vet-and-wild:

animalsustainability:

houndtroglodytes:

zoologicallyobsessed:

gaybatrachologist:

mexicanine:

it’s 2015, we should stop saying “adopt dont shop” and change it to “adopt wisely and shop only from a reputable breeder who health tests their dogs and cares about their temperament and needs.”

Anyway…….. adopt don’t shop

Ah no.

Adopt don’t shop is a catchy phase but it’s ultimately based on uneducated claims and simplifying a much more complex issue. There’s a range of reasons why adopting from animal shelter’s isn’t always the best course for some people.

I’ve worked in an animal shelter for 3 years now. And I am all for adoption and encouraging people to adopt. But there are valid reasons why adoption isn’t always the right option.

  • Firstly allergies. There are specific dog breeds that are bred  to  be hypoallergenic for people with moderate  to severe allergies.
    Most people will just say in response “why not just find a  hypoallergenic dog in the shelter then!” This is unrealistic. As someone who has worked in a shelter, I’ve never seen a  hypoallergenic dog there. Most of the dog breeds are unknown or mixed breed.  Hypoallergenic are expensive too, so it’s unlikely they’ll end up in shelters. And if they do they’d be high-demand dogs who would be easily adopted within days.
  • Breeds for specific purposes. Some people need certain breeds of dogs for certain specific reasons (be it allergies, illness, assisting with a disability, family friendly, working dog) ect. Certain breeds have been bred to assist with very specific purposes and expecting to find these breeds in shelters is unrealistic
  • It ignores the importance of good breeders and rescues working together. Breeders can offer valuable resources such as finances, kennel space, networking or knowledge  Shaming and alienating proper breeders does nothing to help animal shelters or the animals people claim to care about
  • Proper breeders are actually beginning to breed more healthier dogs (that often have a range of health issues due to inproper breeding). Such as with brachycephalic breeds like pugs. 
  • Not everyone is prepared / experienced enough to deal with shelter dogs. Not all shelter dogs have issues, most of them are just lonely or scared. But there are also of dogs (and cats) that require extra care and patience. And you just never know with a shelter animal. Most of the time the history of the animals are unknown. You might not know how the animal will react around children, or around other pets. Not everyone can accommodate for the needs of these animals. That’s why so many animals adopted from shelters end up getting returned weeks or even days later! And this can really mess the animal up even more so. 

There’s lots of great reasons to adopt shelter animals!  But there’s also great reasons to want to buy a pet from a proper breeder too. Shaming someone for buying a pet instead of adopting (especially when you don’t know the circumstance or situation) is stupid and based on a misguided sense of moral high ground. 

Another factor in my choice to buy from a breeder, is that responsible breeders offer lifetime support, so no animal they breed should ever end up in rescue- and the breeder will bend over backwards getting them out if they ever do. If anything were to happen to me, my dog has a safe and knowledgeable home to go to, guaranteed. That’s peace of mind. Also, my breeders are always available for any questions I might have, and will even be taking on my girl for a few months while I’m away overseas. While I have endless respect for those who choose the rescue option, the ongoing support and shared love of the breed clinch it for me. I’m proud of owning a dog from a responsible breeder.

Excellent perspective re the role of shelters and breeders.  

Interesting dialogue that sums up a lot of my thoughts. It’s also interesting to note that shelter roles are starting to change. The shelter I volunteer at actually does not have enough unwanted dogs in the immediate community to meet their adoption demand. They focus on outreach, education, affordable veterinary care, training classes, and bringing in dogs from smaller/overcrowded shelters. In conversation, a coordinator also mentioned to me that it’s possible their role in the future could shift to working with reputable breeders because there may just not be enough homeless dogs coming in (yay!) to keep up with the number of people that want a dog. Coordination and communication between shelters, reputable breeders, and the community seems to be the best way to tackle pet overpopulation.

bettascape:

I just want to let y’all know that it is okay to make mistakes, especially as a pet owner. So you messed up once or twice. It happens. The important thing is to learn from those experiences and through it, become a better, more knowledgeable pet owner.

vastderp:

adorably-confused-fallen-angel:

sparklesmccheesy:

ittygittydiddynator:

iheichouguys:

lifehackable:

This is potentially life saving information everyone should know.

No you guys this post helped me find my cat. He was missing for almost a month and I’ve had him for over 12 years. After seeing this I put his favorite blanket he always slept on outside hoping he would smell mine or his scent and he was back the next fucking day asleep on it.

