Tarazet

October 31, 2006

Dealing With Feral Cats

Over at View From the Porch, Tam has a better idea... Heh.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 06:35 AM | Comments (0)

October 28, 2006

No Black Cat Adoptions During Halloween

Many shelters refuse to allow black cat adoptions around Halloween. From Yahoo news:


A black cat won't cross your path this Halloween, not if a northern Idaho animal shelter can help it. Like many shelters around the country, the Kootenai Humane Society in Coeur d'Alene is prohibiting black cat adoptions from now to Nov. 2, fearing the animals could be mistreated in Halloween pranks — or worse, sacrificed in some satanic ritual.

The shelter's executive director, Phil Morgan, said that while the risk may be remote, the policy will remain just in case.

"It's kind of an urban legend. But in the humane industry it's pretty typical that shelters don't do adoptions of black cats or white bunnies because of the whole satanic sacrificial thing," Morgan said. "If we prevent one animal from getting hurt, then it serves its purpose."

Some animal experts, however, say the practice does more to hurt animals than protect them.

"Black cats already suffer a stigma because of their color," said Gail Buchwald, vice president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals shelter in New York City. "Why penalize them any more by limiting the times when they can be adopted?"

Idaho Humane Society spokeswoman Dee Fugit said that while the temporary adoption bans used to be more common, several years of working in Idaho has proven to her there's no need for such measures.

"If somebody comes in here and they're strange enough that we'd question why they're adopting a black cat on Halloween, then we're probably not going to adopt any animal to them," Fugit said from her Boise office. "It doesn't seem to be a justifiable reason for not adopting black cats. We are absolutely inundated with cats that need homes right now."

Black cats tend to be adopted less often than other felines, Buchwald said. A study published in the Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science in 2002 comparing coat color in shelter animals found that black or dark brown cats were much less likely to be adopted than white, gray or mixed-color cats, Buchwald said.

"Behaviorally, there's no difference from the color of the cat. It's tied into this whole mythology about the animal — don't let it cross your path or some foreboding or foreshadowing of evil — and that's an outdated superstition," she said.


Well. WELL! I think if someone comes in specifically looking for a black cat at this time of year, it's probably best not to let them have one. Otherwise, no problem.


sam_black_cat.jpg
Sammy concurs!



Posted by Jeff Soyer at 05:58 AM | Comments (0)

October 27, 2006

Pay No Attention to This Post

I'm just testing a theory of mine regarding Google and Yahoo...

Ex-Earth, Ex-Earth Colonies, Colony Chronicles, Colony: Universe

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 11:42 AM | Comments (0)

Dog Saves Woman From Fire

Yeah-yeah, common story but I like posting them. From the Cheboygan Tribune (MI):


KOEHLER TOWNSHIP - Dogs have again proven themselves to be our best friend.

A homeowner was alerted to an early morning fire on Wednesday when her dogs awoke her, biting her hand until she got out of bed.

The owner of the home, Marcie Wright, managed to escape from the blaze at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, said Assistant Tuscarora Township Fire Chief Steve Sackett.

“The woman was asleep at the time,” Sackett said. “Her dogs woke her up by biting at her hand.”

The homeowner managed to get out, and neighbors were able to save all but one of the five dogs who were living in the house, Sackett explained.


The home was a total loss.

And here's another one from KOIN TV (WA):


VANCOUVER, Wash. - A Vancouver woman is crediting her dogs from saving her life after a fire broke out in her home.

Lori Wangerim was asleep in bedroom when the fire started. Her home, on Northeast 90th Avenue, does not have a smoke detector. But her dogs alerted her to the blaze by barking and banging on the bedroom door.

Wangerim and her two dogs escaped without injury. The rest of her family wasn't home at the time.


Dogs; the ultimate smoke detectors!

