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Archive for November, 2008


The silent victims of the Housing Crisis: Foreclosure Pets

Friday, November 14th, 2008

With the economic “recession” in a steady downward black spiral, loans defaulting, and homes foreclosing with the crash of the housing market a number of secondary effects are laying into the less represented segment of our population: our pets. While the big banks like Bear Sterns—and soon possibly General Motors—may be getting their bailouts, few are available to bail out animals left behind when a family loses their home.

Sometimes it’s the result of nowhere else to go. The family living there simply cannot support their animals. They don’t know who to turn to, and they’re moving into an apartment (or a worse fate) where they cannot take their pets.

The newly coined term for these hapless economic victims of the housing crisis has been: Foreclosure Pets. The dispossessed.

How can we help save pets abandoned due to foreclosures?

If there is a family in your neighborhood who have recently had their home foreclosed on, or are moving, and you know that they have pets and fear that they might leave them behind; or worse, you know that the family has gone but discover their pets remain, there are still things you can do to help:

  • Call a local shelter or humane society and ask them for information on how to assist abandoned pets—many will send someone out to check on them.
  • Many real estate agents have access to foreclosed homes if they’re on the market; many will happily check it for abandoned pets.
  • Be neighborly, simply knowing the situation and offering to help the family who are moving with regards to the displacement of their pets (giving them rescue information or making sure they’re going with) may reduce the chances of them being abandoned.

Most people simply don’t understand the resources that are available to them or don’t have the right mind to deal with their pets when they’re being pushed out of their homes. This leads to feral animals and, in the cases of pets left inside the home, dehydration, starvation, and death.

lost-our-homeFor people who live in Metro Phoenix, Arizona

PETS 911 is based out of Scottsdale, Arizona so we’re keenly aware of an effort in our area to help deal with the mounting foreclosure pets predicament. A group of real estate agents, seeing that the abandonment of pets from repossessed homes had gone beyond the pale, put together a small coalition and rescue to help with this issue.

If you are facing a housing crisis, must move and cannot take your beloved pets, or know of a house that may have abandoned pets: give a visit to Lost Our Home.

The housing crisis and economic recession is far from over, so we may be seeing more of these happening in the future. The Animal Crossroads blog will try our best to highlight rescue organizations working to alleviate this growing problem.

Adorable Story: Cat returns home after 13 years astray

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Found this little story on MSN about a long-long-term happytail of a cat being returned home after thirteen years in the field.

Cat returns after 13 years astray
Cat returns after 13 years astray

Happytail of the Week: Spike returned home

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Spike“Somebody got him just after he crossed the street and kept him safe. Then took him to their vet to scan him and called his original owner – somehow the chip folks didn’t have my # associated with him anymore.

Then they looked here at Pets911 and found the ad just a couple hours after I posted it. Thanks for putting this together…good community use of ‘the internets’.”

Petz, and other video games

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

The animal welfare community has a far reach nowadays that domestic pets are a staple of live in the everyday household. Especially so now that new forms of interactive media have become extremely prevalent in our culture. Such as video games. 

The Petz series is one of the first that comes to mind when I think of these. Having your own virtual pet? We can thank the Japanese for that and the Tamagotchi for one.

I am a video gamer at heart and have been playing since I was very little, however, I don’t have much experience with the more cutesy and child-directed video games. I am a hardcore Adventure gamer, but I have gotten myself into the more logistic build-and-run simulations that involve animals (Zoo Tycoon anyone?) All that said, I don’t know how much market there is for a video game that simulates running a shelter or a rescue.

The responsibility of caring for a pet and the community surrounding is a broad one. There are lots of ways that it intersects with all of our arts—so I think that us at the PETS 911 blog team will try to give everyone a taste of the various media, literature, movies, and video games that attempt to encompass the pet experience.

Animal Cruelty

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

One of the hardest things for me to wrap my mind around is how people can inflict any type of harm on an innocent and defenseless animal. Intentional cruelty and abuse cases are horrific and tend to grab headlines such as those that involve dog fighting, hoarding, maiming, mutilating, killing, or torturing an animal.

Equally horrific to the headline grabbing cases are the unintentional acts of cruelty that comprise most of the cases investigated by humane officers. Most people that I know are good pet parents that care for their pets as they would their child. However, I have learned that most of the cases of abuse or neglect that end up being investigated by humane officers are those that are a result of unintentional acts.

Unintentional abuse or neglect includes such actions as neglecting to provide proper veterinary care, neglecting to provide fresh water and/or food, leaving an animal outside in bad weather conditions or for excessively long periods without proper shelter, locking a pet in a hot car even for a short time, leaving a collar on the animal that is too tight, crating an animal for excessive periods, etc.

If you witness an act of cruelty, abuse, or neglect, either intentional or unintentional, I hope you will report it to your local agency. The animals have no voice and cannot ask for your help themselves. Pets911.com provides localized information for most communities about where to report animal neglect or abuse. If you do not find your local information, we could use your help. Just email us at info@pets911.com, and include your ZIP code and the name of your local animal care and control agency.

Young children, illness, and exotic pets

Monday, November 10th, 2008

When I was younger, my little brother had an iguana. The iguana lived in a little terrarium along with some water, and rocks, and a few various sticks designed to look like a tropical rainforest protruding into his little home. One thing that we understood well was that after handing the lizard, we needed to wash our hands. Why? Salmonella.

At the time perhaps I didn’t have a clear idea of why “Sal” was such a big problem, or who that was really, just that it was something that could make my brother and I quite sick. So we generally did as we were told, thoroughly cleaning our hands after handling the iguana every time. It wasn’t until years later that I learned that this is the same bacteria found on unwashed/uncooked chicken and is cause for how we prepare it the way that we do.

