Biomarker Insights
May 1, 2023 - Less than a minute readPurpose, Partnership, and Possibilities: The Implementation of the Dog Aging Project Biobank
Purpose, Partnership, and Possibilities: The Implementation of the Dog Aging Project Biobank
Mac is a 7-year-old English Bulldog who was rescued from Oregon and eventually found his forever home here in Seattle four years ago. Some of his favorite things include eating, taking naps, going for long car rides, his human mama and getting to spend time with all of his furrriends. Mac’s such a lover that his dislikes are very few, but he’s not a fan of kitties or being made to go for a walk. He would much rather be acting as your co-pilot on some grand adventure – even if it’s only to the park or to get his nails trimmed. Mac’s become my best friend and has done so much for me in the last four years that I would do anything to keep him with me far as long as possible. I love him with all my heart!
The charismatic Sipowicz came to us as a rescue from the streets of Valparaiso, Indiana shortly before (what we assumed to be) his first birthday. He has been comforting and charming our family and friends since 2008. Likes: Children, dog beaches, open fields, squeaky toys, relatives visiting, and toddler food Dislikes: Skateboard surprises, baths, and dogs on TV (both real and cartoon)
I rescued Medic in 2007 from a local animal shelter when she was less than a year old. She is a very happy and lovable pooch who will do anything for a good scratch on the belly. She loves to ride in the car and really can’t get enough swimming, running and hiking. Medic is very aware of her surroundings, she is a great guard dog at home and also an amazing best friend who knows when you have had a hard day. Medic will do anything for you if you have a ball to throw! Life is so much better when you have Medic in it.
Zena, our warrior princess, came into our lives as a rescue 11 years ago. As a Labrador Retriever/German Shorthaired Pointer cross she’s always been a smart, sweet, fabulous, bundle of energy! She loves everyone and everything (except fireworks) and is a wonderful foster mom to the puppies we frequently shelter for Homeward Pet Adoption Center. Her favorite activities are Frisbee, running, swimming, cuddling and riding in the car. She hopes that her participation in the study can help other senior dogs.
Rascal Finnegan Bigham was born at a rescue shelter in Yakima, WA in September 2006. He was allegedly an English Springer Spaniel/German Shepherd puppy, along with a few other things. His litter of siblings were all born healthy at the rescue and were put up for adoption at the end of November.
When I saw Rascal’s picture online I knew immediately. I didn’t know anything about dogs, mind you – but somehow I knew that baby Rascal belonged with me. (I was in my late 30s and had never had a dog before, but the universe works in mysterious ways and forces aligned just in time for baby Rascal to be delivered into my life). After submitting an extensive application and making some arrangements I made an appointment to meet Rascal – and some of his brothers, just in case someone had snapped up baby Rascal – and drove from the Seattle area up to the mountains in Yakima on December 2, 2006, to meet Rascal and to take him home. His litter had all been given western-themed names – Bandit, Curly, Rascal – we thought Rascal was a suitable name for the impish little pup.
Upon meeting Rascal at the shelter I performed the temperament tests which I’d read about on him: Will he let me hold him on his back, does he startle at loud noises but not panic, does he seem to like people, and so on. To be fair I set him down and tried out a few of the other puppies. My friend who’d accompanied me was pushing pretty hard for one puppy that resembled his own dogs in coloring. That pup was darn cute, and my second choice. My friend pointed a finger at Curly, Rascal’s brother, repeatedly while I continued evaluating.
“No, it’s Rascal,” I said finally as I picked up and cuddled the little ball of fluff to me and held him close. In the adoption photos, little Rascal looks confused and suspicious of his new surroundings but it is easy to see that I was already smitten. We decided he needed a middle name (how else would know when he is in trouble?) and settled on Finnegan which is Gaelic for ‘fair one’. “Rascally fair one” seemed exactly right for the handsome little pup.
In that first year, several momentous things happened in little Rascal’s life. First, he got adopted by a naïve but well-intentioned woman who buckled down and studied up on how to be a responsible dog owner (that would be me)and how to ensure that he would grow up to be a healthy and well-trained dog. Second, we learned through a DNA test through our vet – and also from the vet took one look at Rascal-the-pup during his new-puppy health check – that he was no English Springer Spaniel mix.
