Archive for the ‘For clients’ Category
Ten tips for pet sitting clients, by Denise Lohr, Owner, PetSitPgh, LLC updated, November 14, 2011
1. Confirm the dates of your visits by email. All future visits should be confirmed by email prior to departure. Please notify your pet sitter when you’ve returned home.
2. Have at least two sets of keys made for your pet sitter. Make sure they work.
3. Give your pet sitter contact information for someone who can get into your home in the case of severe weather or medical emergency.
4. Leave updated instructions with the location of all supplies and enough food, treats and litter for all visits. Please scoop your cat’s litter prior to leaving.
5. Inform your pet sitter if a relative, friend or contractor will be visiting your home, especially if they are taking care of the pets.
6. Notify your pet sitter if you are coming home earlier or later than planned. Most pet sitters will invoice you for visits that are not cancelled well in advance.
7. Your pet sitter normally has a vehicle that will need to be parked during the visit and will need to know the location of a legal parking space.
8. Advise the pet sitter of the code and also any passwords that need to be given to your security company.
9. If your dog has a history of aggressive behavior with another animal or person in the neighborhood (such as the mail carrier) advise your pet sitter on how you handle that issue.
10. Tell your neighbors or building manager that a professional pet sitter is coming so they are not alarmed by someone going into your home during your absence.
Beautiful poem for anyone mourning the loss of a dog.
Dog Heaven
When dogs go to heaven, They don’t need wings
Because God knows that Dogs love running best.
He gives them fields. Fields and fields and fields.
When a dog first arrives in heaven, he just runs.
Dog heaven has clear, wide lakes
Filled with geese who honk and flap
And tease. The dogs love this.
They run beside the water and bark
And bark and God watches them
From behind a tree and smiles.
There are children.
Of course.
Angel children.
God knows that dogs love children more than
Anything else in the world, so he fills Dog
Heaven with plenty of them. There are children
On bikes and children on sleds. There are
Children throwing red rubber balls and children
Pulling kites through the clouds. The dogs
Are there, and the children love them dearly.
And, oh,
The dog biscuits.
Biscuits and biscuits
As far as the eye can see.
God has a sense of humor, so He makes His
Biscuits in funny shapes for His dogs. There
are kitty-cat biscuits and squirrel biscuits.
Ice-cream biscuits and ham-sandwich biscuits.
Every angel who passes by
Has a bicsuit for a dog.
And, of course, all God’s dogs
Sit when the angels say "sit."
Every dog becomes a good
Dog in Dog Heaven.
God turns
Clouds inside out to
Make fluffy beds for the dogs
In Dog Heaven, and when they
Are tired from running and
Barking and eating ham-
Sandwich biscuits,
The dogs find a cloud
bed for sleeping.
They turn around and
Around in the cloud.
.. until it feels just right,
and then they curl up
and they sleep.
God watches over
Each one of them
And there are no bad dreams.
Dogs in Dog Heaven
Have almost always
Belonged to somebody
On Earth and, of course,
The dogs remember this.
Heaven is full of memories.
So sometimes an angel will walk a dog
Back to Earth for a little visit and quietly,
Invisibly, the dog will sniff about his old
Backyard, will investigate the cat next
Door, will follow the child to school, will
Sit on the front porch and wait for the mail.
When he is satisfied
That all is well, the dog
Will return to Heaven with the angel.
It is where dogs belong,
Near God who made them.
The dogs in Dog Heaven who
Had no real homes on Earth
Are given one in Heaven.
The homes have yards and porches and there are
Couches to lie on and tables to sit under
While angels eat their dinners.
There are special bowls
With the dogs’ names on them.
And each dog is petted and reminded
How good he is, all day long.
Dogs in Dog Heaven may stay as long as
They like and this can mean forever.
They will be there when old friends show
Up. They will be there at the door.
Angel dogs.
by Cynthia Rylant
Why should I hire a professional pet sitter?
