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All Paws Paradise Boarding Kennels in Pimpama, Queensland | Kennel



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All Paws Paradise Boarding Kennels

Locality: Pimpama, Queensland

Phone: +61 412 043 659



Address: 324 Pimpama Jacobs Well Rd 4209 Pimpama, QLD, Australia

Website: http://www.allpawsparadise.com

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19.01.2022 12/8/20 CHARLIE HAS A NEW HOME! Wishing Gemma and Charlie lots of doggy cuddles. ... thank you to everyone who shared and helped. Charlie is a 8 year old female Border Collie who needs to find a new home. Charlie is located on the Gold Coast. She had developed some anxiety and with her working breed instinct to nip those nips have been inncorrectally directed and now she is in a position of needing a new home for her best interest. As Charlie has some issues and her re homing is required quite fast, if anyone feels they may be in the position to go meet her and assess if she is a dog you could work with and give her the confidence to thrive. Or could take her on and look at re homing her them self at a later date. Please comment and the person who is the go between will contact you. These dogs are so unfortunate to end up with owners who don't truely understand the breed. They are highly intelligent dogs but this in it's self can bring issues if their needs are not met. A walk around the block isn't going to cut it, mental stimulation is required and people contact. A anxious dog being moved to a new home can take months to settle in and can become worse before they get better (been there done that). So someone with the time to spend during the transition will be essential. She's on death row if a home isn't found. Please share this as contact with the owner is crucial to get full disclosed on where this dog is at.



11.01.2022 Here's a message from our friend and advisor Birdy. Hey TCP family As we all know, the world is currently going through some challenging times and a lot of p...eople have to self-isolate due to the Coronavirus. Glenn asked me to put a couple of helpful coping strategies together to help you get through these times. Not every advice is suitable for everyone, so maybe just pick a few that you want to implement or take to heart. Also, please post below what you are doing that you find helpful to cope. How to stay resilient and take good care of yourself and your community during such challenging times: Keep in mind that emotions are contagious, which means you have a choice in what you want to support and strengthen. So, if you have the awareness, choose kindness, compassion, patience and gratitude over low vibrational emotions such panic, anger or greed. For instance, a smile, a phone call, a heartfelt thank you, offering help to more vulnerable people, a supportive message or just not reacting to your environment can go a long way. Decide who you want to be in these times and what you want to stand for. Instead of fighting or begrudging the reality of the Coronavirus, accept it and maybe you can even see it as an opportunity. I totally understand that this is very difficult to do, especially if your financial security and livelihood is attached to it. However, the reality won’t change. So why not see it as an opportunity for self-development and resilience building? I know times like these are not gentle teachers and can be very overwhelming and scary. But instead of drowning in these states of mind, use it to your advantage. It’s time for bravery and courage. Here are some ideas: Doing online courses from your favourite trainers, learn a new skill, start healthy habits, read a book that you haven’t had the time to read, learn to meditate, write a letter to someone you love, get on top of your admin work, develop your business, give your body and mind a proper rest so you are ready when it is over, spend time and be present with your loved ones, train your own dogs instead of your client dogs, etc. Be mindful that your own and other people’s stress levels are higher than normal. So, give people the benefit of the doubt, stay kind and gentle with yourself and others, and use grounding strategies to help you navigate life (e.g. Drop your anchor, mindfulness, being outside in nature). Especially social media is a bit of a minefield at the moment, so be aware of this and be mindful where you put your energy. Try to stay away from unhelpful coping behaviours (excessive binging on alcohol, smoking, eating, TV, social media, etc.) and try to engage behaviours that are nurturing and wholesome. If you are close to burn out, this is an excellent opportunity to fill up your tank and get some spoons back into your life. Make a list of people you can reach out to and follow up with a phone call, video chat, or email. Don’t hesitate to ask for professional support (e.g. therapist, coach, doctor). Reach out and see how you can assist others who are isolated or home bound. Keep in mind that this shall pass too. Let’s bring the best out of each other in the TCP family! Feel free to share this post and don’t forget to comment below with strategies that you have found helpful. Sending you all a lot of love and strength! We’ve got this. Birdy See more

09.01.2022 DOUBLE COATED BREEDS This short video is just some basic information to help you understand double coated breeds a bit more, please note this is just a small pa...rt of how the coat works and grooming will also depend a lot on, how old your dog is diet breed how much exercise your dog gets on a daily basis medical issues if your dog is desexed or not how often you are grooming at home and a lot more! Hope you guys enjoy. See more

09.01.2022 Some of our guests for Christmas.



03.01.2022 I am a Dobermann, cataloged one of the most intelligent and most feared dogs, I have served the US Navy and I will not narrate my dark past on the German side.... They called me the devil's dog, today they ask me to behave like a Poodle, they have gone so far as to wear clothes ... I am a Malinois: Gifted among dogs, I shine in all disciplines and I am always ready to work. Today they ask me to relax on the couch all day. I am an Akita Inu: My ancestors have been selected to fight with other dogs. Today they ask me to be tolerant of my peers, and they blame me for my reactivity when one of them approaches me. I am a Beagle: When I followed my prey, I gave a voice so that the hunters could follow me. I was leading the dance. Today they put an electric collar on me to silence me, and they want me to return to the call in a snap of fingers. I am a Yorkshire Terrier: I was a rat catcher, fearsome in the English mines. Today they think that I can't use my legs and they always hold me in their arms. I am a Labrador Retriever: My vision of happiness is a dip in a pond to bring my master the duck he just shot. Today we forget that I am a sports dog, I am fat and I have to babysit the children. I am a Jack Russell Terrier: I am capable of facing a fox larger than me in its own den. Today they blame me for my damn character and want to turn me into a parlor dog. I am a Siberian husky: I got to know the great spaces of northern Russia, where I could pull sledges at impressive speed. Today I only have the walls of the garden on my horizon, and my only occupation is the holes I dig in the ground. I am a Border Collie: I am cut out to work eight hours a day, and I am an incomparable artist of herd labor. Today they blame me because in the absence of sheep, I try to control bicycles, cars, children from home, and everything that is in motion. I am... I'm a 19th century dog I am handsome, I am alert, I am obedient, I can put up with being in a purse ... but I am also an individual who needs to express his instincts, and I am not suitable for the sedentary life that you want me to carry. Spending eight hours a day alone on the patio, seeing you a little at night when you come back, and being entitled to any activity just a short walk to the bathroom will make me deeply unhappy. I'll express it by barking all day, turning your garden into a minefield, relieving myself on the inside, being unmanageable the few times I'll find myself on the outside, and sometimes spending my days on my cushion, then you'll think I'm happy to To be able to enjoy all this comfort while you go to work: in reality I will be in full depression, because it is not the preference of the human, but also that of the dog of the XXI century. If you like me, if you dream of me forever, if my beautiful blue eyes or my athlete look make you want to possess me, but you can't give me a real life of a full dog, a life that is really worth living, and if not you can offer me the job my genes claim ... then quit me. If you like my rhythm but are not ready to accept my character traits from rigorous genetic selection, and you think you can change them with your only good will ... then quit me. I'm a 19th century dog, yes. But, deep there, the one who fought, the one who hunted, the one who pulled sleds, the one who led a herd still sleeps. And sooner or later, you will wake up. For better or worse. Elsa Weiss Éducation Canine / Cynopolis Translation edited by Razas Poderosas y de Trabajo.

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