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 05:24 AM | Comments (1)

October 17, 2006

A Sad Story That Could Have Been Prevented

A hero dog loses it's life. From Yahoo News:


ELKHART LAKE, Wis. - After a disabled woman's cat started a house fire, her specially trained dog came to the rescue, then died trying to help the cat still in the house. Jamie Hanson said the 13-year-old dog named Jesse brought the phone so she could call 911 and also brought her artificial leg.

"She got me outside and then she heard the cat upstairs and she went up there to get the cat and she wouldn't come back to me," Hanson, 49, said at a news conference Monday at Aurora Sheboygan Memorial Medical Center where she was being treated for her injuries.

[...]

Hanson, who lost a leg in a car accident three years ago, said she was on the couch watching television when the cat ran over the back of the couch.

"And he jumped onto a table that had a candle on it and tipped it over and lighted the artificial plants on fire," she said.

Hanson said she fell off the couch and was unable to get her artificial leg from the table, "so my dog got my leg for me and went and got the phone and brought the phone to me so I could call 911."

She said she tried to put the prosthetic leg on, but it was too hot, and the dog, a golden retriever-German shepherd mix, came to her aid again before going back inside for the cat.


Damn it, you don't leave lighted candles anywhere where a dog or cat can tip them over! EVER! Even I know that.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 12:17 AM | Comments (0)

National Feral Cat Day?

I'm not sure I agree with some of this article:


Feral cats are those that might have been a stray at some point in their lives or those that have been born into the life of a feral colony. These cats want nothing to do with humans, and it's difficult, if not impossible, to tame them. These cats often will form a colony near a food source and continue to breed and expand in their numbers. Feral cats are not adoptable and are usually the first to be put to sleep in shelters. There are several ways you can be a part of National Feral Cat Day. You can support Trap-Neuter-Return in your community. This is the most humane way to handle feral cat colonies. With Trap-Neuter-Return, cats will be trapped, altered and returned to the area. Undesirable behavior will be averted, and no more kittens will be born. As the method is implemented, the feral cat numbers will gradually decline.

Become a feral colony caretaker. Provide food and clean water to the cats to prevent them from rummaging through trash cans and so they will have the nutrients they need to stay healthy and build a strong immune system to help fight off sickness and disease.


Trapping and neutering is fine but I'm not sure about providing food and water. Yes, it would seem the humane thing to do but you only encourage others to join the colony and unless you trap all of them, the breeding will continue and there will just be more misery.

I'm not sure what the correct answer is but there are already too many uncared for cats in the world.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 12:10 AM | Comments (0)

October 13, 2006

Target Dog in House of Wax

Rather a strange choice to be the first dog immortalized in wax:



target_dog_331.jpg


Bullseye,left, the familiar face of Target, poses with his wax figure Thursday, October 12, 2006 after he became the first animal to be immortalized in wax by Madame Tussauds New York.The iconic canines were on hand during an Adopt-A-Dog day held in conjunction with the American Kennel Club.

So... No Lassie, no Rin-Tin-Tin, or any other famous pooch. Instead, Tussauds decides to go with a commercial symbol. There's something creepy about that. It says a lot about the crass commercialization of every facet of our lives in this country, these days.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 05:14 AM | Comments (1)

Ice Cream For Dogs

I don't know about dogs but I do know that two of my cats always loved ice cream, especially chocolate and vanilla. Actually, Rainbow also loved yogurt and cottage cheese. Anyway, now there's a "safe" ice cream for dogs coming out. From Yahoo/AP:


Ice cream maker Good Humor and pet food producer Pedigree have announced plans to produce ice cream sandwiches for dogs. Many dogs are lactose intolerant and cannot eat ice cream, the companies said.

Pedigree Ice Cream Sandwich Treats for Dogs will be dairy-based and have the same texture as ice cream, but contain only 1 percent lactose.

The treats also will have added protein and no sugar. The companies plan to sell packages of 24 frozen treats for $3.99.


All the dogs "I have known" pretty much eat anything they can get hold of so producing a safe ice cream treat just makes sense. Just another way to show the love to them.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at 04:58 AM | Comments (1)