Archive for the ‘other’ Category

22
Oct

The scoop #1

Saving lives in the ACT

RSPCA ACT has used Facebook to blast for foster carers ahead of kitten season (smart! smart! smart!)

Do you want to help save lives?

We are gearing up for summer: We are on the look out for people wanting to help us with our kitten foster care program. We fill up pretty quickly and to have homes in our community for four to six weeks means we save more lives. We supply pretty much everything, you supply the love and socialisation. Give us a call on 6287 8100 and ask about our kitten foster care program.


Cats on the cards

After the Bligh Government’s cat registration scheme was branded a “bumbled effort” and with the program expected to cost $1.1 million over three years,  Queensland councils were not happy:

Community and cultural development chairman Bob La Castra said he was disappointed the council always had to ‘pick up the State Government’s mess’.

“This is what they always do, they bring in the legislation and then throw it in our laps,” said Cr La Castra.

“If they want us to enforce their law they should throw us some money for the costs.”


So unhappy in fact, that they chose not to promote the program. Whups!

Cat owners have been granted a 12-month grace period to register their pets because the Gold Coast City Council and State Government decided to keep them in the dark about the new laws instead of spending money on a public awareness campaign.


catAnd it’s not just QLD having cat law problems.

Joondalup Council in WA, who was  proposing some of the most regressive legislation in the country, including compulsory microchipping, desexing and confinement, has had its legislation repealled in view of state-wide laws.

Hopefully this will sit with the pollies for a long, long, long time. Time enough for the advocates for this ridiculous legislation to come to their senses and start pushing things that actually work, like cheap and free desexing.

Nathan blogs Oz

Speaking of things that work, Nathan Winograd has blogged about his visit to Australia and mirrored our thoughts, that first half of the NDN (the bit where all the councils got to speak) was *headdeskingly* traditional;

(shelter directors across Australia) were surveyed about their attitudes to the No Kill philosophy and its achievability. The excuses were similar to those offered in the United States:

- We need tougher laws to make people responsible

- The animals are better off dead than adopted into low quality homes

- There are too many animals, not enough homes

- You can’t adopt your way out of killing

- Not enough funding to save more lives

- No Kill is not achievable

- Any criticism of shelters is unfair because they’re doing the public’s dirty work

- What works in the US will no necessarily work in Australia

Why are these excuses and not true barriers to success? To begin with, they have been proven false in the US context. And the United States and Australia share many similarities. Both are killing roughly half of all impounded animals. Both have almost identical rates of pet ownership. Adjusted for population, both are killing roughly the same number of animals. And Australian pet owners are spending slightly higher per capita on their animals than their American counterparts. In fact, like the American experience, spending on dogs and cats in Australia continues to grow, even as nearly all other sectors of the economy are in steep decline.

Moreover, recent studies in Australia show that the number of Australia’s every year who get a new pet, outpace the number killed annually in Australian pounds and shelters; As many as 1,000,000 Australians seek a new dog or cat every year; while roughly 400,000 are being killed annually. Like the United States, the real issue is not an overpopulation of dogs and cats – the thriving pet store trade contradicts this assertion – but market share borne of failure on the parts of shelters and pounds to compete with commercial sources of animals.

Read the full report here


Fast fact

The number of times Hugh Wirth was quoted calling pit bulls ‘timebombs’ on online news websites? 32

The number of times the Lynn Bradshaw President of the RSPCA was quoted as saying Hugh Wirth is a silly old duffer is wrong and we should be banning deed not breed? 2

Boo Australian media – BOOOO!

13
Oct

Are you breeding next year’s shelter dog?

Strolling along the lines of kennels at my shelter, the same dogs appear over and over. Young, friendly, happy and healthy they have their whole lives in front of them… except they don’t. These guys are the least likely to find a rescue and the most likely to wind up as rendered fertiliser.

Unlike many in my industry, I’m not anti-dog breeding. There will always be a market for nice looking dogs with a great temperament and a history of healthy relatives. What isn’t selling are the plain, common, fugly and the ‘unknown quantity’. And those dogs are unfortunately being bred by someone.

