Angel Lequiron
Founder & Chief Pet Lover
About
Angel Lequiron is the founder of Mr Pet Lover and has been writing about dog and cat breeds, care, and behavior for pet owners since 2025. Angel personally reviews every breed page and high-traffic article for factual accuracy and practitioner-level usefulness.
Editorial Standards & Credentials
- Founder of Mr Pet Lover (2025)
- Long-time dog and cat owner
- Content reviewed against AKC, ASPCA, and AVMA guidance
Areas of Expertise
Articles by Angel Lequiron (50)
Furbo vs Petcube: Which Pet Camera and Treat Dispenser Should You Buy?
Furbo and Petcube both make popular pet cameras, but they serve different buyers. Compare video quality, treat tossing, subscriptions, privacy, alerts, setup, and long-term value before choosing.
May 16, 2026
Litter-Robot 4 vs. PetSafe ScoopFree: Is the $700 Automatic Box Actually Worth It?
Litter-Robot 4 costs far more up front, while PetSafe ScoopFree keeps the first purchase lower. This hands-off litter box comparison breaks down cleaning tech, litter costs, smart features, odor control, and 2-year value.
May 16, 2026
ChomChom Roller Review: Best Reusable Pet Hair Remover?
The ChomChom Roller is a simple reusable pet hair remover for couches, bedding, and car seats. See when it works, when it does not, and what to pair it with for heavy shedders.
May 16, 2026
Is a Dog DNA Test Worth It? Embark, Wisdom Panel, and Rescue Dogs
Dog DNA tests can help mixed-breed and rescue-dog owners understand breed mix, traits, size clues, and health markers. See when Embark or Wisdom Panel is worth buying.
May 16, 2026
Best Pet Grooming Vacuums for Heavy Shedders: The War on Pet Hair
Heavy-shedding dogs and cats can overwhelm a home fast. Compare pet grooming vacuums, undercoat rakes, slicker brushes, and high-velocity dryers for a cleaner DIY grooming routine.
May 16, 2026
Cats in Japanese Culture: From Ship Companions to Lucky Charms
Cats arrived in Japan as cargo guards on Buddhist scripture ships around the 7th century CE. Within three centuries, they were sleeping on silk cushions in the Imperial Palace. Today Japan has cat islands, 2,500 cat cafés, and Hello Kitty — a $7 billion brand built on an animal that wasn't even native to the islands. The story of how this happened reveals as much about Japanese culture as it does about cats.
May 11, 2026
Pet Photography: 180 Years of Capturing Our Animal Companions
Photography and pet portraiture arrived in the same decade. The very first cameras were pointed at animals almost immediately, and every photographic innovation since — from the action shot to the smartphone — has been partly driven by humans' desire to capture their animal companions. The pet photography industry is now worth $4.5 billion.
May 11, 2026
The Complex History of Exotic Pets
Every era has had its exotic pet craze. Egyptian pharaohs kept giraffes. Roman nobles stripped Africa of hippos for arena spectacles. Victorian aristocrats paid fortunes for parrots. And post-WWII America unleashed 300,000 Burmese pythons on the Florida Everglades. The history of exotic pets is also a history of ecological consequences.
May 11, 2026
Working Dogs of Ancient Egypt
Egyptian dogs are among the most documented animals in the ancient world. From tomb paintings depicting leashed hunting hounds to mummified pets buried alongside royalty, the Nile civilization left a 3,000-year record of human-canine partnership that reveals just how deep our bond with dogs runs.
May 11, 2026
How Dog Breeds Were Created: 200 Years of Selective Breeding
Dogs have lived beside humans for 14,000 years, yet most of the 400+ recognized breeds were invented between 1800 and 1930. The Kennel Club, the AKC, and a handful of obsessive aristocrats standardized canine diversity into something stranger, more beautiful, and sometimes more fragile than nature ever intended.
May 11, 2026
Dogs in American History
George Washington bred dogs with Lafayette's gift hounds. A Newfoundland named Seaman walked 8,000 miles with Lewis and Clark. A Bull Terrier bit the French ambassador's pants. A Cocker Spaniel saved a vice presidential career. American history is full of dogs, and their stories tell us something the official record doesn't.
May 11, 2026
Hamsters: From Syrian Desert to Every Schoolroom
In 1930, a zoologist on an expedition near Aleppo found a female hamster with eleven pups in an underground burrow. He took them all. Those twelve animals are the ancestors of virtually every golden hamster in captivity today. The story of how a laboratory research animal became a classroom fixture is stranger than most people know.
May 11, 2026
Aquariums: From Victorian Obsession to Living Art
The aquarium was invented by a woman the history books mostly forgot, popularized by a man who coined the word, and elevated to an art form by a Japanese photographer who treated moss and driftwood the way a painter treats canvas. This is the story of glass, water, and living creatures in the home.
May 11, 2026
A History of Veterinary Medicine
Veterinary medicine is 4,000 years old, but for most of that history it had nothing to do with dogs and cats. It was about protecting economic assets — cattle, horses, camels. The pivot to companion animal medicine is surprisingly recent, and it changed everything.
