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This year Logan will get a big butcher's bone, while Peterson's female Maltese named Bubbles, 13, will get rawhide sticks made like candy canes. Both will be wrapped and put under the tree. Last year, Debra Jensen's Labrador named Nightmare and a German shepherd-Siberian Husky named Ticia got stockings with dog treats in them. This year, because her husband recently lost his job, there may not be a stocking, but there will still be treats
-- they can count on leftover ham. "The dogs are our only children. I love my babies," said Jensen, 55, of Tulsa, Okla. Pat McCauley figures his 4-year-old Shih Tzu named Crystal can survive the holidays without a present. "I'm not going to buy the pet anything," said McCauley, 54, of Princeton, Ill., "I have a daughter who is 17 and she will buy the pets something but I surely wouldn't in any way, shape or form buy my pet a Christmas toy." McCauley may sound like a Grinch, but he concedes buying pet gifts is not the most ridiculous idea he's heard. "If I just had a pet by myself and my daughter wasn't around, I'd buy it one or two things a year, like a ball or a tug," he said. The AP-Petside.com poll was conducted Oct. 1-5, 2009, by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media. It involved telephone interviews on landline and cell phones with 1,166 pet owners nationwide, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.9 percentage points for all pet owners. ___ On the Net: Petside.com: http://www.petside.com/pet-gift-poll/ PetSmart: http://www.petsmart.com/
[Associated
Press;
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