So in this world of politics, purebred vs cross bred bickering and anti-breeder sentiment how can you avoid breeding next year’s shelter dog?



Will your pups sell for less than $500?

Are people actually buying what you’re selling, consistently and for $500 or more? In today’s market the answer is very often, no. A quick look amongst the puppy farmer hangouts – petlink, gumtree or trading post will tell you pretty quickly the going rate for any dog you’re about to bring into the world.

Cavalier x Jack Russell Puppies
I have available 1 Male and 2 x Female Cavalier x Jack Russell puppies. These puppies have lovely temperaments and would are ideal for children and adults alike. They have been wormed, vaccinated and microchipped and come with a puppy owners guide, sample of food and information regarding caring for, raising and training. These puppies are well socialised and get along with all other dogs and cats. We can frieght. $200.00 each.


Shitzu x Miniature Poodle (Shoodles), Non Shedding
Shitzu mum x miniature poodle dad. Non shedding gorgeous fluffy pups, currently 3 white and apricot boys and 1 black boy left. Ready to go early November. $350.


Cattle x Border collie pups
Currently 4 weeks old but will be ready for sale in two weeks…. these gorgeous stumpy-tailed cattle x bordercollie pups are friendly and very lively. there are 4 male and 4 female pups available. the mother and father are also available for viewing, they both have lovely temperaments. all pups un-vaccinated or chipped although they are all very healthy! there is a great range of colours and patterns to choose from as well as having a mix of stumpy-tailed and non-stumpy tailed pups. price is $270


Lab x Kelpie puppies
Kelpie X Black Lab Puppies 7 weeks old. Gorgeous looking puppies- looking more labby. Mother Kelpie- GREAT family dog, loves fetch. Father- Black Labby- Excellent guard dog, great family dog, loves fetch with sticks. Lots of energy. 1 Choc Brown Male $250. 2 black $150 (mixed sexes).


Dogs that are sold cheap, often aren’t valued by their new owners and once in rescue, aren’t rehomed because they have no perceived value to potential adopters. If you’re serious about breeding animals who won’t go straight in to the bin (literally) spend some time on PetRescue scoping out what kinds of dogs are showing up in rescue and breed away from those.

If your dog isn’t a ‘breed’, but a kelpie, staffy, labby mixxy; or a shitzy, little white fluffy, then know that they are as common as chalk and a shelter intake staple. No one wants them, and even if they do, they won’t pay much for them because there’s dozens in every Sunday paper and more still going cheap in the pound.

Is your dog desirable?

It’s easy to breed dogs. Much harder is to breed dogs people actually want. And really, really hard is to breed dogs people will want to keep for a lifetime. According to a survey of pet owners conducted by Pauleen C. Bennett;

Australian owners want dogs that are medium sized, short haired, acquired as a puppy, desexed, safe with children, fully housetrained and healthy. They also want their ideal dog to come when called, not to escape from the property, to enjoy being petted and to display affection to its owners. When participants were asked to list the characteristics they considered to be MOST important the most common responses included friendly, obedient, affectionate and healthy.


Undesirable behaviours fell into five factors: disobedience, unfriendliness, nervousness, destructiveness and excitability.


Many other dogs are relinquished because of canine behaviours, such as boisterousness, hyperactivity and aggression, which owners are unable to tolerate. Not all dogs are created equal. Some suit the requirements of modern owners more than others.


Read that again; Should be: medium sized, short haired, safe with children, fully housetrained, comes when called, displays affection, friendly, obedient and healthy. Shouldn’t escape, be nervous, boisterous, hyper, excitable or destructive

The dog you are breeding from should have all of these positive characteristics in spades and none of the ones that drive people crazy. Separation anxiety is hereditary. Dog aggression is hereditary. Digging and chewing like a maniac is hereditary. Barking all day long is hereditary. Being spooky of strangers, nippy or growly and inclined to chase and kill the neighbours cat or herd the kids is hereditary. Your dog needs to be literally perfect before you chose to bring more of him into a world where even being ‘a very good dog’ doesn’t cut it.

