Every Pawprint! Every Story!

Maple, Squirrels, and the Life We Fall in Love With

39 min · 11. juni 2026
episode Maple, Squirrels, and the Life We Fall in Love With cover

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] A squirrel can steal a dog’s attention in a second, but it’s nothing compared to the moment a family realizes love also comes with responsibility at the end of a pet’s life. Jenny joins me from Manchester to share stories about Maple, their cavapoo, from her changing coat color and “lead of shame” walks to the very real work of building better choices for pet parents when quality of life starts to slip.  We talk candidly about at-home euthanasia for dogs and cats and why a familiar home environment can help a pet stay calmer through their final moments. Jenny explains how home visits can support the whole household, including other pets who may need the chance to understand what happened, instead of searching for a companion who suddenly disappears. We also dig into the human side: guilt, harsh self-talk, and the heavy question almost everyone asks but nobody feels ready for, how do you know when it’s time.  A big theme is education and planning. Jenny shares why so many families wait for an unmistakable “sign,” how end-of-life often becomes urgent, and what quality-of-life markers matter most, like eating, drinking, breathing, toileting, mobility, and basic comfort. If you’ve ever worried about pet grief, anticipatory grief, or making the “right” call, this conversation offers practical language, grounded guidance, and compassion without sugarcoating reality.  If you have any other questions at all or need any additional information, please check out the following link.   👉Link to E-book : https://vetsathome.com/the-last-kindness [https://vetsathome.com/the-last-kindness] 👉Link to Quality of Life Tool : https://vetsathome.com/quality-of-life [https://vetsathome.com/quality-of-life] If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review so more families can find support when they need it most. 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

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23 episodes

episode The Dog Who Made Me More Honest (About Everything) artwork

The Dog Who Made Me More Honest (About Everything)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] A sensitive dog can change your whole world, then teach you how to rebuild it with intention. We sit down with Haley, who’s been living full-time van life for nearly three and a half years with Scout, her Australian cattle dog mix rescue, and the story is equal parts adventure and hard-won calm. From a Wisconsin shelter to a home that fits on four wheels, Scout’s journey shows how safety is often less about where you are and more about what stays consistent. Haley gets candid about what “reactivity” really looked like for Scout after a dog attack, and how easily fear can be mislabeled as stubbornness or “bad behavior.” We dig into dog mental health, environmental sensitivity, and the reality that some dogs don’t explode when overwhelmed they freeze, which can trick us into thinking they’re fine. One of the most useful threads is the training pivot: shifting away from obsessing over stillness and toward play-based confidence, where engagement becomes a better signal than silence. You’ll also hear what it’s like to travel 49 states with a dog, why public land and wide-open space can be a game changer for reactive dogs, and how the Florida Keys brought a rare season of staying put while Haley volunteers as a campground host. If you’ve ever felt isolated by training challenges or overwhelmed by loud online advice, this conversation offers a grounded way forward: define your priorities, read your dog, and build resilience together. Subscribe for more real pet stories, share this with a friend who loves dogs and travel, and leave a review telling us what part of Scout’s journey you related to most. 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

Yesterday40 min
episode How A Tuxedo Cat Named Hiccup And An Aussie Named Max Changed One Life artwork

How A Tuxedo Cat Named Hiccup And An Aussie Named Max Changed One Life

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] A kitten gets attacked, surrendered at an emergency vet, and ends up becoming a 13-year-old tuxedo cat who still runs the house. That’s how Alex’s story begins, and it quickly turns into something bigger: what it really means to care for animals when life gets messy, expensive, emotional, and unpredictable. Alex joins me from Seattle to talk about Hiccup’s rescue, the strange little “raptor noises” that come with a big personality, and why one split-second decision at a veterinary hospital can change a life forever.  We also spend time on the side of veterinary medicine most pet parents never see. Alex shares what it’s like to move from grief-heavy rooms to happy puppy visits, and why compassion fatigue is a real part of the job for vet teams. From there, we talk about Pow, an older cat who has battled IBD, chronic kidney failure, and diabetes, and how chronic illness can force hard but loving choices about what care is realistic.  Then we meet Max, a blue merle Australian Shepherd who becomes far more than a high-energy dog in an apartment. Alex explains how training, routine, and connection helped her navigate her own chronic illness, and why scent work and nosework can build confidence, support emotional regulation, and help dogs settle. If you’re searching for dog training tips, nosework basics, or a pet podcast that treats grief and joy with equal honesty, this one stays with you. Subscribe, share this with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review so more listeners can find these stories. 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

