Local author and screenwriter, Marion Zola talks about her dog, Mr. Chips from her memoir titled Romancing the Dog; the struggle to make a pound dog happy in Beverly Hills. "She will make you smile, laugh and cry." says one reader. I learned a few things from her and recommend this to anyone; listen online or download.Here are the stats I referred to in the show:INTERESTING FACTS:Revenue:
There are some 70 million pet dogs in the U.S. and 74.1 m...
Local author and screenwriter, Marion Zola talks about her dog, Mr. Chips from her memoir titled Romancing the Dog; the struggle to make a pound dog happy in Beverly Hills. "She will make you smile, laugh and cry." says one reader. I learned a few things from her and recommend this to anyone; listen online or download.
Here are the stats I referred to in the show:
INTERESTING FACTS:Revenue:
There are some 70 million pet dogs in the U.S. and 74.1 million pet
cats, a number that's down from 2006, when the AVMA last conducted its
survey.
The United States may be the most dog-loving country in the world, but
you wouldn't know it in the nation's capital. D.C. seems to have
unusually low rates of pet ownership. For comparison, New York
City's economic development group finds that about one in three New York households have pets,
According to the 2012 U.S. Pet Ownership & Demographics
Sourcebook, the top pet-owning state is Vermont, in which
70.8 percent of households have pets. After that comes New Mexico
(67.6 percent), South Dakota (65.6 percent), Oregon (63.6
percent), Maine (62.9 percent), Washington (62.7 percent),
Arkansas (62.4 percent), West Virginia (62.1 percent), Idaho (62
percent) and Wyoming (61.8 percent).
The states in which pet-owning is comparatively rare include
Rhode Island and Minnesota -- 53 percent of households in those
states have pets. Then comes California (52.9 percent), Maryland
(52.3 percent), Illinois (51.8 percent), Nebraska (51.3 percent),
Utah (51.2 percent), New Jersey (50.7 percent), New York (50.6
percent) and Massachusetts (50.4 percent) rounding out the bottom
of the list, just above D.C.
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