Our trees had beautiful colors and then suddenly they were naked and our lawn was covered with wilting brown leaves. I think the lesson of fall is that all good things come to an end, Lesving fond memories, and giving us reason to look forward new and different good things to come. Yes, I am basically an optimist.

And of course November is a time for reflection and thankfulness for what we have received and what we have learned.

Even when I was teaching and appreciated the day off that national vacation days offered, I questioned why Veterans Day (and Memorial Day too) was a day off of school. I always thought the students should be in school and the day should include lessons and information about the reason for setting aside a day to honor our veterans, as a way to awaken appreciation in our youth for those who have served our country. 


And that brings me to Gettysburg! This year our Lhasa Apso National Specialty was held in Gettysburg. I was so grateful to be able to be there, not just to see all the Lhasas and friends from across the USA (and this year from Poland and Australia) but also because I have always wanted to go to Gettysburg and learn some history.

With that in mind, Jan Graunke, LaVonne Bennett, and I took one day off from the dog show and toured parts of the battlegrounds and visited the museum, which is part of the Visitors Center. We also watched a movie about the battles and were able to view the impressive cyclorama that depicted the battle. I admit to needing to suppress tears.

You can see the cyclorama on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLm1CDBSxQ4

Here are some of the photos we took.


Above: The three of us with Lincoln at the Visitors Center
Below: A couple monuments and a monument at sunset






As for the specialty, in one way it was disappointing and that is because the entry was so small. The bulk of the entry was Specials (dogs that have already earned their champions and are vying for Best of Breed). The largest entry that week was only 46. However, they were all beautiful. Lhasas, their exhibitors, and spectators had a great time.

Our entries seem to get smaller each year. 

I am guilty of contributing to the the paucity of Lhasas  present taking not entering Deacon. By the entry deadline, I was sure that Deacon was blowing coat. He'd earlier had a fairly brief time of coat change and I knew I was not going to get off that easily. So at entry deadline, I decided that if I did not want to be dealing with a coat change, Deacon needed to stay home. Good thing too, because my husband reported that he was having to groom Deacon daily and was getting piles of coat out of him. Lynn was glad to turn the chore back over to me when I got home!

In spite of not having a dog, I did get to take someone else's Lhasa puppy into the ring for a few minutes. I also got to see Karen show Floyd (Joyslyn Karlyn Dark Side of the Moon) in the puppy classes each day. Floyd is a litter brother to Cosmo, Gabby, GI, and Kira whose parents are Millie and Chance. He was super excited to see me, but Karen told me he was super exciteed to see everybody!  

It was also a pleasure to watch LaVonne show Misti (GCHB CH Mon Ami'N Joyslyn's Shades of Summer) in the Veteran Competitions. Misti won the Celebration of Veterans Competition and also Best Veteran in Show. Misti is 9 years old. Some of you who are reading this have puppies out of Misti and Archie (Lacey, Minako, Maple, and Pixie)

Here are pictures:


 






A random picture of me at the National:

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Here is the official photo of Deacon winning Non-Sporting Group 4 in Freeport. It arrived too late to put in the October blog.



Photos and Notes

Lisa sent this Halloween photo of her Lhasa boys. The black and tan is Ebony's brother, Duncan.


Michelle wrote about Sunny: "He loves to run the backyard! He’s so beautiful when he walks and runs! He got that from his Sire and Dam! " She sent a video of Sunny running and here is a still from the video and a photo of him on his 5th birthday.





Bernie The Science Dog is back for another school year of sharing and helping 3rd graders in a Texas school. The topic this year is weather. The weather topic leading to this photo was "wind." Here is a still from the video Jody sent showing Bernie "facing the wind!"



Courtney sent photos and a report on Amelia's recent show. "The judge for breed told me I had a nice dog with a great rear, so that was encouraging. She seems to really enjoy being in the ring with the other dogs in group." And she posted about Amelia's first year on her FB page: "Happy 1st Birthday Amelia! In her first year she traveled through or to eight states, did four shows, got Star Puppy and graduated from advanced obedience class. Can't believe she's not a puppy anymore! Thank you so much Joyce Johanson for entrusting her to me and for all your guidance!"