“That’s a Border Collie mix you have there!” said my vet. What I thought I heard him say: “That’s no small moon … that’s a battle station!” Because holy cow, I didn’t know much about dogs but I did know that Border Collies are the smartest most intensely hard-working dogs of all the hundreds of dog breeds. Rascal was going to be smarter than me and most other humans.
We were working on housetraining soon after Rascal arrived home. Just when I thought the dog had figured some of it out, he snuck off and left me a ‘present’. He was so fast and sneaky! Anyway, when he was out of his crate I had to watch him like a hawk.
One day we introduced some liverwurst into his diet and worked on his sit. Liverwurst because he had to take some medicine and it was easiest to disguise it in the liverwurst, which seems to be the universal dog “crack”. LIVERWURST. “Yay!” said Rascal. He very much wanted some more. He’d get more the next day, with more medicine.
Much much later that same day we were working on our “sit” in the living room. Rascal-the-puppy was almost 3 months old and I had him home with me for about ten days. Also, I was brand new at training puppies at all. So imagine my delight when he seemed to start getting the concept of “sit” before getting his treat! W00t! Then he scampered around and came back for another round of play, eventual sit, then treat.
At one point he scampered off and did not come back. Ruh-roh, I thought, since we’re still not done with housetraining. I got up and dashed in the same direction that Rascal had gone and found him. In the kitchen. In the corner where he got the liverwurst earlier.
During Rascal’s first Winter we learned that he LOSES HIS MIND when there is snow on the ground. Rascal has what we like to call ‘Puppy-Snow-Angel-Impulse-Control-Issues’. He has been known to snow-angel his way across a dog park or whatever other horizontal snowy surfaces he can find. This is his first-ever documented snow angel, taken when Rascal was about 4 months old.
Rascal (and his newbie mom) did several obedience courses that the first year, trying out several dog training facilities and trainers nearby. In trying different places we were trying to find our way of defining our own family dog-training philosophy and commitment to our pack; we take seriously our responsibility to our pack. In between our obedience (and other!) courses, we did find time for fun along the way: when Rascal was about 8 months old he met SHEEP for the first time and we got to see whether he possess the border collie ‘eye’; he DOES. Rascal took right to the sheep and we learned that he could indeed take up sheepherding as a hobby if need be.
Shortly after that Rascal learned to SWIM for the first time! He wasn’t too sure until we got in the water too, but then he swam right to us. He’s so darn tall that he usually ends up wading instead of swimming, but the first-ever RASCAL SWIMS picture is a favorite.
When Rascal was 10 months old he gave me my first health scare: he gored himself on a broken tree branch at the dog park and required surgery. The wound was well hidden among his black fur and I didn’t notice right away. He mainly ignored it except for a bit more licking at the wound which eventually gave it away; ever since then, Rascal has gotten used to full-body pat-downs like I am a TSA agent nearly every morning and every night of his life. His surgery went fine, and he’s a stoic and easy patient. Which is great because he did nearly the exact same thing a few months later requiring ANOTHER surgery! It just so happens that we are big fans of pet health insurance. It’s worked out really well for us, having a sort of action-figure superhero dog.
What we didn’t know right away was how very TALL and LONG and FAST Rascal would turn out to be. After he kept growing and growing we finally ordered the blood test for breed identification through our vet and, finally: Rascal has turned out to be a mostly Border Collie and Borzoi (also known as Russian Wolfhound) mix with a bit of German Shepherd thrown in.
It has helped immensely to know what caused him to get so very big and fast because while his obedience training was going quite well – smart little dog, as soon as he figured out what you were asking for, he’d give it to you in spades – if there was a furry critter in motion around, you’d lose him. Like he would be chasing said critter at 35-40 MPH and HE COULD NOT HEAR YOU telling him to stay put. It turns out that Borzoi are in the SIGHTHOUND GROUP. Which means: This dog can never be off-leash in public/traffic areas because as soon as a squirrel or opossum or raccoon or cat, even, is in sight then he will be OUT of sight, and before you can blink. His speed has been truly breathtaking (although rarely seen at full stride)!
We rounded out Rascal’s first year by attending some Dog Yoga (Doga?) classes, having Rascal groomed professionally for the first time, and proudly watching as Rascal passed his AKC Canine Good Citizenship certification just shy of his first birthday in September 2007. To celebrate, we upgraded our existing little sedan to an SUV Hybrid with a personalized license plate of Rascal’s name. ( Since Rascal had grown so big by then he barely fit in the back seat of my tiny car. Now he rides in style in the back of the SUV with the back seats folded down and wall to wall dog beds providing ample cushion for him as he elegantly points his nose into the wind.) We also got an official portrait of handsome Rascal (and some shots of us together) with a professional pet photographer. The images turned out beautifully.
