Search This Blog

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Dogs sometimes try to communicate with us by sneezing and yawning unnecessarily. A misplaced sneeze or yawn means that your dog is uncomfortable and stressed, often around new pets or people. Believe it or not, humans do this when they feel uncomfortable too! This can get confusing because dogs also yawn when they are feeling content around you. The key is to look for misplaced yawning in unfamiliar circumstances.
Perhaps the most widely recognizable ways dogs communicate is with their tails. In addition to the joyful wagging tail, a dog’s tail can communicate a range of other emotions. For example, a slow wagging means your dog is feeling cautious, and a stiff tail held high means your dog is on alert. A low tail means your pup is feeling content, but a tucked tail means he is feeling scared. If your dog is wagging his tail vigorously enough to make his butt to wiggle (we all know what I’m talking about), he’s elated to see you!
You’ll notice your dog flicking his tongue quickly in and out of his mouth when you’re about to scold him. This means your dog knows he has done something naughty and he feels bad about it. If your dog flicks its tongue at you, this is his way of telling you that he’s sorry!
Dogs communicate in subtle ways with their faces, specifically with their eyes. Constant eye contact from your dog is his way of showing his trust and affection towards you. Think of it as an understated ‘I love you.’ Avoiding eye contact, on the other hand, is a sign that your dog is uncomfortable, scared, or cowering after doing something naughty.
In addition to face and tail movement, dogs also try to communicate using the rest of their body. If your pup rolls over and bares his belly to you, he is initiating this gesture to appease you (but a belly rub is always welcome!) Dogs also communicate with each other this way, rolling over as a sign of passive resistance to the perceived threat.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Darling beautiful new healthy pups born on the 19th to Misty and Joey.  So darling checkout our website Canyon Hills Havanese   www.havanesehome.com.

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Canyon Hills Havanese has beautiful new puppies.  



Friday, April 2, 2010

Havanese large or small

I have to address the issue of what is the the perfect size for a Havanese. I feel a family with children need a little larger dog, so they should be looking for a pup that is going to be around 14 lbs.
The children need a pet that take the rough play and and loving quite time. Usually the adults coming in to purchase the pup want a tiny one not thinking of which size would be best for their children.

So the question is the smaller pup or the larger pup.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Canyon Hills Chocolate Parti Pups

Canyon Hills Has Chocolate and White Parti pups Available to good homes. Our Dog Gus is in the show ring now up North and doing well.

Canyon Hills Havanese & Coton

Canyon Hills and Coton's Has new litters of perfect and wonderful home raised pets. WE are AKC Show Breeders and one of the older breeders of the Havanese. We Guarantee our pups. Contact us and see if we also have retired dogs.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

New Canyon Hills Havanese Pups

Canyon Hills Havanese Puppies, Come on all Havanese pup owners lets tell other what a wonderful pet they make for a family.
If you have a family member with alergy problems this breed is not likely to cause a problem. The Havanese love to be in a family with or without children. They love other animals also.

The Havanese love to please and House break very fast. and talk about swimming they love the water.

