Category Archives: Pet Friendly Hotels
How to ensure that your garden is both child friendly and pet friendly
How to ensure that your garden is both child friendly and pet friendly
Dangers include toxic plants, your pond, stinging nettles, thistles and thorny plants but there are other potential dangers you may not be totally aware of.
There are many plants with toxic leaves, flowers and berries but the list is too extensive to go into detail here, these are however covered in more detail in my up-coming ebook. For example plants such as ‘lily-of-the-valley’ and the berries of ‘honeysuckle’ are very toxic, but there are many more. Check with a horticultural professional for more details or do an internet search.
A simple low fence of any type around your pond area will certainly go a long way to prevent young children and household pets from entering.
Stinging nettles are a nuisance to get rid of, when you think you have managed to get them out by their roots you are often surprised to find them re-appearing in your garden a few weeks later.
It’s much easier just to keep chopping them down and disposing of the stalks and leaves, even very small nettles can cause a severe rash and although in most cases nettle stings are not a serious matter they are however very uncomfortable.
Thistles often contain tiny thorns that will easily penetrate the skin. The problem comes from them being too small or thin to be seen easily making them difficult to find in order to remove them. They can also prove to be rather painful with no obvious sign of the cause of the irritation.
Other thorny plants such as roses, brambles, hawthorn etc. are obvious causes of injury. These often cause a rather nasty bloody scratch resulting in scarred skin tissue. Plus have you ever tried trying to get a thorn out of your dog or cats paw, not an easy task; that is if you can find the culprit in the first place.
Be sure to wear protective gloves when handling any of the above plants.
Also ensure you do not leave any sharp objects or tools in the garden for children or pets to injure themselves on.
The same also applied to garden and plant related chemicals such as weed killers, fertilisers, pest control substances etc. Glass based greenhouses and cold frames also provide another potential hazard you need to be aware of, broken glass can cause a serious injury.
Of course any children or pets should be supervised at all times whilst in the garden.
Apart from the dangers that can be caused to children or pets there is also some risk with the damage that children or pets can cause to your garden.
Children, especially the very young, absolutely love flowers but are often unaware of the damage they are causing when they present you with the wonderful gift of a flower head from one of your prize dahlias for example. They think they are being kind and appreciative, (bless ‘em!) so of course you don’t have the heart to tell them off for giving you a present. I’m sure you see my point, picking flowers in the garden is not always a great idea! Young children can have a very destructive effect on your flower garden, so do not let them go out there unsupervised.
Also try not to let young children go outside with the bucket and spade you bought them at the seaside, they will undoubtedly fill their bucket with soil; but where are they getting that soil from? Maybe a few uprooted plants will allow them to fill the bucket with ease!
Household pets can also have a detrimental effect on your garden. Cats love to leave their faeces all over the lawn as do dogs. This can be difficult to clean up from the grass so it’s perhaps best to try and keep them off the lawn wherever possible, and their mess is much easier to clean up from concrete or slabs (flagstones). Also if you have a female dog here’s a word of caution; bitch urine can cause damage to you lawn as it tends to produce horrible brown patches on your otherwise plush green grass area.
Dogs and cats love to chew on plant life (so much for being carnivorous) and dogs especially enjoy digging, but you can guarantee that they will choose to dig right where you don’t want them to.
A small fence of any type to section off any area you would rather your dog did not go will offer them some reluctance.
Of course there is other damage children and pets can do to your otherwise beautiful garden so the above is by no means a complete list. The best advice I can offer is to supervise them at all times whilst they are in the garden.
Enjoy your garden and be safe!
Please emailme to for more information or to reserve your copy of my new upcoming budget gardening ebook.
Pete Etheridge
Qualified horticulturist and budget hobby gardener.
Offering help & advice on garden matters.
Apartment Marketing – You Need to Know This
Apartment Marketing – You Need to Know This
Any renter who has got a pet knows exactly how difficult it is to find a pet-friendly apartment complex that would welcome them with open arms. And that is just too bad because the situation can very easily be remedied with a three-word policy: Responsible Pet Ownership.
Landlords who advertise apartments which are vacant do not always designate that their apartment marketing plan does not include or, more strongly, does not allow occupancy by tenants with pets. However, that sad fact is discovered when the want-to-be tenant appears on the scene. Although many pets are frowned up, the rules are sometimes less rigid when it come to fish, birds (canaries, parrots, macaws, cockatoos, etc.), small cages mammals or rodents (rats, mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, gerbils, rabbits ), reptiles (snakes, lizards, turtles, frogs) and felines (a.k.a. kitty cats).
It’s the dogs, large and small, which are known to be men’s (and women’s) best friends that have got the bad rap and have acquired the worst reputation for being undesirable and unwanted tenants.
That statement is made obvious time and time again by the fact that, on the one hand, many landlords want to fill their vacancy and advertise rentals in newspapers, hang out “Apartment for Rent” signs and sign up with a variety of websites that provide rental advertisement services. On the other hand, the same landlords turn away tenants who respond to the rental advertising on the basis of owning a pet and most specifically a dog.
I suspect that that is so because dogs tend to bark louder than birds chirp, cats mew, snakes hiss and so on. Furthermore, in lots of cases owners of dogs view their pets as equal (or almost equal) members of their families and give them too much free reign. This takes me back to the statement I made earlier – … the situation can very easily be remedied in many cases with a three-word policy: Responsible Pet Ownership.
For anything to do with apartment advertisement; we suggest you do some diligent research first and beware of the sharks out there!
But what exactly is Responsible Pet Ownership and how will it convince landlords to rethink and then to rewrite their policies as they pertain to pets?
Responsible Pet Ownership is a multifaced lifetime commitment the pet owner must make toward thier pet and the environment. Responsible Pet Ownership includes:
Providing pets with adequate shelter, water and food.
Providing pets proper grooming and sufficient exercise.
Making satisfactory arrangements for the pet to be spayed or neutered.
Affording pets the companionship they require.
Keeping them healthy with timely vaccinations and regular veterinary checks.
Licensing the pet with the local authorities.
Ensuring that the pet wears an identifying tag at all times.
And last but not least is the point which landlords most frequently make against tenants with pets – providing socialization and obedience training.
Socialization and obedience training is truly a huge issue because pets (mostly dogs) which are trained accordingly will usually bark less frequently, will most likely not destroy the property or any parts of it, will not be a threat to other tenants and will not defecate where they are not supposed to. And when and if they do any of those things, their owners will go through all the measures that are necessary to correct such behavior.
Yes, an obedient and well pet, but most particularly a dog, can make the difference between being a menacing tenant or a pleasure to have around.
RentShout.com provides advertising and rental solutions for both professionals and non professionals needing help with advertise apartment rentals. Their company gives rental listings maximum online visibility, gaining “organic” search results and directory placement for rental ads.