Monday, January 25, 2021

Insecure about these possible insecurities


I look at our beloved cats, Harry and Billy, and wonder how I’d feel and what I’d do if we couldn’t afford to feed them.  Then I consider what we’d do if threatened with eviction from our home-for-four.  What, in other words, could we do about both food insecurity and home insecurity?

Both conditions are very much in the media right now, with the very real pet-food problem likely to become part of homelessness as both the pandemic and unemployment rage on.  What months ago were heartwarming stories about people adopting shelter animals in droves have now become ominous stories about their inability to feed and shelter those same animals. 

When I wrote about food insecurity here on November 18, I included a few suggestions for both people and their pets with food insecurity (because of course they're linked).  That post includes a number of ideas from the ASPCA, ranging from finding area food pantries and asking local shelters and vets for ideas, to checking supermarkets and pet stores for food samples and coupons.

I’ve also received messages from HSUS about combatting this growing problem so animals will not have to be surrendered to shelters.  People are struggling, HSUS says, to provide food and other resources for their pets during this difficult time.  Happily, though, its “Pets for Life” program works across the country to provide critical services like delivering pet food and supplies, and providing veterinary care to animals in need.

By now, however, nearly a year into the pandemic and economic crises, the added challenge has become housing for both people and their pets.  “Eviction” is the big black cloud hanging over countless Americans without jobs or the means to pay rent.  Evicted from their homes, people can find it very difficult to find new places to live that also allow, if not welcome, their pets. 

The fact is that anti-pet policies, especially for lower-income renters, prevail in this country, suggesting that those who are evicted may have to choose between their home and their pets.  (Ahead of financial difficulties, housing is the second most common reason people surrender pets to shelters, HSUS notes.)

It’s very hard to find rental housing that permits pets – often with all kinds of fees on top of basic costs that in themselves can be hard enough to pay.  Even though an estimated 72% of renters own pets, until 2006, there were virtually no laws protecting them in times of crisis -- and many more laws are still needed.  

So now, many of the same “family member pets" who boosted people’s mental health during the pandemic will be in peril if their owners are evicted and must choose between them and another home.  https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/19/realestate/rentals-evictions-pets.html?searchResultPosition=1

Tips for animals in winter

My latest mailing from the ASPCA includes at least three timely winter tips for pet owners and animal lovers: (1) ice melt toxicity in pets; (2) four tips for sheltering community cats in winter (use foam coolers and straw, not blankets!); and (3) a winter watch-outs infographic (keep those handwarmers out of pet-reach!).   

https://email.aspcapro.org/your-primer-on-ice-melt-toxicity-in-pets-%EF%B8%8F-1?ecid=ACsprvte-OHxmWNGG-8G0_WblynpnfJmu7t6fuKpJYOEidMusnEudKVnMLz3QP7K4Lpd1FoGjo-k&utm_campaign=Tox%20Insider&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=105952082&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_XcbeTKxtgXs0kgWJjprFV8V_WrQC2VlzedwE_COUEiSt120F-nrEp6-tx_zmfe3dDDWguC0SC4rEBqKrCwb5JRTPJXw&utm_content=105805715&utm_source=hs_email

Recommended reading

With thanks to an animal-friendly reference librarian, these two “book briefs” suggest ways to while away the time on a cold winter’s night. 

(1)       When Harry Met Minnie, by Martha Teichner.  The CBS correspondent tells how she and her bull terrier Minnie met Carol, a dying woman with a bull terrier named Harry, who would soon need a new home.  The book describes how it all came to pass. 

(2)       Lost Companions: Reflections on the Death of Pets, by Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson.  It’s horrible but it happens: the death of a loved pet.  Suggesting how to help dying pets and how to memorialize them, Masson discusses the need to mourn our nonhuman family members.

Pet's Ideal World, Part 1

                                                                                                    Dodo pic

Part 2

                                                                                                      Getty pic


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Thursday, January 14, 2021

Rioting humans made animals look even better

Besides inflammatory chants, signs, flags and clothes, some brought weapons or improvised them.  Or threatened legislators and beat up police officers.  Or invaded and desecrated a building sacred to democracy.  Or caused extensive property damage.  Or tried to overturn crucial Congressional action underway on January 6.  Ultimately, these law-breaking rioters caused the deaths of five people.

Possibly never since the Civil War has Walt Whitman (1819-1892) been so on target:

I think I could turn and live with animals, they are so placid and
self-contain'd,
I stand and look at them long and long.

They do not sweat and whine about their condition,
They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,
They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,
Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of
owning things,
Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of
years ago,
Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth. 

--Walt Whitman

As far as I’m concerned, when one person calls another person an animal, that’s a compliment.  And the current definition of “animalistic” – wholly negative – deserves a positive rewrite, one much closer to its current antonym!

Mink murders                                                                           

Washington Post pic
Since last year, I’ve avoided mentioning the fate of minks in Denmark.  It’s very ugly.  Remember that first it was bats, then various other animals “daubed with the brush” of connection with Covid-19 – either as carriers or as creatures who could catch it. 

Minks have long been raised in Denmark’s barbaric fur farms to be brutally (but oh so carefully) murdered for their fur.  In fact, Denmark is the world’s largest producer of pelts.  But when a mutated strain of the coronavirus was found in the animals, that pelt goal was superseded by fear that minks might transmit the disease.

 At that point, the prime minister called for a mink cull, so mass murder ensued: wholesale slaughter of minks (15 million estimated), followed by their “burial” in shallow mass graves.  Then reason – and fear – resurfaced: officials wondered whether they had acted too fast.  And people grew apprehensive about whether the millions of dead minks, then resurfacing, might infect the ground and drinking water. 