May 11, 2026
The Pet Food Revolution
Before 1860, dogs ate what humans discarded — scraps, raw bones, slaughterhouse offal. Then an American electrician in London changed everything. The story of commercial pet food is a story about industry, war, profit, and our evolving understanding of animal nutrition.
May 11, 2026
The Animal Shelter Movement: A History of Saving Every Life
The history of animal shelters is not a feel-good story. It is a story of slow moral progress, hard-fought policy battles, and the persistent belief of a small number of determined people that killing was not an acceptable solution to a problem humans had created.
May 11, 2026
The History of Therapy Animals
Long before therapy dogs became a fixture of hospitals and schools, a Quaker reformer, a Viennese analyst, and an accidental discovery by a child psychiatrist all pointed to the same truth: the presence of an animal changes something fundamental in us.
May 11, 2026
Guide Dogs: A Century of Partnership Changing Lives
The guide dog partnership began with blinded soldiers and a German doctor's compassion. A century later, it has given independence to hundreds of thousands of people worldwide — and redefined what it means for a human and a dog to trust each other completely.
May 11, 2026
Animals in Space: From Laika to the Space Age
Before any human left Earth's atmosphere, animals went first — some as reluctant pioneers, some as celebrated heroes, and one small dog whose fate sparked a global conversation about scientific ethics that continues today.
May 11, 2026
War Dogs in WWI and WWII: Heroes on the Frontlines
From the muddy trenches of the Western Front to the jungles of the Pacific, dogs served alongside soldiers in roles that saved countless human lives — and earned their place in military history forever.
May 11, 2026
Homing Pigeons: Winged Messengers That Changed History
On October 4, 1918, a pigeon named Cher Ami arrived at Allied headquarters with a message capsule hanging from a shattered leg, her chest torn open by shrapnel. She had just saved nearly 200 American soldiers. This is the story of the pigeon — history's most unlikely hero.
May 11, 2026
Victorian Cat Fancy: How Cat Shows Created Modern Pedigree Breeds
On July 13, 1871, 160 cats entered the Crystal Palace in London for the world's first cat show. The man who organized it, Harrison Weir, called himself the 'Father of the Cat Fancy.' What he actually created was a system that would permanently change what cats looked like — for better and sometimes for worse.
May 11, 2026
The History of Dog Shows
The first recorded dog show, held in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1859, accepted only two breeds and was organized as an afterthought to a poultry exhibition. Within two decades, dog shows had become major social events that permanently altered what dogs looked like and what we expected from them.
May 11, 2026
The History of Pet Cemeteries
In 79 CE, as Vesuvius buried Pompeii, it also preserved a stone slab bearing a dog's epitaph: 'I am in tears, while carrying you to your last resting place.' The history of pet cemeteries reveals that human grief for animals is not modern sentiment — it is ancient truth.
May 11, 2026
Dogs in the Victorian Era: The Birth of Modern Pet Culture
When Queen Victoria wept openly at the death of her Collie, Noble, in 1887, something had shifted permanently in the relationship between humans and dogs. This is the story of how one monarch's obsession reshaped an entire culture's relationship with pets.
May 11, 2026
Ship Cats: The Unsung Heroes of Maritime History
For five thousand years, cats sailed aboard ships as working crew members — controlling the rats that destroyed ropes, navigation charts, and food supplies. Their journeys changed the world: ship cats carried domestic cats to the Americas and Australia, gave sailors good luck, and produced some of history's most decorated animal war heroes.
May 11, 2026
Lapdogs in European Courts
For five centuries, the lapdog was far more than a pet in European courts. It was a status marker, a political symbol, a subject for master painters, and — in an age of cold stone palaces — a practical source of warmth. The story of the lapdog is the story of European aristocratic culture itself.
May 11, 2026
Royal Pets Through the Ages
Kings, queens, and emperors have kept pets since the earliest civilizations — using animals to project power, forge diplomatic bonds, express personal devotion, and inadvertently shape the breeds millions of people own today. This is the story of history's most consequential pet owners.
May 11, 2026
Hunting Dogs of the Middle Ages
Medieval Europe developed a sophisticated science of hunting dogs — five distinct types with specialized roles, detailed training manuals, and legal protections that rivaled those extended to humans. The breeds that emerged from this era still run, point, and retrieve today.
May 11, 2026
Cats in Medieval Europe: From Sacred to Persecuted
In the span of a few centuries, cats went from respected household guardians to targets of organized persecution across medieval Europe. The story of how religious fear, superstition, and a papal decree reshaped humanity's relationship with the cat — and may have accelerated the Black Death.
May 11, 2026
How Rabbits Became Pets
Every domestic rabbit in the world — every Holland Lop, every Flemish Giant, every Rex — descends from a single wild species: the European rabbit native to the Iberian Peninsula. Their path from prey animal to beloved companion runs through French monasteries, Roman pleasure parks, Victorian exhibition halls, and a California garage where a nonprofit was founded in 1988 that would permanently change how humans think about rabbits.