When my cat got out, we called and called for him, and then, later that night, I remembered similar advice to this, and so put his little scratching pad, which he adores, on the front porch. Not even half an hour later, I heard a thump, opened the door, and there was his big butt, meowing at me.

Important and vital

I don’t care that I reblogged this today I’m reblogging it again

awwwww babies ;_; i hope everyone’s pets come home safe.

dylexa:

theexoticvet:

coolcatgroup:

kirby-kitty:

clatterbane:

cenobitic-anchorite:

whenwillwoodyallendie:

attention @ everyone who cares about animals!!!!!!!!!!

tl;dr: do NOT buy this brand of flea medicine. always do research before buying any kind of medication for your animals.

my boyfriend bought this at petsmart for our cat and when we put it on her, she started licking it bc i guess i accidentally placed it too low and he got worried so we’ve been on google to find out if it’ll harm her. we found some scary stuff.

it doesn’t happen to every cat that this product is used on, but there are reports of this product seriously hurting cats. it burns their skin and can be very painful. the screenshots above are reviews from amazon for the one in the blue box. the one we used is the one in the purple box.

some cats had reactions right away while others took a few hours. we put this on our cat about an hour ago (washed it off of her soon after) and she seems fine but we’re so worried about what could happen. even if nothing happens, this is a chance we never would had taken if we’d known.

ALWAYS RESEARCH BEFOREHAND. i can’t believe petsmart has this on their shelves after everything people have said about it. please spread the word by sharing this post! protect ur pets. a simple google search could have stopped all these cats from getting hurt.

Don’t buy anything but front line. I learned this lesson once long ago. :/

http://www.consumeraffairs.com/pets/sentry.html

Looking at the 1-star average reviews here? The dog version doesn’t sound any safer, either. Lots of reports of neurological symptoms and other really bad reactions to the Sentry spot on products.

Don’t buy anything Hartz either…unless you want a dead cat/dog! 😦

Signal boost this!!

Get your pet’s medications from your vet. I know that the price of these knock offs can be very tempting but so many of these products don’t work or can cause chemical burns as seen above. Not to mention, if you buy your product from a veterinarian, used it correctly, and something happens to your pet, most companies will pay the medical bill. If you bought the product somewhere else you have to pay out of pocket.

Also remember that almost all of those internet pharmacies use grey market products they get via diversion. These medications are often taken out of their original boxes and re-packaged, many are out of date. If something happens to your pet with these, you again are not covered. Most vets will price match if cost is truly the issue, we’d rather you get a safe product from us than save a few bucks to get something from the internet.

!!!!!!

why-animals-do-the-thing:

kereeachan:

So I was reading @why-animals-do-the-thing ‘s utterly fabulous article on Why Vegan Diets Will kill You Cat (And Sicken You Dog) at 1am, as one does, and hit upon a pretty good argument against how many people anthropomorphize animals and why it is dangerous.

Anthropomorphization is people assigning human traits to nonhuman beings. This is dangerous because is can lead to fundamental misunderstandings of how those animals function which can then lead to improperly caring for them while actually thinking you’re doing a good thing, like, say, an over-zealous vegan who tries to put their cat (an obligate carnivore) on a vegan diet.  But the cat is not a human with a human digestive tract capable of supporting veganism (hell, there are many humans whose digestive tracts cannot support veganism for varying reasons). The cat is a cat with a carnivorous digestive system that cannot handle a vegan diet. Ditto for dogs, even if they’re omnivores. Omnivore does not mean “can be a vegan if you only feed it plants”, despite what some people think. Again, the article goes into this.

Worse, anthropomorphization

can also lead to people not actually knowing that the reactions their animal is displaying to, say, a vegan diet or some new stimulus. Animals do not express emotions in the same way humans do.