The overwhelming majority of families aren’t looking for a high energy and exercise requirements in their dog, so herding breeds, hounds and terriers are often dumped for being unmanageable. And the chances of even a young working breed finding a home the second time around are close to nil; you may as well be breeding pups and shoveling them straight into landfill.

(If you really think you’re breeding the next ‘dog sport champion’ from your backyard kelpie you’re sadly mistaken. People who do dog sports and obedience tend to make considered pet choices so look to breeders who are providing a long history of proven performance dogs. They do not want your fugly pups.)

If your bitch is not the canine equivalent to Mother Teresa, bomb proof and faultlessly friendly, then you need to desex her. Now. Make the same assessment of any father you’re planning to use; he gets a half say in how these pups turn out, so needs to be equally perfect to give the pups any chance at a long life.


Big, black dog bounce

Big, black dogs are available by the truckload, literally. Truckloads of them are shipped to kill shelters because no one wants them. There’s much less buffer with a ‘big, scary’ dog, which means they absolutely have to be brought up right to live in modern society. A bad mannered toy breed will likely stay in his home as long as he isn’t dangerous; a forty-seven kilo, bouncing adolescent with no manners, a hard head and slobbery chops will not be given the same allowances.

Even the nicest big black dogs scare other dog owners, so they’re much harder to socialise and integrate. And without those ‘pluses’ to dog ownership like relaxing walks and dog park outings, these giant goofballs are rapidly demoted to backyard dogs, to be given up at the first excuse.

If you’re breeding big black dogs, you should do so fully in the knowledge that you’ve set this animal up with characteristics that will likely shorten his life to a sad couple of years.



Is your dog fugly?

I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve seen a show quality dog in rescue; and guess what? PEOPLE WANTED IT. What they don’t want is Labradors that look like kelpies, buck toothed shitzu’s, any of the thousands of identical ‘little brindle’ staffies, the little white dogs with bent legs and bung knees or the white bullie things with perpetually sun blistered ears and noses. Not the mention the thin faced rotties, jack russell terror mixes or anything with ‘mastiff’ or ’shepherd’ in the cross.

Stop breeding these plain looking dogs that no one wants!


Unless you have something to actually contribute to dog kind, please don’t breed!

It’s easy for people who breed their pet to blame ‘irresponsible owners’ for pet abandonment, and wipe their hands of any responsibility after sale. But with shelter killing the leading cause of death in young, healthy dogs in Australia, there are so, so, so many dogs that aren’t going to get a chance to live a long, loved life with a family. Deliberately setting up a litter of puppies with lifetime handicaps and undesirable characteristics like those listed above, means you are equally responsible for these dog’s short, wasted lives.

Desex your pet. And if you just have to have some puppies because they’re just SO KYOOT! Help out your local rescue group by fostering a litter of these throw away animals.

29
Sep

We’re in sunny QLD!

The PetRescue team is in Surfers Paradise ready and excited to attend the 2009 3rd National Summit to End Companion Animal Overpopulation, tomorrow.

If you’re a twitterer, follow: http://twitter.com/Desexing

We look forward to meeting everyone there!

:)shel

15
Sep

Saving Pets dog of the week

Now I don’t normally put the call out, but this guy has captured my heart. I fall in love a couple times a year. Last one was a singing malamute called Catalina and this time…

… meet Squidly

photo(2)

His photos don’t do him justice; he is super cute. His voice is croaky now from being in the kennels all weekend, but last week he was cool as a cucumber. He walked over to me, head down, eyes sqinting in that smoochy way that sensitive souls do and pressed himself up against the kennel door to be as close to me as he could.

He needs out. A kennel is no place for this Cool Hand Luke.

26
Aug

I ♥ Wilfred and Party for Strays

31
Jul

Back to blogging…

*waves* I’m back!

