Question by the_zizzer: I want to start a pet car business taking care of pets while their owners are away…?
I would like to start a business offering to take care of people’s pets in their home while they are away. I heard of someone who did that and made quite a bit of money. How would I start my own business doing this? I don’t know where to start or what I need to do. Thanks for any help you can give me!

Best answer:

Answer by Loves the Ponies
Create a flyer and ask your local veteranarian’s if you can post one in their offices. Check with groomers in your area, too. And any local pet stores. Place an ad on www.craigslist.com.

You will want to tell about some of the things you will do while keeping the pet. Walking them, playing with them, grooming them, etc.

If you have watched any of your friends pets, ask them if you can use them as references and give the references to any potential client. You could add to your flyer “References available upon request”.

Check with your local Humane Society to see if they offer any classes you could take that might help make you stand out amongst pet sitters. They may have classes on animal first aid, for example.

Create a form for your clients to fill out before you sit for them. It should include their cell numbers and hotel numbers, the vet’s name – address- phone, feeding instructions and any medicines the pet may take on a regular basis. You may also want to have questions about how the animal gets along with others, what the favorite treat or toy is and so forth. Make sure there is a collar and leash available if you are to walk the animal. You really want to get to know the animal. Find out if the animal has been microchipped or if the animals collar has contact information on it just in case the animal gets lost.

Take a polaroid of the animal and write his name and the owners name on the photo. Keep all of these things in a file and keep it with you while you sit.

I hope this helps!

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Mothers and Daughters, a Healing

Recently my mother was taken to the hospital. She is 89. The doctors thought she had pneumonia, but it turned out she had taken too much of one of her medicines and had come severely dehydrated. I had not seen her for about six months. Until then I had been, or tried to be, the dutiful daughter, caring, yearning to make her life better –– I think in the desperate hope that she would turn finally into the soft, loving, accepting mother who filled my fantasies. But last July, the tensions between us had become so stressful that my health was being affected and I decided I had to make a long overdue separation. It was difficult. I wasn’t sure I could resolve my issues with her before she died. I did not know if I would ever see her again.

At first, when I heard she was in the hospital, I felt little emotion. Both my sister and brother, who are very supportive of this separation, assured me I didn’t have to go see her. They would take care of her. But the following afternoon, I found myself driving to the hospital. I was not a decision I consciously made. My car, it seemed, was driving me there.

I walked into her hospital room, heart pounding. She was sleeping and as I walked by the foot of her bed, my fingers reached out to tickle her toes. No response. As I stood by her side, I gently tickled the palm of her hand.

She opened her eyes, focused and then looked at me in disbelief that quickly turned to wonder. “You’re here!” she said softly. “Emmy…”

I leaned over and kissed her. Her cheek was soft and warm. I sat beside her and held her hand. Although she was “not there” all the time, she was for a lot of the time, and her joy at seeing me was lovely. We chatted and laughed. Then, totally unprompted, she announced, “I can’t change, you know.”

“Yes, I know,” I said. “But I can change. I’m working on changes within me.”

She nodded and fell silent. It was a comfortable silence and, again, unprompted, she said, “I read what you sent me.”

Recently, I had sent her some pages from my new website, Creative Soul Works. I sent it along with a photograph of myself and my dog, Phoebe.

“Did you like them?” I asked, knowing, amazingly, that I would feel comfortable even if she were critical.

She said, “I had to read the pages a few times, and I’m not certain I understood it all, but I liked them.” She was quiet again, and after a few moments said, “This spiritual part has always been in you and isn’t it interesting that it is now coming out in such a fashion.”

Wow! That was amazing for her. No judgmental criticism!

Then a chaplain came into the room. He asked if he could sit with us a while. We said, yes, of course. My mother began talking, not making apparent sense, but I knew what she meant. She was talking about a woman where she lives who held Friday night spiritual gatherings and my mother always loved going. The woman is dying of cancer and my mother misses her.

After a while, the chaplain asked if he could say a prayer. He and I stood by my mother’s bed and he held both our hands and I held my mother’s hand, said a lovely prayer and left. It was lovely, unexpected, mysterious and perfect. I left her soon after feeling content and safe being my mother’s daughter for the first time in a very, very, very long time.