The Havanese is the National dog of Cuba and the only breed native to the island. The Cuban love of the charming little Bichon Havanese is evident in their use of his likeness on a 1992 souvenir issue postage stamp.Sadly, the actual origin of the Havanese breed is foggy at best. Century's of conjecture and mystery have blurred the specifics and left much of the early development of the little breed to a patchwork of fact and fiction.Most historians seem to agree the roots of today's Havanese dog appear to have originated in the western Mediterranean area. Early ship's logs from the sixteenth century speak of dogs that traveled with the families of Spanish aristocracy to Cuba. At that time the Bichon breeds were quite popular in Europe as lapdogs. The enchanting little dogs were quite small and easily carried. They were quick to learn, adept at performing tricks and games, and were all around charmers. They became a favorite lapdog of the Cuban Aristocracy, making their homes on the vast sugar plantations owned by these wealthy patrons of the breed. Litters were never offered for commercial sale. Instead they were planned for the express purpose of sharing with intimate friends and family members. The little dogs were rarely seen outdoors, other than with their mistresses during promenades.So desired were the dogs, that stories abound of ships captains offering them as gifts to the affluent wives of Cuban businessmen in the hopes of garnering business for the sea merchants. These dogs most likely came from Tenerife, one of the few ports open to Cuba for trade at the time, which would have made the dogs accessible to the ships passing through. The Dog of Tenerife was able to develop with out much outside influence, becoming the common ancestor to all Bichon breeds.Once on the Island of Cuba, the dogs seemed to acclimatize to the tropical island extremely well. They became quite heat-tolerant. They developed profuse silky coats, which protected them from the sun and heat, much as a sari protects the women of India. The coat's silk floss texture became one of its distinctive features. The coats were never clipped so as to allow the light airy layers to protect the dog from the tropical rays, and the hair was allowed to fall forward over the dog's eyes to protect them from the intense sunlight.Even as the "Bichon Havanese" emerged as a favorite of Cuban Aristocracy, they also found their way to Europe. European Aristocracy vacationing in Havana became quite enchanted by the dogs, returning home with them at the end of their holidays.
The Havanese proceeded to find favor in the courts of Spain, France, and England. By the mid-eighteenth century, the little dog of Havana was quite trendy. Queen Victoria owned two and Charles Dickens owned one. During the dog's brief appearance in Europe, they could be found enchanting audiences both at dog shows, and performing in circus acts. Unfortunately, none are known to have survived the turbulence of the century in Europe.Near the start of the twentieth century in Cuba, slavery was being replaced by mechanized equipment. The aristocratic families who had closely guarded the ownership of the dogs were disappearing, no longer able to maintain their vast sugar plantations without the cheap labor they were accustomed to. With the absence of their wealthy patrons, the Bichon Havanese were now free to win the hearts of the general public, ingratiating themselves into Cuban family life, and becoming the preferred dog of the common people.Many wealthy Cubans migrated from the island of Cuba after the Socialist Revolution of the 1960's. By that time, the Havanese had virtually disappeared throughout the world, and the little dogs were on the verge of extinction. Three families are known to have smuggled their Bichon Havanese aboard ships with them. The Perez and Fantasio families immigrated to Florida, while Ezekial Barba went to Costa Rica. Once settled, these three families worked together to preserve the breed by combining their gene pools.In the early 1970's, Dorothy and Bert Goodale in Colorado were able to acquire 11 dogs from the three families. All the Havanese in the world today, except for possibly some in "Iron Curtain" countries, and those remaining in Cuba, stem from the 11 dogs the Goodale's acquired from the Perez, Fantasio, and Barba lines.In 1991, 15 purebred havanese were found in Cuba and a carefully supervised breeding program was put into place, using them as foundation stock with the Cuban Bichon Habanero Club overseeing their resurgence.
var repeat_num = "3";
var imageArray = new Array();
var textArray = new Array();
imageArray[0] = "";
imageArray[1] = "";
imageArray[2] = "";
imageArray[3] = "{$IMAGE_3}";
imageArray[4] = "{$IMAGE_4}";
imageArray[5] = "{$IMAGE_5}";
imageArray[6] = "{$IMAGE_6}";
imageArray[7] = "{$IMAGE_7}";
imageArray[8] = "{$IMAGE_8}";
imageArray[9] = "{$IMAGE_9}";
textArray[0] = " ";
textArray[1] = " ";
textArray[2] = " ";
textArray[3] = "{$TEXT_3} ";
textArray[4] = "{$TEXT_4} ";
textArray[5] = "{$TEXT_5} ";
textArray[6] = "{$TEXT_6} ";
textArray[7] = "{$TEXT_7} ";
textArray[8] = "{$TEXT_8} ";
textArray[9] = "{$TEXT_9} ";

for (var i=0; i", "/SCRIPT>");
if (textArray[i] != "" && imageArray[i] != "") {
document.write( ""+
""+
""+
""+strTemp+""+
"");
}
}