I’ve moved Saving Pets to a new home and given it a bit of a makeover. Bear with me while I get the links, formatting and pics all sorted out for the older posts (please email me if you find a broken link or funky page).

Also, follow me on Twitter if you’re a twit :)

12
Mar

How pragmatism took us away from life saving

I heart Seth Godin.

If you haven’t already, tag his blog as one of your daily activities because he doesn’t just *get it* he wrote the book on *getting it* and just keeps getting better;

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In search of dolphin leather
by Seth Godin

There’s a story in the bible with very specific instructions for building an ark. Included in the instructions is a call for using tanned dolphin leather. Regardless of your feelings about the historical accuracy of the story, it’s an interesting question: why create an impossible mission like that? Why encourage people who might travel 100 miles over their entire lifetime to undertake a quest to find, capture, kill, skin and eventually tan a dolphin?

My friend Adam had an interesting take on this. He told me that the acquisition of the leather is irrelevant. It was the quest that mattered. Having a community-based quest means that there’s less room for whining, for infighting and for dissolution. Having a mission not only points everyone in the same direction, it also creates motion. And motion in any direction is often better than no motion at all.

All around you, people are telling you two things:
1. whatever you want, forget it, it’s impossible, and
2. sit still, preserve resources, lay low.

And yet, the people who are succeeding, creating change and (not coincidentally) are happier aren’t listening to either of these pieces of advice. Instead, they’re on the search for dolphin leather.

Frank Sinatra had it wrong. Your dream shouldn’t be impossible, but it sure helps if it’s improbable. Don’t choose your dreams based on what is certain to happen, choose them based on what’s likely to cause the change you want to occur around you.

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Right now I’m watching rescuers debate on a forum about the merits of spending money to rehabilitate a pet. Most say; kill the sick ones, the injured ones and the ones that have behavioural difficulties, because spending resources on them takes resources away from other perfectly healthy pets. It’s pragmatisim at it’s finest - we’re a practical bunch and since we see, day in and day out the pets coming through rescue it seems like the most sensible plan to handpick the ‘best’ pets and let the others fall through the net.

But here’s the thing; by not chasing our own ‘dolphin leather’ we’ve abandoned the ‘impossible mission’ that was keeping us all moving in the same direction. And you call tell, because rescue isn’t a community all working towards the same improved future, but a fragmented industry based on sniping, politics and turf wars – and it nearly always comes back to who is ‘worthy’ of being saved.

However, it’s not about resources as they’d have you think; there are organisations with hundreds of millions of dollars of capacity and they still pick and choose the best pets and kill the rest – and who would actively encourage others to do the same. It’s simply people believing it’s impossible and doing their best to lay low. But no one in history has been inspired to great things by a proclamation of  ‘there’s no hope – just give up’. No wonder rescue can be such a gloomy place!

Being pragmatic can only have one result – a future which looks pretty much exactly like today.  The groups who will take over and lead the new rescue world are those can see that there is a bigger picture which comes from believing that all animals are worth saving, no matter what the cost. Because if you believe that the community is compassionate and that there is a family to take every single pet, no matter what their problems, you’ll find that the reasons people adopt are as complex and varied as the animals themselves. If you recognise that the aim of rescue was never just produce a ‘perfect product for a perfect family’, but to develop an ongoing, supportive relationship with the community, you turn yourself from ‘gatekeeper’ to providing a service that sees pets have a home available to them for their whole lives.

These groups are chasing the ‘improbable dream’ and by doing so will make amazing things happen. They know it not only that can be done – but absolutely will be.

06
Mar

Cute kids, fluffy bunnies and sports stars

Q: What education campaign for children are these the images for?

a) A promotion for responsible pet ownership?

b) Lessons on the appropriate care of pocket pets?

c) A drive to improve rabbit adoptions?