May 11, 2026
Dogs in Ancient Greece
When Odysseus returned to Ithaca after twenty years of war and wandering, disguised as a beggar so that not even his wife recognized him, only one being saw through the disguise immediately: his old dog Argos, lying on a dung heap, too weak to rise, who wagged his tail once and died. Homer wrote this scene in the eighth century BCE, and it remains one of the most affecting animal portraits in all of world literature — the oldest dog story most people have never read.
May 11, 2026
The 2,000-Year History of Goldfish
The goldfish you can buy for fifty cents at a pet store is the product of 1,700 years of deliberate selective breeding — one of the longest and most successful domestication projects in human history. It began not with beauty in mind but with Buddhist monks noticing color mutations in wild carp they were forbidden to eat, and it produced over 200 recognized varieties before Victorian England invented the glass fish tank.
May 11, 2026
Cats in Imperial China
China's relationship with cats began not in a palace but in a granary — small wildcats drawn to the rodents eating silk worm cocoons along the nascent Silk Road, tolerated and then welcomed by Han Dynasty merchants who understood exactly what their grain stores were worth. What followed over eighteen centuries was one of the most sophisticated human-cat relationships in history, producing court poetry, Buddhist theology, a thriving cat market economy, and the cultural foundation for Japan's beloved lucky cat tradition.
May 11, 2026
Dogs in Ancient Rome
When archaeologists excavated Pompeii, they found a dog chained at the door of the House of the Tragic Poet — not as a warning to intruders, but as a memorial to a beloved guardian killed trying to protect his family. Rome's relationship with dogs was one of the ancient world's most sophisticated, spanning war, law, medicine, and genuine affection across twelve centuries.
May 11, 2026
Why Does My Cat Knead? The Science Behind Those Happy Paws
That rhythmic push-pull your cat does on your lap has roots in kittenhood, territory, and pure contentment. Here's what veterinary science tells us about kneading.
March 20, 2026
Horses in Medieval Europe
Discover how horses became the backbone of medieval European society — revolutionizing warfare, agriculture, transportation, and social status.
March 19, 2026
Birds as Companions Through History
Explore the history of birds as human companions — from ancient Egyptian aviaries and sacred ibises to Victorian canary collections spanning 6,000 years.
March 19, 2026
Cats in Ancient Egypt: Divine Felines
Discover how cats rose to divine status in Ancient Egypt — from household protectors to embodiments of the goddess Bastet, worshipped for millennia.
March 19, 2026
Ancient Dogs: The First Companions
Discover how wolves evolved into dogs over 15,000 years ago — the archaeological evidence, theories of domestication, and how this partnership changed both species.
March 19, 2026
Pet Domestication Timeline
Somewhere between a campfire and a couch cushion, wolves became dogs, wildcats chose us, and horses changed everything. This is the 15,000-year story of how animals stopped being wild — and started being family.
March 19, 2026
How to Read Your Dog's Body Language — A Visual Guide
Your dog is constantly talking to you through posture, tail position, ear angle, and eye contact. Learning to read these signals prevents misunderstandings and deepens your bond.
March 17, 2026
The Truth About Grain-Free Dog Food: What Veterinary Research Actually Says
Grain-free dog food surged in popularity, then came the FDA investigation. Here's what the science actually shows about grains, legumes, and your dog's heart health.
March 14, 2026
Adopting a Senior Pet: Why Older Animals Make the Best Companions
Senior pets wait the longest in shelters and bond the fastest in homes. Here's what experienced adopters and shelter veterinarians want you to know about older animals.
March 12, 2026
Puppy Socialization: The 16-Week Window That Shapes Your Dog's Entire Life
The first 16 weeks of a puppy's life create the foundation for everything that follows. Miss this window, and you're managing fear for years. Here's how to get it right.
March 10, 2026
Indoor vs Outdoor Cats: How to Give Your Indoor Cat a Rich, Happy Life
The indoor-outdoor debate divides cat owners. Here's what the research says about safety and longevity, plus how to make indoor life stimulating enough that your cat thrives.
March 8, 2026
Understanding Dog Allergies: From Seasonal Sniffles to Food Sensitivities
Your dog won't stop scratching, and you're not sure why. Allergies affect 1 in 5 dogs. Here's how veterinary dermatologists diagnose and manage the three main types.
March 6, 2026
The Overnight Bag: What to Pack When Traveling With Your Pet
Weekend trip with your dog or cat? This packing list covers everything from health records to comfort items, organized by experienced pet travelers and veterinary advice.
March 4, 2026
Why Your Cat Brings You 'Gifts' — And What It Really Means
A dead mouse on the doormat. A half-alive lizard on your pillow. Your cat's gift-giving habit has evolutionary roots that reveal something surprising about how she sees you.
March 1, 2026
First-Time Dog Owner? 7 Things Nobody Tells You (But Should)
The puppy guides cover the basics, but nobody mentions the emotional rollercoaster, the 3 AM doubts, or how profoundly this animal will rearrange your life. Here's the honest version.
February 26, 2026