Tailwagger Dog Photography

Grand Rapids Pet & Dog Photographer

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Celebration Giveaway

August 20, 2019 by Tailwagger Dog Photographers

An English Springer Spaniel stands in the tall grass at Millennium Park in Grand Rapids, MI.

CELEBRATION TIME – we hit 500 Facebook followers over the weekend! Just how exactly do dog photographers celebrate? We celebrate by doing what we love to do the most and that is by photographing more DOGS! 

We are giving away a Wee TailWag Session to a lucky pup. To enter all you have to do is like our FB page and post a snapshot of your pup(s) in the comments of this post. 

A Wee TailWag Session is a 1-hour session and is good for up to 2 dogs (from the same household).  Wee TailWag sessions include a collection of high-resolution digital negatives – sessions need to take place in the Grand Rapids area (people outside of the GR area are welcome to enter, but need to be willing to travel to GR for the photo session). 

We will pick and announce the winner on Labor Day. Get to our Facebook page by clicking here.

Filed Under: TDP NEWS, The Tailwagger Dogs

Wee TailWag Session

August 7, 2019 by Tailwagger Dog Photographers

A beautiful female Daisy dog stands in the front yard of her Grand Rapids, MI home.

Just want a few awesome digital negatives of your pup, so that you can do your own printing – maybe a cool image for your Christmas card, a canvas for your living room or a nicely framed desk print for your office? 

We are pleased to introduce a new session type called the Wee TailWag Session. This session is perfect for the budget conscious dog lover and for those of you who just want a few special digital negatives of your pup and want to do your own printing. 

A male Golden Retriever mix lays on a large tree stump at Riverside Park in Grand Rapids, MI.

The Wee TailWag is a 1-hour photo session that is good for up to 2 dogs from the same household. Each session includes a collection of five high-resolution digital negatives that you will choose from 15 carefully selected, beautifully edited images of your dog. The session location is your choice, but needs to be within a 10 mile travel distance of our Grand Rapids home base. This all-inclusive session is priced at $295. 

To see the difference between our two sessions, the Full TailWag and the Wee TailWag, please see our Pricing & Products page. 

Questions? Call Trish at 517-990-5630 or email at trish@tailwaggerphoto.com. Tailwagger Dog Photography is a West Michigan dog and pet photographer based in the Grand Rapids area. 

Filed Under: TDP NEWS

Come See Us At the Eastown Bizarre Bazaar!

June 16, 2019 by Tailwagger Dog Photographers

Square composite of Tailwagger Dog Photography photos.

As West Michigan and Grand Rapids pet photographers we are so excited to be participating for the first time at the Eastown Bizarre Bazaar this Saturday, June 22nd, from 9am to 6pm. Our location will be on the south side of Wealthy Street between Ethel Ave and Norwood Ave (more on the Norwood Ave side).

Stop by and tell us all about your dog – we love to hear all the goofy, adorable and special stories everyone has about their pups! Better yet, stop by with your dog – we will be taking snapshots of all pups that stop by and say hello who want a quick headshot taken. Follow our Facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/tailwaggerphoto/ – for instructions after the Bizarre Bazaar for a link where you will be able to download the images of your dog.  

We’ve saved the BEST FOR LAST! We will also be giving away a free Tailwagger Dog Photography photo session good for up to three dogs from the same household, as well as $250 wall art credit. But you can’t win unless you register! To register just stop by our location and fill out a registration form – we look forward to meeting everyone and their pups!  

Filed Under: TDP NEWS

Pup of the Month Club – Tucker and Bucky

June 4, 2019 by Tailwagger Dog Photographers

Bucky and Tucker

Everyone needs a little help from time to time. Quite often that help comes from an older sibling – a big brother or a big sister. Those big brothers and sisters are usually a bit protective of their younger siblings and show them the ins and outs of the world. Well, this month’s Pup or rather I should say Pups of the Month put their own spin on this familiar idea of big brother helping little brother out.