25. juni 202636 min
episode The Quiet Heroes Who Care for Our Furkids artwork

The Quiet Heroes Who Care for Our Furkids

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] Your pet can look “fine” one minute and be in real danger the next. That whiplash is exactly what we get into with Dr. Jessica Corley, an ER veterinarian and medical director with VEG ER [https://www.veg.com/], as we talk about the moments that shape families, the animals who become our heart companions, and the split second decisions that can change an outcome.  We start with Dr. Corley’s own furkids and the unexpected ways they trained her as much as she trained them, from Nino the dog like cat to Pixel the “ray of sunshine” she holds onto when the work gets heavy. We also talk openly about pet loss and grief, including Mia’s kidney disease and Onyx’s sudden cancer related bleed, plus what pre grieving looks like when you can sense change before it’s obvious.  Then we go deep on emergency vet reality through our story with Marley and, later, Marshall’s GDV bloat. We break down what GDV is, why time is everything, what helped Marshall make it to surgery, and what pet owners should watch for when their dog is pacing, uncomfortable, or acting “not right.” Dr. Corley also shares the most common emergency surgeries she sees, how the VEG model supports families during crisis, and why compassion fatigue is so common in veterinary medicine when love, limits, and money collide.  If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review so more families can find it when they need it most. What’s one pet emergency lesson you wish everyone knew? 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

18. juni 202640 min
episode Maple, Squirrels, and the Life We Fall in Love With artwork

Maple, Squirrels, and the Life We Fall in Love With

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] A squirrel can steal a dog’s attention in a second, but it’s nothing compared to the moment a family realizes love also comes with responsibility at the end of a pet’s life. Jenny joins me from Manchester to share stories about Maple, their cavapoo, from her changing coat color and “lead of shame” walks to the very real work of building better choices for pet parents when quality of life starts to slip.  We talk candidly about at-home euthanasia for dogs and cats and why a familiar home environment can help a pet stay calmer through their final moments. Jenny explains how home visits can support the whole household, including other pets who may need the chance to understand what happened, instead of searching for a companion who suddenly disappears. We also dig into the human side: guilt, harsh self-talk, and the heavy question almost everyone asks but nobody feels ready for, how do you know when it’s time.  A big theme is education and planning. Jenny shares why so many families wait for an unmistakable “sign,” how end-of-life often becomes urgent, and what quality-of-life markers matter most, like eating, drinking, breathing, toileting, mobility, and basic comfort. If you’ve ever worried about pet grief, anticipatory grief, or making the “right” call, this conversation offers practical language, grounded guidance, and compassion without sugarcoating reality.  If you have any other questions at all or need any additional information, please check out the following link.   👉Link to E-book : https://vetsathome.com/the-last-kindness [https://vetsathome.com/the-last-kindness] 👉Link to Quality of Life Tool : https://vetsathome.com/quality-of-life [https://vetsathome.com/quality-of-life] If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review so more families can find support when they need it most. 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

11. juni 202639 min
episode The Dog Who Hugs You Back artwork

The Dog Who Hugs You Back

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2590104/fan_mail/new] Your dog suddenly looks dizzy, can’t keep their balance, and the whole thing feels like it comes out of nowhere. That’s where our conversation with Lauren begins, with a real-life look at vestibular disease in dogs and why it can appear terrifying while still being something many dogs recover from with rest, careful management, and the right veterinary follow-up. We also talk about what it means to care for a sensitive dog when stress and excitement can make symptoms worse, and how to keep your home and routines supportive while you wait for healing. From there, we step into the harder topic that so many families face in silence: reactive dog behavior. Lauren shares the story of her German Shepherd Zeus, how a single off-leash attack changed his relationship with the world, and how confusing it was to find trustworthy guidance. We get specific about humane dog training, positive reinforcement, and why “quick fixes” can backfire when a dog is operating from fear. If you’ve ever felt isolated because your dog barks, lunges, or locks in on triggers, this conversation puts language and empathy around that experience. Lauren also offers practical tools you can try, including simple attention exercises that build focus and create safer “exit strategies” before a dog goes over threshold. We close with a grounded, honest reflection on pet loss grief: there is no deadline, and the pain can be part of how you honor the bond you had. If this resonates, subscribe, share this with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review so more families can find support. What’s one thing you wish someone had told you sooner about your dog’s behavior or your grief? 1. Purchase the Book [https://pawpads.pet/pawprints] that inspired the Podcast 2. Want to share your pets story on a future podcast?   1. Send us a message: SUBSCRIBE [https://pawpads.pet/sign-up-for-book-release] 3. All new, the first ever Pet Journal - start logging your memories with your Pet 1. Click -> Pet Journal [https://paw-pads-240ecf88.base44.app/]

4. juni 202643 min