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www.petrescuebyjudy.com Update: Mandy is Fully trained! She loves to play ball, will sit, lay down, come and speak on a dime! Description: Mandy is a purebred, papered Border Collie, registered with the International Boarder Collie Association and the American Boarder Collie Association. She is a very sweet dog who was, unfortunately, bred several times by her owner. I say unfortunately because backyard breeders are often well-intentioned but naive. I mean, gosh, she didn't even keep poor Mandy up to date on her shots. And obviously she didn't socialize her well at all. Mandy is very affectionate but hasn't spent much time with other dogs (except to get pregnant by them). As a result, she has a tendancy to be possessive of her people when other dogs are around. We have had a dog trainer work with her, with her foster following throughh on the training. As a result, Mandy has come a long way, but her new owner will have to be sure to lay down the law in this area. Mandy is beautiful, but she is having some hair loss as a result of her last litter of puppies (they are only 8 weeks old). And of course she isn't in as good of shape as she could be (I feel like I'm describing myself after my kids were born!). All this darling dog needs is someone to love and lead her. With that, she will perfect! According to www.dogbreedinfo.com, the Border Collie originated in Northumberland on the Scottish/English border. The breed is descended from old British droving breeds with some

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Copperhead snakes are the cause of most of the snake-bite problems in the United States. The copperhead can be distinguished by its thick shape and its neck, which is quite distinct from its body as well as by its pale cross-band tan pattern that darkens in the middle and on the sides. [I:http://yournewpets.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/ColinJones0.jpg]

Copperhead snakes have pale bellies, which makes it look very similar to its background, but their colourisation also be whitish sometimes. There are obvious spots or pits on the head of the copperhead snake that appear like tiny dark specks. There is also a rather vague stripe on its head behind its eyes; less prominent on the top, the stripe gets a lot darker towards the sides of the snake's head.

Copperhead snakes can be found almost anywhere, from rock and pond areas to woods and the shores of streams. Their choice of habitat is dictated by the predominance of prey, as copperhead snakes live on frogs, small rodents, cicadas, lizards, caterpillars and anything else that cabe taken without too much trouble.

The most usual hidey-holes for copperhead snakes, wood piles, stone slabs, walls, debris and abandoned or ruined buildings are the most common, which explains why people come across copperheads so often in such areas. The active months of the year for copperhead snakes are in the spring and summer for as long as the weather stays warm. After that they go into hibernation.

Copperhead snakes return to the same dens to hibernate year after year, and more often than not, there are large nests counting many individuals during hibernation. On very hot summer days, copperhead snakes will remain in cooler areas during the day and use the cover of the night to hunt. On balmy summer days, the copperhead will lie in the sun on rocks or wooden debris. Copperhead snakes do not hatch eggs, but give birth to their young live. The number of young ranges from one to fourteen and they are usually born from the summer untill October.

The bites of copperhead snakes must have immediate medical care since they are not only very painful but they may also lead to permanent scarring and tissue loss. Avoid copperhead snakes when you come across them, since many people get bitten when trying to kill or handle them.

Snakes will not harm you unless they feel threatened, then, you will become the victim of a fierce attack by a creature that is just as afraid of us as we are of them. Statistics reveal that copperhead snakes have the highest incidence in bite frequency in the United States, because these snakes attack quite out of the blue without giving threatening warnings like other species.

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