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Issue Date: December 7, 2003

More this week:
Part 1: Making gifts of memories
Part 3: Holiday plants

HOLIDAY IDEAS
Part 2

Purr-fect pet presents
No "family members" need feel left out -- especially when there are such great gifts these days.
By Steve Dale

Critter Clubhouse: Hamsters and gerbils get a place to hang out.
Polly Wanna Piñatas: Birds break into a variety of these for fruit treats.
Panic mouse: This winner of the Best New Cat Product award will keep Kitty busy.
Doggles: Fido knows he looks extra cool in his new sunglasses.

Each October a new trend emerges at the annual Backer Christmas Trade Show for pet products in Rosemont, Ill. Recent ones include New Age products and gifts for pets other than cats and dogs. This year, it's all about keeping your beloved companion busy while you're away -- think occupational therapy for pets. Here are some of the gifts that caught my eye:

An entire line of these "therapy" products is called Busy Buddy, a variety of rubber toys for stuffing treats or kibble inside. The idea is for your dog to labor to get these goodies while you're away from home. Busy Buddy Twist and Treat, for example, resembles a flying saucer; twist open to the width desired, making it more or less work for your pooch. Busy Buddy toys, for $7 to $15, are available at pet stores.

For more canine occupational therapy, meet a cuddly plush pooch called the Talk to Me TreatPup. He can talk -- and amazingly, he sounds just like you. You tape a message for your dog using the recorder on the treat-dispensing ball inside the TreatPup's tummy. So, when your dog is home alone, he can hear your voice say "You're a sweet doggie" as he energetically shakes the pup for the treats to tumble out. Talk to Me TreatPup is at pet stores, $20. Pour Talk to Me Treats (the treats don't actually talk) inside, $15 for 16 ounces. "They're dental treats," says company vice president Rod Herrenbruck. "So when your dog kisses you, his breath will be minty fresh." Their web site is at talktometreatball.com

In addition to pouring kibble or treats into these boredom-buster toys, try a sort of Cheez Whiz for dogs called Kong Stuff'N, except this paste is peanut butter- or liver-flavored ($8, available at pet stores).

For the Jewish dogs in your life, Copa Judaica makes plush squeaky toys, including Meshugeneh the monkey, Trayf the pink pig and an octopus named Schmutz, $6.50 each. For a retailer near you, call 800-727-2672 or e-mail copajudaic@aol.com. You also can give the gift of the world's first certified-kosher Hanukkah Doggie Treats ($7 to $12). The all-natural ingredients are "approved by top breeders and the Almighty," as well as the Chicago Rabbinical Council. Available at select pet stores and at kosherpets.com (954-938-6270).

Doggles eyewear appeared on the market several years ago but now features a new interchangeable lens system. Ken Di Lullo, director of Doggles, claims that military dogs in the Middle East wear these to keep sand out of their eyes and that vets recommend them for canines with cataracts. Also new this year are sunglasses for dogs. "As soon as you put the shades on these dogs, they have a new attitude, because they know just how cool they look," Di Lullo says. The eyewear is $25, available at pet stores or doggles.com (866-364-4537).

Tabby needs some entertaining, too. So, while you're doing a crossword puzzle, your cat can keep mentally active with the Peek-A-Prize Toy Box. It's a wooden box filled with "mouse holes" along the top and sides for Kitty to poke his paws inside to move toys and treats. It's $30, available at many pet stores and drsfostersmith.com, or by calling 608-260-8260.

The Panic Mouse won the American Pet Product Manufacturers Association Best New Cat Product award the last two years. This year's version features a plastic Garfield the Cat with a pole that waves in various directions. The prize at the tip of the pole is a toy for cats to snatch that the manufacturer says is a mouse but that looks more like a spider. No matter -- cats love it because the movements are random. You can set the speed using a timer. Available at pet stores, $30 to $35.

It's also important to play with your cats, so here's a great toy for just that purpose. It's a Swizzle Bird Teaser. No, wait. Is it a snake? It's both. At the end of a pole is a 3-foot-long piece of soft and easy-to-latch-onto material that mimics a snake, with feathers at the end. To your cat, this irresistible toy could be a flying snake. It's $7, available at pet stores.

Don't forget your other pets. Hamsters, gerbils and mice can celebrate Christmas in a Critter Clubhouse, furnished with orange-scented straw bedding. In a rodent version of Trading Spaces, critters can rearrange their edible home by snacking on it. The Critter Clubhouse is $8, at pet stores or fetchitpets.com.

Polly Wanna Piñatas are 8 inches high and packed with fun. "Birds are turned on by color," says Vickie Canepa, president of Fetch-it Pets, "and even more excited when those piñatas are broken into. It's a bird treasure -- banana chips, raisins, papaya and pineapple." There are donkey, Santa, dreidel and other piñatas, available for $9 at fetchitpets.com or pet stores.

Contributing Editor Steve Dale last wrote about when to get a new pet after one has died.


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