I found an article today in the Huffington Post about doctors trying to educate the public about young children and exotic pets that might carry even such staid domestic bacteria as salmonella. As adults some of us have become experienced veterans of the kitchen and know full well the danger of not washing up properly when handing raw chicken and turkey (Hello, Thanksgiving!) but younger children who coo and chirrup over amazing green things like iguanas don’t quite have the judgment to be as safe as we do.

The Huffington Post, Hamsters, Exotic Pets May Put Young Children at Risk, Doctors Say.

For example, about 11 per cent of salmonella illnesses in children are thought to stem from contact with lizards, turtles and other reptiles, Pickering said. Hamsters also can carry this germ, which can cause severe diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps. 

Salmonella also has been found in baby chicks, and young children can get it by kissing or touching the animals and then putting their hands in their mouths, he said. 

Study co-author Dr. Joseph Bocchini said he recently treated an infant who got salmonella from the family’s pet iguana, which was allowed to roam freely in the home. The child was hospitalized for four weeks but has recovered, said Bocchini, head of the academy’s infectious diseases committee and pediatrics chairman at Louisiana State University in Shreveport.

Of course, Mr. Lean-and-Green isn’t the only hazardous pet that our kids really want to get their hands on. The article goes on to talk about quill sticks from hedgehogs and how hamsters can also carry salmonella.

The idea here isn’t to frighten people into not owning these pets. Under most conditions they’re perfectly adorable animals and good for the soul, but there’s a great deal of misunderstanding by both parents and children about the relationship that we have with our pets, care and feeding, and as could be divined from fears of doctors, their own special quirks.

With any pet it’s a good idea to consult a veterinarian to determine if they’re right for you and yours. Oftentimes when you adopt a pet from a shelter, the whole event will come with an exit interview, a great deal of extremely useful knowledge will come with the person who presents you with your newfound friend.

So, when going out to get a new pet always come with questions and include not just how to care for the health of your pet but also of your family. Remember: your pet depends on you being healthy just as much as themselves.

Be healthy. Be safe.

Anyone out there have any exotic pets themselves? I’m wondering if anyone else has experience with some of the more interesting variety.

Obamas to choose First Dog, hopefully shelter adoption

Friday, November 7th, 2008

In recent news, President-Elect Barak Obama let his children know that he would make good on his promise of getting them a puppy for when they moved into the White House. This little tidbit has set most of cyberspace aflutter with anticipation of exactly what breed of puppy and where it might come from.

Good news is that Michelle Obama has said that they would consider a shelter dog for the office of First Dog and if that comes to pass the message it could send through the animal welfare community would be a powerful one. Getting shelter animals adopted has been the mainstay of shelter life—with pet overpopulation currently still a giant issue, no-kill shelters being overcrowded, having a beacon like the President adopting a dog would create a watershed event for this cause.

One of the obstacles the Obamas face to getting a puppy is that their daughter Malia, 10, has allergies—if I recall correctly, like me, she’s asthmatic. Allergens, especially animal dander, can be a huge risk for an asthma attack. This makes getting an animal for the family something of a risk and the responsibility is to find an animal that won’t set off an attack. Thus, hypoallergenic dog breeds come into play.

Firstly, I should point out that there are no truly hypoallergenic dog breeds—with perhaps the exception of shaved dogs and eventually genetically engineered dogs—but there are dogs which have certain attributes to reduce the allergens associated like less dander, less shedding. Also, people can do a lot to reduce their own allergies to their pets through regular bathing, proper use of shampoos without scents and dyes, and keeping their pets healthy.

Here’s a short list of possible hypoallergenic breeds from the AKC:

  • Bedlington Terrier
  • Bichon Frise
  • Chinese Crested
  • Irish Water Spaniel
  • Kerry Blue Terrier
  • Maltese
  • Poodles (Toy, Miniature or Standard)
  • Portuguese Water Dog
  • Schnauzer (Miniature, Standard or Giant)
  • Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier
  • Xoloitzcuintli

We wish the Obama family good luck in finding a shelter dog who fits their needs. There are probably numerous shelters from all across the country with wonderful dogs just looking for their day.

If anyone else has suggestions on what they know to be good low-allergy dog breeds. We’d welcome the input.

Puppy Mill Action Week

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Join the Humane Society of the United States this upcoming November 16th through the 22nd in their second annual Puppy Mill Action Week. We are trying to bring attention from the public to the reality of puppy mills during the peak of puppy buying season: the holidays.

This year during Puppy Mill Action Week, The HSUS asks that consumers work with local pet stores to encourage them to develop and implement “puppy friendly” policies, like refusing to sell puppies in their store and supporting shelter adoptions instead.

According to Stephanie Shain, puppy mill expert and director of The HSUS’ Stop Puppy Mills campaign, “Thousands of people have already signed our pledge to stop puppy mills, promising not to shop at stores where puppies are sold, and to never purchase a dog from a pet store or over the Internet. This year’s action week asks that consumers work with local pet stores and encourage them to support animal shelters rather than selling puppies. People should never buy a dog from a pet store or over the Internet.

Link, via the Humane Society of the United States

Welcome to the Crossroads

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

I would like to welcome everyone to our official blog, PETS 911 Animal Crossroads. For the benefit of our visitors we will focus on pet and animal welfare issues and attempt to bring a sense of community and connection.

We have a lot of interesting stuff coming up! Look here for updates on pets related news, PETS 911 updates and new offerings (like new listings, services, and wonderful stuff for you to use,) and general everyday distractions for those who just want to get their fix.

PETS 911 welcomes the input and voice of our visitors and we hope that you’ll join us in this additional resource. So, don’t be a stranger!