Best Friends Magazine: May/June 2004
Transcription
Best Friends Magazine: May/June 2004
All the good news about animals, wildlife, and the earth Best Friends May/June 2004 Learning to Love Again What the Animals See Wise World of Fairy Tale Critters Plus • Wild & Wacky Cat World News • SUPER Super Adoption • World’s Wealthiest Pets BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 1 from the editor Victor the Dogfather By Michael Mountain Our work for the animals is a work of the soul. V “ The simple truth is that all aggression is born of fear. ” 2 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 ictor the Dogfather had no high-tech weapons – no nukes, cruise missiles, star wars satellites, or cluster bombs; and no chemical weapons, dirty bombs, or other cheap WMDs. He didnʼt even have an army – just a couple of slightly overweight, old black Lab/spaniel mixes who considered themselves his chiefs of staff. Victor couldnʼt even have defended his territory, Victorville, if other dogs had crossed his line in the sand and challenged him. But the point was, they never did. This was all 15 years ago, and Victorville was just across the way from Octagon Three, where breakfast was prepared every morning for 600 or more dogs. Dozens of street-smart dogs, abandoned pets, and old mutts would mill around, watching for tasty morsels to drop as volunteers loaded the bowls onto pickup trucks for delivery all over Dogtown. But however excited the dogs might be, none of them ever ventured across Victorʼs line in the sand just a few yards away. Instead, they would take a detour around his tree, and only then race off to the dog compounds along the delivery route. It wasnʼt that other dogs couldnʼt have taken him on. Victor was old and creaky with arthritis. Heʼd lived on a heavy iron chain in a trailer park for years before coming to Best Friends. He walked stiffly. But no young upstart ever challenged him. And while handsome “Sheriff” Amra the Malamute strutted around, greeting people like he was lord of the manor, Victor remained the true alpha dog. What was his secret? It wasnʼt that the other dogs were afraid of him. They knew there was nothing he could have done to stop them. But he didnʼt need force. There was something about him that simply commanded respect. There have been occasional people in the human world who have commanded the kind of respect and honor that was natural to Victor. But I canʼt think of any today. Instead, we live in a world that grows ever more dangerously polarized – where violence is the order of the day, and selfrighteous men worship gods of hatred and intolerance that reflect just how uncertain and insecure they truly are. Itʼs a world divided against itself, and mirrored right here at home in a country thatʼs split angrily down the middle in whatʼs set to become the longest, nastiest knock-down, drag-out election campaign ever. Itʼs a world of aggression. And the simple truth is that all aggression is born of fear. Any of us can be scared by things we have no control over. But the fear thatʼs endemic in the world today comes not from outside threats but from deep within ourselves. This kind of fear is born of a sense of disconnection – from ourselves, from each other, and from nature. Itʼs the kind of fear that Victor the Dogfather never felt. He knew who he was, and he knew his place in the scheme of things. And he projected an inner confidence that made other dogs feel secure rather than afraid. So they honored his line in the sand – not because they feared reprisals, but because he was truly the Dogfather of Dogtown. True power doesnʼt depend on the ability to destroy, but on the ability to offer life and love. Our would-be world leaders today could learn a lot from Victor. contents Best Friends M A G A Z I N E M a y / J u n e 14 2 0 0 4 Minority Report III Reservation Rescues BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE Editor: Michael Mountain Managing Editor: Steven Hirano Assistant Editor: Estelle Munro Senior Editor: Julie Richard Associate Editors: Anne Zepernick, Elizabeth Doyle Photos: Clay Myers, Troy Snow Graphics: Arnie Bishop, Diane Doyle Cartoons: Marc Brown, Steven Hirano Advertising: Ashley Tillman, Denise Kelly Distribution: Denise Kelly BEST FRIENDS ANIMAL SOCIETY President: Michael Mountain Sanctuary & Animal Care: Faith Maloney Rescue Programs: Francis Battista Spay/Neuter & Adoption: Gregory Castle No More Homeless Pets: Bonney Brown Veterinarian: Virginia Clemans, DVM Treasurer: John Fripp ADVERTISING OFFICES: Los Angeles: Ashley Tillman (818) 986-3006 New York: Denise Kelly (212) 592-0743 5001 Angel Canyon Rd • Kanab, UT 84741 Tel: (435) 644-2001 • Fax: (435) 644-2078 e-mail: [email protected] www.bestfriends.org 26 The Earth Olympic Wonder Best Friends magazine is published by Best Friends Animal Society. Located at Angel Canyon, in the majestic red-rock country of Utah, Best Friends runs the nation’s largest sanctuary for abused and abandoned animals, and is also home to a host of wildlife who find refuge here. Best Friends operates a low-cost spay/neuter program, sponsors a network of members in rescue, foster care and humane education, and works with humane groups nationwide to bring about a time when there will be No More Homeless Pets. The society is supported primarily by memberships and donations, and subscriptions to this magazine. Your contributions are taxdeductible. B E S T F R I E N D S M AG A Z I N E is published by Best Friends Animal Society, 5001 Angel Canyon Road, Kanab, Utah 84741. Subscriptions are $25 (6 issues per year). Standard A postage paid at Maple Grove, Minnesota. Vol. 13, issue 3 © 2004, Best Friends Animal Society. All rights reserved. Cover photo of Dauveny by Troy Snow 2 4 From the Editor • Victor the Dogfather 5 Oddly Enough • “Siamese” turtles • Clubby cub • Hereʼs your ball…and a furball • Families that rattle together • Oddly but briefly 6 Reviews & Updates • The dark underbelly of ecotourism • Chippy chipper • For the love of pups • Dogs of war • Elephant on ice • New “pocket” pet Mysteries of Life • A land before RAID • Land Oʼ Spooky Lakes • Studs “R” Us • Get your Dasani water here 8 12 18 21 22 24 28 Thinking Globally • News and photos from around the world 38 40 42 44 46 48 Ambassador to the Animals • SUPER Adoption! 54 On the Light Side • Soon to star in an NBC reality show • There goes the neigh...borhood! • Their food bowls runneth over • Free at last • Run, postman, run! • Pamper your pets…or else! No More Homeless Pets • Stop Woof & Co! • News briefs Animals & Society • Learning to love again through Project Second Chance London Hound • Culture shock! Adopting a cat in the U.K. Talking with Animals • The wise world of fairy tale animals On the Wild Side • You are so there! An animalʼs eye view of the world Best Friends Animal Sanctuary • News from the sanctuary • Rockyʼs road to adoption • Special adoptions • Tomatoʼs Cat World News Health & Behavior • Faith Maloney answers your questions The Animals’ Bookshelf • Lessons from our animal friends Point Counter Point • Should dogs go veggie? On the Radio • Pets, people, personalities Members & Pets • The miracle of Zoe • Letters • A grey angel flies home • Sweet memories BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 3 mysteries of life A Land Before RAID Land O’ Spooky Lakes Studs “R” Us! Get Your Dasani Water Here! It was so spooky that most residents near the Thunderbird and Britannia Lakes in Florida didn’t even want to talk about it. But with more and more people hearing the nocturnal din – a series of basso bellows – the mystery began to grow. What was making that spine-tingling sound? Some of the locals put it down to bullfrogs in their attics; others believed these were the ghostly moanings of sad spooks. As the noisy nights went on, it became clear that the sound was emerging from two nearby man-made lakes. Nessie in Florida? Turns out it wasn’t anything so exotic. The otherworldly noise issued from black drum fish sending out their mating call. These huge creatures (one was found weighing 93 pounds!) move inland in the winter to mate in warmer waters. But residents needn’t fear that they’ll have to suffer through the spring ritual. Warmer weather sees the fish moving back out to deeper water where they normally forage. www.nasa.gov Long before humans took over the earth – long before the age of the dinosaurs – huge insects were lords over all they surveyed. Three hundred million years ago, when much of the land was lush and tropical, an explosion of plant life gave off so much oxygen that insects just grew and grew and grew. There were dragonflies with wingspans of two and a half feet. Five-footlong millipedes. Superscorpions. Humongous spiders. What happened to them all? A huge extinction event 250 million years ago, much bigger than the later dinosaur apocalypse, wiped them all out. And what happened to all the plants? They’re still with us, in their own way. They just got buried and turned into coal. Wish you could preselect whether your baby will be a boy or girl? Deer can already do it. As urban sprawl increasingly claims their habitat, deer are “choosing” the gender of their children. The healthiest females are producing more male children. Weaker, less favored females deliver females. Bees, wasps, and some birds have been known to practice selective breeding, too, but until now it was a matter of debate whether mammals could do the same. Having the strongest females produce male heirs ensures that there are enough high-quality males available to become the next generation’s studs. Nobody knows quite how they go about this regulatory process. 4 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Is there life on Europa? When the spacecraft Galileo first flew by this moon of Jupiter, scientists were excited. It was a world covered in ice – most likely ice made of water. And where there’s water, there may be life. But latest observations suggest that the ice is not quite so hospitable. It’s frozen sulphuric acid! Europa may have volcanoes deep down under the water, spewing sulphur and other chemicals into its ocean that turn water into acid. Or possibly it’s being bombarded with sulphur from Io, another of Jupiter’s moons. So, does that rule out Europa as a possible home for living creatures? Not so fast, say biologists. Here on earth, there are species of bacteria that thrive deep down in ocean vents where the water is just as sour. oddly enough Photo: Sharon Ehasz Whew! That Was Close! You canʼt have one without the other … only now you can. Peanut Butter and Jelly, a pair of conjoined tortoises, have been successfully separated and are recovering in an Arizona clinic. The two were joined at the side of the belly near their tail ends and had spent half of their lives with one on Clubby Cub Here’s Your Ball ... and a Furball EPA/Barbara Walton Youʼd think that a baby piglet would automatically be lunch for a hungry twoyear-old Bengal tiger. But one such man-eater prefers to romp as brothers with a litter of piglets. Saimai, the tiger, was suckled by a sow when he was a cub, and he grew up with a litter of piglets. As an adult, the tigerʼs natural urges havenʼt taken over – at least not as yet. An animalʼs early experiences can apparently override its genetic predispositions. And there are many cases where early life experiences affect later life behavior. In other words, a pig can be imprinted on a tiger cub, and the tiger may, in turn, begin to think he or she is related to the pig. But those piggies better not get too clubby. Nobody knows how long the imprinting lasts, but most such instances find the animal reverting to its natural behavior sooner or later … and often when itʼs least expected! its back and the other trying to kick itself over. Their people routinely flipped them, logging the time one stayed on its back while the other was upright. The condition is rare, but after surgeons agreed to operate, the siblings were free to crawl together ... or opt for a little alone time. Dogs who fetch the paper or their personʼs slippers are a fairly common occurrence. But cats? Until recently, the retrieving skill was thought to be the preserve of canines, but these days about 44 percent of cats fetch and return items tossed for them by their people. The cats use their natural behavior (retrieving prey) to encourage people to interact with them, thereby garnering a lot of attention. Burmese and Siamese cats are at the top of the retrieving list, while mixed breeds show the least interest. Paper, tinfoil balls, feathers, socks, brushes, and even ear plugs were all items of choice on the play list. The “new” behavior is attributed to a change in lifestyle, with more cats living closely with human companions rather than out trawling the land for their own dinner. Families that Rattle Together Stay Together They can send most people into terror-filled paralysis – or screaming off into the woods. But rattlesnakes might be getting a bad rap. The supposedly fearsome reptiles are actually caring, social creatures who even form family groups. Females associate more with their sisters than with unrelated kin and they form birthing rookeries with other snakes when theyʼre pregnant. The ability to distinguish relatives from those unrelated to them was previously not thought to exist in snake species. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 5 reviews & updates www.fotosearch.com The Dark Underbelly of Ecotourism I t has been promoted as the way forward for all animal-loving travelers. Ecotourism – the modern, compassionate answer to safari hunting – has given poor countries an economic boost while protecting their most precious natural resources. It has helped transform poachers into guardians of the animals they once destroyed. And it has helped finance countless wildlife preserves. But now, it seems, some of those best efforts may have a dark underside. From penguins to polar bears, dolphins to dingoes, animals are showing signs of stress, ranging from weight loss to premature death. Itʼs painful news for an industry that was designed to have exactly the opposite effect. Evidence is growing that animals do not react well to having tourists tramping around their habitat. The effects can be subtle and difficult to detect at first: changes in heart rate, an increase in stress hormone levels, and alterations in social behavior. For example, when New Zealandʼs bottlenose dolphins were monitored, they became increasingly agitated when tourist boats were present. They rest for as little as .5 percent of the time when three or more boats are within close range, compared with 68 percent of the time when only a single boat is present. Similarly, dolphins in Scotlandʼs Moray Firth spend significantly more time surfacing in synchronization when tour boats are present than they do otherwise. And that, in turn, means they have to rest more at night, which reduces the time they spend socializing among themselves and foraging for food. 6 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Tourists are fanning out all across the globe in search of ecotourism opportunities. Special vehicles designed to transport visitors to watch polar bears in Manitoba have been in operation since the 1980s. The tourist season is short, lasting only from October to November, but this is the time the animals should be resting, waiting for the Hudson Bay to freeze over so they can hunt for food. The presence of visitors means the bears are not resting up for the work ahead. Male bears show a marked increase in defensive vigilant behavior when even as little as one vehicle is around. Their heart rates and metabolism increase, which means their body fat and individual fitness is reduced. For slow-breeding animals like the polar bear, the effects could take years to reverse. And while poor countries that are rich in biodiversity have been encouraged to benefit from the industry, oftentimes their ecotourism projects arenʼt properly accredited and are only on the fringe of being environmentally friendly. But the news isnʼt all bad. There are carefully controlled programs, such as those in the Galapagos Islands, which raise money for preservation without causing any damage to wildlife. Studies in that area have shown that the islandsʼ famous reptiles do not have any increased stress or behavioral changes in the presence of humans. Wildlife experts are calling for more studies and careful monitoring of ecotourism programs to ensure that the goals the industry wanted to accomplish when it was born are really the end result it achieves. AP Photo/ Anchorage Daily News/BNob Hallinen Chippy Chipper Again He became an instant celebrity when headlines captured his 100-mile adventure up the San Joaquin River. Chippy the sea lion (so named by the California Highway Patrol officers who rescued him) had swum up the river to the agricultural canals. From there, he moved onto land for about half a mile. When he was found, he had a bullet wound in the back of his head. His post-operative recuperation saw him paddling in a pool and munching on 14 pounds of herring a day. But he wasnʼt much interested in cavorting with the other sea lions at the wildlife rehabilitation facility. With his wounds healed, Chippy was ready to return to his home in the Pacific Ocean, hopefully back with family and friends. So the 315-pound sea lion was released amidst much fanfare and good wishes from his legion of fans. For the Love of Pups Computer and canine geeks alike are logging on to the hottest new website to hit the animal kingdom: dogster.com. It started as a small social network site for dogs, complete with mug shots, heartwarming stories, and a list of pet peeves. When it went live on January 12, there were fewer than 100 dogs sharing stories of their personal adventures. Within three months, more than 8,000 dogs had been posted on the site with more being added daily. And these arenʼt just local pooches; they come from all over the globe – from Malaysia, Afghanistan, New Zealand, and even Croatia. Dogster may just be the ultimate home for canine fanciers. It connects pooches and people where theyʼre sure to receive not only likeminded companionship but also an endless dose of puppy love. Outfitting the Dogs of War The new recruits heading to Iraq and Afghanistan are now being properly outfitted – the canine ones, anyway. K-9 units deployed to the war zone will now be issued Kevlar vests that cover their bodies from shoulders to hindquarters, protecting them from bullets, shrapnel, and knife attacks. The Marinesʼ K-9 units are used for sentry duty and for detecting explosives. Although no dogs have been killed in Iraq, some have been injured, prompting the decision to provide the vests. The body armor includes pouches for cooling packs in high temperatures, and rappel loops and a harness should the animals need to scale a steep slope or be deployed via parachute. Itʼs the Free Willy campaign of this century. But now itʼs an elephantʼs turn to raise awareness and become the focus of a campaign to better her life. The “Free Maggie” movement has been gaining momentum and attention as pleas for a new home for a 22-year-old African elephant at the Alaska Zoo in Anchorage resound around the world. It doesnʼt take a genius to see that Maggie is cold and cramped in her winter compound and clearly missing her companion, who died seven years ago. Since then, Maggie has lived without the company of any other elephant, contrary to national zoo standards. Elephants are social creatures who need companionship. Alaska zoo officials are coming under fire as they weigh the benefits (to them) of keeping Maggie against the cost of spending the money required to improve her living conditions or even provide her with friends. Locals who profess to “love” Maggie want her kept where she is, claiming sheʼs a favorite of the kids and is perfectly content in her long-time home. Others say that she should be given the chance to thrive in her homeland by being moved to one of the state-of-the-art elephant preserves in Africa, where she can lumber about among her own kind and be free to roam the range. New Old Stuff Theyʼre baaaaaack. Those ubiquitous Tamagotchi pocket pets that graced key chains everywhere in the 1990s have been upgraded to a new 2004 version. The older version of the virtual pets required them to be fed, walked, and played with, lest they expire. In the newer digital version, available in the U.S. this summer, the virtual pets are able to date, fall in love, and have babies. (Did no one tell the software nerds about virtual spay/neuter?) AP Photo/HO AP Photo/Fresno Bee/Mark Crosse What’s Wrong with This Picture? BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 7 www.dominaweb.net thinking globally Got Grass? Wales: Three Asian water buffalo have been imported to a Welsh wildlife center to help in conservation work. The animals, originally from Romania, graze in swamp areas that provide an important habitat for wetland birds. In the past, cows and horses were used to keep down the grass and scrub, but they proved to be fussy eaters. When a local farmer loaned six adult water buffalo to the wildlife center, they were so pleased with the herdʼs eating habits that they decided to acquire more. The unconventional grazers have attracted a lot of attention, and now other conservation groups are following the model. Determination Fuels Conservation another 10 percent last year. Only 100 specialist horse butchers remain in the country, with Paris containing only 32. (Twenty years ago, there were over 100 in the capital city alone.) The increasingly successful political challenges in France to animal cruelty (including foie gras production and bullfighting) have been slowly altering Gallic opinion and practices. The decline is also attributed to an increased popularity in horseback riding and the concerted public awareness campaign by the organization The Ethical Association of Horses. Nigeria: The Environment Minister has warned that the countryʼs animals, fish, and plants in the wetlands might be lost if indiscriminate bush burning and wood fuel extraction continue unabated. The ministry is determined to create a national policy and action plan for sustainable use of the wetlands and to raise awareness among the public about protecting its resources. The Ultimate Whaling Ban! Worldwide: Animal welfare groups from around the globe have joined together to launch an international campaign for the outright banning of whaling. The Whalewatch Coalition is comprised of 140 organizations from 55 countries and is lobbying the International Whaling Commission to stop both commercial and research whaling. Traditional whaling countries such as Japan, Norway, and Iceland dismissed the campaign as “environmental imperialism.” Doctors Debate Vivisection Policy France: The French, one of the firmest holdouts in reducing gastronomic animal cruelty, finally seem to be setting out on a more animal-friendly course. There has been a steady decline in eating horse meat in the past two decades, with consumption down 17 percent in 2002 and Humane Care Tops Bill of Fare Three out of four American consumers would choose food products certified as protecting animals over those that do not, according to a recent study on behalf of the United Egg Producers. Consumers would also be willing to make the choice in favor of humane animal care even if the products might cost more. A whopping 77 percent of consumers would consider switching to animal friendly brands if their usual brand was not certified as protective of animals. The results are encouraging to all those industries that want to respond positively to humane animal farming issues. 