That night I spent time in and out of sleep thinking about end of life and passing over. Wednesday, I woke up early and went walking with Phoebe along a trail through the marsh near us. It was a bright, cold morning. Glorious. The sun sparkled on the thin covering of new ice, the first of the season. I was lost in the beauty of the morning. Nature embraced me. Nature in its denuded, brown beauty. Trees reaching to the brilliant blue sky in prayer. Me and my beautiful puppy dog and the marsh and the ice and the sun and the birds and thoughts of my mother and the beauty of age and even the majesty of death.

All this swirled in my mind as Phoebe and I walked through the marsh. And it seemed to me the trees and air were whispering poetry into my ear. This came to me:

Guardians of Light

hear my sorrow.

Guardians of Death

soothe my soul.

The frozen marsh is a starfield

of December sun.

I fall into the Mystery

where questions are shackles

and the ancient memory of tress

shines.

When I returned to my car I knew I had to go see my mother again. She was sleeping when I got there, curled up like a baby, white blanket tucked high about her neck. I sat beside her on the bed and nudged her into waking. She blinked and stared vacantly at me.

“Who I am?” I asked.

She smiled and said, “Emily.” Then added, “Where did you come from?”

“A walk with Phoebe. It’s beautiful out.”

She drifted back to sleep.

“Wake up,” I nudged her again. “Come on.” I tickled her.

She laughed and opened her eyes.

“Do you still know who I am?” I asked.

“Of course!” She looked at me as if I were crazy.

We talked a bit. She rambled. I asked her if she had seen any angels.

She said, “No, but some men where chasing her all night thought the woods in Larchmont.”

I asked her if she has seen my father or her mother?

“They’re dead,” she said.

“I know. But maybe they’ll come visit if you want them.”

She smiled.

“Daddy can protect you from the men chasing you,” I said.

She drifted back to sleep.

I nudged her again. “I wrote a poem,” I said. “Do you want to hear it?”

“Sure,” she said.

“Okay, listen…” I read the poem. When I finished, I thought she had fallen asleep. I leaned over and whispered, “Did you hear the poem? Should I read it again?”

“Read it again,” she said. She listened, silent a few moments and said, “I understand the poem. I think you’re telling me not to be afraid of death.”

I smiled. She smiled. “Have you seen any angels?” I asked again.

She sighed. “I’m sleepy.”

I leaned over and kissed her soft skin. “Sleep,” I said.

“Are you coming back?” she asked.

“Yes,” I said. “I’ll be back.”

Emily Hanlon
http://www.articlesbase.com/religion-articles/mothers-and-daughters-a-healing-104726.html

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Faces Of Pet Abuse

As much as people are fond of keeping pets, inhumane actions are often reported from across the globe. Pets serve as man’s joy and relief, their furry, cozy, crawling, exotic, terrific, and enriching existence bring a few moments of joy to people’s monotonous, tedious lives.

If pet owners eagerly keep pets it should be particularly clear that they fully take the charge and responsibility of their pets because animals too feel pain as human beings do.

Reports of pet abuse from all over the world shows what humans are oblivious of. There are millions of dead animals that have been found in various city corners. People out of some odd reasons and frustration tend to kill their pets and then to avoid getting caught they go and throw them near drums etc. It gives a grotesque picture of inhumanity and inconsideration.

The illiterate and uneducated people often tend to find ways of earning easy money and these are the people who make their dogs get in to fights. They train them by electrocuting them and burning their skins. When they are trained according them they are proud to win money when their dogs end up being horribly injured during fierce dog fights. Then they pat and love them which are more of an irony in the name of pet love.

There are celebrities who are known to wear fur of pet animals. Giving pets as gifts is a trend these days, just wrapped up like a commodity and presented to people without stopping to consider animals are not products.

There are people who keep horses and donkeys for carriages they too are like pets but these people beat their horses and donkeys and push them to carry extra loads without feeding them properly. They die of malnutrition and in some cases they even die of getting severely beaten up. There are vets in this world that treat sick pets with outdated medicines and they end up dead.

Some pets turn wild and hysterical because their owners treat them wildly. They would beat them, keep them chained, give them stale food and make them irritable. These kinds of pets resolve to biting and screaming to let out their feelings. Pets are found locked up in trunks, locked up in attics and forgotten till they are starved to death.

Some drug addicts drug their pets out of spite and watch their reactions as a vulgar means of entertainment. These and a million more faces of human vindictiveness, inconsideration, brutality and viciousness are widely observed yet not taken care of. Such pet abusers fail to realize that animals too are as flesh and blood as themselves.

Jonathon Hardcastle
http://www.articlesbase.com/automotive-articles/faces-of-pet-abuse-50632.html

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