Judy G. wrote, "Nyx's  Rally Novice title on October 19. Ty, Winny, Onyx and Winter received their Fit Dog Bronze title. To earn the title  we walked 55 minutes weekly in addition to  their fitness related titles (Rally Novice).
Judy told us last month that she was taking Winter and Nyx to rally trials. She let me know that they both did well!  Judy wrote, "With 2 qualifying scores, Winter received 2 first place ribbons. I was worried because at last Wednesday night's class she "forgot" how to sit and down! I will finish her title with a Rally Virtual trial before the end of the year.
Nyx had 2 qualifying scores and a second place and received her Rally Novice title! She will begin her Rally Intermediate title with a virtual trial at the end of the year."

Here is a photo of Nyx and her ribbons.

Judy L posted photos of her 14 year old girls on  the occasion of their birthday. She wrote, "Happy 14th Birthday, Raven and Whisper! 7 weeks old in the first photo. Raven (left) is a finished Champion with 3 litter contributions to the Joyslyn breeding program. She is great-great grandma to Gusto Spitz and Lippy Maverick Jones.
Whisper (right) is a miraculous girl who was left practically stillborn in her birth sack by her dam. Mom Mira’s first litter. Breeder Joyce Johanson as Superwoman swooped in and applied all possible live-saving procedures, to no avail. Whisper was softly placed to the side on a towel, while Superwoman assisted with the delivery of the remaining puppies.
Superwoman, out of the corner of her eye, noticed subtle movement of the presumed stillborn puppy. Whisper was alive! She is a survivor of a miracle birth, with no adverse effects to live a full and normal life. Heck, she is 14 years old today. From stillborn to 14 years - yippee!
Whisper is great-great aunt to Gusto Spitz and Lippy Maverick Jones.
Thank you, Raven, for your contributions to the Breeding Program which eventually led to Gus and Lippy, two of your great-great grandsons, becoming Laffoon Munchkins.
Whisper, thank you for your continued exuberance and joie de vivre, and being Besties with Raven. You were nicknamed, “Kissie” as a young girl because kiss, kiss, kiss was your favorite thing. Well, probably after your daily soccer practices with any of your 30 tennis balls!"


From Sally, "Ginger and Jaxon are so good! Every day is a great day with these two. How could anyone have a bad day when they are privileged enough to wake up to lhasas?!"


Puppy News

We have a litter that is now 2 weeks old. Those of you who are on the waiting list, please be patient. I will be contacting you in a couple weeks in the order in which you are on the list. These puppies will not be leaving until after the holidays. Holidays are too crazy to be a good time to get a puppy.

The sire of the litter is a dog named Monkee who belongs to my friend Jan. Here is his picture.

The dam is our Pearl.

There are 2 females and 3 males in the litter. I plan to keep a girl. The sire's owner may want a puppy also.

That said, we also have a second litter that is due on December 1. The sire of that litter is Josh.

The dam is Ebony.


Back to Our Past

In previous blogs I introduced you to Lhasas that were the beginnings of Joyslyn's Lhasas. The dog that really got us into showing was Multiple Group Winning American & Canadain CH Joyslyn's Piece of the Rock ROM (Register of Merit). Rocky's sire was BIS Am Can CH Arborhill's Ra-Kieh.Dam was our own Joyslyn's Miss Buffy Jo.
Rocky earned his first point at age 7 months.
(Yes that is me showing him at age 24!!)


 A few months later, I asked a professional handler, Marge Lewis, who became a dear friend and mentor to this novice exhibitor, to take Rocky to Texas for a big specialty week there. He came home needing only one point to be a champion.

Rocky was specialed, shown by Marge, and won many group placements in the US. At the end of his career in the US, we sent him with a handler on the east coast, Bill Trainer, who showed him in Canada, earning his championship and 3 Group 1's. 