In recent years, attitudes and laws have changed regarding the care and keeping of domestic animals. Many pet owners regard their pet as family, and want to provide them with the best care possible when they are not able to do so. Imagine this unpleasant scenario: you are vacationing in a distant state and get a voicemail from a neighbor saying that your dogs are running wild throughout the neighborhood. This in fact happened to me, when instead of hiring a professional pet sitter, I asked my neighbors to “keep an eye” on my dogs. WHAT A MISTAKE! As well meaning as my neighbors were, they had left my dogs in the back yard unattended, long enough for one to jump over and the other to dig under the fence and indeed they were on the run. I was extremely upset and vowed never again to entrust my precious dogs to anyone other than a professional. Now when I travel, I can relax and enjoy myself, knowing that my pets are well cared for and in the best of hands. Should a medical emergency arise, the sitter will know where to go and what to do. There will be lots of playing & cuddling and I will get regular photos sent to my phone and/or text messages letting me know all is well. Yes, it costs money and YES, it is well worth it. When I arrive home, I am met by pets who have been lots of attention, my mail is neatly piled up and the newspapers have all been brought in. Now, when I plan my vacations or business trips, the first thing I budget for is the pet sitter. Why hire a professional pet sitter? Peace of mind is worth every penny.
10 nice things to do for your pet sitter
1. Confirm your visits prior to leaving, with the pets’ names and dates of service in the subject line of an email.
2. Prompt payment is always appreciated.
3. Have extra keys made and make sure they work.
4. Shovel out a parking spot.
5. Leave lights on or on timers so the pet sitter is not walking into a dark home.
6. Leave updated instructions with any changes (eg, the painter will be here on Friday etc). Tell the pet sitter to help herself to water or cold drinks if possible.
7. Scoop your kitty litter prior to leaving.
8. Leave brushes, toys and treats in plain view so your pet sitter can you give your pet a little extra TLC.
9. Ask a neighbor, friend or family member to be on call in case of emergencies. Pet sitters are human and get sick, have car accidents etc.
10. Leave a nice tip (in cash), especially during the holidays.
10 worst things you can do to your pet sitter
1. Leave an almost empty bag of high end pet food that can only be bought at one specialty store and no money to buy it.
2. Leave an almost empty bag of kitty litter.
3. Leave without cleaning your cat’s litter box – for the last several weeks and no litter scoop to clean it.
4. Forget to inform the pet sitter that your nephew will be “hanging out to watch football” (most likely in his underpants) while you are away.
5. Arm the security system without giving the pet sitter the code to disarm it or the secret word to give the company when they call.
6. Have no legal parking space available or leave 3 feet of snow not shoveled in the only spot available.
7. Forget to inform your pet sitter that your pet has been sick and has been throwing up and having diarrhea in every room of the house and leave no visible cleaning supplies.
8. Put your food, water, and pet supplies in three different unknown areas of the house, with no instructions on where to find them.
9. Forget to inform your pet sitter that your flight was cancelled and you need the visits to continue.
10. Come home early and forget to call the pet sitter, and then act indignant when she shows up at 8am waking you up.
Cassidy will be missed
Today Cassidy finally crossed the Rainbow Bridge, after thirteen and a half glorious years on earth. She and her collie sister, Shayna, belong to my secretary, Jan, who has raised collies all her life. No dog could ask for a better life than Jan gives, showering her dogs (and everyone else’s) with unconditional love, from beginning to end. I hope when it’s my time to make that awful decision, I will have the courage and grace that Jan shows every day of her life, as she selflessly does for others. Thank you Jan.
City of Pittsburgh pet waste removal law
http://www.city.pittsburgh.pa.us/main/assets/stormwater/07_doggydoo.pdf
Our law requires you to do one of three things with your pet waste:
1. Flush
2. Double bag and place separately from other trash on pick-up day
3. Bury at least one foot deep in your yard
Ten reasons to start a pet sitting business
1. You are absolutely out of your mind crazy about animals and would gladly run in front of a speeding vehicle to save one.
2. You have no life and nothing better to do with your time anyway.
3. Your personality does not fit in with office politics, cubicle etiquette, dress codes, and 9 to 5 hours.
4. You despise bosses who lie, cheat, steal and treat employees like crap – and expect you to do the same.
5. You need money to survive and welfare just won’t make it.
6. You have a gift for listening, getting people to trust you and to feel safe with you and you are a good conversationalist.
7. You don’t blink an eye when a potential client asks you to feed Fi Fi from her special spoon on her special china plate at the formal dining table.
8. You don’t mind working 365 days a year because you are usually alone on the holidays and weekends anyway.
9. You love driving to neighborhoods you never knew existed, creating your own parking spaces where there were none, finding houses with no numbers, and figuring out how to get into them with keys that don’t work.
10. You have no intention of becoming a millionaire, and just want to earn an honest living doing what you love, hanging around with dogs and cats all day.
Doggy treadmills give your pet another alternative to an outdoor walk.
Check out this treadmill, designed specifically with dogs in mind. It comes in different sizes and I have personally used this with a client’s dog. It works!
http://www.pawwws.com/