Let’s take crying. I have mentioned to a few people over the last few days a crying incident my dog had while I was not home–because I was not home, he is used to only living with me and was confused and distressed that my parents were home and I was not, we are still working on this as it is a new situation. But when I say he “cried” I do not mean he wept or blubbered as a human would. In fact my dog is baffled by human tears and thinks licking them (which is profoundly uncomfortable) is the solution to their existence, while being far more accommodating to almost all other human signs of distress other than tears. His “crying” was to sit at the door, refuse play, food, or treat, and make distressed noises. My father tried to comfort him, but as the reason for the discomfort was partially my father’s presence (”why are there humans in the house when My Human is not in the house, this is not something I am used to, I am unused to it and therefore upset” essentially) it did not work for a little while. Still, my parents recognized the source of the crying and acted accordingly, and eventually he calmed down and joined dad on the couch (albeit dad noted he was still clearly stressed, just less so). They also recognized his getting upset and urinating was due to being in distress (again, he is not used to being home with other humans but not me yet) and was not him being a Bad Dog. It’s just that he hasn’t even been here a month at their house and is still adjusting when things go off his usual routines such as “no humans in the house unless My Human is.”

A lot of people seem to think that an animal is “crying” when it looks as if tears are coming from its eyes. That is not how many animals’ eyes function. Again, let’s take my family’s dogs, this time two cocker spaniels (both now passed). In some dogs, there are issues with their tear ducts–the eye socket is too shallow based on breed face shape, there are airborne irritants, or more serious issues. The first cocker spaniel, who was older than me, had constant tear tracts due to the stellar combo of all the crap in north Florida air, shallow eye sockets, and light fur making them more visible. He looked like he was constantly weeping, especially in heavy pollen season, but he was not weeping and was  a perfectly happy dog.The second cocker was in almost the same conditions, but had lesser tear tracts due to differing head shape giving her deeper eye sockets and her nose shape being less conducive towards gunk buildup sliding down her face quickly. Neither of the “tear tracks” meant anything other than that we as owners needed to clean around their eyes and make sure we were minimizing irritants. Excessive “tears” in dogs are not an indication of sadness but either of just flushing out irritants or a medical issue. If it seems severe, go to a vet. Otherwise, remember that animals have their own systems of showing distress and that you need to learn how your animal is likely to show upset, not assume that because a behavior seems like a human behavior it is the same as that human behavior with all that goes behind that human behavior.

Mistaking animal behaviors can lead to problems. There’s of course the common “my dog is smiling!” when in reality the dog is showing its teeth as a sign of distress. But, moving back to the vegan issue, there’s things like “my dog ate it so they must like it or think it’s okay for them!” Dogs will eat anything. My current dog will eat the fluff from inside stuffed animals or wads of hair pulled out of hair brushes and put in the garbage. One of the cocker spaniels loved shrimp, which turned out to be an issue as he ended up being allergic to it later in life. Dogs do not know what an acceptable diet is for them and will eat almost anything. It is what they do. Dogs also cannot be vegan because veganism is not just a diet but a series of lifestyle choices and dogs cannot actually make the choices inherent to veganism–they are dogs. They are not eating something because they have any moral feelings about it, they are eating it because they are hungry and it is there. While people say “oh, you can feed your dog a vegan diet with vet assistance!” I’m sorry, but having to have a vet constantly monitor your animal and give you supplements to prevent your chosen diet from killing your animal is honestly not much better–sure the vet can make sure you don’t do them serious harm but the fact that you admit what you are doing is so iffy that you need a vet to keep a constant eye on things should be a huge warning sign.

And this is an area where I blame the media. For example, in the wangst-laden film Seven Pounds, the “too good for this earth” love interest has a massive Great Dane that she claims is a vegan (which I’m 90% certain was done to make the love interest seem like a good person to the viewer). In one moment of the film the dog happily gobbles up some meat  from the protagonist (which upsets the love interest) and its diet is mentioned–it’s so bad, just steamed broccoli and tofu. No wonder that poor thing wants more protein, she’s killing it! And of course any number of animated movies. I don’t mind pets being anthropomorphized to star in the story, but maybe don’t have their humans do things that are completely bad animal care (unless that’s the point of the story). Even otherwise good movies fall into this trap a lot just for the sake of showing an animal, say, enjoying hot chocolate or ice cream (I like Oliver and Company, but Oliver should have been dead or at least very sick with what Jenny was letting him gobble up). And this has just never been a thing I’ve understood, even as a kid. Probably the “best” example from kids movies is Lilo and Stich were a) Stitch survives being given coffee because he is not a dog but an alien, b) there are still negative repercussions to giving him coffee and c) all of Lilo’s poor animal care is tacitly acknowledged by the story to be misguided as she is five and Nani is too busy to help her. And even then it’s pretty iffy.