Guardian pic

A murderous mess, right?  Nor is it the first time humans have wiped out animals, including pets, from fear.  Yes, these minks were slated to die by other means, but. . .  the fur industry is another story, coming soon.  https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/denmark-mink-coronavirus-zombie-/2020/12/17/1f8cb00e-3bea-11eb-aad9-8959227280c4_story.html?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_most&carta-url=https%3A%2F%2Fs2.washingtonpost.com%2Fcar-ln-tr%2F2d

Lasso the loose llama!

Gizmo, who recently moved from Indiana to New York State, ran away from his new home and caught people’s attention near and far.  Or, from the article about the errant llama, “In this moment of unfathomable worry, of airborne plagues and economic ruin, the opportunity to fret over a lost llama became its own kind of balm.” 

BBC pic
And “fret” they did, too.  The myriad ways that myriad people tried to find the llama included infrared drones, search parties, a lasso and hundreds of “lost llama” posters.  The  lasso worked first, thanks to a Guatemalan cowboy-turned groundskeeper.  He roped Gizmo’s BF llama, Sandman, before he got very far. 

But despite all efforts and a mix of weather that included a nor’easter, Gizmo remained elusive for more than two weeks, starting Dec. 13.  Finally, a person who saw the poster and had seen the llama broke the case, and Gizmo was retrieved about a mile from home. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/01/nyregion/missing-llama-westchester.html?campaign_id=2&emc=edit_th_20210102&instance_id=25588&nl=todaysheadlines&regi_id=20760274&segment_id=48210&user_id=a360dad7b26df61ea65737080d3deedd


                                  Gizmo & Sandman                                                            Jones-NYT pic

Yum!?

OK, kids, get into your jammies if you want to have your Doggy Desserts!  What’ll it be: pumpkin with cookies or peanut butter with pretzels?   https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddrink/video/ben-jerry-s-releases-ice-cream-for-dogs/vi-BB1cHa3R?ocid=mailsignout

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Tuesday, January 5, 2021

2021 good news & a continuing threat

Welcome back!  Here’s to 2021 and every possible good thing.

And on that subject, here’s a great thing: a message on behalf of animals who need vet care – a message so wonderful, it should attract millions of donor dollars to aid this eminently worthy cause. 


The call came in at 5:51 pm on Friday, December 11. 
Janine, our programs director, was still in the office. “Can you help?,” the caller asked, while crying. She was sitting in her car in a veterinary hospital parking lot with her dying cat. He had a urinary tract blockage - a life-threatening condition. Romeo had been examined by the vet, but nothing was done because she did not have the money. Instead, they brought him back out to her car. Her son was crying, she was distraught and Romeo was surely going to die. Then she found Animal Protection League of New Jersey.

She had learned of another hospital that was still open and would see her. Would APLNJ be able to pay the bill? If our Veterinary Bill Assistance Fund was empty, we would not have been able to say: Absolutely! Once there the vet immediately put a catheter in to allow urine to pass.

 Romeo spent four days in the hospital until he was able to pass urine on his own. He’s been home now for 12 days and his mom says he’s doing great!

When Janine told me about this, I knew we had to tell you this positive story. Because of YOU Romeo’s life was saved! This is one example of your donation at work. Your support is life-saving and we know Romeo would agree!

 If you’d like to see that our Veterinary Bill Assistance Fund will always be available, so that we may be able to help others like Romeo, please click below.

 Thank you! 


Signed by Angi Metler, Executive Director of the Animal Protection League of NJ (aplnj.org), this message had gone out to those on the organization’s mailing list, and it prompted both generous contributions and responses such as  

  • how could a veterinarian be so cruel as to withhold treatment for lack of money?
  • was that vet's refusal to provide lifesaving help a breach of professional ethics?  
  • so much for "24/7 emergency service"! 

Programs director Janine Motta handles the requests for help with vet bills.  They arrive regularly -- especially now, during ongoing pandemic and economic crises.  She dreads ever having to tell a pet owner APL can't be of help because there are no funds available.   

 

People with pets know ensuring their good health can be expensive.  To help those who can’t handle vet bills right now – to help all the other Romeos out there! -- please donate to APL’s Veterinary Bill Assistance Program (VBAP).  It’s easy to do; just click here: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=B74TL9ELP8J8Y

 

True Christmas miracle  

“One plant worker saw something abnormal: a moving, crying backpack.”  Three kittens had been stuffed inside and discarded in a Burlington County recycle bin.  

Sonny, 1 of 3 saved kittens 
The two girls and one boy then survived the recyc truck’s compressors and a trip through some of the plant’s heavy-duty sorting machinery, including a wheel designed to break down recyclables.  Only then was their (oddly-behaving) backpack spotted by Barrie Donaldson, a plant employee – and hero.

Checked out and judged to be OK, the three kittens were soon adopted.  Light a candle to St. Gertrude of Nivelles, the patron saint of cats?  https://whyy.org/articles/miracle-kittens-found-in-backpack-rescued-from-n-j-recycling-plants-conveyor-belt/

Mutually harmful

Covid-19 relief may be coming, but more viruses are sure to follow as humans continue to destroy habitat, maintain notorious wet markets and consume wild animals.  Links to earlier articles by David Quammen on this subject have appeared here; this is his latest: “The Virus, the Bats and Us.”  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/11/opinion/covid-bats.html?campaign_id=39&emc=edit_ty_20201211&instance_id=24934&nl=opinion-today&regi_id=20760274&segment_id=46651&te=1&user_id=a360dad7b26df61ea65737080d3deedd

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