8 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 www.photolib.noaa.gov Gaul Gastronomy Not So Galling United Kingdom: Doctors are calling for a moratorium on animal experiments until their contribution to human health is properly evaluated. Physicians from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and other members of the Reviewing Animal Trials Systematically Group say there is little evidence that animal research has contributed to treating human disease. The doctors want a study performed that reviews the existing animal data to determine whether animal research can be applied to humans. This could end the debate between pro- and antivivisectionists about the value of animal research to human health. The group asserts that no new animal studies should be conducted until the best use of existing studies has been made and until their validity has been assessed independently. The Royal Society has rejected the suggestion that animal research isnʼt pertinent in medical research, claiming that every medical treatment in the past century rests in some way on vivisection. Meanwhile, Britainʼs science minister, Lord Sainsbury, is set to announce plans for a “virtual” national research center to replace some animal testing. New Zealand: In a bid to save the islandʼs Maui dolphins – called by many the worldʼs most endangered marine mammal – New Zealandʼs public conservation agency is testing satellite tagging on three Hectorʼs dolphins. Those animals, which number around 7,000, are less endangered than the Maui, whose population is down to about 150. If the experiment is successful, the Maui will also be tagged in order to provide critical information about the animalʼs range. Maui dolphins are now protected through a ban on the use of commercial nets set within four nautical miles of the countryʼs North Island, where they live. But some have been spotted well outside the protected area, exposing them to danger from the fishing industry. The transmitters are tiny satellite tags that will be attached to the dorsal fins with nylon-coated pins. Some local conservation groups are opposed to the trial on the basis that other, non-invasive research methods (such as acoustic, boat-based surveys) should be used. Crime & Punishment Canada: After seven years of legislative stalling, the Species at Risk Act (SARA) is finally set to be implemented. The law, which was passed last summer, aims to prevent wildlife species from becoming extinct and help endangered animals recover their numbers. June will mark the first time that SARA will be used to prosecute those who contravene the law. Until now, education, financial incentives, and compensation have been the extent of the actʼs powers, but proponents say the change will allow the law to have some real bite. For example, it will now be a punishable offense to destroy habitats of endangered or threatened species; it will be illegal to kill, harm, harass, or take them, and illegal to possess, buy, or sell them. It’s the Law India: A new brand of cruelty-free silk, Ahimsa Peace Silk, which has been two years in the making, is ready to be released for use. The developers, People for Animals, are hoping to attract boutique owners who are interested in offering customers a crueltyfree silk alternative. The silk is the only one of its kind, and sales will benefit 21 animal hospitals in the country. The invention was launched at the international textile fair in Delhi recently, with foreign buyers nabbing the initial stock. For more information, visit www.ahimsapeacesilk.com. Elephants in Wisconsin: The owner of Lota, a Milwaukee County Zoo star elephant, has settled charges brought against him by the federal government for violations to the Animal Welfare Act. John Cuneo and the Hawthorn Corporation have admitted guilt to violations of the Animal Welfare Act in addition to inadequate veterinary care. The settlement includes a $200,000 fine and the removal of Lota and 15 other elephants. The animals will go to the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee. Touting a Turtle Turnaround Singapore: It was a first when experts from seven Asian countries gathered for a four day conference aimed at finding ways to reverse the slide toward extinction of the turtle and tortoise populations in Southeast Asia. The animals are poached for the pet trade, food (turtle soup and eggs), and in quack “medicines.” Habitat loss and pollution add to the problem. A major concern at the meeting was that many of the turtles who are disappearing are adult breeding females, making it difficult for populations to replenish themselves. Pledging to Protect United Nations: More than 180 countries signed an agreement in Kuala Lumpur that is designed to slow the loss of species and habitats around the world. A network of protected areas will be established on land and sea to offer incentives for poorer nations to protect the environment. It is intended that by 2010, areas of the world that boast a huge diversity of species will be part of the network of protected areas. Led by the United Nations, the conference set targets and timetables toward the goal of reducing the number of species dying out within six years. www.turtlesurvival.org Steve Dawson, ©2002 www.theglobalbridge.com Studying Dolphin Trips Luxurious & Cruelty Free Animals as Prizes in Iowa: Lizards, mice, goldfish, rabbits, and baby chicks can no longer be awarded as prizes at carnivals and fairs under a new bill passed by Iowa’s House of Representatives. The Animal Rescue League of Iowa pushed for the ban after receiving complaints last year about animal abuse at carnivals. The bill now moves to the state Senate for ratification. Dissection in Virginia: The state Senate passed a bill allowing Virginia students to opt out of vivisection and study computer models of animals instead. If the governor signs the bill, Virginia will join nine other states that offer alternatives to dissection. Not all senators sided with the bill. Senate minority leader Richard L. Saslaw declared: “We are on our way to becoming a nation of wimps. It’s just a frog, for crying out loud.” Microchips in Illinois: Cook County (which includes Chicago) gave the green light to mandatory microchipping of pets. With only one “no” vote, the board voted to require that all dogs, cats, and ferrets be fitted with microchips in order to reduce the number of lost animals who never make it home. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 9 thinking globally Two Inca cockatoos eye each other up at the Animal Paradise Center in Gross Schauen, Germany. 10 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 A man takes his goose chicks for a walk in Taiping, China, after theyʼve been given the okay by the bird flu authorities. AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko EPA/Patrick Pleul EPA/IFAW Melanie Adendorff of South African National Parks with Thandi, a black rhinoceros calf who was found abandoned. Thandi belongs to an extremely rare sub-species of which only 850 now remain in the world. It is hoped that Thandi will eventually breed when released into the wild. REUTERS/Stringer EPA/David Jones Standard poodle Chyna of Corringham arrives on the opening day of the 101st Crufts dog show in England. Crufts is regarded as the worldʼs most prestigious dog show. A bald eagle says farewell to the Wind River Wildlife Rehab Center before being released in Menasha, Wisconsin, after being treated for injuries. REUTERS/Kimimasa Mayama AP Photo/The Post- Crescent, Mike De Sisti A monk prays as cats play around him at a temple in Thailand. U.S. Army Private Second Class Michael Roleson strokes a stray dog while on duty in the center of Baghdad. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 11 no more homeless pets Stop Woof & Co! A new chain of pet stores means a whole new round of homeless pets By Jim Davis D og by dog, kennel by kennel, community by community, rescuers on the front lines of the animal welfare movement fight heroically to save lives and find homes for a seemingly endless flow of homeless dogs. They combine dogged determination with a relentless education campaign, in an attempt to reduce the canine population and bring about a day when there will be no more homeless pets. Some of the biggest successes have come in New England, where spay/neuter campaigns have gotten birth rates largely under control, and the kill rates are among the lowest in the country. Enter Woof & Company. With a glitzy approach, cute graphics, and upscale accessories for “companion animals,” the store purports to offer a “holistic approach” to pet sales and ownership. But the main attraction is cage after cage of purebred puppies, sold at prices ranging from $750 to $1,800 – with a 50 percent profit margin. Led by a high-powered management team of former Gap and IKEA executives, Woof & Company (soon to be reborn under the name Rufus Inc.) brings its purebred puppies to New England by the truckload from breeding sites across the country. The company has opened two stores in the Boston area, with six more planned over the coming year. And, if those stores do as well as expected, sources report that the firm is prepared to enter the national market in a big way in 2005. Woof & Company ignored multiple requests for comment for this article, but CEO Don Jones has been quoted elsewhere as saying the company hopes to become the “clear market leader” in the “retail market for puppies.” This is a goal guaranteed to strike fear in the hearts of rescuers around the country. “It is good for no one, any way you turn,” says Mary Webber of the Alliance for Animals in Massachusetts. “Itʼs ruining the ecology, and itʼs going to sink us.” Webber says she is infuriated by the cavalier attitude of Woof & Company “taking over the puppy market.” “Itʼs evil, itʼs really evil,” she says simply. Animal advocates are concerned that the new company is already disrupting the delicate balance achieved in New England. By conquering some of its own problems, the animal rescue community there has been able to give much-needed relief to shelters in other areas of the country. Thanks to aggressive spay/neuter campaigns and assorted other efforts, there are parts of New England where puppies have actually been in short supply. That has resulted in national partnerships through which shelters with too many puppies, largely in the South and Midwest, send puppies to New England. Anne Lindsey, of the Northeast Animal Shelter in Salem, Mass., recognizes that the exchange program is controversial among some animal welfare advocates, who want to focus on animals close to home. But to her, a puppy is a puppy. “Emotionally, I have a hard time drawing geographic lines on humaneness,” she says. Lindsey says the Northeast Animal Shelter started importing puppies 11 years ago to fill an obvious need. In addition to helping other shelters, she says the puppy importations also help her to place older shelter dogs. “Youʼve got to get people in the doors in the first place,” she says, “otherwise theyʼre going to go to pet stores.” Undoing years of good work Profiteering off puppies Rescuers fear that every sale the company makes can mean another life lost. Every time a cute and cuddly puppy goes out the Woof & Company doors, a shelter or rescue somewhere may have lost a potential adoption. There is also a considerable risk that when the adorable Woof & Company puppy grows up, he will find himself in a shelter kennel. Helen Rayshick of the Massachusetts Animal Rights Coalition is horrified that breeders are churning out puppies in high volume just to turn a profit through stores like Woof & Company. “How much more suffering is there going to be if they open nationally?” she asks. “And whatʼs [happening to] those puppiesʼ parents in the puppy mills?” 12 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Rayshick is taking steps to make her voice heard by helping to organize a letter-writing campaign directed at Woof & Company and its parent firm, Meridian Venture Partners of Pennsylvania, and coordinating protest marches. There are some indications that the protests have made an impact. In an attempt to redefine its image, Woof & Company has already announced it will re-emerge as Rufus Inc. The company also says it will counsel would-be buyers on the demands of each breed, follow up after sales, and work with animal activists and veterinarians. Notably, the store did not suggest that it would stop selling puppies. Rather, CEO Jones, a former Gap executive, wrapped his statement in animal welfare lingo. Stressing a “holistic approach,” he said the new company is designed to “enhance the quality of lives of companion animals.” The executives who run Woof & Company are savvy business people. Putting the high-end stores in upscale malls was a particularly effective touch. And while the store asks for up to $2,000 for one of its puppies, it also attempts to tug at consumer heartstrings with claims that its dogs “need homes.” What they donʼt say is that for every Woof & Company puppy who “finds a home,” another is bred to takes his or her place. Behind the scenes: puppy mills The origin of the Woof & Company puppies is also a matter of considerable concern. The company has indicated its animals are purchased from Missouri-based Hunte Corporation. Founded in 1991, Hunte proclaims itself as the worldʼs leading licensed distributor of purebred puppies to pet stores. On its website, Hunte boasts, “We take great pride in our ʻpuppy firstʼ policy and are totally committed to animal welfare. . . . Our puppies are supplied by the best licensed professional breeders in the country. Each pup is double-examined by one of our full-time vets, both incoming and prior to delivery.” Critics take a different view. “ poor socialization skills due to lack of human companionship, genetic problems due to inbreeding, and a variety of other health issues. Wheeler says that many puppy mill dogs, sold for hundreds or thousands of dollars in pet stores, ring up many more hundreds of dollars in veterinarian bills to treat these disorders. And while Wheeler canʼt specify where all of the Hunte puppies come from, she says that research done by Hearts United for Animals shows that 98 percent of puppies sold in pet stores come from puppy mills. And the 3,500 pet stores that sell puppies push 500,000 dogs out their doors each year. In Missouri alone – the undisputed puppy mill capital of the country – the puppy industry is valued at $40 million annually. As long as these numbers continue, animal rescuers fear that they wonʼt be able to reduce population below a certain point. And as long as dogs continue to die because there arenʼt enough homes, many say it is immoral for pet stores to flood the market with puppies. Facts and figures aside, Wheeler says the best approach animal advocates can take is to urge people not to buy puppies from pet stores and to refuse to patronize stores that sell puppies. If people stop buying, then business will fall off, and puppy mills will close. “If you buy a puppy, youʼre just contributing to the cycle of misery,” she says. “Never, ever buy a dog in a pet store. This is an individualʼs ability to make a difference.” Woof versus the other chains The comparison between Woof & Company and some of the nationʼs leading pet stores is rather stark. Woof & Company executive Linda Povey has been quoted as saying that her company wants to distinguish itself from chains like PETsMART and Petco: “Weʼre not interested in going head-to-head selling dog food. . . . Weʼre a lifestyle store.” And Woof & Company does take a different approach from other national chains. PETsMART and Petco both refuse to sell dogs or cats, instead contributing store space and money to the adoption efforts of local shelters and rescues. By contrast, Woof & Company seems bent on exploiting the “market” created by the success of adoption efforts. If ventures such as this succeed, it will mean that dog overpopulation will continue as long as there is a buck to be made from the life of a puppy. In a call for protestors to join their effort, Helen and Steve Rayshick proclaim that “Woof is test-marketing animal exploitation in [Massachusetts]; it is vital that we send a clear, strong message that this is unacceptable and immoral.” Mary Webber is hopeful that this message will be heard. She says she is inspired by the growing number of caring animal people across the country who are joining the campaign against pet stores that sell puppies or kittens. “They donʼt know us, and we donʼt know them by name, but weʼre on the same team,” she says. “Those are our hearts and hands.” Woof & Company seems bent on exploiting the “market” created by the success of adoption efforts. ” Lee Wheeler, director of Hearts United for Animals, headquartered in Nebraska, is something of an expert on professional breeders. During her agencyʼs first seven years, it rescued some 3,000 dogs from puppy mills. Wheeler says Hunte is very careful in proclaiming how well it treats its animals. “What they never, ever say is where the puppies come from. Hunte is a puppy broker,” she says. “Iʼd like to know, has [CEO Jones] been to the kennels? Has he seen the conditions where the parents live? The parents are going to be there for the rest of their lives.” By law, puppies cannot be sold until they are eight weeks old. And Wheeler says that what happens to the puppies during their first eight weeks, before they are transported for sale, can have lifelong repercussions. Dangers include inadequate early nutrition due to poor food, Send letters, faxes, and phone calls to: Don Jones, CEO, Woof & Company, 55 Carter Drive, Edison, NJ 08817. Phone: 732-339-1323. Robert E. Brown, Jr., President, Meridian Venture Partners, 201 King of Prussia Road, Suite 240, Radnor, PA 19087. Phone: 610-254-2999. Fax: 610-254-2996. For more information on puppy mills or to adopt a former puppy mill dog, visit: www.hua.org or www.nopuppymills.com. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 13 no more homeless pets Minority Report – Part Three Reservation Rescues By Estelle Munro T he lines were long around the large trailer. People had risen early, bringing their dogs and cats for the event. It was April, and a mobile spay/neuter team had come to the reservation to help people get their family pets fixed. The fact that they were there at all, these members of the Navajo Nation, shatters a belief held by many in the welfare community that itʼs impossible to make a dent in the pet overpopulation problem on reservation lands. The Native American community is spread all across America. Yet, even though it includes hundreds of separate tribes and customs, it remains one of the smallest minority groups. Many people have preconceived notions about the relationship between Native Americans and animals. The concept that their fundamental culture is one of an elevated respect for and symbiotic existence with animals seems in sharp contrast to what many visitors to reservations find: large numbers of cats and dogs who seemingly roam free and uncared for. David Ortiz is a writer and anthropologist based in Flagstaff, Arizona. His work has taken him to the heart of the Navajo population – a patriarchal culture where elders still pass down traditions and customs, and shape the attitudes of younger generations. “Many older people on reservation lands were brought up with the idea that animals are a resource,” says Ortiz. “Dogs guard the hogan or house and herd sheep and goats. A catʼs job is to kill mice and other smaller animals. When animal welfare people show up and start talking about altering the animals to control the population, they just canʼt relate to it. They feel in part that dogs and cats need to reproduce to provide food for coyotes and other predators. Theyʼre part of the cycle of life.” These cultural attitudes are often an obstacle when it comes to interacting with the Native American community. Historical treatment of their people at the hands of the white world has left deeply embedded suspicion – and that hesitation is 14 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 often present when humane groups come to town. “Language can be a barrier,” says Dr. Carol Holgate, a Navajo veterinarian who runs the health services of Plateauland Mobile Veterinary Clinic. “There are many English-speaking people, but among the older generation, there are also those who only speak Navajo. Iʼve been working with some groups that come to the reservations to come up with ideas on how to communicate more effectively. What would help is to have materials – videos, audio cassettes, and pamphlets – that are written in the language. And we have to educate people not to judge. Just to understand that there are differences in attitude and culture.” Culture or economics? Still, in todayʼs world, working with companion animal issues in the Native American community is not very different from working with any other group of people. “I think that economic differences are far greater than cultural differences,” says Paula Johns-Fellman, the executive director of Plateauland. “The idea that animals are animals, that you donʼt need to do stuff like take them to the doctor, and that they can take care of themselves, is the same as in poorer Anglo communities.” Many tribes are excessively poor, and some of the most basic human needs – food, medical care, and adequate housing – are not met. And thatʼs often the biggest stumbling block when trying to change attitudes about animals. Add to that the belief that all of life will begin and end as it is intended, as part of the natural world, and the resistance to animal welfare is understandable. “Some customs and cultural behaviors have to do with the belief that animals have their own integrity that we as humans will never really understand,” says Ortiz. “The trick is to develop programs that donʼt try to change this attitude but rather emphasize that the existence of animals is just as important and just as valid as human existence and that we share life on this planet, with both of us con- “If you talk to the animals They will talk with you And you will know each other. If you do not talk to them, You will not know them, And what you do not know You will fear. What one fears one destroys.” – Chief Dan George tributing to an earthly existence. “The other thing to stress is that animals are not here to amuse us or to provide entertainment for us, but rather that sharing life as we do, they are deserving of our respect.” Reaching a new generation When Ted and Susan Fadler moved to the Navajo Nation, where Ted was to become the principal of the primary school, they noticed many unhealthy, malnourished stray dogs and cats. So the couple developed RUFF (Reservationʼs Unwanted Four-footed Friends) and gathered a group of teachers, students, vets, and volunteers who established a shelter for homeless animals and raised funds to provide spay/neuter services. The program was so successful that others have adopted the model, and some humane workers have now formed web groups to expand its reach. While the original purpose was to find homes for the strays, it quickly grew into a full humane education program in the school. Children began keeping journals of their experiences with animals. They were taught to write letters to their local newspaper and politicians on issues affecting animals, and their creative writing assignments often had animal themes. The curriculum was taught “ people will receive more understanding. It will take a while, and you can waste your time trying to convince older Native American people to change long-held and ingrained beliefs. Preaching doesnʼt work – especially if you are white. Youʼre just one more example of a white person telling Native Americans what to do. Many of them, particularly the older ones, experienced prejudice, and it still exists, so if they put up with it at work or school and then are told in a private setting what they are doing wrong with animals, well, you will never make any change in their beliefs.” Working together So what does work? Regardless of the particular tribe, all who have worked on reservations agree that the key is to know the audience. “Each tribe or reservation has their own customs, traditions and spiritual beliefs,” says Suzi Hansen, program coordinator for the Northern Rockies Regional Office of the Humane Society of the United States. “Before coming to a reservation, you must have some knowledge of their history, their customs, and the way of life of that particular tribe. And your program has to relate to the ʻIndian way.