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Monday 6 June 2016

Wildlife Rescue Groups


Rescue groups exist for most animal types reptile rescue, rabbit rescue or bird rescue, mammal rescue etc etc.

Wildlife rescue groups, unlike many other animal rescue organizations, focus on the rehabilitation and care of wild animals saved from illegal breeders, circuses, zoos, and many other abusive situations.


They do not seek to find adoptive homes for the animals, but rather to reintroduce the animals to lifestyles that suit their needs and that allow them to live freely, sometimes even releasing them into the wild after sufficient care.


The World Wildlife Foundation (WWF) is also an organization that, amongst other objectives, strives to rescue wildlife.[9] 

This foundation raises awareness of endangered, vulnerable, and threatened species and accepts donations to aid in controlling climate, sustainability and ecosystems to ensure the safety and protection of these species. WWF's notable efforts to preserve wildlife has significant impact on the well-being of many species. 


They offer "symbolic adoptions" for animals, meaning that although one cannot raise a wild animal in a domestic environment, people have the opportunity to purchase a plush toy of an endangered species on the website and "adopt" said species. 

The money raised through this campaign goes towards conservation efforts, ultimately hoping to save these species from endangerment. 

It should also be noted that WWF supports trophy hunting and considers this a form of "CONservation."

source..... Wikipedia

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Sunday 5 June 2016

Remember, if you encounter a fawn lying quietly in the woods, do not touch it.....


Deer hide their babies by residential areas to keep coyotes and fox from killing their babies while they are off looking for food. 



More than likely that baby that you found in your backyard is there for a reason. Please leave it there. If you feel it has been there too long then please contact...... 

Deer Fawns and What to Do If You Find One | Washington Department


"Callers are told that in the spring it is a perfectly natural occurrence to come across a fawn that is seemingly by itself in the woods.The fawn is probably not alone; .."


"Therefore if you find an adult deer that is sick or injured call your local game warden or Sheriff's department. ... Mother deer leave her babies alone all day and only come back to feed them at dawn and dusk to prevent attracting predators to her young. If you find a fawn, "


"Now that the spring baby season is upon us, you may find babies in what may ... April, but most often in May and June, you may find a White-tailed Deer fawn .... If dogs have chased the fawn, return it to nearby woods or field while keeping the ..."

Searches related to i found a baby deer in the woods







Please share and help educate people as to what to look for and how to proceed without doing more harm then good.....


Saturday 9 April 2016

The argument against breed specific legislation.

As we advance as a society, embracing compassion along the way must be part of the path forward. This of course includes the way in which we treat and respect the animal kingdom, value of live, living conditions, general treatment, future legislation and educational advancements.
 
bsl. Mark Aldridge, Independent for Wakefiled, wakefield, Independent, put your money in the right pockets, buy Australian, Mark Aldridge Independent, supporting farmers, Australian politics, how to vote in Australia, employment,  Farmers markets, Farm Direct, Wakefield electorate, country Australia, Country politics, Independent politicians AustraliaAustralians in general have come to value the positive role that companion animals play in our lives. However there is a persistent gap between the community’s desire to live alongside animals and its understanding of how to properly interact with them.
 
Education is an important step in ensuring safety for people and animals, rather than a strict legislative agenda that is ignorant of professional advice, and that includes breed specific legislation.
 
The Australian veterinary association and indeed the same groups in England, Canada and the US, have all recognised that BS legislative approaches have been a failure.
 
Dog attacks on humans, other companion animals, livestock and wildlife in Australia are
comparable to other developed countries, in terms of available data, so the very fact most of the experts in animal welfare in all these countries are against BSL, must be heard by our political representatives.
 
Some breeds of dogs receive more media attention when attacks take place, even though the frequency of attacks by these breeds may be small in numbers, this fact alone has manipulated public concerns.
 
For many years countries including Australia have attempted to regulate certain breeds in an attempt to reduce the frequency of dog bites, rather than invest in education or act in a more equitable manner by basing their approach on the identification of individual potentially dangerous animals.
 
Test cases from all over the world have also been very clear, that when tested for natural aggression, breed alone has had no influence, this point alone should deter such an uneducated approach to the reduction of dog bites in Australia.
 
If our legislative agenda took a similar approach to bad human behaviour, there would be uproar, because we have come far enough as a society to judge people on their actions, the same equity must apply to all legislative advancements in animal welfare reforms.
 