This month’s adoption story starts with a pup named Tucker – a medium sized hound mix. Tucker was adopted by the Hein family about 4 ½ years ago when he was a 4-month-old pup. The Hein family felt it was time to adopt another dog after losing their red heeler mix a few years earlier and the timing worked out just perfect for 4-month-old Tucker. Tucker was a transplant from Tennessee and had just been put in the kennels at the Humane Society of West Michigan for adoption when the Hein family arrived looking for a dog. The family wasn’t really looking for a puppy. The idea of starting from the beginning again with crate training and house training seemed a bit over the top at the time, but it was love at first sight when they saw Tucker and they just knew he was the ‘one’. So, they met with an adoption counselor, filled out the paperwork and brought him home after he was neutered.

Naomi, Tucker’s Mom, said that Tucker has always been very much on the shy side – as a puppy and as an adult. He was very timid when meeting houseguests that came to their home, or just strangers he met on walks. Once he got to know someone he was very affectionate and just wanted to be close to that person, but getting him through the transition from stranger to friend was difficult. This shyness was what brought the family back to the HSWM to adopt another pup. They wanted to find Tucker a brother that he could hang out and play with, but that also might help Tucker get over his shyness.

The family started looking for a brother for Tucker earlier this year. They knew they wanted a dog that was smaller than Tucker, so that Tucker would not be intimidated by him, as well as a dog that would not try and dominate him. They spent a lot of time talking with HSWM staff about the adoptable dogs they saw in their kennels that they were interested in, as well as discussing what their intention was in regard to finding a pup that would work well with Tucker. They made several trips to the HSWM over the course of a couple of months and finally found a medium-sized black mixed breed that was an older puppy (9 or 10 months old) named Bucky. Bucky had a friendly, outgoing and playful personality that appealed to the Hein family.

It was suggested by the HSWM staff that they not have the regular ‘meet and greet’ at the HSWM that is usually required when adopting a dog into a household that already has a dog. Instead they recommended the introduction take place somewhere that Tucker felt he had ownership of. The Hein family were given detailed instructions of how to do the introductions outside of their house with both dogs on leashes and progressively let the dog have more contact with each other and then eventually, if everything worked out well, take them into the house and let them off their leashes. Needless to say – everything went according to plan and by the end of the weekend it was all familiar and routine!

Bucky has been part of the Hein family for about two and a half months now and everyone is getting along wonderful. Naomi says they are, “getting to be two peas in a pod”. They play together, egg each other on to play and just enjoy each other’s companionship. Naomi also says Tucker is coming out of his shell a little in regard to strangers and is more receptive to the pets of strangers and she believes it is because of Bucky’s influence. Hey – what are little brothers for, right? Most of everything important in life comes down to family and friends…why should dogs be any different?

Big congratulations to the Hein Family – especially new brothers, Tucker and Bucky! Pup of the Month Club is a partnership of Tailwagger Dog Photography and the Humane Society of West Michigan. It is a celebration of dogs, dog adoptions and the human/dog bond. If you have an adopted HSWM pup and would like to nominate him or her for the Pup of the Month Club, you can find more information and the entry form on Tailwagger Dog Photography’s website.

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Filed Under: Pup of the Month Club

Pup of the Month Club – Willow Taylor

May 1, 2019 by Tailwagger Dog Photographers

Headshot of a smiling white 8 year old boxer.

A big congratulations to Willow Taylor, May’s Pup of the Month. Willow is an 8-year-old, deaf boxer that was adopted by the Taylor family August of 2014. We met Willow and her Mom, Julie, at Buck Creek Park in Wyoming a few Saturdays ago. Willow approached us with the friendly greeting of a tail wag, leaned into me for a few welcome pets and proceeded to sniff out the lamb liver treats in my pocket. 

Julie was a volunteer at the HSWM when she first encountered Willow. Her family was thinking of fostering a different dog, but the meet and greet between the family dogs and the dog they wanted to foster did not go well. Julie was expressing her disappointment to a HSWM staff member, who happened to be outside watching Willow and another dog play, when Julie really noticed Willow. The longer Julie watched Willow play the more she became intrigued with her and wondered if Willow could possibly be a good match as a foster dog for their family. 

A white 8 year old boxer looks into the lens and smiles.