Here are a few of the many photos we have in Rocky's album.


Rocky won the Group in St. Louis, and a Hallmark photographer took the photo below that eventually appeared in two Hallmark calendars.



Rocky in Canada with Bill Trainer after winning a Group 1 placement.


Below: Rocky selected as the "Ideal" Lhasa in Dog World magazine.


Two Topics That You Need to Know About

As an intro to Topic 1, I'll tell you about a Sci-Fi movie I saw years ago. I cannot recall its title, but what I have always remembered is that the house pet in the movie was what we today would call an "AI dog." He was loved by the children but was not a living, breathing animal. "UGH," I thought.

I was reminded of that movie when I read the following article. You will think, "Oh, that's only one crazy town. Weird, but no big deal. It has nothing to do with me." 

I think you would be wrong. We all have seen how crazy ideas tend to spread from "crazy" to policy. 

Sometimes when I think ahead to the time when I will give up showing and breeding, I get so sad. Lhasas have been part of my life since 1973. These crazy laws, which may have begun with "Good Intentions" (or probably not), make breeding more difficult not only for puppy mill breeders and backyard breeders, but also for preservation breeders like me -- with repercussions also for puppy buyers. Where are you going to get your puppies when everyone gives up? When the crazy laws produce unintended results? 

So what can pet owners as well as breeders do? AKC outlines how you can help. Read the following article.


You will see Lhasa Apsos on the list. If you are a Lhasa lover, think what that means for our beloved breed.

This comes from AKC.
Here goes: 

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"On October 22, the Ojai City Council voted 4-1 to adopt a first-in-the-nation law that prohibits the breeding of dogs and cats with “congenital anatomical features” that are likely to cause the animal or its offspring to suffer pain, deformity, or difficult expressing natural behaviors, difficulty breathing, difficulty with physical exertion or exercise, or difficulty breeding. It provides no exceptions. 

 

The City Council also voted unanimously to amend Ojai’s mandatory spay/neuter law by eliminating exceptions for (1) dogs that compete in, or are in training for, American Kennel Club (AKC) events and , (2) dogs that are owned by AKC Breeders of Merit.  It now allows exceptions for male dogs over 40 pounds to wait until it is two years of age, and for female dogs over 40 pounds until it has experienced one heat cycle.  Exceptions remain for service dogs (including those in training), law enforcement and search-and-rescue dogs, and those certified in writing by a veterinarian that the dog cannot be sterilized until after a certain date or because sterilization would be detrimental to the health of the animal.

 

Both ordinances take effect 30 days after passage.

 

About Ojai

Ojai is a small city, with a population of approximately 7,500.  It already requires the mandatory spay/neuter of dogs by the time they reach six months of age.  

 

In addition to these new anti-breeding laws, the town is known for other first-in-the-nation animal rights-driven laws it has adopted.  In September 2024, the town adopted an ordinance that grants bodily autonomy—or habeas corpus rights—to elephants.  This means legally, elephants cannot be imprisoned against their will inside city limits.  No elephants are known to be located in Ojai.    

 

Summary

Modeled on European breeding regulations, the “unethical breeding” ordinance prohibits any person in Ojai from breeding a dog or cat with congenital anatomical features that are likely to cause the animal or its offspring to suffer pain, deformity, or difficulty expressing natural behaviors, difficulty breathing, difficulty with physical exertion or exercise, or difficultly breeding; and supports this prohibition with a preamble of findings that feature unsubstantiated claims about the number and distribution of animal suffering. 