Within a few months of Rascal’s first birthday – in January 2008 – we both got certified by the Delta Society (now called Pet Partners) as at therapy dog team. My intention was for us to visit people in hospitals and nursing homes to give people a boost emotionally and to give back to the community. Unfortunately, two things happened then which would change Rascal’s life – and mine – forever.
First, Rascal started going through a secondary fear imprint stage where he was suddenly skittish and afraid of things he’d previously been fine with – wheelchairs, the clatter of a pair of falling crutches, etc. Borzoi is a notoriously skittish breed and young Rascal had suddenly come into his own, Borzoi-wise. After consulting with a local behaviorist we decided to take a break from therapy-dog work and training and to focus on the basics for a while. Basically to continue obedience training to wait out this perfectly normal -albeit frustrating- developmental stage.
Within a few months of that decision I have diagnosed with a medical disability myself, and consequently determined that Rascal’s new path would not be as a therapy dog but instead would be: Service Dog! He was already rigorously trained through our myriad of classes, and per federal law I only needed to train him to do any one thing to assist me (in addition to being disabled myself, of course). I quickly trained Rascal to assist me in navigating crowds and to help propel me along on a shorter leash. And voila! The world’s best service dog was created! Rascal began accompanying me to my job at Microsoft, then later Amazon, until my disability symptoms increased in severity and prevented me from working. Rascal continues to accompany me around town to errands, medical appointments, and to the dog park when I can manage it. The local pharmacy and grocery store know Rascal quite well these days.
Now age 9, his working days are fewer as he starts to show signs of fatigue far earlier than he used to. We recently added a new puppy into our household to keep Rascal company. He’s always been more of a dog’s dog than a people dog, and he seems happier with a baby sister to boss around. Our household is re-learning those new-puppy lessons from Rascal’s early days plus learning a few new ones!
Rascal is legendary among our crowd for being both handsome and noble AND the love of my life. When Rascal originally got to his larger size I feared that his years with me would be shorter than some and I did everything I could think of with diet and exercise to keep him happy and healthy and robust. We were thrilled to learn of the Dog Aging Project and overjoyed to discover that Rascal’s age and size met the criteria for the Phase I study. We are optimistic about the results from the Rapamycin trial, and either way are happy to be contributing to the greater good as citizen scientists!
Lucy was born on Thanksgiving Day, November 2005.
She is a pure breed English Lab. Originally, as her owners were traveling to Hawaii, her name was to be an island oriented one, but evolved into our Lucy.
Lucy is kind, a poet, a pup who is thoughtful and senses one one feels in her travels. Since she was young, her owners have a goal of her as therapy dog.
Lucy is trained to absorb and make good decisions in a variety of circumstances. She has been exposed to simple walks in the park, to night time urban excursions, to paths along heavy traffic, to horse travels and various water scenarios.
As her owners tend to travel throughout the PNW. Lucy has been camping in Canada, dog paddling off the San Juan Islands, running for miles along the Oregon coastline, wearing hippie beads and balloons at Seattle Fremont folks events and just plain watching television in our homes.
We love her.
Rayna just turned 10 years old and is our 3rd Golden Retriever since 1980. Besides riding in convertibles with her Doggles and harness- Rayna loves chasing tennis balls in and out of the water (Marymoor Off-Leash Area especially) – and spending quality time with us and her BFF Maddie (our 9-year-old Australian Shepherd). This is an awesome arrangement and ‘pairing’ because Maddie’s necessary dog job is to keep track of Rayna – and (in typical Golden Retriever fashion) Rayna doesn’t mind and enjoys the attention and Maddie’s company. We’d love to keep Rayna around forever and have high hopes that the Dog Aging Project will help extend all dogs’ lives. We’re glad to be Citizen Scientists and support this amazing project.
Waldo is an English style Lab. He just turned 11 in September and we have had him since he was 7 weeks old. He loves to go for car rides, to the beach and will swim until we have to drag him in because the waves are too big. Although he’s too smart for his own good, he’s very friendly and loves to say ‘hi’ to everybody he sees-even if it means sneaking out of the gate someone has forgotten to close!