In Australia between 70 and 80% of dog bites occur in the domestic environment, yet media reporting tends to lean towards animals at large, so when considering the best way forward education and training will have a greater effect than BS bans.
 
In most domestic situations it is less likely that reports will be made, where as in the public domain most indeed will be, so the reported facts and figures are not a true indicator of incidents let alone supportive of BSL.
 
When one studies the causes of dog bites, most of the victims are children and young adults, and in the most it is the behaviour of the human not the animal that cause the incidence to occur, so education is not just about how to handle and train a companion animal, but teaching our children how to interact with them.
 
“A child’s natural behaviour, including running, yelling, grabbing, hitting, quick and
spontaneous movements, and maintaining eye contact, put them at risk for dog bite injuries. Children also have a habit of having their face too close to the dog, which also increases the risk of facial injuries and more severe trauma.
 
There are many reasons to stand against BS legislation;
 
 * Firstly, breed on its own is not an effective indicator or predictor of aggression in Dog’s.
 * It is not possible to precisely determine the breed of the types of dogs
targeted by breed-specific legislation by appearance or by DNA analysis.
 * The number of animals that would need to be removed from a community to have a   
meaningful impact on hospital admissions is so high that the removal of any one breed would
have negligible impact.
* Breed-specific legislation ignores the human element whereby dog owners who desire that kind    of dog will simply substitute another breed of dog of similar size, strength and perception of   aggressive tendencies.
* The size or build of a dog has no correlation to aggressive behaviour.
* Most dog bites are the result of the actions of the human component.
* And finally it is not a compassionate nor equitable approach.

bbsl. Mark Aldridge, Independent for Wakefiled, wakefield, Independent, put your money in the right pockets, buy Australian, Mark Aldridge Independent, supporting farmers, Australian politics, how to vote in Australia, employment,  Farmers markets, Farm Direct, Wakefield electorate, country Australia, Country politics, Independent politicians Australia
Jack Russell terriers and German Sheppard’s head the list of reported dog bites, yet they have yet to make the list, while breed specific legislation takes the approach of what damage a dog may do if indeed it does bite, a very uneducated one at that.
 
So it is a well known fact that the kind of people that prefer larger breeds of dogs that they perceive to be aggressive in nature, will still find a way to achieve their goals, regardless of any proposed breed specific legislation.
 

Animal bites are more so based on the animals training, social surroundings and indeed the behaviour of the human involved, so education is the key, not ill thought legislative agenda.
 
So the saying “Judge the deed not the breed” is definitely well said, but just maybe it is the lack of education and short falls in regards to the responsibility of parents and animal owners that should be put under the microscope.