ʼ On many of the reservations I have visited, our organization was the first that had ever taught a humane education class to their youth. After going back year after year, the animal bite incidents went down, and animal control programs have started. “These children are bright and eager for the knowledge of pet care responsibility, dog bite prevention, careers with animals, veterinary care, and so on. The reservation schools have been wonderful to work with. The second time I returned to the Wyoming Wind River Indian Reservation, I asked the children questions to ascertain what theyʼd remembered from my visit a year ago. Again and again, I asked them questions about what to do if they were approached by a dangerous dog or ʻHow many times do you feed and water your pet?ʼ ʻWhen should you groom your pet?ʼ Not once did my questions stump them. I was overjoyed that the seeds Iʼd planted had taken root!” Besides knowledge, respect for the community can help to create the much desired change that those who love animals strive for. “People need to introduce themselves and their organizations with proper respect for the community,” says Hansen. “And donʼt believe rumors or old sayings that stereotype Native Americans. If you donʼt know something, you will be more respected if you ask the elders and community members. “People who come into these communities wanting to effect a change need to realize that, yes, they are a teacher, but they are a student as well.” The Navajo philosophy that all life is sacred made it easy to explain the need to spay/neuter the animals. ” in their native Navajo language, and when instructors were in doubt, they called on traditional medicine men and women for assistance. Beginning with the Navajo philosophy that all life is sacred made it easy to segue into a discussion of what animals need and what care they require. As with most things, success often lies in the approach. “Some older Navajo people are tolerant of animal welfare,” says Ortiz, “when they see the benefits of cutting down on the number of stray dogs, who sometimes roam in packs. Other work, such as vaccinating, is also seen as okay since it really doesnʼt hurt the animal. Many also are used to taking their cows, goats, sheep, and horses to vets, but for some of them, it is a new idea to do the same thing with dogs and cats. “I think that as a younger generation comes along , animal welfare BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 15 no more homeless pets news Hidden Treasure in Illinois Chows Fly First Class Tampa, Florida – The day had gotten off to a bad start for the staff at Hillsborough County Animal Services in Florida. They had just rescued 49 chows, many of them puppies, from a single-wide mobile home. “The animals werenʼt socialized,” said animal control director Bill Armstrong at the end of a chaotic situation. Staff members had been bitten and had to use a chemical dart gun to catch all the dogs. “They were in varying states of physical condition,” said Armstrong. “I was afraid theyʼd all have to be destroyed.” Across the country, in Lubbock, Texas, Anna Wallace of West Texas Chow Chow Rescue got word of the situation and offered to take some of the puppies. Trouble was, she had no way of getting to Florida and back with the dogs. But word had also gotten to Tom Kolfenbach, CEO of Florida-based Southeast Airlines. Kolfenbach has a chow called Ming. And the airlineʼs vice-president of marketing, Mary Jo Hoday, has two chows. “We donʼt have scheduled flights to Lubbock,” said Hoday. “So we bought her a ticket on Southwest Airlines to fly to Tampa.” When Wallace arrived, she offered to take 29 of the pups. But how to get them back to Texas? Kolfenbach immediately decided to personally charter one of Southeastʼs planes, a DC-9, complete with a flight crew of attendants. And since he wanted the dogs to go first class (well, at least coach!), he bought 29 dog carriers (with the help of gift certificates from Wal-Mart) and strapped all the pooches into passenger seats. Officer Armstrong went along for the ride. “It was a bumpy trip,” he said, “and we landed in a driving snowstorm. But the people from West Texas Rescue were there with vehicles on the parking apron. The chows are all doing well and will be saved. And thatʼs the most important part of the story.” West Texas Chow Chow Rescue is at www. westtexaschowrescue.com. New Program in the Galapagos Digital Stock The famous Galapagos Islands, off the equatorial coast of South America, are worldfamous for their unique wildlife, including iguanas, birds, and turtles. The islands are also home to people and their pets. Puerto Villamil, a fishing village, has an estimated 1,400 dogs and 800 cats, triple the population of just one year ago. They wander Isabela Island, many of them hungry, hunting wildlife. Sick animals are often shot. A new group, Animal Balance, is working to establish a program that will sterilize and treat cats and dogs and teach humane treatment of sick animals. Animal Balance has been raising funds and gathering supplies, which were shipped in February. A team of about 30 volunteers will depart for the Galapagos in May. To learn more, visit the Animal Balance website at www.animalbalance.org. 16 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Springfield, Illinois – State treasurer Judy Baar Topinka places a high value on homeless pets. “Iʼm a sucker for animals,” she says. “I wanted to be a veterinarian as a kid.” Instead, she now uses her government website to help find homes for shelter dogs and cats, linking her Treasured Pets program to no-kill shelters throughout Illinois. Topinka says the idea took root when she was at the Sangamon County pound in 2001, helping a co-worker adopt a dog. She ended up adopting one herself – and deciding to launch the program. Since last August, Treasured Pets has helped find homes for 36 dogs and 27 cats. Treasured Pets is at www.state.il.us/ treas/Programs/Treasured_Pets.htm. Humane Society Wins “Jackpot” Donation Reno, Nevada – A small dog, adopted 11 years ago from the Nevada Humane Society in Reno, has brought a milliondollar donation to build a new shelter for the community. Local philanthropist Link Piazzo is making the donation for the new Regional Animal Center, which will be shared with Washoe County Animal Services. The 85-year-old Piazzo says he was inspired to make the gift because of Punkin, a black cocker spaniel mix. Couch Potato PJ Party Fundraiser Ann Arbor, Michigan – “Why go traipsing off to a fundraiser,” wondered Cathy Leonard, “when you can lounge about at home with Fido and Fluffy?” Leonard is a board member of the Humane Society of Huron Valley in Michigan and was chairperson of the shelterʼs March fundraiser. But rather than mount a special event, with all the costs and hassle, and have everyone come out just to make a donation, Leonard offered a new type of event: “Be the Catʼs Pajamas.” Members of the humane society and other pet people were encouraged to stay home for the Friday evening, relax at home in their pajamas, and send in a donation. Snoozy people responded as hoped – with $13,000 and counting. churches, lodges, and businesses. “I wrote a paper telling what I was collecting and why, and the next day the boxes were [overflowing]. We had a full truckload. I was really happy that everybody who donated wanted to help just like I did.” Spay Day Record! This Scout’s a Trooper Smithfield, Pennsylvania – Fifth-grader Shannon Lewis completed her Bronze Award for Girl Scouts – the highest honor a Junior Girl Scout can attain – by helping homeless dogs and cats. “I wanted to help out the SPCA because I care for animals,” said Shannon, who has four cats. “I went there to see what kind of things they needed.” Shannonʼs mother, Denise Lewis, is the leader of the Girl Scouts troop. “Shannon had seen a story in the paper and asked, ʻWhat do they mean it might close?ʼ” For a month, Shannon collected food, toys, blankets, cleaning supplies, etc., from Sacramento, California – The Sacramento area was the scene of the nationʼs largest spay/neuter event ever. Last year, they broke a world record by spaying and neutering 650 animals in one day. This year, they broke their own record by performing surgery on 1,100 animals. “It has an immediate translation for next year into a staggering number of about 10,000 dogs and cats who wonʼt be born and show up in shelters next year,” said Jennifer Fearing of the Sacramento Area Animal Coalition. Twenty-five clinics in the region took part in the Sunday event. Among them was the new Veterinary Medical Laboratory Facility clinic at the University of California at Davis. “Iʼm here because itʼs cheap,” said local resident Betty Girtman, a senior with a fixed income, who received more than $300 in First Steps in Polynesia Bora-Bora, French Polynesia – Fenua Animalia is the biggest humane group in Polynesia. But it’s still tiny, with just 200 members (less than a dozen active ones, with no veterinarian or shelter). The group’s president, Eric Loeve, writes: “After two years of a big struggle, we are starting today the sterilization campaign of all pets on Bora-Bora Island with the Esther Honey Foundation volunteer vet team. “Bora-Bora is the most touristic island in French Polynesia. There are about 4,000 pets for about 10,000 inhabitants. This leads, like everywhere in Polynesia, to a huge amount of abandons. “This mass action for pets is the very first one in Polynesia. Its mission starts today and will last for a month. We expect to make 400 to 500 sterilizations. “We are going to face a bill of about U.S. $30,000–$50,000 for these 400–500 sterilizations. This amount will put us at risk, but we don’t care for now because the top-most services. “This is our first year participating in Spay Day USA,” said the dean, Bennie Osburn, adding that students and faculty all joined in the spay-a-thon. “This year, weʼll do 500 to 700 spay/neuters for animal shelters in the area. But we never did 300 in a day before!” This yearʼs Spay Day USA, organized by the Doris Day Animal Foundation, was the best ever. Humane groups prepared weeks in advance, with veterinarians, volunteers, city and county administrations, and people everywhere pitching in to help offer low-cost spay/neuter in their communities. More information is at www.ddaf.org. thing is to start the process, to open a new hope for history. “We hope that after this, authorities will help us financially, but it is still not awfully obvious today. “However, to reach this point is a big victory in a country where there are dog meat eaters, and we are proud to share this victory with you all. It is one more example to give to convince those who are in a very difficult situation, like ours at the start, that obstination and patience pays and that, with the Internet, even on the remotest part of our Earth, you are not alone. “Our aim is to be able one day to do the same on Tahiti, the main Polynesia Island, where there are 60,000 to 70,000 pets with the same life conditions. Any help of any kind is welcome, but we know that you are all with the same needs.” Eric Loeve, President, Fenua Animalia, BP 9075, 98715 Motu Uta, Tahiti, French Polynesia Checks made out to Best Friends, with a note saying that the donation is for Fenua Animalia, will be collected here and sent in full to the group in Polynesia. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 17 animals & society T he teenagers waited who populate the city in anxiously on the overwhelming numbers. curb for the van to Each dog was happily led arrive – their excitement away by his or her new palpable. Perhaps it came friend. from knowing they were S stood anxiously. His the “chosen,” entrusted to dog was the last to emerge. a special mission. His supervisor went into This group was handthe van and escorted out picked. As residents of his charge. The boyʼs Albuquerqueʼs Youth mouth dropped open in Diagnostic and Developshock and outrage. This ment Center, a juvenile wasnʼt the expected pit facility, theyʼd all had bull or Rottweiler. This hard starts. They came was no lathering beast. from violent homes, This was … this was a … By Julie Richard broken homes, and from fluffy, white French poono homes at all. And now dle. And a female poodle. they were going to meet And with a decidedly girly their animal counterparts, name: Sadie. dogs who, like them, had “No way,” he declared entered the “system.” emphatically, his eyes conThe kidsʼ job wasnʼt demning his supervisor simple. They were to with undisguised scorn. spend three intensive “I donʼt want that dog. weeks each caring for, Iʼm not taking that dog.” training, and socializing This pooch could ruin his a dog on the road to being image in a heartbeat. adopted. But as his superviThe dogs were timid sor, equally determined, and frightened, nervous explained, S was taking and wary, and sometimes this dog. Heʼd signed up just too enthusiastic and for the program, and this rowdy. The kids also was the dog for him. The ran the gamut of perboy glowered and capitusonalities. Some were lated. emotionally damaged, Over the next few victims themselves, wary weeks, the children would of people. Others were teach their dogs to sit and tough cookies, “thugs” stay, walk on a lead, and many would call them. to trust and love humans. A few even had abused But at the end of three animals themselves. But weeks, S had taught his all of these kids, like dog something more. He the dogs, had come from would run down the grass damaged backgrounds and field, Sadie romping hapneeded help. pily along, as he belted “S” was particularly out for the world to hear elated to be chosen. At a song he had customized age 17, he was a strong, macho boy. He was proud that he had been especially for her: “Sadie, Baby,” sung to the tune of “Angel, Baby.” picked and had already put in his bid for the kind of pup he wanted After gaining enough speed, he would fling his arm out to the side, – a pit bull or Rottweiler or maybe a chow. It didnʼt matter which, and the poodle would jump up, run up the length of his extended as long as it was rough and tough just like him. limb to perch on his shoulder and trade kisses. He had taught Sadie The van pulled up the drive, and the kids began to stir eagerly. to love. And she had taught him. The supervisors of Project Second Chance had teamed up with a When it came time for Sadie to go to a new home, S wrote a local humane group, the Animal Humane Association, to provide letter to her new family with explicit instructions. She liked to be the dogs who would enter the program. They already knew which sung to each night (he included the words to “Sadie, Baby”). She dog would be paired with which youngster. The van doors opened, loved being cuddled. She needed to be groomed. She liked her treats and the dogs were brought out one at a time to meet their new given to her just so. She was a very good dog and deserved a loving trainers. Most were nondescript – the medium-sized brown mutts family who would dote on her like he had. Learning to Love Again Illustration: Marc Brown A new program gives dogs and people a second chance at life 18 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 How one bad thing leads to another S and his friends, along with the dogs, who were all placed in new homes, are one more success story for Project Second Chance. “This program is just as important for the dogs as it is for the kids,” says Tamara Ward, the centerʼs community and social service coordinator who introduced the course. “It has to be good for the dogs, too. We want them to be adopted. Thatʼs why we limit the program to three weeks; anything longer and the dogs and the kids get too attached to each other. Itʼs just the right amount of time to form a bond, but one thatʼs temporary. “The kids are given a chance to be good kids. The program teaches them empathy for another being. Thatʼs something many of them donʼt start out with. By the end of the training, they know theyʼve done something good for this dog, and thereʼs no reward for it other than that theyʼve done a good thing.” “ of abuse it is and the age of the child. If an eight- or nine-year-old uses violence to solve problems rather than talking it out, theyʼve already established conduct disorder behavior. By that age, the pattern is set, but you can still intervene. If at age six, a kid is really into animal abuse, itʼs a pretty good sign that he or she is going to become one of these disordered kids because of their inability to control impulses. So when a six-year-old does something to the dog or cat, a parent or teacher has to assess the child right then. They have to determine if there are attachment disorder problems that are causing the child to displace anger.” After assessment comes treatment. With Anicare, that means helping abusers develop a critical emotion that they lack – empathy. “Kids who have difficulty forming attachments often lack empathy – and that starts the behavior that gets them into trouble,” says Ward. “Itʼs easier to establish empathy with animals.” In the Project Second Chance program, the kids rise at 6 a.m. to walk their dogs. They feed and groom the animals throughout the day, spend playtime with the dogs, and take them on a few more walks before bedtime. They come together as a pair, always under the watchful eyes of supervisors. And they attend therapy sessions with their animals. Theyʼre asked basic questions and must respond not as themselves but as their dog. What would their dog say? What is the dog feeling? What emerges from the sessions most often is a sudden recognition of what an animal feels when faced with less than kind human hands. “The kids finally get whatʼs going on,” says Ward. “They recognize that the dog has feelings. When they can attach those emotions to the animal, itʼs a lot harder to think of it as just a dog. Theyʼre able to see that the dog or cat theyʼve mistreated is afraid, that the animal was going up to someone hoping to get some compassion and got something else instead. “Answering as the animal when theyʼre asked questions about what it feels like to be hungry or scared or what it feels like to be Those who engage in habitual violence, from domestic abuse to serial murder, often start off by abusing animals. ” Project Second Chanceʼs methods are adapted from Anicare, an intervention program developed by Ken Shapiro of Psychologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PSYETA) and Mary Lou Randour of the Doris Day Animal Foundation. Anicare was born out of California legislation that made animal abuse a felony. The link between animal abuse and violence toward people has already been well established. Those who engage in habitual violence, from domestic abuse to serial murder, often start off by abusing animals. Professionals working in social services and law enforcement are increasingly aware of the connection – so much so that in many states, they are instructed to check for signs of spousal or child abuse when they are called out to investigate animal cruelty. Several organizations were involved in convincing the California judiciary to take animal abuse seriously. Once they did, it was apparent that there was a need to treat the abusers with counseling, just like domestic batterers. But there was no existing model for therapists to follow. So, says Shapiro, “We thought weʼd better provide a treatment.” Catching the first signs Gradually, Anicare took shape. The program was originally developed to identify and treat adult offenders, but as Shapiro and Randour traveled around the country providing workshops to law enforcement, social workers, and other professionals, they kept being asked “Could children be assessed and treated the same way as adults?” And thatʼs how Anicare Child was born. Both programs use the same two key elements. The first is assessment – identifying a person as a potential or active abuser. “With children, age is critical,” says Shapiro. “Three-year-olds canʼt be given the responsibility for proper care, but if a six-year-old is throwing the dog down the stairs, itʼs a different ball game. By six and eight, you can really start assessing a childʼs behavior. “Most kids go through a stage of experimenting with animals, and that can be abusive in many instances. You have to assess what kind From the journals and letters of young people in a Second Chance Program. (Grammar and spelling have been left intact.) “It helps me to have patience so I don’t get frusterated when the dog dosn’t do something right, and it makes me feel good to know that I can make a difference in the dogs life.” A.W. “I saw that dog and said I want that dog and that dog came strate to me. I think he is thinking where’s my family? Why am I hear? This boy seems nice so I will be nice. So we had a lot of fun today. We walked ran and sat down all togather. I already love that dog and I hope I do a good job with him and he gets a new home. This program shows us how to treat dogs with respect and it shows us how to be a good father.” D.H. “From this program I have gotten patience and have learned to deal with people that I don’t usually work with” S.F. “To whoever adopts Sidnye: Please don’t tie or cage this dog up… She will probably get you mad at her the first few days you have her cause she don’t know you. She needs lots of love and [praise]. Give her your hart and you will see what a great dog you have.” V.W. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 19 shouted at and told youʼre terrible reaches them. As they tap into the animalʼs feelings, they see from the animalʼs point of view. Itʼs the animal saying to them, ʻI came to you for help and you threw rocks at me.ʼ Everybody can relate to that. Itʼs the same as, ʻI came home from school, and I was feeling bad, and you yelled at me.ʼ Thatʼs how we start connecting.” Along with the sessions, the children keep journals about their experience. Their counselors and therapists read these, and they measure the childʼs emotional progress, looking for the signs of empathy being formed. “Weʼre trying to find specific statements that show theyʼve been able to integrate something,” Ward explains. “When they write things like they hope the dog will go to a loving family who wonʼt abuse or mistreat the animal, thatʼs a good measurement. Itʼs not egocentric thinking of what a good job theyʼre doing. Theyʼre not writing about themselves; theyʼre thinking of the animal.” The adult program The core of the Anicare adult program is the same: assessment and empathy-based therapy. And it can be critical for the animals. “Helen” sat in her group therapy session, feeling anxious and scared. She was preparing herself for a revelation that she knew would surprise her therapist. Like everyone in her group, she was a survivor of abuse herself. Recovering from the effects of beatings and low self-esteem was painful and draining. But she knew she needed help, and what she was about to reveal about herself struck her with even more fear and horror. When it was her turn to speak, she became teary as she revealed her awful secret. She had been abusing her beloved animals herself, and now she was afraid she was going to abuse her child. Her therapist, Karen Schaefer, a psychologist at New Mexico State Universityʼs Counseling Center, knew that victims of abuse often displace their anger through violence themselves. But Helenʼs admission stopped her in her tracks. Abusing animals? This woman was an animal rescuer. The therapist promptly got a second surprise. “I asked how many “ a bargain with Helen. They were going to get her help as fast as they could, but if any further abuse occurred, Helen would report herself to the authorities. Helen agreed. “Iʼve learned so much since then,” says Schaefer. “Now weʼre starting to ask on intake ʻHave you witnessed or committed animal abuse yourself?