The meet and greet with Willow and the Taylor family dogs went well and they took Willow home for the weekend for a ‘test run’. Even though the meet and greet at the humane society went well, Willow’s first night at their home was a bit stressful. One of the family dogs would not leave Willow alone and then proceeded to bark the entire night. The family was disappointed and Julie knew she would have to return Willow to the humane society the next day; it just wasn’t going to work. However, when the family got up the next morning the situation was entirely different. All three pups got along so well – it was like they had always been together. It took an entire two days for Willow the Foster Dog to become Willow Taylor, as the family fell in love with her and decided she needed to be a permanent member of their pack – they couldn’t live without her. 

Everyday life with a deaf dog isn’t that much different from a dog that can hear, according to Julie. Albeit – a bit quieter. The staff at the Humane Society of West Michigan worked with Willow to develop a way of communicating with her via hand signals. The Taylor family has continued to use and expand her vocabulary of hand signals – some of the signals even being part of legitimate American Sign Language. Because of Willow’s deafness, she is quite sight reactive – so all a family member has to do is wave and if that person is within Willow’s area of sight, she will turn to see what that person wants. If she is looking in the other direction, they tap her on her head to get her attention and then give her the hand signal. Willow has a tiny stubborn streak though and occasionally looks the other way and pretends she didn’t see the signal, when she doesn’t want to do what she is being asked to do – selective seeing it is called.

A white 8 year old boxer stands by the creek at Buck Creek Park in Wyoming, MI.

Willow doesn’t have the sound sensitivity issues that some dogs do – such as fear of thunder or fireworks. She also does not bark at any unusual or strange sounds that dogs tend to zero in on. In contrast, because she cannot hear, there have been a couple of scary situations – such as the time Willow escaped from their yard. Even though they had Willow in their sight the entire two hours she was loose, they could not call to her and signal her to come to them. 

Julie also thinks Willow understands more than the hearing dogs the family has had over the years. She doesn’t know if this is because her other senses are heightened, or if she just has such a strong bond with Julie, her husband, Tom, and their sons. If a family member is feeling a bit under the weather she stays with them until he or she feels better – she’ll snuggle with the sick person, lie at the feet of that person or curl up on his or her lap in an attempt to provide comfort to the ailing family member.

Headshot of a white, deaf boxer at Buck Creek Park in Wyoming, MI.

Willow has been such a wonderful addition to the Taylor family and they simply cannot imagine life without her. She loves ice cubes and her absolute favorite snack is a banana. She loves everyone who walks through their door, but if you visit the Taylor home you might want to leave the idea of personal space at the door, because you will more than likely have a boxer snuggle bug cozying up to you. And if you dare sit on the couch you will end up with a 70 pound, white and furry lap warmer and a boxer face so close to your face that your eyes cannot focus on her. Willow is a firm believer in sharing love, as well as the couch. 

A white boxer runs at the park with a creek in the background.

Willow likes to play, but has slowed down a little as she has gotten older. Her favorite toy is a stuffed cow she likes to snuggle with when there isn’t an available family member and when her little brother, 4-year-old Felix, will leave her alone. Willow is endlessly patient with Felix’s outgoing, playful and boisterous nature. When he wants to play he will stand next to her and bark and poke her with his nose. She ignores him if she doesn’t want to play and when he goes too far will eventually snap back at him to get the message across that she isn’t in the mood. 

Julie was a volunteer adoption counselor at the HSWM for 3 years and thinks it takes a little longer for deaf dogs or dogs with other challenges to be adopted: “I think people are afraid of what they don’t understand. I’ve had the opportunity to speak with people that were considering deaf dogs before and tell them how we communicate with Willow. I think it helps for them to see that it’s really not terribly different than it is to have a hearing dog; you just need to find the right way to communicate with them. It’s a learning process for everyone involved, but it’s not really a difficult one.” 

A white boxer sits in front of a stream at the park.

Congratulations again to Willow and the Taylor Family! As always it was a pleasure to meet and photograph the newest member of the Pup of the Month Club, as well as hear Willow and the Taylor family’s story. Pup of the Month Club is a partnership of Tailwagger Dog Photography and the Humane Society of West Michigan. It is a celebration of dogs, dog adoptions and the human/dog bond.

If you have an adopted HSWM pup and would like to nominate him or her for the Pup of the Month Club, you can find more information and the entry form on Tailwagger Dog Photography’s website.  Check out all members of Pup of the Month Club too – their stories are all so individual, unique and special!

Filed Under: Pup of the Month Club

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