Saturday 6 February 2016

Animal Lovers: Don’t Hesitate to Feel Your Hate


Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2014. All Rights Reserved
Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2014. All Rights Reserved
Living in Earth’s out-of-the-way places, surrounded by prime wildlife habitat (as I’ve always chosen to do), an advocate must eventually make a choice—either stand with your wildlife friends, or join in the “fun” (made increasingly more popular by repulsive “reality” shows like Duck Dynasty and so many evil others) and go around shooting everything you see.
I made my choice long ago and decided the only way to live in such a wildlife-war-torn area is to have as little to do with the people as possible. To quote Sea Shepherd’s Captain Paul Watson, referring to his native land, coastal New Brunswick, Canada (where clubbing baby seals is the local pastime), “Love the country, hate the people.”
Author Farley Mowat, another selfless Canadian animal advocate in league with Captain Watson, ultimately came around to that same sentiment in A Whale for the Killing. The 1972 book is an autobiographical account of Mowat’s moving to Newfoundland because of his love for the land and the sea, only to find himself at odds with herring fishermen who made sport of shooting at an 80-ton fin whale trapped in a lagoon by the tide. Although he had started off thinking folks around there were a quaint and pleasant lot, he grew increasingly bitter over the attitudes of so many of the locals who, in turn, resented him for “interfering” by trying to save the stranded leviathan.
Mowat wrote, “My journal notes reflect my sense of bewilderment and loss. ‘…they’re essentially good people. I know that, but what sickens me is their simple failure to resist the impulse of savagery…they seem to be just as capable of being utterly loathsome as the bastards from the cities with their high-powered rifles and telescopic sights and their mindless compulsion to slaughter everything alive, from squirrels to elephants…I admired them so much because I saw them as a natural people, living in at least some degree of harmony with the natural world. Now they seem nauseatingly anxious to renounce all that and throw themselves into the stinking quagmire of our society which has perverted everything natural within itself, and is now busy destroying everything natural outside itself. How can they be so bloody stupid? How could I have been so bloody stupid?’”
Farley Mowat ends the chapter with another line I can well relate to: “I had withdrawn my compassion from them…now I bestowed it all upon the whale.”
Having recently finished reading, Give a Boy a Gun, by Jack Olsen (author of the pro-coyote/anti-trapping book, Slaughter the Animals, Poison the Earth—an appropriate addition to his numerous other true-crime works), I’m still puzzled by that book’s similar underlying question: How could so many people be so stupid as to think so highly of Claude Dallas Jr., a killer whose crimes included poaching, trapping out of season and the shooting of two Idaho Department of Fish and Game agents? Apparently the majority of people in cattle country there think nothing of the prolonged suffering of a bobcat, coyote or trappers’ other non-human victims, and accept people at the shallowest of face-value (except game wardens out to uphold the few laws animals have on their side).
In civilized society we’ve been brought up not to hate other people. Tolerance is the buzz word and that’s supposed to go for everyone, even if they choose to kill the animals you care about. It’s not like animals are people, right? Well, that’s debatable; besides, there’s only so much tolerance to go around. I love the wilderness and the wild things who live there. But can you really love something, without at the same time, hating those who threaten its very existence?
Every morning I’m reminded how much I hate the local duck and goose hunters, for example. At first light this time of year, before I can even think about how much I love living where flocks of migratory geese spend the winter, the sound of shotgun fire rings out to remind me of those whom I hate—the ones who make sport of killing creatures more noble, magnanimous and intelligent than they could ever hope to be.
If it’s not okay to hate the people who kill your friends for sport, who can you hate? And don’t think for a second that hunters, no matter how the schmooze, don’t hate you or anyone who might be out to spoil their fun by trying to ban contest hunts, or otherwise exposing their sadism.
1598558_10152837672323554_7131931279073962386_oIdaho’s ongoing Predator Hunting Contest and Fur Rendezvous, organized by a group ironically calling itself “Idaho for Wildlife” (more appropriate names would either be, Idaho against Wildlife, or Extremist Idahoans for the Destruction of Wildlife) claims as part of their second mission, “To fight against all legal and legislative attempts by the animal rights and anti-gun organizations who are attempting to take away our rights and freedoms under the constitution of the United States of America.” Apparently somebody is confusing the Second Amendment with the right to kill non-human animals for sport.
Now, you may have grown up to songs with lyrics like, “Come on people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try to love one another right now,” or just heard phrases like, “feel the love,” “love thy neighbor” “blah, blah, blah.” Bullshit! If your neighbor is out mowing down coyotes or wolves for fun or cash prizes—or blasting into flocks of geese for sport—they need to know how deeply you hate them.
But hate is such a negative emotion; it’s not good for your chakras, or whatever they say. Well, sometimes the animals need our outrage, our lividness, our hate. It’s a war, after all, and the other side is winning, partly because we resist the urge to embrace our hatred. How can you fight a war and not feel hate for your enemy?
Yet it shouldn’t be seen as desperate words coming from some lone, animal-loving whacko. As long as the laws are on their side and they think society shares their view of animals as objects, they’ll be encouraged to keep up the killing.
In other words, “Come on people now…Everybody get together, try to hate coyote hunters right now. Right now. Right Now!
coyote contest kill

It's not cool to be cruel.