ʼ But even then the staff will say to me, ʻI just canʼt bring myself to ask.ʼ They know thereʼs nothing they can do. Weʼre trying to incorporate it into the written forms because, believe it or not, people will often put it down.” But what about all the abusers who refuse to seek help even if they admit what theyʼre doing to the animals? Therapists canʼt do anything, and they often suffer their own emotional turmoil over it. With PSYETA sponsorship, Schaefer is preparing a survey to determine how such cases affect her colleagues emotionally. She hopes her research will lead to legislative changes to include animals in the mandatory reporting laws that already exist for children and the elderly. Until then, Shapiro is urging people in animal welfare, along with teachers, counselors, law enforcement, the judiciary, social workers, and anyone who encounters potential animal abuse in the context of their profession, to become trained in the Anicare programs. “The bottom-line goal is to give animal abuse the same status as child and spousal abuse,” says Shapiro. “Iʼve trained over 200 professionals across the country, and we want to have teams of people traveling the country, holding workshops in assessment, and as many therapists as possible trained in the treatment phase to be able to alter these behaviors.” Learning to be a dog – and a boy For those already working with the program, Anicareʼs positive effects are already invaluable. “We had a 17-year-old who had abused animals in the past placed in the program,” Ward recounts. “He was given a scruffy little white dog called Velma to partner with who had been horribly abused. She was incredibly fearful and timid, but it was a perfect teaching moment. We explained to the boy that this is what a victim looks like. You may be long gone, but that animal is still afraid today because of what someone did to her. “Velma wouldnʼt go near him at first. He spent 10 days sitting on the floor with hot dogs, placing them a foot in front of her, talking to her calmly and quietly until finally he got the dog to come into his lap. Instead of trying to get her on a leash, he would be in her kennel just rubbing her ears. Velma went through the program and then into a foster home, and eventually she did get a home of her own. But it was a long, painstaking therapy for her to just learn to be a dog.” And the boy? “Well, at the next session he asked to be a teen supervisor. This is a perfect example of a survivor. Heʼs come through all that heʼs come through in his own life, and I truly believe he will never abuse another animal. He knew heʼd done something bad, and he could see before him the effect his actions might have had. But with Velma, he knew heʼd done something good. And that felt a whole lot better.” This is what a victim looks like. You may be long gone but the dog is still afraid today because of what someone did to her. other people in the room had ever abused their animals and threequarters of them raised their hands,” says Schaefer. “You know, I specialized in abuse, and it wasnʼt until this point that I started putting together that there were animals in these homes and abuse would be going on.” Schaefer swung into action to help Helen and her animals. “We were in that house within 48 hours. I worked with her and the animals, getting them rehomed. Helenʼs view of the animalsʼ needs was very distorted. She cared about them. But almost every time there was an incident of abuse, it was triggered by unreasonable expectations of the animals. And this was a woman who came from a history of being abused herself.” There was another problem. Because she is a therapist, subject to strict confidentiality laws, Schaefer couldnʼt report known animal abuse to the authorities without her patientʼs consent. So she struck 20 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 ” If you would like to learn more about the Anicare program, contact www.psyeta.org or call (301) 963-4751. For more about Project Second Chance, contact Tamara Ward at [email protected]. London Hound By Julie Richard Culture Shock! British people always ask me about culture shock. Whatʼs it like being an American and actually living in England as opposed to being a tourist? Most Americans donʼt ask; generally, they donʼt really recognize that there would be culture shock. After all, how different can it be? We speak the same language, right? But assimilating to a different culture goes beyond learning to ask for kitchen roll rather than paper towels or understanding that youʼre not going to the movie theater (make that “theatre”) to see a movie but rather to watch a film at the cinema. It goes further than referring to the drugstore as the chemist (lest someone think youʼre after illegal substances) or even learning to drive on the left-hand side of the road. (Just ask my driving instructor, who seems to quiver every time I get behind the wheel.) If you want real culture shock, try adopting an animal in the U.K. “Can’t do that, old thing” After adjusting to my move to the U.K. from Los Angeles, where Iʼd worked with animal rescue groups, I wanted to adopt some cats. I thought Iʼd be the perfect home – with a sunny (unusual for London) flat (read: apartment) that had floor-to-ceiling windows complete with comfy, cushy window seats that look out on the River Thames, with a continual show of sea gulls swooping on one side and quacking ducks waddling about in the shallow water on the other. This was sure to engage the interest of any cat worth his salt. I also prepared by having the windows screened (the British donʼt normally screen windows) and picked out multiple-level cat condos to adorn the corners of my home. Once I had kitted up, as they say here, I started phoning some local, overcrowded shelters. I knew Iʼd be welcomed (after the obvious mandatory home check) as a dream home. Oh, how wrong can one woman be?! Group after group told me that far from being a welcome new cat mom, I was simply not “qualifying” material. Why? Because I lived in a flat. A third-floor flat, no less. A flat that was sans garden and hence kitty would be forced to live indoors. British cats must have access to the great outdoors. They must romp in fresh air and the daily rain shower. They must be free to chase hapless little critters, crawl through the underbrush, and roam city streets. Cats kept indoors, I was informed, are terminally unhappy. It didnʼt matter how much you arranged the décor to suit them, how much interaction you had, or the fact that you worked at home and could be a constant companion. Cats simply did not belong in indoors-only homes. Things got even stranger when the head of one very well-known organization told me that indoors-only cats had often been known to commit suicide. “From an overdose?” I asked. Or did they shoot themselves? Apparently, they had flung themselves off balconies. Maybe it was an accident, I suggested. Perhaps they were just leaping for leaves that floated by. “Donʼt be stupid,” was the answer. because now I have Joe (who prefers to be called Joseph when heʼs feeling particularly cocky) and Miss Kitty, an elderly lady who was clearly once queen of her domain but had spent six months in a cage awaiting a “temporary” foster home. I find myself watching them sleep – the sheer beauty of their faces in contented repose. They both had such a hard time of it. Joe was abused by local yobs (read: thugs) and took months to catch, and Miss Kitty was found wandering the streets, obviously abandoned or lost and so thin and ill they didnʼt think she would make it. Sheʼd been on the euthanasia list of a larger shelter before being smuggled out by a caring worker to a no-kill group. Each morning as I work, I occasionally glance over at Miss Kitty stretching herself out on her back on the window seat, warming up under the streaks of sunlight falling over her. Now well filled out, she will open one eye as a particularly vocal gull sweeps by screeching. Often she raises a lazy paw to the screen as if to say, “Yeah, well, if I werenʼt so comfortable, youʼd be lunch.” Jolly good idea! I was determined not to cave and buy a cat from a breeder. So I took to prowling the streets at night, looking for any scruffy stray who looked like he could use a good meal and a home. But since everybody lets their cats out, I couldnʼt figure out who was genuinely in need and who I would be kidnapping. Then I had the brilliant idea of signing up as a foster parent – not just for any cat (as an indoors-only home, I wouldnʼt be acceptable), but for cats who had been deemed “unadoptable.” Iʼd look after those who suffered from FIV or feline leukemia, cats who were elderly and needed daily medical attention, or habitual biters and scratchers. (Okay, so Iʼd learn to type wearing gloves.) That offer apparently hit the right note How many millions of people living in flats in London could provide a wonderful home to adopted cats? How many resort to buying from stores or breeders? I get periodic check-in calls from the rescue group that still “owns” Joe and Miss Kitty. They are concerned about the catsʼ mental state at being confined indoors. They called me today. Was I noticing any signs of depression? How was being house-bound affecting their health? I glanced over at Joe, stretched out on the kitty heating pad on his side of the sofa. He had fallen asleep clutching his catnip pillow to his chest with both paws. “Uh … no real signs of it yet,” I said. “But Iʼll be on the lookout.” BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 21 talking with animals Wise World of Animals What they teach us in fairy tales By Rae Ann Kumelos 22 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Illustration: Marc Brown O nce upon a time ... Before time ... Beyond time ... When we read these words, we know we are in a fairy tale world, the realm of enchantment. Fairy tales are timeless and placeless; they lead us into a magical sphere where anything can happen. In this world, animals talk with people to inspire, guide, assist, and protect. But is this notion really just a fairy story? There are several ways to understand the animals in fables. One is as a symbol of our own instincts and inner nature. Marie Louise von Franz, the famous student of psychologist Carl Jung, discovered a remarkable fact about the role of animals in myths. She studied hundreds of folk tales over the years, searching for some basic overall guidelines that could be applied to human behavior. In all those stories from dozens of cultures, she found only one rule for which there is no exception or contradiction: “If you do not listen to the helpful animal – if any animal gives you advice and you donʼt follow it – then you are finished.” Finished! It did not matter what the animal told the hero to do: lie, donʼt lie, fight, donʼt fight. What mattered was following the animalʼs advice. If the hero didnʼt, it meant certain disaster. Psychologists like von Franz and Jung view fairy tale animals as an example of our own instincts taking over when we need them most. We compare instinctual animal behavior to our own in everyday phrases like “clever as a fox,” “the eyes of a hawk,” and “horse-sense.” These instinctual perspectives and phrases give us a common language we all immediately understand. Yet, what about the actual physical presence of a fox, hawk, or horse? Is their appearance or companionship in our lives reduced only to observing their characteristics for guidance in our actions? Does that mean that if I happen to see a fox in my “ ” If any animal gives you advice and you don’t follow it, then you are finished. backyard, I am to assume she is telling me to be clever and cunning in whatever I happen to be doing? Interpreting animal messages as an embodiment of our own instincts is one possibility; another comes from the world of the shaman, a medicine man or woman who has the ability to communicate with animals when in a trance. This supernatural ability has led to shamans often being called “walker of worlds between ordinary and non-ordinary reality.” While in a trance, a shaman meets up with his animal spirit guide, who in turn steers his course and inspires him in some area that will be of help to him or his community. In fables, this guidance and inspiration eventually concludes with a “happily-ever-after” ending. The shamanic “walking between two worlds” motif populates stories such as Snow White. The heroine is lost in a forest and suddenly finds herself in a timeless Otherworld, usually inhabited with talking animals who help her in her quest. (In Celtic tales, if these animals are white with red ears, then one knows they are in the land of faerie). In the Cinderella story, our heroine travels back and forth between the otherworldly realm of the magical ball (where, in the version we are most familiar with, she is taken by animals metamorphosed into useful footmen and horses) and her everyday life among the cinder ashes. In the Disney movie, rats and lizards are transformed into horsemen and footmen who ferry Cinderella back and forth between the two worlds. In the Irish version, Cinderella is assisted by a tortoise-shell cat who gives her all she needs. The Egyptian Cinderellaʼs wishes are granted from a tree that grows on her beloved petʼs grave. What is common to all versions is that she is helped by her animal friends. Cinderellaʼs Otherworld brings us a little closer to appreciating the animals who live with us in this world. There is one more lens through which to view animal helpers in legends and myths: the dream world. There has been much speculation that fairy tales may have originated from nighttime dreams in which a person was helped by an animal. Perhaps the next morning, over the dayʼs chores, trips to the local well, or in gatherings with the royal court, the dream was retold, and a fairy tale was created. Today, in modern-day dream workshops and clinics, when a person dreams about an animal, they are not just looking for the “horsesense” reasoning the animal brings, but to hear the actual voice of the animal in the dream. Just what is it that the polar bear, tiger, lizard, dolphin, or ladybug is trying to tell you? In a harried and hurried society where we often donʼt take the time to pay attention to the natural world, whether it is the presence of our own cats and dogs, or the appearance of the fox in the backyard, our dreams can act as a radio through which other voices are broadcast. It is one place where we let go of the craziness of a busy day long enough for us to hear the wisdom and guidance of animals. And, the animals need us to hear them, for their message and wisdom lies mute until the dream is paid attention to. And when we do pay attention to our dreams, what will emerge are images full of guidance and inspiration that we can take into our waking lives. However we choose to interpret the animals that come to us in fairy tales and legends, one fact remains consistent: Their message is essential. Once upon our time, we can choose to follow in the dance steps of our fairy tale heroes and heroines by embracing all the four-footed, crawling, swimming, and winged helpers who envelop and protect us in a timeless weave of inspired grace. And that is no fairy tale. Rae Ann Kumelos and her husband are co-owners of Star Hill Inn, an astronomy retreat in northern New Mexico. A Special Conference Presented by Best Friends Animal Society No More Homeless Pets Conference October 22-24, 2004 Cincinnati, Ohio How can your community bring an end to the killing of healthy homeless pets? Cities, counties, and entire states across the country are doing it. ... And yours can, too! Meet the people who are creating a new world for homeless pets at this landmark gathering of experts from across the country, as we explore strategies to develop no-kill communities. Adoptions: How to get more animals out of the shelter and into good homes – guaranteed! Spay/neuter: The best programs from around the country, and how they can work for you. Fundraising: How to get the funds you need. (It’s not difficult!) Promotion: How to get the attention of the media and really reach your target audience. Plus: Saving feral cats, working with animal control, dealing with burnout, attracting volunteers, building coalitions, going no-kill, and much more. For more information, contact Best Friends Animal Society phone (435) 644-2001 ext. 129, fax (435) 644-2078 e-mail: [email protected] www.bestfriends.org go to www.bestfriends.org Visiting Best Friends The Best Friends Welcome Center is open every day except Christmas from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Mountain Time. The sanctuary covers a large area and some of the animal areas are several miles apart. Guided tours of the sanctuary leave from the Welcome Center twice daily. They need to be booked ahead of time. To book a tour, or for more information about visiting the sanctuary, e-mail [email protected] or call (435) 644-2001, ext. 0. Your furry friends look forward to seeing you soon! BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 23 on the wild side You Are SO There! An animal’s eye view of the world By Simone Szaraval I tʼs the sound that comes at you first. Snuffling and scratching; heavy thundering; whining and growling. As you absorb the reverberation – either high pitched or the kind that kicks you right in the solar plexus, you begin to focus on the wiggling, twitching ears that resemble cacti; or a fleecy head bobbing and dipping; or maybe the slithering slide through a thick stream of water. And then you begin to laugh, realizing that youʼre experiencing a herds-eye view of what it feels like to be part of the pack. Welcome to Sam Eastersonʼs world of Animal, Vegetable, Video. Itʼs reality video like no other. Youʼre not just watching animals in their natural habitats, itʼs like you are the animal. A graduate of the University of Minnesota, Easterson began his career as a landscape researcher. One of his projects was to study the world from the point of view of sheep. So he strapped small cameras on their heads to see how the land looked to them. A stint at the Los Angeles Natural History Museum followed, and from there, the project began to grow. His ever-expanding collection features a variety of American wildlife, and Easterson plans to keep it that way. He has no plans to travel to the heart of Africa to capture big cats or great apes. His is a more personal, more ordinary approach, and itʼs the animals at home that he wants as his stars. And sponsors have come calling. From Animal Planet to National Geographic, Eastersonʼs homegrown project is attracting attention. As the project expands, he hopes that more interest will follow, allowing him to purchase equipment and add to his library of species that weʼd all like to know more about. A session with wolves has been integrated into Dogs, an exhibit at the National Geographic Explorerʼs Hall in Washington, D.C., which runs from May 20 to September 6. “That footage is some of the most heartwarming and funny that 24 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Iʼve captured,” says Easterson. “Wolves are really amusing animals, far from the pack of ravenous predators that some people imagine them to be. “I was working in the Colorado Rockies at a wolf rehabilitation center, and I got some great footage of one wolf chasing after a squirrel who had embedded himself in a ground nest. That wolf spent 10 minutes digging into the squirrel hole. But he just could not get to the squirrel. And you can just feel the alpha frustration. ʻI canʼt get him…I canʼt get him.ʼ As a man, I found it very relatable.” The bird’s eye view After filming armadillos and frogs, crocodiles and bison, this year Easterson is branching out to the sea and sky. Heʼs developing a system of aquatic harnesses and underwater cameras in order to capture sea turtles, jellyfish, lobster, snails, and starfish. And heʼll go airborne to capture life as a falcon and a hawk. Always on the lookout for sponsors and financing to help nurture his dream, Easterson hopes that one day heʼll have accumulated enough unique footage to assemble a feature-length documentary. That could take a decade or more, since his shoots last anywhere from two minutes (in the case of a tarantula) to two hours, and end abruptly when the subject simply gets bored and shakes the camera loose or the batteries wear out. When that happens, Easterson lets nature take its course and goes with the footage he has. “What the animals tell us is the most fascinating thing to me,” he says. “Everybody has seen documentaries of animals in Africa or sharks or dolphins, but when we place a video cam on a snail, I dare you to take your eyes off it.” Helmet cams donned by a variety of animals – from sheep, cows, wolves, and crocodiles to frogs and tarantulas – take you up close and personal like never before. “The films show us how a species exists – not just the big mammals that are the poster children for conservation campaigns, but the small and ordinary that are also so fascinating. I believe it elevates species in a thought-provoking and entertaining way. It can be viewed from merely a scientific standpoint – thereʼs a huge amount of data and so much to dig into that can be very significant. But I think people will also view the films and the animals beyond mere science. I think theyʼre beautiful and poetic. To me, the films are art.” The heart’s eye view Easterson has also gained some major insights into the emotions of animals and their relationships. “I was filming cows last fall,” Easterson recalls. “We put a helmet cam on a cow, and she walked off into the field, and all the other cows could tell something was off. They began coming up to the cow and licking her. They licked the camera. They rubbed against her, trying to comfort her as though they knew something was abnormal ... different. Then, after about an hour, when the camera fell off as it was supposed to, a sense of normalcy returned. The cow ran back into the herd, and the others didnʼt approach her the same way as when she had the camera on. Suddenly, she was normal again. “The same thing happened with the sheep. “And sometimes animals donʼt notice at all. Sometimes theyʼre oblivious. We try for that. We try to put the camera on discreetly so no one notices. Thatʼs sort of the perfect scenario.” Although no harm comes to any animal, nor are animals sedated or handled harshly in the effort to put the camera on, Easterson says there are still ethical dilemmas about studying animals. “Iʼm very careful, and I feel like the outcome of what we are achieving far outweighs any temporary inconvenience or stress the animal may feel. There is a mass of information that people can gather from the footage. Most importantly, there is an emotive value to it. You can see how animals think, how they feel. You can watch problem solving at work, which is the sign of real intelligence. Itʼs really incredible seeing how theyʼre navigating the landscape or how theyʼre interacting to a specific area or to a herd.” In order to capture the animalʼs point of view, Easterson customizes all the helmet cams and adjusts them to the size of the animal and his or her lifestyle – larger, sturdier versions for thundering buffalo, miniscule mini-cams for smaller creatures such as tarantulas. Easterson sees his hands-on project as being very different from the more “normal” stream of animal documentaries. “This footage is rooted in popular culture,” he says. “Itʼs Big Brother to the extreme. Itʼs a great way to introduce people to scientific ideas. It disarms people and lets them look at footage from a different viewpoint. So much emerges from it.” For more information, go to www.anivegvideo.com. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 25 the earth Olympic Wonder By Clay Myers the Olympic is as diverse as the land itself. Marmots and mule deer forage for food in the high country, and starfish and mollusks cling to rocks in tidal pools. Bald eagles soar overhead, and herds of Roosevelt elk live in lush, primeval forests. If you think of grandeur and adventure when you think about our national parks, then the Olympic lives up to those perceptions like nowhere else. Photos by Clay Myers Imagine standing in a sub-alpine meadow watching the sun rise over snow-capped peaks, then hiking through a temperate rain forest graced with lush mosses and ancient trees, down to a wild, undeveloped beach as the sun slowly sets into the Pacific Ocean. Yes, you did it all in one day, here at Olympic National Park. The park is located on Washington stateʼs Olympic Peninsula, and it is one of this landʼs most precious jewels. The wildlife of 26 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 27 best friends animal sanctuary May I Cluck Who’s Calling? Visitors to our Feathered Friends bird home are delighted to meet the new receptionist, Gretchel the chicken. As soon as you walk in, Gretchel stops whatever sheʼs doing and struts down the hallway, clucking all the way to greet you. Gretchelʼs cluck really sounds more like a purr, and she loves to be petted and picked up for cuddles. So now sheʼs on payroll and happy to work for chicken feed. And sheʼs even added yet another new responsibility to her job description. She walks on a leash a n d accompanies staff as they make the rounds to feed the other birds. Bathing Baby Lovable, vocal Baby the cat is a natural gymnast, able to walk across the floor in a straddle handstand, since her hind legs and 28 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Meet the Dream Team! Laundry Room Kid The mini-sized old dogs in the laundry room may lose their “ornery old coot” status now that they are baby-sitting a goat. Wordʼs getting out they like the little tyke. How did a newborn goat get into the laundry room at Best Friends? Pat Baker, who runs things in there, is looking after the kid because her mama couldnʼt care for her properly. The baby has to eat every three hours, and the mama goat cannot produce nearly enough milk. “So sheʼs named Lucky, because sheʼs lucky to be alive.” Lucky has a playpen in the laundry, can walk on leash, and is having a great time giving kisses to the old dogs, as well as visitors. Sheʼs even figured out the dog door. back end donʼt work very well. Like all the other kitties at the Incontinental Suite at Best Friends Cat World, Baby needs the help of her human friends when it comes to grooming. Genny Franzen of Concord Township, Ohio, was only too glad to bathe Baby. And even though Baby had a definite opinion about the whole process, she really did appreciate Gennyʼs grooming assistance. This was the fourth visit to the sanctuary for Genny and her husband Peter. She said, “This is the best time of our lives. Every time we walk away from Best Friends, I feel blessed. This is the happy ending.” Little Baby, who isnʼt even two years old yet, strutted through the Incontinental Suite, showing off her freshly flounced fur. Sheʼll be happy to see Genny next time. Watch out, New England Patriots. Thereʼs a new team on the horizon. Itʼs furry, itʼs fierce, and it means business. A group of Best Friendsʼ older dogs have formed a football team, and age isnʼt going to slow them down. It started with Red, formerly known as “The Tub-Monster” until he lost weight. He may be … oh … letʼs just say, over ten, but he still likes the ladies. Heʼs got quite a reputation going for his good manners, and now, heʼs a pro athlete as well. Then Mickey showed him girls can do anything boys can do. Zebra and Ezra decided if footballs were being thrown, they had as much right to them as anyone else … by wrestling, if necessary. And Vincent and Cassius, who are a little slowed down by age, decided their job would be to watch (or, as watchers prefer to call it, “referee”). Yes, itʼs a co-ed football team comprised of old dogs and a few mild heart conditions that have to be monitored during play. If that doesnʼt scare the NFL teams, maybe they havenʼt watched this talented crew play! Stop Press report: Thereʼs an opening on the team. Red has been adopted by a family in Pennsylvania. From Psycho to Mellow Perry the cat is an old love muffin who seems to have grown out of truly frightening behavior all on his own. Best Friendsʼ Carey Belcher says Perry started out as a “psycho kitty.” “Iʼd be out in the hall sweeping,” she recalls, “and Iʼd hear this awful screaming and yowling, like the worst cat fight in the world. Iʼd rush into Perryʼs room, and there would be no cat fight, just Perry viciously attacking his own tail. Heʼd stop as soon as you came into the room.” That was four years ago, when Perry came to Best Friends at the age of 15. His person was heartbroken when her health problems forced her to let go of Perry, whom she had lived with since the day he was born. He was very attached to her but would not go near other people. Perryʼs heartbreak showed up in his very disturbing behavior. The medical team put Perry on some medication, but when that made no difference, he was taken off of it again and just loved as he was. Now, at age 19, Perry greets people with rubs and purrs. He sits up on his back legs in a very endearing manner and entertains visitors with “the Perry Wave” – waving with his front paws like a puppy begging for a walk. “He just mellowed out ,” Carey says. Looking for a Running Mate The sheep and the goats here at the sanctuary are having a slight problem with their fitness and weight loss program. Thatʼs because their personal trainer has just been adopted! Logan is a heeler mix – and heelers are herding dogs, who always love having something to do. In fact, Logan was so bored in his old home that he kept jumping the fence, getting out, and getting into trouble – which is why he was given up. So here at the sanctuary he got a really good job doing his favorite thing: herding. And with nearly a dozen sheep and goats here at the sanctuary at any given time, thereʼs always some herding to be done (at least according to Logan). The sheep and goats enjoy it all – plus, it keeps them busy, and the exercise is good for them. In fact, when Logan first started encouraging the sheep and goats to jog around their pasture, they looked more like giant cotton balls than animals. For his part, Logan was always very gentle with them, never nipping at their heels, the perfect personal trainer. And it worked. They started to lose weight. But great dogs like Logan donʼt hang around here at the sanctuary too long. Logan is off to a great new home, where heʼll have plenty of new games and jobs to keep him busy. So what about the sheep and the goats? Will they all turn back into giant cotton balls again? Not likely. The search is on for a replacement, and one of the border collies is going to be taking over Loganʼs position very soon. Easter’s Rebirth Easter was rescued from almost certain death, lost her mother, and then had to be given up by the woman who rescued her. Margie Rickards had bought Easter’s mother, Patsy, from a Premarin production line in Indiana. About 85 percent of the foals born to these mares are auctioned off for slaughter. “I spotted the picture of Patsy in a horse magazine,” said Margie, “and found out she was on a Premarin line, which infuriated me.” It’s a brutal life for mares who are used in the production of Premarin, a hormone replacement therapy for women. Margie has been involved in the work of the United Pegasus Foundation, which rescues foals born as a by product of Premarin production. Margie brought Patsy home to California and found she was pregnant with Easter. But soon after Easter was born, Patsy died of colic. Easter grew up to be a very smart horse – big, strong, willful, and difficult for Margie to handle. So, she contacted Best Friends for help. “I was afraid of her. I knew at Best Friends they would take good care of her, do right by her, and find her a good home.” Easter is settling in just fine and has a bright future ahead of her. Read more about the work of the United Pegasus Foundation, and check out alternatives to using Premarin by doing a web search on “alternatives to Premarin.” BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 29 best friends animal sanctuary at the sanctuary Once they were just cast-offs. Now, thanks to you, these oncesad faces are living “happily ever after” at Best Friends, the nation’s largest sanctuary for abused and abandoned animals. “You be happy in your new home, Lore!” For many people, Best Friends is their annual vacation spot. Kelsey Kelly and her parents will be back next year, as always. But this is Loreʼs time to say good-bye. Heʼs going off to a happy new home! Heʼll never forget Kelly and her folks. “I spy visitors! Everyone, on your best behavior!” Sassy the cat acts as lookout for a room full of cats-in-waiting. Waiting to be adopted, that is. 30 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Taking a break at the TLC Cat Club: Big Boy, an FIV-positive love bug, snuggles in the arms of staff member Lenny Domyan. Lenny must have strong arms, because Big Boy didnʼt get his name for nothing! Olʼ Blue Eyes – a.k.a. Toby. He may not be much of a singer, but the lady dogs think Toby is a dream. No swooning! Me, too! (left) Logan brings the sheep back after their daily workout. He figures he deserves a treat, too. Once an abandoned herding dog, Logan is getting ready to go to a good new home. Education or vacation?! (right) Interns Melissa Espino and Laurel Holding introduce Cowboy to the camera. Melissa and Laurel became close friends during their six weeks working at the sanctuary. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 31 best friends animal sanctuary Rocky’s Road to Adoption And there’s no such thing as “finals”! The writer of this piece poses with Rocky the St. Bernard. Except ... well ... we werenʼt sure how Rocky would do on a face-to-face, so this is a “dramatization,” a “re-enactment,” or whatever you call it, with Chewbacca standing in for Rocky! By Elizabeth Doyle T oday is Rockyʼs big day. He doesnʼt know it yet, but heʼs about to take an important test in front of a room full of strangers, who are all watching to see how he does. It may sound like an “I dreamed I was back in school” nightmare, but Rocky is a big, brave guy. Besides, heʼs surrounded by well-wishers here at Best Friends Dogtown, where heʼs lived for more than a month. And in some ways, Rocky is going to be the teacher today, as well as the test-taker. By letting us watch his Big Performance, heʼs going to teach us all a little something about behavior assessment exams. The purpose of the test “This is not a pass/fail test,” says Best Friendsʼ dog trainer Sherry Woodard. “Itʼs just an exercise to see what areas need improving.” For animals in many shelters, this is not the case. Unbeknownst to the dogs, when they step forward for their behavior assessment trials, their lives are on the line. A failing grade could be a death sentence. Talk about test pressure! No college student has seen the like. But here at Dogtown, nobodyʼs worrying when Rocky the St. Bernard bonka-bonkas into the room for his official behavior assessment. Thatʼs because no matter how he does on his exam, heʼll be bonka-bonkaing right back out again to rejoin his friends. He wonʼt even know his grade. Second chances In fact, Rocky blew it completely on his first behavior test. When he arrived at Best Friends from a rescue group that had closed down, he seemed like a cuddly love-monster. Who could resist that face and those giant feet! But when Sherry began evaluating him, it was obvious he could be really scary toward people he didnʼt know. A St. Bernard? Being mean? Is that possible? We picture them 32 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 as those big, lovable teddies rescuing strangers from snowstorms. And thatʼs true, says Sherry, but any animal can become mean if heʼs had a difficult enough past. And of course, the more dogs are bred for looks rather than personality, the more likely they are to have temperament problems. So she was surprised but not astounded when Rocky did so badly on his first behavior exam. On todayʼs first “re-take” of the exam, weʼre checking to see whether Rocky has improved after a month of the “Dogtown treatment” – living with a lot of other dogs, and getting plenty of fresh air and good food, along with some gentle guidance from the staff. The room is full. Rocky canʼt be placed in a new home until heʼs shown real improvement. But when heʼs ready, the national St. Bernard Rescue Foundation will help find an appropriate placement. And since some of their members happen to be enjoying a visit to Best Friends, theyʼve stopped by to see the “problem child” going through his paces. Scary hooded people Rocky is excited about his test! Well, actually, heʼs just excited to see Sherry. He nuzzles her and slobbers, but Sherry is about to trick him. Sheʼs about to disappear and re-emerge … as a hooded, faceless stranger. “Knock, knock.” Rocky wags his tail. He waits with a big, goofy smile. Sherry opens the door, emerging in a heavily hooded sweatshirt. She does not speak to him, but keeps her face down like a clunky teenager and stomps over to him. Rocky just nuzzles her. Sherry knows that he recognized her anyway. And though sheʼs pleased he wasnʼt repelled by the hood and mannerisms, that wonʼt be enough to get a good score written down in her little lined book. She calls in a young man whom Rocky has never met before. This is the real test. Last time, Rocky growled, barked, and then charged the stranger who approached him. For the first time, some observers are nervous. The young man walks up to Rocky, who keeps wagging his tail. He pats him on the head, a little uneasily, and then keeps going. Rocky doesnʼt lose his goofy smile. Nobody can believe this is the same Rocky! Now, thatʼs the difference a month can make! Biting the hand that feeds you Sherry loves her job, but she isnʼt willing to lose her hand for it! She puts a stuffed glove at the end of a long barbecue skewer, making sure the glove carries her scent so the dog might think thereʼs a hand in there. This is the “bite tester.” Rocky is given a bowl of food. He plunks his giant face into it and munches greedily. While he eats, his fuzzy ears flopping around, Sherry pets him with the fake hand. He allows her to do this. Next, she sticks the fake hand in the food bowl itself and chomp! Rocky bites it. Uh oh! Sherry laughs and makes a note. Rocky still has some work to do. He must learn to let people touch his food and even take it away. This will be a focus in the upcoming month, before his next exam. part herself. She grabs a Homer Simpson doll, jumps up and down, and squeals. She shoves the doll in Rockyʼs face, yelping about how exciting this is. Sheʼs very convincing. In fact … glances are exchanged around the room. Anyone else get the feeling she does this sometimes at home? (Just kidding!) Rockyʼs tail wags, and he seems to be happy that sheʼs so happy. He grins and slobbers and then looks around the room when sheʼs done. Wow – that was an embarrassing display. But stop staring, everyone. Sheʼs still my friend! Sherry makes a note that heʼs doing well with erratic behavior. Grrrr…I love you…Grrrrr… How important is a knowledgeable tester? Does it matter whether the examiner is a dog expert or just a person with a checklist? Have a look at this: Sherry suddenly opens an umbrella to see how he reacts to surprises. “Umbrellas do something no one would expect them to do, unless they already know,” she says. Some dogs might react to the sudden opening, but not Rocky. Heʼs just wagging and grinning and slobbering over to Sherry. She gives him a bear hug and pets his ears. Then suddenly, it sounds as though heʼs begun to growl. And for no reason! His tail is wagging, but the sound is unmistakable. Whatʼs going on? “ No matter how he does, he’ll be bonka-bonkaing right back out again to rejoin his friends. He won’t even know his grade. ” “Thatʼs just a St. Bernard sound,” Sherry explains. “It means, ʻthis feels good.ʼ It sounds just like a warning growl, but if you heard him actually growl, the two sounds are slightly different.” Itʼs a good thing she knew that. Because to someone who didnʼt know better, it really and truly sounded like a growl. Sherry’s alter-ego Now itʼs time for the kid test. In fact, because of his history, Rocky will never go to a home with children. Still, itʼs good to test his reaction. Since no real children are used in these tests, Sherry plays the Shades of gray It doesnʼt take an expert to guess that tail wagging is good and snapping is bad. But what about those in-between signals? “You need to use some intuition,” says Sherry. “And you need to put together all the different pieces to complete your picture of the dog. Itʼs hardly ever black and white.” Sherry holds each of Rockyʼs feet and then his tail. He doesnʼt growl or snap, but his tail isnʼt wagging either. And heʼs doing a funny thing – he follows her hand with his nose, as though keeping a close eye on it as it travels his body. What does that mean? Sherry says this is called “orienting” and it means different things in different dogs. In some cases, putting his nose up to the hand that holds his tail might be perfectly harmless. In other cases, an “orient” leads to a snap. Paw lifting is another vague gesture. It can mean, “I am showing you submission.” Or it can mean, “I was taught to shake hands, and Iʼd like to show you my trick.” All’s well that ends well Itʼs time for Rocky to thumpity-thump back to his play area, where all his new friends are waiting for him. Heʼs enjoying life at Best Friends and has made significant progress. There was a time when he just couldnʼt pass a behavior assessment. He was a problem child. But in just a month of gentle training, an open, sociable atmosphere, and a lot of encouragement, Rocky has improved his grade from a definite “F” to what you might call a “C.” And heʼs well on his way to passing with flying colors. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 33 Pick Me! From our Garden of Love Each of the animals on this page is older, or needs some daily medication, a little extra help getting around, or the training and understanding to be comfortable again in a home environment. If you’d like to know more about giving one of them a home, please call the sanctuary at (435) 644-2001. There are more “special adoptables” on the Best Friends website at www.bestfriends.org/adoptions.htm. 34 Noah are best Always on the go, Peekaboo and The world is a big friends on a never ending adventure. this. like playground for a smart, curious pair ect health. So perf in are Theyʼre friendly fellows who without each live t canʼ y The s? need what are their special a home thatʼll take other. Their special wish today is for not just one of them, but both. ars. Peekaboo is Noah is the one with the helicopter-e ember once you rem ʼll You d. frien his patient, lop-eared get them home! BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Scared of linoleum? Thatʼs a little embarra Charmer had never seen the indoors befo ssing! But poor re. He lived on a chain in the backyard, where would pull and try this active guy to play, but couldnʼt . The chain stopped every attempt … his wh of energy. It must ha ole life long. Heʼs 80 pounds and full ve been hard! He doesnʼt “get” cats. But he likes girl dogs heʼs fine with lino no – a lot! And w. His special hope ? To be picked by grown-ups who know a handsome face wh en they see one! allie suffered ose! Poor C me that her rp u p n o it all the ti she did Itʼs not like dust, and itched so badly . Plus, with a shot s to fault from allergie er up. But it wasnʼt her h e av g e. d. Her family sheʼs just fin a kissable pompom hea s, k ee w x si in … ith every o to snuggle er-cuddly, w Callie is sup a home with a lap or tw is for wish today s! y to f o and lots , nts a family guy who wa r one. He y sh a is a d p and ask fo cere. Pago Shy but sin too scared to walk u le litt im. nt but is just a meone will come to h yful. He wouldnʼt wa la n p o so d p g n u a in t e y a v e ra siti tb is p ooking, sen nd sisters, who migh nice. a e Heʼs good-l b ers ld scary broth tle cat wou to to have any dogs. But another gen ad a home. He used h o r ey n e th d ev n n n e A h has him. for food. W ars old and Heʼs six ye ho coupleʼs backyard someone might like Ida opes come to an brought him here in h ey th moved, . to adopt him Itʼs so frustrating! Baby Cakes is an insanely intelligent dog with lots of focus and energy who canʼt do everything she wants to do … because she was hit by a car. Now, her pelvis is held together by plates and screws, and she has to be careful with her activities. Not easy for a dog this alert! Sheʼs a border collie mix who desperately needs a job. Jogging, herding, chasing errant sticks are all out of the question since the accident. Today, this lovely dogʼs best shot at feeling fulfilled is to find a home where she can be a devoted best friend, and focus her energy on being the best companion she can be. Whoops! Reka thin ks she blew it big tim Sheʼd only lived wi th one person her wh e. person was her hom ole life, and that e. So when the lady got engaged and the whole family chan ged, “bad” all the time. Sh Reka got jealous and started being e got in trouble. Her pu thought it would help, but instead she nishment? She woul d be thrown out and never get to see any of her Reka is four years old family again. Ouch. sensitive, and incline , a real Dalmatian, emotionally clingy, d to get attached ve ry quickly. So pleas donʼt lead her on! Sh e e and cats, and promise wants a home, is fine with other dogs s sheʼll be good this time. Faust canʼt believe Never! Old folks lik what heʼs hearing! Old cats – useless? e him have lots to of fer. At ten years old, he m ways. He likes his me ay be a little predictable and set in his als to be served prom you very much. He ptly, on time, thank likes to map out a ste ady daily routine fo himself. But heʼs extre r me jet black cloud of velve ly intelligent, absolutely gorgeous, like a t, and heʼs happy to sh are a home with other cats. So long as they ʼre as mellow and co nsiderate as he is! Faust has been at Be son passed away. He st Friends ever since his beloved perholds onto the hope that thereʼll still be another for him. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 35 tomato the cat CAT WORLD NEWS TOMATO’S CAT WORLD NEWS ELVIS ALIVE – LIVING AT DOGTOWN STRANGE KIND OF CAT FOUND ON BED! BED KILLER CHIHUAHUA HEADED FOR EARTH DOGS ARE ALL RUNNING FOR COVER NASA: MARS CAT SIGHTING A FRAUD Cats “from Mars” are really at Best Friends By Tomato the Cat The Weekly World News shook up the animal world with its recent declaration that a new breed of cats has been discovered on Mars. The tabloid, considered by media experts to be the main competition for Tomato the Catʼs Cat World News, stunned the scientific world when it described “A pair of catlike creatures photographed scampering across the dust-filled base of an impact crater!” The photos seemed to prove it. But Cat World News can now confirm that the Weekly World News story is completely false. And our chief investigative reporter and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Tomato the Cat (show us your Pulitzer Prize-winners, Weekly World News), has the photos to prove it. “Those cats arenʼt from outer space,” said a spokesperson for Cat World News. “You can see them right here at Best Friends, where they live with staff member Peggy Sutton.” Sutton, noted the 36 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 spokesperson, is a attorney who now specializes in feline law. “Best Friends … Mars … whatʼs the difference?” shrugged an anonymous source at Weekly World News. Officials at NASA were unavailable for comment. KILLER CHIHUAHUA HEADED FOR EARTH Those dangerous asteroids, meteors, and comets that may be on a collision course with Earth may not be simply lumps of rock, say scientists. Cat World News can now report that the European Rosetta space ship, launched on March 26th on a five-billion-mile, 10year journey to Comet 67P/ChuryumovGerasimenko, has instead rendezvoused with an angry, stray Chihuahua. “We were shocked to discover the dog in orbit,” said an unidentified source at the European Space Agency. “After all, it is now known that the dinosaur age came to an end when a Yorkshire terrier crashed into what is now the Yucatan region of Mexico.” ELVIS ALIVE – LIVING AT DEAR TABBY? hocking revelation: BEST FRIENDS DOGTOWN Dear Abby is really a cat S Admits he ainʼt nothinʼ but a hound dog By Tomato the Cat Fans claim their faith has finally been validated. Elvis is alive and living at Best Friends. And the proof? “It says so on his I.D. card at Dogtown.” “Itʼs true,” said an official at Best Friends Dogtown. “We were a little surprised to discover heʼs a Labrador mix with an ʻiffyʼ temperament. Somehow we thought heʼd be … snugglier. But thatʼs our Elvis, alright! The king is alive.” But how do they know that heʼs the real Hunk of Burning Love, and not just a six-year-old dog from California, who came to Best Friends because his Humane League couldnʼt find a home for him? “Well, for one thing,” said the official, rolling his eyes at the questionʼs absurdity, “heʼs food aggressive. Hello? Iʼm the last one to criticize The King, but wouldnʼt you say that fits the profile?” Fans are already gathering outside Elvisʼs Dogtown home, where they sing Love Me Tender, waving flashlights at all hours of the night. They note that there are clues in all of Elvisʼs songs that he was profoundly inspired by his surroundings at Best Friends. Let Me Be Your Teddy Bear was obviously ghostwritten by Boogie, known at Dogtown as “the boppy-eared teddy dog,” who, like the King himself, suffers from severe separation anxiety. And Jailhouse Rock, they say, was originally called Dog Pound Rock. And what about all those references to cats in his songs? Rip It Up, they insist, was clearly in reference to Toshie the Cat, who spends her days at the Best Friends TLC Cat Club tearing paper towels to bits. Meanwhile, rumors are spreading that Elvis can only be adopted by someone who can sing Are You Lonesome Tonight? In an exclusive interview with Cat World News, a source close to the world famous advice columnist has revealed that her daily columns are really being written by a cat at Best Friends. “In order to hide the true facts,” purred the source, “she took the first letter off her name to change it from Dear Tabby to Dear Abby.” The columnist herself has declined comment, but observers have noted that her answers to readers have been getting more and more “catty” over the years. A recent question began: “Dear Abby: My husbandʼs friend, Kevin, has been coming to our house once a week for the past eight years. He is always broke and looking for a handout ... In the beginning, I tried to help him by inviting him to stay for dinner once in a while. Now he has started to complain: The steak isnʼt cooked the way he likes it ...” A Cat World News expert cites this as evidence, noting that “Kevin” is obviously a stray cat, and that Abby – a.k.a. Tabby – is trying to cover this up by focusing on the “manʼs” bad manners. New Improved Adopt-a-mins Guarantee Adoption! Feeling abandoned? Need a new home fast? Try new, improved Adopt-a-mins, the supplement that guarantees a new home in three months OR YOUR MONEY BACK. Make sure the moment is right when you go out to an adoption day. Adopt-a-mins are specially formulated to put you in the mood for a new home. Lasts up to 36 hours. (And now available: Adopt-a-vites. The best way to ensure that people you don’t like will get adopted and go away.) BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 37 ambassador to the animals SUPER Adoption! By Francis Battista he traffic jam on the Bob Hope Drive off-ramp of the 134 freeway was a thing of beauty! It led to another traffic jam going north on Bob Hope Drive, which led to the Best Friends Pet Adoption Festival in Johnny Carson Park in Burbank, California. By one oʼclock, all 2,000 parking spaces plus street parking were full and the park was jam-packed with people. By the end of the day, roughly 10,000 people had come out to see the animals for adoption and enjoy some perfect SoCal weather. And 60-plus rescue organizations, along with the city shelters, spread out in the park with about 1,200 dogs, cats, bunnies, birds and a pair of guinea pigs all looking for new homes. Golden Globe winner Frances Conroy topped the Hollywood guest list, encouraging everyone to adopt a new furry friend. But the real celebrities of the day either had four legs and fur or feathers and wings. And more than 400 of them wound up making their way into new adoptive homes. Many thanks to all the great volunteers, including our friends at West Valley Dog Sports, who brought out their amazing agility dogs to entertain the crowd. You made it all possible. T 38 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Join the Experts Online! Spend some time each week with leaders of the No More Homeless Pets movement. And discover how to save the animals in your community. Pose your own questions or just follow the discussion. To join in, come to www.bestfriends.org and follow the link to the No More Homeless Pets Forum. Upcoming topics: • May 3 – 7: Why People Give Up Pets Karen Green of Best Friends on why animals end up in shelters and what can be done to keep them in their homes. • May 10 – 14: Holistic Treatment for Rescued Pets Holistic veterinarians Dr. Randy Kidd and Dr. Rose Di Leva on using alternative medical treatments for rescued animals. • May 17 – 21: Events on a Shoestring Megan Newman of No More Homeless Pets Hillsborough County and Jill Borkowski, a special events consultant, offer tips on planning frugal events that net serious results. • May 24 – 28: Creative Fundraising Ideas You’re the expert! Have you hosted a unique event? Had a greatfundraising idea that worked? Tell us all about it or just read what others are up to. • May 31 – June 4: Engineering a Turn-Around Want to make dramatic improvements in your local shelter? Charlie McGinley of Brookhaven Animal Shelter and Susan Feingold of Southern Hope Humane Society tell how they did it. • June 7 – 11: Puppy Mills and Pet Stores Lee Wheeler of Hearts United for Animals and Francis Battista of Best Friends on how to stop the sale of pets. • June 14 – 18: Starting a Grassroots Program Should you start a local group? Wendy Baron of AnimalHelp of Central Washington and Michelle Hankins of DC Metro No More Homeless Pets answer questions about grassroots organizing. • June 21 – 25: Creative Pet Adoptions This week you are the forum guest: What are your top adoption tips? Do you have a unique adoption event or venue? E-mail your advice into the forum this week. Full forum schedule at www.bestfriends.org Sanctuary Workshops How to Start an Animal Sanctuary June 13–19 • September 12–18 • November 7–13 Pet adoption festivals are a great way to find homes and promote the cause. You can find out more about putting on a pet adoption festival in your community on the Best Friends website at www.bestfriends.org in the No More Homeless Pets section. An intensive, week-long workshop at Best Friends. Includes outreach programs, fundraising, community relations, spay/neuter programs, and hands-on sessions with the animals. Attendance limited. Cost: $500, includes lunches and materials. For more information, call Cathie Myers at (435) 644-2001, ext. 317. Or send an e-mail to [email protected]. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 39 health & behavior FAITHFULLY YOURS clump of DNA, that will shape his or her little individual being. But when it comes to love, few of us are sensible. You may have to take a back seat on this one. Your friend has the information, and you cannot stop her from doing something she wants to do. She will come to her own realization that she cannot reproduce her beloved pet by having him sire a puppy. Letʼs hope the cycle stops there, and your friendship survives. – Faith, hopefully Are My Days Numbered? Faith Maloney answers your questions about animals and life Can’t Stop the Breeding! Dear Faith, My best friend (human) has rescued animals for the past decade, placing numerous cats and dogs in great new homes. She has her own dog whom she adores. Unbelievably to me, she has decided to breed him. She declares that he is unique – so special that absolutely everyone loves her dog and would want one of his puppies. When I try to talk to her about it, she gets incredibly defensive and tells me that she would never dream of breeding a cat but a dog is different (especially her dog), and sheʼll make sure all the puppies get homes. When I respond that she knows very well how many dogs are already homeless, she starts screaming and saying that this is whatʼs wrong with “animal rescue” people – that they “take it too far and are extremists not living in the real world.” How on earth can I persuade her not to breed him? – Stumped Dear Stumped, I can hear your frustration in your letter. I have often found that principles are all well and good until they conflict with something we really want to do. Then we all become very good at finding the loopholes. Your friend has convinced herself that her own dog is so special that one of his pups will help her continue the identical relationship she has with him. Sensible people know that this cannot possibly be true, as each dog is unique. Even a cloned dog – should that technology ever be perfected – is going to start life as a pup and have a whole new set of experiences, different from the parent or the original 40 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 My animals mean the world to me, but I work in an office where nobody else is an animal lover. They think Iʼm a bit nuts and enjoy torturing me. Once, when I called in that I would be late because my cat was critically ill, and I had to get her to the vet, my boss started screaming at me and told me to “just let the cat die and get to work.” My co-workers are taking his lead and have started to say cruel things in my hearing, like how they canʼt wait for upcoming hunting trips and how much they enjoy killing. I need this job badly, so I canʼt just walk out. What should I do? – Victimized Dear Vic, Itʼs a shame you canʼt just walk out right now, because that is one seriously hostile work environment. I would quietly start looking around for something else in your field. Lifeʼs too short to spend a good chunk of it with cruel and stupid people. You mentioned the actions and statements of your boss. If the boss you are describing is not the overall head of the company but just your immediate supervisor, then maybe you have a good case of harassment to take to your employer. If, however, he is the highest authority, then Iʼm afraid that the only solution for you is to get out as soon as you get another job. Meanwhile, youʼll need to work something out for your own sanity. Obviously I would recommend not talking about your own animals in the workplace. Iʼm sure you have figured that out already. And stop responding to your co-workersʼ jibes. They will only continue to do this while they are getting a reaction, so let it roll off your back like water. But remember this experience for any future workplace, and get the feel for your co-workersʼ reactions to animals before putting out photos of your cats on your desk. Sometimes itʼs best to keep what we love the most to ourselves. Insecure people who are abusive and bullying often look for other peopleʼs personal sensitivities to use as a weapon of control. So donʼt provide them with ammunition. – Faith, strategically Help Me Help Them My local shelter is in terrible shape. The people there work very hard, but because of funding, there are just so few resources. I would very much like to help, but when Iʼm there Iʼm given the impression that Iʼm just in the way and they donʼt need any help. I know I could make a difference for the animals there if I was given the chance. But I donʼt know how to make them want me. Can you give me any suggestions? – Feeling Unwanted Dear Unwanted, Volunteers are the life-blood of most animal rescue organizations and shelters, but many of them donʼt seem to know how to utilize this asset. If your shelter is understaffed and poorly managed, then volunteers can easily be seen as “getting in the way.” Staff members usually have pre-set tasks to do, and it does take time to explain a procedure or a policy to a new person. Every animal organization needs a volunteer coordinator, even if itʼs another volunteer who fills the role. That person can then act as a buffer between the staff and the volunteers. Might this be a role you could take on with your shelter? You might find that the director leaps at the chance to have you do that job. I suspect you are not the first person to have this problem at the shelter. If you are not sure what might be involved, find an organization that has a volunteer coordinator and ask that person how itʼs done. (We have one here at the sanctuary.) Then, when you sit down with the director to propose the idea, you can have a concrete plan in place – not just an idea that they have to develop! If you get a go-ahead from the boss, you could interview the staff, find out where they need help the most, and offer to train the volunteers yourself. Sure, this stage might take up some precious time, but the benefits in the long run far outweigh the minor inconvenience. If they are not responsive to this proposal, or itʼs not something you feel you can take on at this time, find a place that welcomes your help. The animals need you. – Faith, voluntarily Be Part of Best Friends! As a member of Best Friends, youʼll be helping those animals most in need, and youʼll receive each bimonthly issue of Best Friends magazine. YES! I want to be part of Best Friends, and read all the good news about animals and animal lovers. ❒ Subscribing Membership $25 a year ❒ Supporting Membership $45 a year ❒ Sustaining Membership ❒ Guardian Angel $100 a year (or $10 a month) $240 a year (or $20 a month) Amount enclosed: $_____________ ❒ Check/M.O. ❒ VISA ❒ MC ❒ AmExp ❒ DISC Card no.: ____________________________________ Exp. date:____________________________________ Signature: ___________________________________ Your name:__________________________________ ©MARC BROWN/BFAS Address:_____________________________________ City:________________________________________ State:___________________ Zip: ________________ Phone: ______________________________________ This is a gift for: Name: ______________________________________ Address:_____________________________________ City:________________________________________ State:___________________ Zip: ________________ Phone: ______________________________________ BMS 5001 Angel Canyon Road Kanab, Utah 84741 • (435) 644-2001 e-mail: [email protected] www.bestfriends.org BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 41 the animals’ bookshelf Friendly Lessons By Sally Rosenthal Laurenʼs Story: An American Dog in Paris by Kay Pfaltz. J. N. Townsend Publishing, 2002. Hardcover, 203 pages, $22.50. Speaking of Cats by Harry Cauley. J. N. Townsend Publishing, 2003. Softcover, 103 pages, $13.00. Calico Tales ... and Others by Betsy Stowe. Infinity Publishing, 2004. Softcover, 109 pages, $14.95. Riding Between the Worlds: Expanding Our Potential Through the Way of the Horse by Linda Kohanov. New World Library, 2003. Hardcover, 252 pages, $22.95. Stories Rabbits Tell: A Natural and Cultural History of a Misunderstood Creature by Susan Davis and Margo DeMello. Lantern Books, 2003. Softcover, 358 pages, $22.00. T he grocery store clerkʼs bubbly voice interrupted my reverie as my husband and I unloaded our cart onto the conveyor belt. “See that dog?” she called out in amazement to the clerk at the next register. “She can walk down the meat aisle and not even go for anything!” “Yes, sheʼs a good girl,” I said as I reached down to pat my guide dog Boiseʼs broad Labrador head. While I knew that Boiseʼs training meant she would never go on a rib roast rampage in the supermarket, I had to smile to myself because she often did suggest with a tug toward one of her favorite smells that we turn into the pet food aisle. (OK, she might be a highly trained professional, but, beneath the harness, sheʼs all food-driven Lab.) The checkout clerkʼs remark was a variation on a common theme. Strangers often stop me to express their admiration for what Boise has been taught. While guide dogs possess more skills than average pets, however, what Boise teaches me and others proves much more interesting to me than what she has learned from trainers. Working dog or companion animal, the creatures who share our homes and hearts come, I believe, to teach us many things. The authors of the following books feel the same and give voice to their beliefs in works about beloved animal teachers. As any Best Friends reader would attest, one of the most important lessons animals teach is unconditional love. They would get no argument from Kay Pfaltz, the author of Laurenʼs Story: An American Dog in Paris. Donʼt be fooled by the subtitle; this book is more than a canine travelogue. Much more. While the author does pay homage to her adopted city of many years, the true object of her 42 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 affection is Lauren, an infinitely lovable, chronically ill beagle. Virginia native Pfaltz was living a lone writerʼs life in Paris when her sister acted as matchmaker between the author and a small, charming beagle. It was, as the saying goes, a match made in heaven. In this wonderful tale, Pfaltz chronicles her life with Lauren on both sides of the Atlantic, making no bones about the depth of their relationship. Laurenʼs Story is my favorite sort of animal book – one that details a loving bond that enriches the readerʼs life almost as much as the lives of the dog and person involved. While Pfaltz looks back in middle age at her life with Lauren, Harry Cauley recounts, in later life, the joys and sorrows encountered in a lifetime filled with special feline companions. In Speaking of Cats, screenwriter and novelist Cauley shares his memories of cats as diverse as the aloof, mysterious Socrates, a stray who took up residence with the author briefly, and his beloved Nutsy, a cat who weathered storms but came through them with an unabashed love of life. Speaking of Cats might look like a collection of reflective essays about a particular man and his cats, but it is really a series of love letters. The only problem I had with this book is its length; like Cauleyʼs catsʼ lives, it is much too short. As a reader and cat lover, I wanted it to go on longer. Poet and photographer Betsy Stowe, too, knows all too well the brevity of our catsʼ time with us. But, in the work included in Calico Tales ... and Others, Stowe uses her considerable skill with words and camera to examine the life lessons she has garnered from her feline soul mate, Cali, as well as many former strays who came to fill her home and heart. Although I have been acquainted with Stowe professionally for years and have enjoyed her poems immensely as I came across them in magazines and online, I wasnʼt prepared for the beauty and depth they would assume collected with her loving black and white pictures. Not all the animals who change our lives, however, share our homes. Horses, as Linda Kohanov eloquently argues in Riding Between the Worlds, also have the capacity to alter our perceptions and spirituality. The author of The Tao of Equus, Kohanov has returned with this evocative work. Riding Between the Worlds, however, is not just for horse lovers. Kohanov, who works in cuttingedge equine-facilitated psychotherapy, also brings readers in touch with the deep spiritual connection between horses and those of us in need of connectedness, higher consciousness, and empowerment. I came to this book knowing little about either horses or the subjects Kohanov addresses, but I found myself engrossed by the authorʼs craft and beautiful prose; I guarantee other readers will feel the same. Another fascinating – and often overlooked – animal with much to teach us is the rabbit, as Susan Davis and Margo DeMello relate in Stories Rabbits Tell. This thick volume, filled with cultural and natural material, has been described as “ground breaking” in the publicity information that arrived with my review copy. Although such language is standard publicity-speak, it is nothing more than simple truth in this case. In over 15 years of reviewing animal books, I cannot recall receiving another rabbit-related book or many works as comprehensive as Stories Rabbits Tell. This book is one born out of first-rate scholarship and total commitment. Davis and DeMello, both long-time rabbit lovers and advocates, cover a huge amount of territory in their inquiry into the rabbitʼs place in nature, myth, religion, the meat and fur industries, etc., but the most important message of this book is that rabbits are sentient, social creatures who have much to teach humans about the value of life and the values to be cherished in everyday life – a fact that might surprise my supermarket clerk even more than Boiseʼs training does. The Best Friends Wishing Garden May we plant a special wish for you? The Best Friends Wishing Garden is just outside the Welcome Center at the sanctuary. Each wish is written on rice paper that nourishes the earth and is then planted with a flower seed. Just send in your own special wish and we’ll sow a seed of good fortune for you. And thank you for helping to make Best Friends a dream come true for all your furry friends here. Kindness to animals makes a better world for all of us. That’s why Best Friends is working with our members all across the country to bring about a time when there are no more homeless pets, and when every companion animal who’s ever born can be guaranteed a loving home. The sanctuary, at the heart of the Golden Circle of Southern Utah, is the nation’s largest for abused and abandoned animals, home on any given day to about 1,500 homeless dogs, cats, and other animals that come from shelters all over the country. Beyond the sanctuary, the work of Best Friends reaches far and wide, helping people set up spay/neuter, shelter, foster, and adoption programs in their own neighborhoods. In our home state, Best Friends manages a model campaign, working with shelters and humane societies statewide to bring an end to the killing of healthy homeless pets. And across the nation, the Best Friends Network of members and rescue groups works to help set up No More Homeless Pets campaigns in local neighborhoods. You can become part of the Best Friends Network on our website at www.bestfriends.org. Best Friends is supported through the donations of our members. Thanks to the generous hearts and hands of people like you, we can ensure that animals who come into the care of Best Friends will never again have to be alone, hungry, sick, afraid, or in pain. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 43 point counter point Should Dogs Go Veggie? It’s a dilemma for many vegetarians who don’t want their dogs contributing to the suffering and death of other animals. Are we imposing our own human morals on animals by requiring them to eat a meat-free diet? Or are we hypocritical in saying it’s fine for them to be patronizing the factory farm industry? Supporting canine vegetarianism are Ned Buyukmihci, professor of veterinary medicine (emeritus) at the University of California and director of the Primate Sanctuary of the Animal Protection Institute, and Margie Gill, co-founder and vice-president of Kentucky’s Home At Last animal sanctuary, who feeds her charges a vegetarian diet. Against vegetarianism for dogs are Phil Brown, DVM, a veterinarian who specializes in nutrition, and Nancy Kearns, editor of the Whole Dog Journal. Vegetarians are often conflicted about feeding their dogs a meat-based diet. Is it morally justified for us to impose our own ethical dilemmas on our pets? Yes. It’s not only morally correct to “impose” our beliefs on our dogs, but it is a moral imperative. Food is a necessity, and as long as we provide a nourishing diet, then there is no harm in modifying that diet to prevent suffering to others. Otherwise, we are keeping one animal alive by killing, or being responsible for killing, possibly hundreds of others over the lifetime of the animal in question. – Dr. Ned Buyukmihci I think it is immoral to knowingly deny an animal its evolutionary diet. While it is possible to design a complete, balanced vegetarian diet for dogs, it is beyond the ability of all but the most committed, knowledgeable, resourceful owners. People need to take responsibility for the many health problems that may result from feeding any animal a diet that is less than perfectly suited to its biological needs. Ideally, a dog owner who has an ethical problem regarding their dog’s biologically appropriate (i.e., meatbased) diet will strive to find sources of humanely farmed meat and poultry. If he cannot find a way to provide a dog with the diet that best suits the biological needs of the dog and meets his own ethical criteria, he should reconsider having a dog. – Nancy Kearns Carnivores in the wild kill other animals to survive. Is a vegetarian diet for dogs perverting nature and disrupting the natural order of the food chain? The domestic dogs we speak of have been raised by humans, acclimated to the touch of humans, and exposed to the amenities of the human environment. Instinct exists only in remnant form. Survival, for those who are not so lucky, usually leads them to a trash can on the back porch of someone kind enough to make offerings. Free roaming dogs here at our sanctuary who have full access to their “natural” prey ignore such and wait patiently for their bowl of veggie food. The natural order has long since been disrupted. A vegan/vegetarian diet for dogs is simply a healthy, crueltyfree, environmentally peaceful way to adapt to the current order. Nature relies on adaptation. – Margie Gill 44 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Dr. Andy Turkel, spokesperson for the American Hospital, stated, “Animals eat to live, whereas people live to eat. Just because vegetarianism is a trend among humans doesn’t mean it fits the animal model.” Carnivores kill, not for the sake of killing, but to survive. Instinctively their desires arose from the physiological need for specific nutrients obtained from meat. Healthy eating has prompted many people to switch their dogs to vegetarian foods, all the while ignoring their animals’ ancestry and anatomy. The nature of the species is being disrupted, and the evolutionary process is being usurped by personal beliefs. The natural order of the food chain is at risk in man’s attempt to fix something that is not broken. – Dr. Phil Brown Dogs’ intestinal tracts are short (compared to humans), making it more difficult to digest plant foods. Don’t these biological differences prove that dogs need meat to survive? While it may be that digestion of non-meat food is not as efficient in dogs (and there is no proof of this with certain high quality proteins such as those based on soybeans), this does not demonstrate a “need” for meat. We human beings also are “designed” to digest meat, in addition to other foods. We believe, however, that the moral issues involved in taking another life when not necessary outweigh the physiological issues. The same proscription should be applied to dogs. – Dr. Ned Buyukmihci The domestic dog is closest genetically to the carnivorous wolf, differing in only one to two percent in gene sequences. Wolves and domestic canines also have identical digestive tracts. A dog’s mouth is designed to grasp, tear, and swallow meat whole. A large mouth opening, single hinge joint for vertical action, and large facial muscles are typical features of carnivores. Short, razor-sharp teeth facilitate grasping and ripping. The short intestinal tract is designed to quickly digest meat and bones. Due to a lack of oral digestive enzymes, complex carbohydrates are not broken down in the mouth. Because carbohydrates require a long time to break down in the small intestine, they often pass through undigested, resulting in increased stool volumes. Dogs also have a difficult time digesting and utilizing protein from vegetable sources. – Dr. Phil Brown Medical recommendations for human health often include restricting or eliminating meat, quite apart from personal ethical questions associated with vegetarianism. Are there nutritional advantages for dogs on a vegetarian diet? Yes! We are reminded daily of the nutritional advantages. Amongst our animals here, all the standard health indicators – appetite, weight, energy, skin condition, disposition – have demonstrated consistently that these vegan dogs are thriving. Obesity, one of the most common nutritional problems in dogs, has rarely been a concern on the vegan diet – which means there are fewer difficulties with heart and respiratory problems related to weight. Skin problems are limited to the occasional hot spot on heavily coated dogs in the summer, which are easily treated. Though the average age of a dog at time of rescue here is about 3-4 years old (they usually come with histories), cancer prevention begins with the first vegan meal free of chemicals. The dog’s immune system gets an additional break since chemical control of parasites is barely necessary. – Margie Gill The only dogs who could be said to enjoy an advantage from eating a vegetarian diet are those who have either an allergy or an intolerance to meat, fish, or poultry. In these cases (and I’ve heard of many), a vegetarian diet improves the health of the affected individuals. I’ve heard allegations that a vegetarian diet may be associated with greater longevity, but there are no studies that bear this out. – Nancy Kearns The movie Shirley Valentine satirized an owner who had placed a Doberman on a vegetarian diet, creating one unhappy, neurotic dog. Can “unnatural” diets lead to other behavioral issues? To the extent that behavior is learned, our dog friends are at our mercy for their “conditioning.” We train them to do, and not do, what fits our own lifestyles. Discontent, whether due to stress, chronic disease, or lack of companionship, causes behavior problems. If a dog is fed a healthful diet, and is strong, able to play well, rest well, and finds their environment predictable and stable, they just don’t question the source of their contentment. – Margie Gill Supplying dogs all the necessary nutrients is complex and challenging. By ignoring dogs’ genetics, there is a danger of providing too much or too little as well as a risk of improper ratios. The result is often physiological or behavioral malfunctioning. The movie Shirley Valentine placed the cause of neurosis of a Doberman on a vegetarian diet. There are probably as many emotionally dysfunctional canines on meat-based diets as there are on vegetarian foods. The cause is most likely the result of sharing space with upright creatures that have a talent for disrupting the normalcy of nature. – Dr. Phil Brown BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 45 on the radio Pets, People, Personalities Best Friends Radio, which airs weekly on stations around the country, features news, call-ins, interviews, and round-table discussion. Check www.animalradio.com for a station near you, or listen online. In recent shows, we talked with some experts on emotions, morality, and personality in the animal world. Here are a few excerpts: When Fido Plays Marc Bekoff, Ph.D. is professor of biology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His main areas of research include animal behavior and the study of animal minds. He has published over 175 papers and 15 books, including his latest book, Minding Animals. You say that from all the scientific study and work youʼve done, animals definitely have a sense of morality. Certainly dogs and cats, and a lot of mammals. I developed that idea by looking at the way they play with one another, how they negotiate the agreements to play rather than to mate or fight or eat one another. Why are you so interested in the way dogs play together? In dogs and other canines, we see the play bow. She crouches on her forelimbs with her butt up in the air, may wag her tail, may bark. A play bow is a classic play-soliciting signal. So when my dog bows to another dog, heʼs saying, “I want to play with you!” And if theyʼre playing and heʼs going to bite the other dog, he might bow his head first, as if to say, “Iʼm sorry. Iʼm going to bite you now, but this is still play.” And we found that they also follow up a bite with a bow, as if to say, “Iʼm sorry I bit you so hard.” Like I might come up and meet you and slap you on the back, and Iʼm being friendly. But you think Iʼm really pushing it, 46 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 and I might back off for a moment and say, “Oh, Iʼm sorry. Didnʼt mean to hit you so hard.” Precisely. If I run up to you and push you and say, “Hello!” you might get upset. But if I walk up to you in a loose gait, what they call a gamboling approach, you would have a different response. Thereʼs also something called self-handicapping. Youʼve seen a dog or a cat bite a friend much less intensely than they could. And thereʼs role reversal, when a dominant animal rolls over and plays subordinate. A dominant animal would never roll over or allow himself to be chased, if it were not in the context of play. Like a German shepherd who rolls over and allows himself to be attacked by a Yorkshire terrier! Exactly! And the neat thing we do is look at video frame by frame. It can take a week or two to just look at five minutes of play. We look at the subtle interactions that occur between the animals, and we find similar patterns – not only in domestic dogs, but also in wolves and in coyotes. So this negotiating seem to go across the different species of the members of the dog family. What are you setting out to teach people about animals? First, that animals can be very complex individuals, and that if we really want to appreciate and understand how they behave and how they live, we need to pay attention to the details. Second, that these animals have highly developed cognitive skills and emotional skills. They can also empathize with one another. Once we all begin to understand this, how might this affect the way we behave toward them? Well, the more we attribute to animals, the better we usually treat them. I actually think that that is ridiculous, because every life is valuable. But if we think an animal can empathize and that theyʼre feeling and sentient beings, then we tend to treat them better. Fido’s Personality Professor Sam Gosling of the University of Texas at Austin is a social psychologist whose studies include how personality traits are perceived and described in humans and other animals, such as hyenas, dogs, and cats. You can check out his personality tests at http://gosling.socialpsychology.org. How did you go about categorizing animalsʼ personalities? There are a number of different ways of assessing personality. One of the best is to simply ask people who know you well what youʼre like. For instance, if I wanted to know what your personality is like, Iʼd probably be well advised to go ask two or three people who know you really well, and ask them. So we applied that to dogs. We found people taking their dogs for a walk in the park. And first, we had the owner tell us what the dog is like and fill out a personality report on their dog. And in the second phase, we had another person, who knew that same dog very well, tell us what this dog was like. Then in the third phase, which was the most important really, we had the dog go to a dog park and engage in a broad range of activities, and have observers watch them and rate their personalities. The goal was to see if what the owners said about the dogs or the other persons knowing the dogs said about the dogs corresponded with what these new observers thought who had only seen the dogs performing these behaviors. Now if I get this right, there are basically four aspects to personality that you look for. Yes, there are four, and the first is the extrovert energy dimension, distinguishing lively active dogs from ones that kind of sit down or nap all day. Of course, all individuals show a bit of both behaviors, but they do vary from both ends of this dimension. Second, thereʼs affection versus aggression. In humans, itʼs called agreeableness. Next is what in dogs we call emotional reactivity. It distinguishes anxious, nervous dogs from ones that are more calm and placid. And finally, thereʼs the fourth dimension, which we call openness/intelligence. These are dogs that are intelligent and perform well, who are able to control their impulses and not pick up the dog biscuit if they are told not to, and so on. One of the big questions in the world of psychology is what they call nature versus nurture – how much we inherit our personality and how much of it is from what we learn. Well, in terms of humans, the research now is pretty conclusive that itʼs both. And thereʼs every reason to believe that itʼs the same in non-human animals, too. And we know that a dogʼs breed affects not only its physical characteristics but also its psychological traits, including personality. So Iʼm pretty certain itʼs a combination of both of these things. In the last few years, almost any remaining shred of notion that animals donʼt have consciousness and personality seems to be going by the board in science just generally. Is that true? Yes, thatʼs true. Thereʼs widespread evidence that animals have consciousness and emotions. Of course, in 1872, Darwin explicitly wrote about this in his book In Man and Animal. He was very clear about it, and most scientists would now acknowledge that there are emotions. And so we say, “Well, why not personality too?” How is this knowledge going to affect the way we see ourselves and each other and animals in general? I think itʼs taking away the barriers we humans have put between us and other animals. Itʼs a way of saying, “Look, although we might like to see ourselves as different, weʼre not quite as different.” And why should we be different? Weʼve all evolved from the same ancestors, and weʼve evolved to meet similar adaptive challenges. So it would be surprising if we were that different. Of course, there are differences, but weʼre not as different as we might like to think. It’s Not Fido, It’s You! Joel Gavriele-Gold, Ph.D., is a psychoanalyst and psychologist in private practice. He is the author of When Pets Come Between Partners, and answers readers’ questions periodically in Best Friends magazine. When we donʼt want to take a look at our own problems, itʼs very easy to drop our issues on our pets or somebody elseʼs pet as if it were the pet who is having the problem or making the problem. A young woman who came to see me had recently married. The only problem in her marriage was her husbandʼs dog, whom she had loved before, but now she found she couldnʼt stand the dog. I said, “Well, what was there not to stand?” She said, “He doesnʼt act like a dog. He sits and lies in front of the television all day. Heʼs not interested in going out. Heʼs not interested in other dogs. Heʼs not interested in playing. He doesnʼt care if he ever gets a treat. He just lies there.” So I asked her if the dog reminded her of anyone. After a minute or two, she started to cry, and said, “My father.” “What about your father?” “Well, my dad was a big CEO. He got caught in a crunch where he was forced into early retirement. Then he and my mom got a divorce. My dad got very depressed. He sat around in front of the television all day. He gave up golf. He wasnʼt interested in doing anything with his friends.” I pointed out that everything she was saying about her husbandʼs dog was what she was saying about her dad. I suggested she still had a whole bunch of unfinished business with her dad. So we agreed to have a number of sessions together and work on that. And that permitted the dog to go back to being a dog again. Are you saying that the dog actually became this way, or that he was probably that way all along, and she was just reading things into that? Well, the dog is a beautiful Irish setter. And as we all know, Irish setters just have to be beautiful; they donʼt have to do anything. The dog was the kind of dog who could just lie in front of the television all day. He was just being his kind of dog. So once sheʼd gotten over the problem from her point of view, the dog could just be the same way as he always was and … As he always was… just being a dog. So itʼs not a matter of finding out whatʼs going on with the animal. Itʼs a matter of finding out whatʼs going on with you. Well, first, of course, I always ask if theyʼve checked the animal out at the vet. But then, as I say, there are a number of different things you can look at in yourself, and ask some questions about yourself in terms of what your pet means to you, how you react to your pet. There are many tests in the book that people can take a look at. They help you redirect whatever the issue might be back into taking a look inside yourself, instead of dropping the issue on the pet. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 47 members & pets God’s Little Gift By Karen Franklin Z oe is my miracle. She came into my life when she was ten months old. A friend of mine, who manages a shelter in Louisiana, called me in tears over this darling little Shih Tzu. The shelter didnʼt have the funds to care for sick animals. I had been rescuing and rehoming little dogs for years and had taken many from them. Zoe had been adopted, but got sick the first day she went to her new home. Her new family took her to the vet, only to find out she had parvo. They were unable to afford the treatment – especially since there were no guarantees it would work. I readily agreed to take Zoe. I have a wonderful vet, Dr. Ricks, who treats all my rescues at discounts. Since parvo is very infectious to other dogs, I couldnʼt bring her home, so I took her directly to his clinic. Even though it was after hours, Dr. Ricks came to the clinic, as he had so many times before. We started her on medication and made her comfortable in a kennel and began the wait-and-see process. The following morning, I was there first thing and Zoe was doing better. She was unable to eat but was getting the nutrients she needed through an IV. After three days she was fine, and I bathed her and took her home. She began to eat but kept choking on her food and violently throwing up. I took her back to the clinic and again she stayed for a few days. She was so weak and only weighed three and a half pounds. When 48 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 she didnʼt improve and X-rays showed nothing, Dr. Ricks decided to do exploratory surgery. I am a vet assistant, so I scrubbed up to do it with him. We found some food blockages in her intestines and cleaned them out. We were hoping this was the problem and that it was fixed. Well, it wasnʼt. After a few days of trying to eat, choking, and violently throwing up, we X-rayed her throat only to find what looked like a mass. I feared I would lose this precious little girl. Fortunately, it was a clump of blocked food, which we removed. When we finished, she stopped breathing briefly, but Dr. Ricks was able to save her. He sent her home on a diet of liquefied canned dog food and several medications. He told me she would probably be like this for life and always need the meds. Poor little girl was hungry all the time and I fed her four times a day. I had to hold the bowl up so she didnʼt have to put her head down to eat. This seemed to alleviate the problem, but having several other dogs, it was hard keeping her from their food. Every time she got the smallest piece of hard food, she choked and vomited violently. I had no problem accepting the fact that she would always have special needs, and was more than happy to keep her as my own. I was in love with her by now anyway. What a loving little dog she was…and still is. After a few months of eating like this and getting more medicine on me than in her, something happened. Zoe got into the doggy playroom and went straight for a doggy biscuit left by another of my dogs. I panicked and ran after her but she had already eaten some of it. To my surprise she didnʼt choke, and continued eating the treat. Later that day, I cautiously gave her a few pieces of dry food to test her eating. She ate it like a little pig with no problem. I was thrilled and knew that God had given her one of his special miracles, and me too. I stopped all her medication and she continued to do great – no problem eating anything. When I told Dr. Ricks, he was as surprised as I was and couldnʼt believe she was eating everything and taking no medications at all. This was truly a miracle, with no medical explanation. Zoe is almost two now, and continues to be a normal little dog, full of life, and up for playing all day and night. Every night when I go to bed, I say a little prayer thanking God for her and for Dr. Ricks. When the going gets tough, the tough go shopping ...with the Best Friends credit card Thousands of members and supporters are using the Best Friends Credit Card. If you’re not one of them yet, please sign up. A half of one percent of the money you spend on purchases using the card is donated to Best Friends. There’s no cost to you and it’s a great benefit to the animals. Call or write Best Friends for more information. your mail STRAYS IN PUERTO RICO SCHOLASTIC SCANDAL The story about the five dogs experimented on and then destroyed at Tufts University broke my heart. I wrote to Tufts and told them how I felt. I also told them that in the past my family has contributed to their school, thinking it a fine educational facility, but as of the moment I read that article, however, those contributions have stopped. ALICE DAVIS BLACKSBURG, VA. As for some dogs dying to promote the health of others, years ago I took a philosophy course in which one of the “problems” the professor gave the class went something like this: Aliens from outer space have come to earth with a proposition. They have the ability to cure all illness and confer perfect health and harmony on humankind. And they only want one thing in return. We must give them a thousand children to take back to their planet, to be cooked and eaten as a delicacy. Will we say yes? Not surprisingly, no one in the class would agree to this bargain. The professor thus made his point that justice for many cannot be based upon injustice to a few. Somehow this teaching parable stayed with me over the years. I think the case for the dogs at Tufts is similar. DOLORES RICCIO WARWICK, R.I. The inhumane and unnecessary experiments as described in your article are unacceptable to many citizens of the USA, including citizens with a university research background. It is a bad sign when scientific experiments do not tolerate open communication. Is it possible for you to mention in the next issue of Best Friends the e-mail addresses of these individuals? I am not the only one who likes to speak up. FROUKJE BEYNEN, MD Re. Trouble in Paradise. On our last day in Puerto Rico, we stopped on the beach at Isla Verde to enjoy a little more time in the warm sunshine. While lying on the beach, we were visited by an extremely friendly female dog with a severe limp. Her leg appeared to have been broken. But her temperament had not been affected, and she walked up and down the beach happily greeting everyone. Normally, I would have tried to do something to help, but as it was a Sunday afternoon and my plane left within hours, I was unable to do anything at the time. On the plane ride home, the thought of this gentle, sweet dog limping and begging from strangers nagged at me. Immediately upon returning home, I got on my computer and discovered the organization Save-A-Sato at www.saveasato.org. (“Sato” translates to “mutt.”) The next day I received an e-mail from a volunteer there, asking for details. A day later, I got an e-mail from a volunteer who told me that they had rescued Isla, as she was named because of her location on Isla Verde. For several weeks, the volunteer sent me several updates on her progress, including photos. Islaʼs personality made her a bridge between frightened, scared dogs not used to people and to their human rescuers. While she lived with her rescuer and her leg healed, she helped several other rescued dogs come out of their shells. The last letter I received told me that she had been given a clean bill of health and I hope that she has found a home that suits her wonderful personality. I am indebted to those dedicated volunteers at Save-A-Sato. They really went above and beyond the call of duty. TEREZA MARKS NORTH BEACH, MD. FERAL PUPPIES We saw your article about the feral puppies (March 2004, pg. 32). We adopted/ rescued two such puppies at five months. They had never been on a leash, never been to a vet, never even been in a car. They had been locked in a basement with a door to the outside. Their owners threw food down the stairs for them. When we adopted them, they went through a very hard time getting to know us and adjust to a new loving home. When we took them to the vet for the first time, they were literally screaming. Today, 10 years later, they are happy, healthy, and terrific family members. All the work for socializing a feral dog was worth it! GEORGE & LAURIE STRAGAND LITTLETON, COLO. THE DICKIN MEDAL You identify the Dickin Medal, as awarded to Buster, the British Army dog, as the animal equivalent of the Purple Heart. It is, in fact, the animal equivalent of the Victoria Cross, which is the British equivalent of our Medal of Honor. Buster is the 60th recipient of this award, which was established in 1943. Three dogs from the U.S. have also received the Dickin Award for their gallantry during and after the 9-11 attacks. You can learn more about the Dickin Medal at www.pdsa.org.uk/pages/page01_ 13.cfm. REV. K. CHERIE JONES ATASCADERO, CALIF. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 49 your mail HMMMMMM I think you make a mistake embroiling the humming toadfish in the political process. (March 2004, Mysteries of Life) If the humming toadfishʼs voice muscles vibrate at 6,000/minute, thatʼs 100 Hertz, which is only two octaves (+) below middle A (440 Hz) – a pitch well within the vocal range of most human males. I thought the humming sound was supposed to be very deep. No? This looks like a major journalistic error to me, requiring, at the least, a retraction and an apology to the handsome fish, who are evidently deeper than you have given them credit for being. Demonizing the toadfish? Fair enough in an election year, I suppose. But next youʼll be quoting a toadfish as saying “Itʼs the humans thatʼs supposed to suffer, not the toadfish.” This would add insult to injury. Surely we can expect more humane thinking and better grammar from a toadfish than from Mr. B. Remember, you donʼt want to anger the fish too much, or theyʼll be humming us all into insomnia, just as the human politicians “ahem” us into deep slumber. TOM KIRSHBAUM FLAGSTAFF, ARIZ. It was actually the universe, or more precisely a black hole, in yet an earlier report, that hums at depths more profound than a toadfish – deeper even than James Earl Jones announcing that “This ... is CNN.” Of course, maybe the universe itself is a toadfish – and we but its tiny cells, living only to sing its praises, two octaves below middle A, when it goes in search of parallel toadfish universes during the cosmic mating season, humming, perhaps, to the sweet strains of harmonious string theory. Hmmm. ELEPHANTS IN KENYA Olly the elephant has been flown to the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Kenya, where they have the room and decades of experience to raise orphaned elephants. Your readers can learn more about him and his move to Kenya at www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org. Unfortunately, most of the orphans are there because their mothers and families were poached for their tusks. You also wrote about the Maasai who are working on saving their lands by focusing on wildlife and tourism. You mentioned how tourists have been staying away from Kenya because of travel warnings. I was there last August to study black rhinos (at the height of the travel warnings), and had no problems whatsoever. Security in Kenya is tighter than anything Iʼve seen here in the U.S. I never felt unsafe. Of course it is a developing country and has a high rate of street crime, so normal precautions are essential, but no one in our group ever had any problems. The Kenyan people are extremely friendly and love Americans. Anyone thinking of visiting Kenya should do it. Seeing the Mommy keeps me supplied with lots of toys and, as you can see, I take them all into my bed. MARILYN, STEVE, HARLEY, BLONDIE & LULU APELMAN S. SETAUKET, N.Y. 50 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 wildlife in its natural habitat is amazing! After seeing rhinos or massive elephants munching grass by the side of the road itʼs hard to imagine how someone could kill them just for their horns or tusks. DANETTE BORG SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ANTIFREEZE Antifreeze tastes sweet to children and animals. A teaspoon or less kills. Many thousands of animals and hundreds of children die each year from swallowing antifreeze. There is an embittering agent, denatonium benzoate, that can be added to antifreeze to deter children and animals from eating it. It costs only 2-3 cents to add enough deterrent to a gallon of antifreeze. A national legislation pending, H.R. 1563, requires addition of an embittering agent. A few states and cities already have a similar legislation. Unfortunately, all legislation exempts the 55-gallon commercial containers, fearing that the antifreeze manufacturers would resist the bill if the 55-gallon containers were required to contain the additive. Please call the national Congressional switchboard, (202) 224-3121, and speak with your representative in support of H.R. Bill 1563, the antifreeze bill. Also e-mail the same person at www.house.gov to express your support. Ask them to include 55-gallon containers in the legislation. KATE JEWEL SANTA FE, N.M. When I let Sable in, she runs back out and grabs a leaf, or rock, and wonʼt give it to me unless I give her a treat. Iʼm 81, a widow of 11 years after a beautiful 51 years of marriage, and Sable is a blessing in my life. BETTY COMBS COLUMBUS, OHIO KITTEN FOR MOM? Re. Dr. Goldʼs advice in his March 2004 column supporting the idea of a Kitten for Mom. Any of us that have had kittens know the unending energy they have as they climb the curtains and constantly get into mischief. My mother is in her 70ʼs and my mother-in-law is 80. I would be very concerned that a kitten would get underfoot. If an elderly person falls or trips, it can be a serious health risk, with breaking bones, etc. Sometimes circumstances simply donʼt allow you to bring another pet into your household when your mother passes away. Cats can easily live for up to 20 years. We owe it to them to give them the most stable environment we can. They are not toys to be passed from person to person. The kindest thing that “Daughter Knows Best” can do is to go with her initial thought, which was to have her mom adopt an older cat that needed a home. Older cats are perfectly suited to quietly give their elderly person all the love, affection, and companionship that they both need. BONNIE A. TROWBRIDGE CLAVERACK, N.Y. QUOTH THE RAVEN, “PAR FOUR!” I popped my (yellow) ball onto the green, about 20 feet from the pin. A big black crow came down from out of nowhere, landed beside my ball, and looked at me as if to say, “I saw you putting on the last green and you could use a little help.” Then, to the surprise and dismay of my opponents, he started knocking it toward the hole with his beak, leaving me a makeable putt and a big argument and perusal of the rule book by the other golfers. Donʼt tell me these birds donʼt know who the animal lovers are! DONALD B. BROWN TORRANCE, CALIF. More than once, my cat Mojo, who was adopted from the local SPCA as a kitten, is the one thing that has kept me alive and going. I so love what you all have built at Best Friends. If you did not exist, I may not have met Mojo. No More Homeless Pets has spread everywhere. As more and more SPCAs adopt “no-kill” policies, more Mojos are there to be adopted. God bless you all! MERIANNE BARRY SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. Good news! Samantha the bear and her cubs survived the hunt. She came back extra early this year. I think she was letting me know sheʼs fine and healthy! SUSAN KEHOE HIGHLAND LAKES, N.J. Letters & Photos Photos intended for publication must be addressed to Best Friends magazine, not simply to the sanctuary. Letters sent by e-mail and intended for publication must include your name and address. While there is only limited space in the magazine, many of the photos sent in each month appear in the Members & Pets section of the Best Friends website at www.bestfriends.org. We were very happy to visit Best Friends and volunteer with the cats for the day. We regret that our cats Noodle and Taco were not able to make the trip. Both have always wanted to be a part of Best Friends, but their biggest ambition has been to appear in the official Best Friends magazine. VIRGINIA BOWEN & LONNIE TURNER HAGERSTOWN, MD. Gizmo (age 15+) showed up covered in ice on Christmas 1991. Koko, a stray, was adopted in 1997 as a companion for Gizmo when our older dog and cat passed away. MARILYNN WALSH LAND Oʼ LAKES, FLA. Susan and Samantha met in Susanʼs backyard in 2001. Every spring the bear brings her cubs to visit. Susanʼs blueberry bushes are a favorite treat. But the bear hunt in New Jersey has put Samanthaʼs life in danger, but so far, so good. More information is at www.savenjbears.com. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 51 sweet memories A Grey Angel Flies Home By Barbara Williamson “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” K – Hebrews 13:2 itty-Boy has been “tucked in” for the long nightʼs sleep at Best Friendsʼ pet cemetery, Angels Rest. His courageous battle against a legion of ailments is over. Kitty-Boy was a grey long-haired stray cat, a shadow who came out of the Ohio woods and gave the people who befriended him the gift of becoming a force for good. He was at Best Friends for only a few months, but everyone who met Kitty-Boy found him to be compelling, the essence of love. “There was just something spiritual about him; he got to everybody,” said Willis Payne, who along with his wife, Debbie, rescued Kitty-Boy when he showed up at their home in Bellefontaine, Ohio, in June 2003. “You were in his presence, and he made you feel good. He made you want to reach inside yourself and try to make a difference,” Debbie said. Debbie and Willis took him to the vet and found out the many health problems Kitty-Boy faced: He had feline leukemia and FIV, was diabetic and had liver, urinary tract, and respiratory problems. They already had two rescued cats and could not keep him at their house. Their vet recommended euthanasia. But Debbie and Willis knew this lovable cat was not ready to cross the Rainbow Bridge. Debbie had seen a Best Friends newsletter, so she reached out for help and talked with Best Friendsʼ Gloria Hill. “Gloria was very supportive and gave me many resources. She told me cats like Kitty-Boy can live good lives with proper care from people who understand these conditions,” Debbie said. 52 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 Debbie, who had never used a computer, now learned about email. A friend helped her develop a website to help spread the word about this special cat. And when they still couldnʼt find the right home for Kitty-Boy, he was accepted at Best Friends. His caregivers at the sanctuary were deeply impressed with how affectionate he was, regardless of his illnesses. Now, the legacy of Kitty-Boyʼs life is that he is helping other cats with special needs. The website http://classicx.homestead.com/Samson02.html, which was developed originally in hopes of finding Kitty-Boy a home, gets more than 1,200 hits per day. Several special-needs animals have found homes through his website. And many people have found the strength and the wisdom they need to keep their ailing animals rather than euthanizing them or abandoning them at shelters. “I believe there are animal angels sent to help us, and Kitty-Boy was one,” Debbie said. “He stayed alive because he had a mission. He had to get to Best Friends. He had to get the message out about special-needs kitties.” In the end, the one thing Kitty-Boy couldnʼt survive was cancer. On the overcast day when he was buried, Willis and several people from Best Friends fondly remembered his brave spirit. One of the dogs, Faith, who loves cats, also attended, gently kissed Kitty-Boy good night, and buried a rawhide bone next to the grave. As soon as Kitty-Boy was laid to rest, the sun broke through the clouds. B e kind to animals, Be kind to trees, Be kind to the earth and everything on it, Be kind to children and one another, …and God will be kind to you. And thatʼs a promise! Signed, GOD Hobo: The house is so quiet without you; I still expect to hear you barking every time I come home. You were a dear and precious friend. I was blessed to have had you, if only for half your life. I miss you and love you, but I know there are no thunderstorms in heaven to scare you. Alecia Williams, Rocky, Joe and Bugger Beaufort, N.C. Jones: I remember Jones as the mighty huntress of the wild Q-Tip; the one who met me at the door each day to lead me to the food dish, in case I forgot the way; the one who fought congestive heart failure, only to have osteosarcoma take her. With love… Uno: You were my buddy and friend from the day you were born. I will remember you always – your cute face, velvet paws and golden eyes that changed color with the sun. You were my “sun boy” and my “gray man.” Thank you for all the times we had together. Nancy Huntoon Reston, Va. Katie: Our sweet little “bug.” You left us far too soon. You were a once in a lifetime gift. You blessed each of us with your perfect love and gentle nature. Thank you for enriching our lives. You will be loved and cherished always as we hold you forever in our hearts. The Ockuly family Toledo, Ohio Kathy Hays Eugene, Oreg. Ms. Iggy: Every day, Iʼd say to you, “Ms. Iggy is the most beautiful iguana in all the world.” Even though you have left us, itʼs still true. Rest in peace, beautiful girl. We love you and miss you. Patti and Michael Wiggins Howell, N.J. Your memorial notices and donations to the sanctuary are deeply appreciated. We publish all memorials on the Best Friends website and send you a copy. Once placed, no name, no memorial, is ever removed. Here in the magazine, “Sweet Memories” is a selection of those memorials: photos, poems, and stories of your most memorable moments with a pet who has passed over the Rainbow Bridge. So please send in your funny stories and anecdotes, your memories, and your memorials. Include a photo, too, if you have one. And if you’d like your best friend to rest in the peace and beauty of our memorial park here at Angel Canyon, or you would like a special memorial placed in his or her name, please write or call for information. Mechelle Miller and Smith Rochester, Minn. Sarah: My walking partner and best friend for 141/2 years. Thanks for sharing your life with me. Youʼll be with Norman and Tommy now – theyʼll be so happy to see you. Iʼll always love you and will see you again. Angels Rest Wheatoe: My sweet little girl, I miss you terribly! You were always there with me, following me to any room, just to keep me company. We had a good life together, 21 years, and I wish you peace, happiness and a warm lap until we meet again. Stephanie Ball Santa Barbara, Calif. MoJo: My beloved companion of 10 years. “As it is, the time we had is worth the time alone, and lying by your side, the greatest peace Iʼve ever known.” Thank you and bless you. Angels Rest Best Friends Animal Sanctuary Kanab, Utah 84741 [email protected] (435) 644-2001, ext. 118 Elizabeth Fenley Greensboro, N.C. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 53 on the light side Soon to Star in an NBC Reality Show held as a fundraiser at the Helen Woodward Animal Center and hosted by the Del Mar, California, Kiwanis Club. Although there were also “cutest” contests – cutest costume, cutest dog, cutest dog that looks like its cutest owner – the big prize of the day went to the homely among us. Having won the contest for the third year running, Hoss has become somewhat of a celebrity ugly dog. His shortened snout is a condition that afflicts many dogs, and most are euthanized because of it. Beauty, however, is in the eye of the beholder. His person, Mike Fournier, confesses a little befuddlement at why his dog keeps winning the prize. “Weʼre proud heʼs won the title three times but Iʼm surprised because I think heʼs cute.” against what? The most likely explanation is that the vehicleʼs red color is triggering the birdʼs aggression. The postman believes the bird thinks he is a giant pheasant, which it “has got to see off.” Whatever the cause, the bird is clearly obsessed with both the man and his van. The postman runs the gauntlet every day along a 50-yard country lane where he delivers the mail to a farm at one end and a cottage at the other. No matter what he tries, he canʼt avoid the bitter bird. Sometimes when he sneaks along, the pheasant changes tactics by hiding or cutting corners to get ahead of him and ensure a confrontation. Run, Postman! Run! Heʼs plain and heʼs proud of it. Hoss, a 10-year-old black Lab/basset mix with a short snout and an underbite that makes his bottom teeth protrude prominently like a barracuda, beat off all competitors to take the title of Ugliest Dog. The 9th Annual Ugly Dog Contest was An English postman is finding his rounds a little tough going these days. He is repeatedly assaulted by a jealous pheasant. The bird lies in wait for the postal van and then attacks without warning. So far, the mailman has suffered injury to his hand and leg. But the cheeky pheasant hasnʼt stopped there. Heʼs tried to sneak into the postal van, hiding out for his moment of revenge. But Their Food Bowls Runneth Over! The world’s richest animals are scampering around with fortunes bequeathed by millionaires who thought their money was best left to their pets. A new report puts Gunther IV (the son of Gunther III) at the top of the well-heeled list. The lucky German shepherd acted as companion to German countess Karlotta Libenstein. When she passed away, Gunther III was left $110 million. But shrewd investments have tripled that sum, and when Gunther passed, his son inherited the big bucks – along with his own butler. That kind of moolah makes poor Hellcat and Brownie’s fortune appear quite paltry. They landed a mere $3 million apiece from their person. But it’s not only cats and dogs who are winning the pocket books. The second wealthiest pet is a chimp, Kalu, who inherited $97 million – and perhaps a little bit of a scandal. His person, Patricia O’Neill, changed her will to bequeath the money to Kalu while her husband was away from home competing in the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Then there’s Gigoo, the hen. Her person wanted to make sure she got more than chicken feed and left her over $18 million after his wife had died. Even some of the British Royals have thought of their animals. The Queen Mother made provisions in her will for her 48-strong herd of Aberdeen Angus cattle and a flock of 100 Cheviot sheep to the tune of $368 million. But not all of the world’s richest animals are merely playboy (or girl) pets. Some actually work for a living. Moose (more commonly known as Eddie) of Frasier TV-show fame racks up a cool $11,000 per episode and has amassed a $3.3 million fortune. That’s a lot of dog bones. 54 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 how it would help identify the birds. This seemed a little quirky to the cops but they had nothing to lose and so issued an appeal for the public to be on the lookout for any avian whistling Laurel and Hardy. An anonymous tipster promptly called to say he had heard the distinctive music coming from a house. The birds were recovered and two people were arrested for the theft. riding every day to avoid muscle cramps, so she trained under a jockey just to be able to handle him. There were some concerns about the neighbors, but so far, other than the odd complaint objecting to late-night neighing, the horse seems to be co-existing peacefully with the neighbors. There Goes the Neigh… borhood! Free At Last, They Whistled the Theme from Cops Sometimes it pays to teach your animal new tricks. Eight stolen cockatiels were rescued by police after someone heard them whistling the Laurel and Hardy theme song. The birds had lived in an aviary and had developed a habit of whistling the song after any new addition arrived. One bird, who had been taught the tune, started the practice and pretty soon he had half the flock singing along. So when the birds were stolen, their person told the police about the song and An Indian couple has moved out of their apartment to give their horse some room. The couple moved into his parentsʼ home next door so the horse could have the house to himself. They explained that the apartment was only a one-bedroom, and with the horse standing at over 5 feet in height, he wasnʼt getting enough leg space to trot around when sharing with two roommates. The female half of the duo says that the horse, called Akash, needs to be taken out Pamper Your Pets ... Or Else! Itʼs not enough to simply meet their basic needs. Pet people in Reggio Emilia, Italy, must pamper their dogs, cat and birds (and even show some mercy to lobsters) or face up to $500 in fines. Dog owners must provide sufficiently spacious doghouses with ample shade; you can no longer dye your animalsʼ fur (this was presumably for those people who wanted their pet to match the décor); and canary owners must provide a significant other for their birds, lest they get lonely. BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004 55 ...And They All Live Happily Ever After “ Hi, I’m Wilson, one of the dogs here at Best Friends, and this is my story. I was going to be sold to a laboratory for experiments. At least, I think I was. Iʼd been captured by a man in Arkansas who sold dogs to all kinds of places, including laboratories. Yuck – I donʼt think I would have liked that! There were hundreds of dogs like me, all crammed into tiny spaces while we were waiting to be sold. It was so sad, you had to be there to believe it. But then we got a lucky break: a federal bust, no less! It had been set in motion by an organization called Last Chance for Animals, and we were all set free and placed in rescue groups all around the country. I got to come to Best Friends! I really like it here. Iʼm a shy guy, but Iʼm starting to make friends. I hope some day I might even get to have a home of my own. So thatʼs my story. It started out a bit sad, but thanks to the wonderful people like you who support Best Friends, Iʼm living “happily ever after.” ” God bless you. 5001 ANGEL CANYON ROAD • KANAB, UTAH 84741-5001 (435) 644-2001 • www.bestfriends.org 56 BEST FRIENDS MAGAZINE May/June 2004