06/15/2026
Lost Dutchman Kennel Club
The Lost Dutchman Kennel Club (LDKC) is an All-Breed kennel club serving greater Apache Junction, AZ.
06/15/2026
06/15/2026
Have photos or videos from shows, your Juniors, booths, educational events, or special community moments youβd like to share?
Submit them at the link below so we can feature you in future social media posts, newsletters, and event recaps.
Whether itβs a big win, a mentoring moment, a candid ringside photo, or a fun memory with friends, weβd love to celebrate our community with you.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdQhd2aBzdNWaVUuc27bGpeCp80zUfYWjMa-nQwyV-H5mlIvg/viewform?usp=preview
06/15/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BQaWuFP9J/
You might call them Rabiolis.
Members and followers alike! The 2027 Leash Campaign is now live to the public. Visit https://lostdutchmankennelclub.org/leash-campaign-2027/ to sponsor a leash trophy today. Payment can be done via check or PayPal, and you do not have to be logged into the member portal to purchase. Thank you for your support!
06/14/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/17dZY9kJMT/
What Dog Sports Can Three-Legged Dogs Compete In? Many three-legged dogs can live fit and active lives despite missing a limb. A growing number of tripods are even competing in a variety of dog sports.
06/12/2026
The Growing Movement for Shelters to Make Room for Pets (Gift Article) Shelters recognize that many would rather sleep on the street than leave their animals behind.
06/12/2026
π¨ THE 2026 PREMIUM BOOKS ARE OFFICIALLY LIVE! ππ
Calling all creators, competitors, and livestock handlers! The path to the 2026 Arizona State Fair competitions is ready for you. Whether you're showcasing the finest livestock in the state, baking an award-winning pie, or displaying your stunning artwork, this is your map to the winner's circle. π
It's time to find your category, review the rules, and map out exactly how you can earn a coveted blue ribbonποΈβ¨
π Click the link to explore the Creative, Competitive, and Livestock Premium Books today! ππ https://pulse.ly/1mphomgdum
06/12/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1ZAsRKjF4R/
The biology of sadness is relatively well researched. The experience of sadness is not. From a behavioural perspective, one of the most interesting observations is that grief appears to be the price of attachment.
When someone important to us dies, the brain is not simply processing an abstract concept of death. It is responding to the sudden absence of a relationship that has become embedded within our nervous system.
The brain has spent days, months, or years predicting the presence of that individual. Then suddenly they are gone. The brain continues to search for them.
Neuroscientists sometimes describe grief as a prediction error. Your brain expects a dog to be waiting at the door or a person to answer a phone call. When reality contradicts those expectations, a profound state of distress occurs. The same regions involved in emotional pain overlap significantly with areas involved in physical pain.
We often debate whether animals feel grief, sadness, disappointment, love, fear, jealousy, or loss. But if we are honest, we cannot directly access our own subjective experience either. I can tell you which brain regions become active when you cry. I cannot tell you why losing one being feels different from losing another.
The conscious brain may understand death. It may understand the medical facts but another part of the brain is responding to the loss of a relationship. And that system does not necessarily respond to logic.
Crying is one of the least understood phenomena. Humans are the only species known to produce emotional tears. Animals produce tears to lubricate their eyes, but emotional crying appears uniquely human.
We know crying involves activation of the autonomic nervous system, hormonal changes, and limbic structures. What we do not know is why emotional overload specifically results in tears. We can describe the mechanism. We cannot fully explain the purpose.
Some theories suggest tears evolved as a social signal. Others suggest crying helps regulate physiological arousal. Some researchers argue it may simply be a by product of emotional circuitry becoming overwhelmed. The truth is we still don't know.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Location
Contact the school
Address
Apache Junction, AZ