Sentences with phrase «running alongside their humans»

Dogs who spend their weekends romping around the dog park with friends or running alongside their humans when they hit the trails experience aches and pains just like their human counterparts.

Not exact matches

As well as being a School of Babywearing accredited consultant, she runs a very busy sling library and consultancy alongside her successful carrier making business, Rock Solid Slings and she's also a lone parent to 2 amazing human beings.
The recovery of the wildlife following these pressures will be monitored under the South Georgia Government's science strategy, but there may be opportunity for additional science to run alongside this monitoring and to better understand the impact that humans have in this environment and represents a unique large scale ecological experiment.
Even though they aren't bred for jogging alongside their human companions, they still enjoy running around the yard chasing a ball or another dog.
Labrala are fairly energetic dogs that excel in activities ranging from agility to retrieving to running or jogging alongside their human.
You're dumped on a version of Earth that has been terraformed where there's now seven different alien races running around alongside humans and a load of dangerous wildlife attempting to murder you in the face, though to be fair most of the humanoids are also trying to murder you in your face.
Enemy design is rather hideous in the sense of how players would anticipate enemies to look in a survival horror game with a gigantic female enemy named Guardian towering at around 8 feet tall wielding a saw blade as it runs at Sebastian whilst giggling, while a common yet scary enemy is The Lost and Hysterics which have a craving for feeding on human flesh, alongside a vast number of enemy bosses that are just as strong and ferocious as Guardian.
These run alongside a long - form essay on a camp in which one comes to terms with one's own death, by Gabriela Wiener, and another on translation and human subjectivity, by Kate Briggs.
The omission may well be down to the simple fact that the phrase «human rights» has passed into the lexicon of pejorative terms employed by the British media, alongside «political correctness», as shorthand for something that runs contrary to a deeply ingrained British sense of fair play.
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