 

The ordinance provides a lengthy list of characteristics it considers likely to cause suffering: 

  1. Snout length comprising less than one-third of the animal’s head, from the top of the skull to the tip of the muzzle.
  2. Abnormal or labored breathing sounds during rest, including snoring and snorting when awake.
  3. Body shapes, including, but not limited to, head size and shape, relative to pelvis that increase the risk of dystocia, perinatal complications, or death.
  4. Body shape or proportions that do not allow animals to mate naturally without human intervention.
  5. Exposed sclera when the animal is looking straight ahead caused by shallow eye orbit in the skull.
  6. Vertebral malformations, including, but not limited to, “corkscrew tails” and the lack of tails.
  7. Sensory loss, including, without limitation, blindness and deafness.
  8. Visible skin folds on top of the muzzle.
  9. Excessive skin folds on body, head, or legs.
  10. Unnatural posture.
  11. Stenotic, narrowed, or closed nostrils.
  12. Elongated or thickened soft palate.
  13. Hypoplastic trachea.
  14. Everted laryngeal saccules.
  15. Lagophthalmos.
  16. Exophthalmos.
  17. Lameness or movement disorders.
  18. Neurological disorders.
  19. Chondrodystrophy.

The ordinance empowers peace officers, code enforcement officers, and others designated by the city manager to enforce the prohibitions. 

 

AKC’s Position and Commentary

AKC strongly opposes the breeding of dogs by those who do so without regard for the dogs’ welfare, and takes a strong line on animal cruelty, including implementing a policy that suspends the AKC privileges of anyone charged with animal cruelty involving dogs, and complete revocation of such privileges of anyone convicted of cruelty.

 

Respectfully, AKC views Ojai’s latest anti-breeding ordinances as (1) unsubstantiated, uninformed, and difficult-to-enforce extremist targeting of breeds, breed characteristics, and responsible purebred dog breeders that is primarily intended to gain media attention and notoriety; (2) a failure of contributing anything of positive consequence for dogs or the ongoing efforts by purebred dog fanciers and veterinary researchers to use science-based approaches to further improve animal health; and (3) ineffective in addressing the issues of shelter populations that are commonly understood to be caused by socioeconomic factors, veterinary care costs, and the return of shelter pets acquired during the Covid-19 pandemic, not by responsible purebred dog breeders who compete in AKC events.  

 

While the new “unethical breeding” law does not explicitly list targeted breeds, the Administrative Report that accompanies the ordinance did.  After incorrectly equating a scientific description of head shape (brachycephaly) with physiological deviations found in dogs with Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome (BOAS), the report listed the following as common brachycephalic breeds, thereby implying a direct relationship to BOAS: Boston Terriers, Boxers, Bullmastiffs, Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, Chinese Shar-Pei, Chow Chow, “English” Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Lhasa Apso, Pekingese, Pugs, and Shih Tzu. 

 

The report also included a list of breeds with short limbs that it claimed, without scientific evidence, are prone to cartilage defects, joint disease, and a predisposition to spinal problems: Basset Hounds, Beagles, Dachshunds, Dandie Dinmont Terriers, Pembroke Welsh Corgis, and Scottish Terriers. 

 

The Administrative Report, like the official findings included in the ordinance, failed to provide any statistical or scientific substantiation of the claims it made about canine health and suffering.  It also failed to provide any information on the work being done both in America and abroad to improve animal health, including veterinary training and implementation of the BOAS Grading Scheme.  These, along with the elimination of exceptions to the mandatory spay/neuter ordinance that were designed to benefit AKC Breeders of Merit and dogs that compete in AKC events, indicate that both ordinances and the supporting documentation were written with an anti-dog, anti-breeding, and anti-AKC bias often championed by animal rights groups. 

 

Moreover, the “unethical breeding” ordinance’s extensive list of conditions that it classifies as “likely to cause suffering” features medical terms usually only understood by veterinarians, other experienced veterinary medical professionals, and purebred dog breeders.  However, the ordinance does not empower those with this type or level of specialized knowledge to enforce it.  Instead, everyday peace and code enforcement officers are given that power.  AKC believes this is a disparity that will lead to uninformed, onerous, inconsistent, and potentially prejudicial enforcement, if the ordinance is enforced at all.  

 

What You Can Do

All breeders, owners, and residents in Ojai, along with all AKC-affiliated clubs, and all national breed parent clubs, are strongly encouraged to express opposition to the ordinance to the members of the Ojai City Council. (Scroll down for discussion points.)