If you answered ‘none of the above’ and instead said this was an in-school campaign to teach kids about methods used to kill rabbits as pest animals – you’d be right! And it is likely you have already heard about RabbitScan, the new initiative of the national Rabbit Management Advisory Group (RMAG);

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RabbitScan is a nation-wide challenge for community and schools to help scientists map where rabbits are, by asking people to ‘scan’ their landscape (school, farm, parkland, roadside reserves, ovals etc) for signs of rabbits and their damage, and to load their results online – during RabbitScan Month in May 2009.

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But it’s not just about counting poo pellets and chomped bushes; this group have also put together a Teachers Project Kit for school children outlining exactly how to exterminate Bugs. But it’s ok they’re not animals…. they’re rabbits.

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Rabbit Control
“It is not the number destroyed but the number remaining that is the problem”’

hunting

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FerretingHey, remember when those kids threw that kitten onto the train tracks and we all wrung our hands and said ‘how could kids have so little empathy for a living, breathing creature?’

While we’re trying to encourage children to be compassionate towards animals; to care for them appropriately and to treat them with kindness and all that silly stuff, the Rabbit Information teachers workbook is also spreading a message – outlining some of the more popular techniques for killing small furry mammals;

poisoning,  fumigation,  biological control
ripping (using machinery to destroy the warrens and kill the rabbits at the same time)
explosion devises (sic),  ferreting

and of course

shooting and trapping.

So remember kids – treat your pets with compassion.
Play nicely with your rabbit
unless it’s a wild rabbit
(then it’s perfectly ok to explode them).

04
Mar

Run ragged

We spent today doing a photoshoot with 9 rescue dogs getting their photos professionally taken. It went *brilliantly* with some gorgeous photos of each… however I can’t believe how tired I am now!

I’m sure this’ll be why ;)

(Aim: pup sits quietly on the spot and smiles for the camera).

25
Feb

Good rescuers fall victim to bad egg

The SAFE rescue group are one of the genuine good guys of the pet rescue world. They are innovative, modern and make great matches between pets and owners. They convert enquiries into adoptions and turn adopters into evangelists. And it has been my absolute pleasure to watch them go from strength to strength.

So when they told me they’d been targeted by a convicted fraudster who took advantage of their good hearts and homeless pets I was stunned.

The story has now been featured on Perth’s Today Tonight;

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Her real name is Lisa McKay, a mother of two and con artist, who scams money from unsuspecting victims.

You might remember Lisa McKay. She’s been jailed for fraud after telling the world she had terminal, vaginal cancer that had spread to her lungs, liver, kidney and spine. There were fundraising pleas in two newspapers.

Helen Hall handed over $2000 and organised an appeal that raised a lot more.

In an on-line medical newsletter, Lisa wrote about her so-called terminal illness.

“I have approximately 6 months remaining of my life to enjoy my two beautiful children.”

“I have been told that I will soon lose the ability to walk.”

That was written four years ago. Lisa’s husband stood by her when she faced court two years ago, but the problem is, Lisa McKay never had cancer. She cut her hair, forged hospital records and conned kind hearted people out of their hard earned money.

In 2007, Lisa McKay pleaded guilty to 25 fraud charges and spent 18 months in jail. Unbelievably, she’s out of jail, on parole and at it again. This time she’s turned her attention to animal rescue groups. Volunteers who save cats and dogs from the pound and foster them out to loving families. Like the other volunteers, Lisa sells the cats for $100 each, but instead of giving that money back to the animal group to cover costs, they say Lisa has been pocketing the cash. Thousands of dollars, they can’t afford to lose.

Natalie Baldock is a volunteer with SAFE – Saving Animals From Euthanasia.

“She’s just used us. We were easy pickings. We try so hard but you don’t have time to do police checks or things like that. You take people in because of their hearts and because they care about animals.”

Today Tonight has confirmed Lisa McKay has approached three animal rescue groups and the RSPCA, trying to pull off the same scam. She also uses various names including Lisa Burch, Lisa Burton and Lisa Fraser.

Lisa McKay’s victims say she has to be stopped before she fleeces anyone else.

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Consider yourselves warned.