Preparing your dog for the new arrival, fracking and wildlife - here are the letters for May 15, 2019
Having a baby is a big event for the whole family, including their dog and the more time they spend training their dog and helping them adjust to the changes that are coming, the easier it will be for all as the dog will experience changes in routine as well as new sights, smells and sounds that may upset them.
There are lots of simple steps your readers can take to help their dog adjust to the arrival of a baby:
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Hide Ad* Get them used to the reduced attention before your baby arrives by separating them from you, for short periods of time every day, in the lead up to the birth.
* If they are going to be kept out of certain rooms i.e. the baby’s room, start doing this as soon as possible by setting up baby gates ahead of time. This way they will feel comfortable well in advance of when you need them to.
* Try not to overexcite or stress your dog by staying calm and relaxed when you bring your baby home.
* Teach them how to approach the baby properly and gently. Allow them to make safe initial investigations and approaches under your supervision.
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Hide Ad* Give them treats and lots of praise when they behave well around the baby.
* Make sure that your dog has enough to do and is kept well exercised, even if it means considering a dogwalker for a while.
* Make sure your dog must have a place that they feel safe and relaxed; somewhere that they can go to if things are getting too much for them.
Hollie Sevenoaks
Dogs Trust Head of Education
FRACKING
Grim experience from the USA
Re: Monday’s letter, Fracking will help reduce pollution (Your Say, May 13).
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Hide AdThe article details comments from a reader who claims, “on a holiday, we saw the results after fracking. It amounted to an area the size of a tennis court. A large pipe came out of the ground for a metre and then went underground again. The area was fenced off and cows roamed in the field. It was not a blot on the landscape.”.
This is a naive statement.
I was born in Chorley and lived most of my life there.
I emigrated to the US in 2005. I live in a rural part of Texas, in an area where the Barnett Shale has a huge amount of natural gas. My 10-acre ranch sits atop the area. Since the reserves were discovered in 1981 and fracking started, we have seen a steady increase in the amount of wells.
A few years back, we started experiencing earthquakes throughout the area (covering huge areas and not local to the wells themselves).
It got so bad that the state got involved and sponsored seismographic studies (I have TWO seismographs on my property, and I have personally experienced the earthquakes and have minor property damage - cracked concrete foundations, drywall etc - as a result). Our city roads are literally destroyed by heavy trucks making daily trips to the well sites to collect the unwanted byproduct bracken water that is released as a result.
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Hide AdYou’ll either have a hazardous holding pond of dangerous and toxic water or large holding tanks.
As these tanks fill, they are serviced daily (seven days a week) by trucks hauling the waste water out.
The whole area is a blot with these ugly water holding tanks.
Over the years, some have been retired and sit rusting in fields and pastures.
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Hide AdWells are abandoned and pose a hazard of contaminating the aquifer that serves us drinking water.
I do not know what the energy solution is.
I do know that fracking should not be one of the proposed solutions.
David Andrews
via email
COMPETITION
Laughter from start to finish... thanks
Just a “thank you” for the tickets I won in the Manford Comedy Festival.
My sister and I had a thoroughly good evening, watching John Bishop and Friends.
It was laughter from start to finish. Many thanks.
Sylvia Waddington
Via email
WILDLIFE
Crows need to be culled
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Hide AdOnly the other day, a couple of crows or rooks targeteted a young beautiful song thrush.
Whilst its parents tried in vain to defend it, alas it lost its battle to the crows. We don’t need anymore of this butchering. They do need to be culled if we wish to preserve our depleted songbirds. A sad day it was, in the rain too.
Jarvis Browning
Address supplied