Some points to be sure to mention to your councilmember:

  • This ordinance ends the ability of responsible city residents to produce certain breeds of dogs and establishes a dangerous precedent for radical legislative proposals around California and the rest of the country.
  • This ordinance assumes that all brachycephalic animals, including dogs, suffer from serious health issues. In fact, brachycephaly does not equal unhealthy.  Across all dog and other animal types, multiple factors can contribute to differences in breathing, including physical condition, environment, and genetics.  Nevertheless, all breeding of brachycephalic and chondrodystrophic breeds of dogs–regardless of health, breeder background, fancier status, or club affiliation—will be prohibited under the ordinance, which will have a chilling effect on all responsible dog breeding.
  • This ordinance implies that all who breed dogs do so without regard for the dogs’ welfare. Facts demonstrate that responsible purebred dog breeders are passionate about both preserving breed characteristics and producing healthier successive generations.
  • Protecting and promoting responsible breeders and the puppies they produce is a better solution than blanket bans based on inaccurate or incomplete information that creates a perverse incentive for city residents to buy puppies of unknown source without predictable traits or health backgrounds.
  • Ojai’s residents would be better served through enforcing and supporting the strengthening of California’s consumer protection laws for pet purchasers.

Visit Breeding Regulations and Restrictions in the AKC Legislative Action Center for more talking points and information.

 

Staying Vigilant About What Local Governments Are Doing Is Key

Unfortunately, AKC only learned of Ojai’s latest anti-breeding ordinances after they had been adopted, not before.  While we use sophisticated government relations tracking systems that keep us up-to-date on federal and state-level issues, no tracking system in existence today, including ours, accurately or timely tracks what the more than 33,000 local jurisdictions in the United States are up to.  And while media reports may be helpful, search engines and news aggregators provide only partial information.    These are the reasons why AKC strongly encourages all purebred dog fanciers and breeders to be vigilant about what dog-related issues are being discussed in your communities.  Here are some simple strategies to use:

  1. Monitor local news outlets to learn of any animal incidents in your community. Incidents are often the catalyst for changes in the law. Following their social media pages aggregates their reports for you into one convenient location.
  2. Follow your lawmakers on social media. They often report about their accomplishments in office because they want to be seen as doing of something of benefit for their constituents.
  3. Regularly check city and county websites, or subscribe to their social media accounts if they have them. Meeting agendas and calendars are often posted on these sites. If your city or county has an animal advisory committee, information about it is usually posted on their websites. 

When something dog-related does come up, it is vitally important that you share that information with AKC Government Relations (GR).  A simple email to doglaw@akc.org with your city or county’s name and a link to online reports, or a simple summary written by you, is all it takes to alert us.


And here is another downer for dog breeders: https://www.akc.org/legislative-alerts/u-s-congress-bad-breeder-laws-advance-quickly-lame-duck-take-action-now/"



I would that the pet owners of the dogs on the list can and should should join breeders in writing opinions to our local, state, and federal leaders.

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Topic 2:

Those of you who have purchased puppies from me know that my sales agreement includes a caution about giving the Lepto vaccination. New versions of the vaccine are now available and are supposed to be safer. The following article explains -- but note that it also contains some cautions. The Lepto vaccine is now considered to be one of the core vaccines. It is not to be given before age 12 weeks. It should not be given at the same time as another vaccine. It should be given annually.


New News about the Lepto vaccine:

https://www.akc.org/expert-advice/dog-breeding/announcing-updated-canine-core-vaccine-recommendations-leptospirosis-now-included/#:~:text=The%20leptospirosis%20vaccine%20has%20been,reactions%2C%20including%20death%20in%20puppies.



Finally
If you made it this far, thanks and congratulations!

I hope you have a Thanksgiving that is all Thanksgivings are supposed to be. Make a list of 10 things you are thankful for and share your list -- even if you just re-read and share it again with yourself. It helps!


Regards,

Joyce