By Raining Cats and Dogs,

Earlier this summer, I did a blog post with a young woman who had just purchased her first pet. Within a day, her pet store purchased puppy was deathly ill and was diagnosed with canine parvovirus. Her story had barely gone live when she called me and sounded heartbroken.
Allie became ill shortly after purchased from Furry Babies. Her story sparked a mean reaction from some advocates.
Allie became ill shortly after purchased from Furry Babies. Her story sparked a mean reaction from some advocates.
Why are they so mean?
They are the animal advocates that launched nasty, personal attacks against her on my blog post. I won’t get into some of the vile comments that I quickly took down. My reader was hoping to be helpful by telling her story and was crucified for doing it. She was not only dealing with a deathly ill dog but with being bullied when she told her story.
It's not cool to be cruel.
Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident. I’ve lost track of the number of very nasty and personal attacks that have been posted on some of my blogs. I’ve been pilloried by puppy mill owners and puppy brokers – that is to be expected, they make a living off a vile business model. They are almost laughable and I can work with that.
But, it’s the lack of compassion from a small group of people from the community that baffles me. Why can’t we be kind to animals and people too? Why do people think this is OK? It's not cool to be cruel.
I’m not alone.
ElephantOne of my fellow bloggers – Jenna Karvunidis who writes High Gloss and Sauce – wrote a great post recently criticizing Hillary Clinton. It focused on Clinton’s humanitarian efforts in the fight against elephant poachers while ignoring very important local issues. Jenna concentrated on a very key issue for her – water pollution (more specifically chemical contamination caused by Atrazine) – an issue that had taken the life of her unborn child. It was a very personal and heartfelt post.
Shortly after her post went live, the stampede came from the pro-elephant crowd. Whole groups of people that couldn’t just state their case…they had to summons the depth of nastiness to make it.
How does that help your cause?
"I'm actually very careful that my 'activism' for clean water stays the distance from verbal assault territory," says Karvunidis. "Sadly, and I say this as a 20+ year vegetarian, I use PETA as my anti-example. When your message, however true, is too harsh, no one can stand to look at you. I try to mix funny stuff and posts about my thrift finds into my overall message about the dangers of atrazine. I just don't want to be the proverbial paint-throwing activist."
It's a good point. Why would anyone want to listen to your way of thinking after you channel your inner middle school bully and let loose? Does the relative anonymity of social media give you super powers to help animals by being hurtful to people? Is it cool to be cruel? I don’t think so.
This dog was rescued from puppy mill/hoarding situation.
This dog was rescued from puppy mill/hoarding situation.
Here’s the deal. If you’re involved in animal welfare or pet rescue, you often see the worse people have to offer. You see cruel everyday. People tiring of their pets and dumping themanimal abuse, dog fighting, puppy mills, factory farming and so much more.
The phrases – people suck and I hate people – pop up often in our threads. When you are battling against the worst people have to offer and the heartless acts of so many…it’s perfectly understandable to go postal on animal abusers. That’s not the focus of this column at all.
I’m seeing a mean streak too frequently when people with a common interest – pets and other animals – that have no compassion for people who don’t share their experiences. The people who don't have the background or knowledge from being involved in rescue to know where pet store puppies come from. That haven't had the experiences to know certain behaviors may put their pets at risk until it happens to them.
When people tell their stories about sick puppies from pet stores or a dog snatched from their yard or other topics, it tells a powerful story. Those stories reach far more pet lovers than any public service announcement or Saturday protest. Many people don’t know the back-story of an issue until it hits them.
So, what’s the point in being a jerk?
Bird supporters have frequently gone after groups supporting feral cat management.
Bird supporters have frequently gone after groups supporting feral cat management.
Why can’t you be kind to animals and people too?
One Chicago organization, The Puppy Mill Project, has launched their own campaign focusing on the It's Not Cool to Be Cruel message.
“The “It’s Not Cool to Be Cruel” campaign is the cornerstone of our new educational program that we're using, especially with school children,” says Cari Meyers, founder of the organization. “This campaign covers so many aspects of what children are facing everyday beyond just focusing on how we treat dogs and other animals.”
I have no problem with controversy and debate when it’s respectful. I have ZERO tolerance for those that need to bully anyone – whether you are on the same side of the issue as I am or not. If you disagree…make your point without channeling your inner Mean Girl.
My focus here is the pet-related stories. But, if you write a blog or run an advocacy page anywhere, you’ve been hit. There’s a lot of stupid nastiness by the garden-variety social media trolls that spew venom any place with a comment button. It’s enough that it makes you want to pack up the group of trolls and ship back to middle school, lock them up and throw away the key. (I’m not even touching nasty political debates here.)
Yikes.
That being said – I do love a good debate. Earlier this year, I blogged about the rescue of 23 English Bulldogs from one of the worst puppy mills in Iowa. As the story was cross-posted beyond the animal welfare community, it landed on the page of puppy millers and some breeders who have been known to be nasty. They let loose and even accused the rescue of stealing dogs.
Portia was one of 23 English Bulldogs rescued by CEBR from a puppy mill in April.
Portia was one of 23 English Bulldogs rescued by CEBR from a puppy mill in April.
The Chicago English Bulldog Rescue and many of its followers responded with facts and documentation. Even though they were being baited by the same people they were trying to put out of business, they didn’t go there. They used the forum to speak up and educate in a way that more people should mirror. It's not cool to be cruel.
There are so many issues in the animal welfare community that need support – from puppy mills and feral cats to responsible pet ownership and, yes, elephants. As we look at the bigger picture in Chicago, the violence continues to spill out on our streets and we are about to start what could be a very dicey school year.
Maybe if we all worked a little harder at being kind to animals and people too, we could continue to have a dramatic impact for our causes because it's not cool to be cruel.
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Friday 15 January 2016

What makes an aggressive dog, and how you can spot one

by Dennis Thompson, Healthday Reporter


What makes an aggressive dog, and how you can spot one
Study suggests it's not so much the breed as the gender, training, origin and owner's age.