Hershey Kiss (Owner Tammy). This is my sweet baby girl Hershey that turned 11 years old on May 7, 2015. This sweet dog has loved my family and I for the last 11 years unconditionally. Recently she was diagnosed with high liver enzymes and high white blood count. She was prescribed an antibiotic and Denamarin which seemed to help her the next day but as the days passed she was not getting any better. We made the decision to have put to sleep because we did not want to see her suffer any longer. This was the hardest decision in my life I had to make. I did not want to see her suffer any longer. It was so heartbreaking. She was also stubborn towards me. If I called her name when she was out in the front yard or back yard to do her business. She would look at me and keep walking. She never did this to my children or husband just me. I am not sure why. I was the one that fed her, gave her water, took her outside to potty etc. Hershey also like to open the lid of the cooler and get ice out. She thought ice cubes were her treat. LOL. She also loved beer. If you had a beer sitting in your cup holder in your lawn chair she would take her nose and knock it out of the cup holder so she could drink it. She was the light of my life and my family’s. Our lives will never be the same without her. I miss hearing her bark when we pull in the driveway. I miss hearing her drink her water from her bowl. I miss seeing her wag her tail like crazy when we get home from work because she is exciting to see us. I miss letting her outside each morning and hearing her dog tags on her collar rattle when they hit each other. Hershey Kiss I love you from the bottom of my heart and to the moon and back. I hope you know this. Someday we will be together on the other side of the rainbow. XOXO
Dexter was a rescue from our local San Diego County Animal Shelter. He was a stray. No idea how old he was or where he came from. I was lucky because I was the first person to see him. That was 13 years ago this month. He was clearly a puppy because he more than doubled in size from 50lbs when I took him home to 117lbs in his prime. He was confident, strong, and full of love. He was a rare dog. He learned to fish at a young age. Nearly everyday we would go to Fiesta Island here in San Diego and he would immediate head out and carefully walk in the water hunting for fish. He caught several in his life (one photo is with one in his mouth – at age 12!). So even though I never entered him in any race or competition, he was my champion.
Intense, loving, and a forever-resident in our hearts. His life touched many, but in particular Stacy Brodzik, Socorro Medina, Kristen Rasmussen, Cheng Dang, Aaron Hill, Hannah Barnes, Jennifer DeHart, Lynn McMurdie, Bonnie Brown, Angel Adames-Corraliza, Angela Rowe, Joe Zagrodnik.
Arlo was definitely special. He had been in several homes before ours, then returned to various shelters. Arlo had even spent six months in the no-kill shelter where we found him. When we first adopted him he was rather a wild dog but I decided I could out-stubborn him if I trained him as a therapy dog. It turned out that’s what he was born to do. Arlo worked with autistic children, preschoolers with cochlear implants, fifth graders who were non-readers, and seniors in a Memory Care Unit. We miss him so much but feel good that his last nine years were such good ones.
Our Scribbles was truly the heart of our home, and he will be forever missed. His life, like all of his kind, was unmercifully short, and we were so thankful to find out that research is being done that might someday help extend the lives of our precious canines, just as research has extended the lives of humans. Where there’s a will, there’s a way!
Mr. B, our sweet, feisty, first (but not last!) basenji was rescue dog who was found wandering in the woods in Joliet, Illinois. He was a character! He never failed to “sing” to us when Louis Armstrong’s “Black and Blue” was played. Quinn joined our family as a rescued greyhound racetrack dog. He was a sweet, gentle, kind soul who liked nothing better than a soft sofa with a warm human to rest his head on. Both of them were loving guys (they even loved their cats!) and we miss them every single day.
Liliput (aka: Lili) came to us as a team with her brother, Leviathan (aka: Levi). This is her baby picture. As the runt of the litter she was certainly “Liliputian”! She was Daddy’s girl but spared me copious affection. Lili brought such joy to this house and made us laugh. She also made us cry, especially when we lost her at just 7 years old. We and her brother mourn her still.
Goodbye Laika, we loved you so much. My former boss said, right after we got you from the Seattle Animal Shelter in December of 2011, that you had “landed in butter,” and we like to think that was the truth when you lived with us. You made us happy every single day with your twinkle toes and your velociraptor legs and your great pleasure in being vacuumed and your sweet, sweet face. We will love and miss you always.