I just do not get why so many shows and movies seem resistant to feeding pets pet food. Hell, not even to feeding pets pet food, but often by showing animals as disliking pet food and wanting something else, usually something humans desire but pets shouldn’t have like cake, ice cream, or hot chocolate (with no repercussions, of course). It baffles me. And then that causes people who don’t put too much thought into animal care to assume diets are wider than they are or that there’s no (or just very little) difference between feeding a pet and feeding a human. Or worse, to convince people that typical pet food is not going to be something their pet desires enough to eat and so start looking at ways to spice it up or feed them something else. Protip: if your dog or cat  is not eating normal, healthy pet food, as in refusing to eat it or not eating enough to sustain themselves despite it being provided, go to a vet and ask them what to do. Not eating is normally a sign of a problem. It is a sign something is wrong not “oh, he’s being picky”. Go to a vet.

While animal and pet care has definitely improved over my lifetime in many ways, there are still a lot of people who are hugely uneducated in how to keep their pets properly and I think anthropomorphization plays a role in that. While you still certainly have your assholes who treat pets just as property instead of living creatures with needs, you also now have well-meaning owners who have gone so far in the other direction–seeing their pets as practically human–that they’re ignoring the needs the animals have as animals and treating them and their behaviors as if they were humans. Animals are not “practically human” with human behaviors and people pushing that as the way to get people to empathize with animals can often be the wrong tactic as it can lead to misinterpretation of animal behaviors due to
anthropomorphization making people think the behavior must be related to the nearest human analogue. And the well-meaning can be as much trouble as the assholes since they might (and often do) react very badly to the very suggestion that their behavior is harming their animal because they love their animal and would never intend to harm it. But lack of intent does not mean lack of harm. So there needs to be a lot more education so that the well-meaning learn that it’s not an attack on them and that we’re not saying they don’t love their pets, just that their pets need a better standard of care and need to be treated as the animals they are, not as the animal-shaped humans they are not.

My favorite line from this whole piece: “Lack of intent [to harm] does not mean lack of harm.” It’s a hard lesson to learn, that you can hurt creatures you love to dearly just by trying to empathize with them – but it’s why anthropomorphism is so dangerous.

betta-resplendent:

thebettasarebackintown:

tejoxys:

garrow-the-khajiit:

musicalhell:

thehappyvet:

thehappyvet:

Guess what?! There is a miracle cure for parvovirus but it’s not what youtube and natural health bloggers would have you believe. It’s not feeding them charcoal, colloidial silver, homeopathic vaccines, capsules full of faeces from a dog that currently has parvo, oregano, garlic… not even a raw food diet.

It’s vaccinating your fucking puppy.

Reblogging since we’ve euthanased at least 20 dogs in the last two weeks due to a positive parvo test 😭😭😭 please vaccinate your puppies!!

Wait, are you telling me the anti-vax crowd has moved on to pets now?  What are they afraid of, a rise of feline autism?

Antivaxers are literally the stupidest group of people possible, so they probably are.

no but one of the things I witnessed as a little vet tech intern doing rotation was a frustrated tech trying to convince an older woman to let the clinic give her adult dog his annual rabies vaccine (a required vaccination for reasons of public safety), which she was refusing to do because “what proof can you show me that these weird drugs won’t make my dog autistic??”

and a week later, another woman shying away from the parvo vaccine for her puppy because “you just hear all sorts of horror stories about vaccines these days, you know?”

also, when I was looking up my state’s rabies vaccination laws just now while writing my addition to this post, one of the first things to pop up was an article for pet owners about “tips on how to avoid ALL vaccines!!”

so, yes. yes, the antivaxxers have moved on to pets, people are now afraid of “autism” in dogs & cats, and it is it brain-meltingly stupid, not to mention dangerous for everyone.

VACCINATE YOUR PETS OR GIVE THEM TO SOMEONE WHO WILL! THAT IS BORDERLINE PET ABUSE YOU MONSTERS!!

God, I heard a horror story about this from our vet. She had to put down a positive (for what I don’t recall, i don’t know if it was parvo tho) puppy because the owner had bought into the anti-vaxx (NOW FOR PETS!!!) movement and fed her puppy i n f e c t e d  f e c e s. 

on purpose

so the dog could build up immunity

????????????????????????????

imo not vaccinating an animal is abuse, just…a little different than ‘traditional’ abuse. it’s inactive abuse. once you know you should vaccinate there’s really no excuse.