(HealthDay)—You see a Rottweiler standing next to a poodle and a Chihuahua. Which dog is most likely to bite you?
To answer that question, don't look at the dog, British researchers say. Instead, look at the owner standing beside it.
A dog's breed is only one of many factors that influence its capacity for , according to a new study published recently in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science.
More telling clues to aggression might be the age of the owner, the training the dog has received, the place the dog was obtained and the gender of the dog, the researchers found.
In addition,  that are aggressive in one situation likely will not be aggressive in other situations. For example, a dog that might lash out on the street could be perfectly peaceful in its own back yard.
"Aggression is incredibly complex. It's going to be both situation-dependent and dependent on the history of both the people and the dog," said Stephen Zawistowski, science adviser to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA). "You can't just pick the breed of the dog and say somehow that will be predictive of whether the dog will be aggressive."
Zawistowski, who is also an adjunct professor of anthrozoology at Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y., was not involved with the new study.
For the study, Rachel Casey, of the University of Bristol's School of Veterinary Sciences, and colleagues distributed about 15,000 questionnaires to dog owners regarding dog aggression toward people. About 4,000 were returned.
The researchers found that owners reported dog aggression toward unfamiliar people more often than aggression to family members.
Nearly 7 percent of owners said their dog barked, lunged, growled or actually bit unfamiliar people who came to their house. Meanwhile, 5 percent reported these aggressive behaviors when meeting people while out on walks. By comparison, only 3 percent of owners reported aggression toward family members.
The results showed that a majority of dogs were aggressive only in one of these three situations. A dog that would lunge at a strange person on the street was not likely to lunge when a strange person approached their house.
In breaking down factors associated with dog aggression, the researchers found much more than the dog's breed at work. For instance:
  • Dogs owned by people younger than 25 were nearly twice as likely to be aggressive than those owned by people older than 40.
  • Neutered male dogs were twice as likely to be aggressive as neutered female dogs. However, there was no significant difference in aggression risk between neutered and non-neutered males.
  • Dogs who attended puppy-training classes were about one and a half times less likely to be aggressive to strangers.
  • Dogs trained using punishment and negative reinforcement, however, were twice as likely to be aggressive to strangers and three times as likely to be aggressive to family members.
  • Dogs obtained from animal rescue and other sources were much more likely to be aggressive than those bought from a breeder.
"The origin of the dog was a significant factor in aggression toward family members," said Mary Burch, Canine Good Citizen director for the American Kennel Club. "There was a 2.6 times increased risk in dogs obtained from rescue centers, and a 1.8 times increased risk from a combined category of 'other' sources, including pet shops and Internet sites, as compared to those obtained directly from breeders."
A lot of dog aggression is spurred by fear and anxiety, Zawistowski said. To avoid having an aggressive dog, he said, owners should properly socialize their pups by doing the following: 
  • Leaving puppies with their litter until 8 weeks old, so they learn how to be social with other dogs.
  • Taking them to puppy kindergarten classes before 16 weeks old, so they become comfortable with other people and dogs.
  • Engaging them in positive-reinforcement training that teaches them things such as not jumping on people or pulling on a leash.
Older dogs that suddenly become aggressive might be experiencing pain due to an ailment. "If you're looking at a 6- or 7-year-old dog that's starting to be aggressive, you might want to look at whether the dog is starting to have some arthritis," Zawistowski said.
If you're worried that an unfamiliar dog might become aggressive toward you, you should pay attention to its body language, Burch said.
"Some pre-aggression behaviors are a direct stare, stiff posture, hackles up, ears or lips pulled back, baring teeth, growling, barking, lunging and snapping," she said. "Barking alone should not always be defined as aggressive behavior."
Burch criticized the British study for including barking as an .
"It can be problematic for barking to be considered 'aggression' because barking can have multiple functions," she said, noting that dogs also bark to alert owners or to signal that they need something. "In my opinion, this overly broad definition, which includes barking, skews the data to show that there is an aggression problem in the U.K."


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-02-aggressive-dog.html#jCp