Tuesday, March 31, 2009

An insect’s antics make good therapy

For an ant, a twig makes a handy bridge.


My previous post on the birds' nest I spotted near the ceiling of the Budget rental car kiosk inspired Shelly Patton of Louisiana SPCA in New Orleans to write her own ode to nature. A quirky afternoon with an anthill in formation made me smile. She saw power in this little insect. He instinctively knew he needed to work hard to ensure survival. Humans need to be taught this skill, and we all know some people who never learn it.

In watching the mesmerizing display, Shelly was finally able to escape the all-consuming, mind-altering state that characterized survivors of Hurricane Katrina. When the fatal wake receded, not even grass was left growing. The toxic floodwater had eaten every scrap of vegetation away.

The ant meant life was returning to a place that had died for a time.

Shelly's just quit smoking, so she's feeling a bit challenged lately. We all know what it feels like to leave a vice behind. Painful and distressing. I have a feeling she'll be searching out another anthill sometime soon.

Ant photos taken by Ginger Schell Morvant.


Just a quiet afternoon swinging from the grass blades.


A note by Shelly Patton

Carreen, when you wrote you had watched the birds for almost an hour, I remembered one beautiful summer afternoon when I watched a large red ant dig a new tunnel. He was only a few inches into his work when I chanced upon him.

This ant was fascinating in his movements and abilities. He toiled alone, going in the tunnel with nothing more than a goal and coming out with a huge piece of dirt he threw casually onto a mound he was building to the side. I watched for a long time, lying on my stomach, at eye level with the ant. At one point, I guiltily caved in his tunnel only to have my admiration of him grow beyond that of most humans I know. This red ant quickly cleared his tunnel, the dirt flying out in little puffs of dust and debris.

The ant continued as if nothing had happened. He dug deeper and deeper. Each time he went into the tunnel, it took longer for him to return to the opening with his laborious load. I wondered if he connected with another tunnel, because I waited and he never returned.

The next morning the ant was gone, as was any evidence of his tunnel. I think the dogs may have sniffed out what interested me and disrupted his work beyond repair.

Watching this ant happened only months after Hurricane Katrina shattered my world. It was a time when slowing my mind wasn't an easy thing to do, but that ant did it.

The point is, in the past few weeks, I haven't been able to slow myself. I have been racing around running from feelings of anxiety and the frustrations gripping me. On reflection, I feel very similar to the first many months after Katrina. Your post reminded me of an avenue to relief I had forgotten. Nature.

Genesis Awards harness star power to save animals

Portia de Rossi and Ellen DeGeneres strut their stuff on the red carpet. Photo courtesy of HSUS.

When you make a career in show business, creating a fantasy becomes your reality.

But this past Saturday, it wasn't make-believe that took center stage at the 23rd annual Genesis Awards in Beverly Hills. Animal cruelty and neglect grabbed the spotlight when celebrities, directors, writers and producers were honored by the Humane Society of United States.

America's largest animal welfare organization handed out 20 awards for films, television programs and news stories that raised public awareness of animal issues. The biggest honor of the night went to Ellen DeGeneres and her partner Portia de Rossi, who accepted the Wyler Award together for spreading the word on the inhumane treatment of factory farm animals. DeGeneres spoke to viewers of her talk show about Proposition 2, which addresses the issue in California.

"This stuff haunts me now," DeGeneres said.

As the star-studded crowd began to arrive at the Beverly Hilton hotel, uninvited bystanders crowded against the velvet ropes with cameras in hand, hoping to get a glimpse of the noteworthy parading past on the red carpet. The eclectic crowd featured big-name stars mingling with hard-core animal activists.

But the most popular celebrity was one who strolled in on four legs, not two. It was Clyde, the dog who starred in the hit film Marley and Me with Jennifer Aniston and Owen Wilson. He stood to the side of the red carpet and enthusiastically greeted everyone who walked by, even giving my face a friendly lick when I kneeled down to pet him. It was better than an autograph.

This was my second year attending the event that's held in the same massive ballroom used to host the Golden Globes. Guests nibbled on a delectable vegan meal of artichoke salad, tasty soy protein with black rice, and a rich chocolate mousse dessert.

"I called myself an animal lover, and I ate them," DeGeneres told the crowd. "It really is so much easier to say, ‘I can't think about it - I don't want to know about it - it's horrible' - and when we finally took the time to force ourselves to look at the reality of the lives of these poor animals, you can't ignore it. You can't say, ‘Yeah, but I want a cheeseburger so badly. I don't want to look at that."

The footage that rolled as the nominees were announced was gut-wrenching to watch. At every table, tears flowed down perfectly coiffed cheeks. Some guests had to step out when the images got to be too much.

The clips spared no tender hearts. A has-been racehorse was killed at a slaughterhouse. The tape cut to another that lay dying in the mud. Abused elephants were beaten and chained until they performed tricks for a circus crowd. A whale was massacred in the ocean, its blood staining the seawater bright red. Factory farmed pigs and chickens were miserably crowded into tiny cages, unable to enjoy basic behaviors like standing up or spreading their wings.

DeGeneres wasn't the only talk show queen to win a prize for speaking out against the atrocities. The Oprah Winfrey Show also garnered an award, picking up the outstanding talk show accolade for reports on factory farming, puppy mills and dog fighting. Another big win was for Walt Disney Pictures' Bolt, in the feature film category. The Academy-Award nominated movie reveals the sad truth about the fate of abandoned cats and dogs. For the fifth time, Fox picked up the Sid Caesar comedy award for The Simpsons, which recognized them for a show that painted a bleak perspective on the horrors of factory farming. ABC TV's Grey's Anatomy won best drama for an episode that discussed the ethics of using live animals in medical research.

News outlets were also honored. ABC News took home the TV newsmagazine national prize for 20/20. World News With Charles Gibson won for a national news feature. HBO's Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel received the national newsmagazine cable award.

Among the print journalism winners were USA Today for a series of newspaper articles, and the magazines Sports Illustrated and Newsweek were also recognized.

Animal activists are accustomed to being abused and misunderstood for their viewpoints. But it was evident that among this crowd, being kind to animals was ultra-cool. Celebrity chic, in fact. Ellen herself embraced the title.

"The more labels I add to myself, the more I risk alienating people, but I'm openly gay, and that's worked out okay...so now I'm openly vegan, and I will do everything I can to help."


Here's me with Clyde, the lovably rambunctious canine celebrity from Marley and Me.


Jorja Fox of CSI fame has been voted sexiest vegetarian by PETA. She plays forensic scientist Sarah Sidle on the CBS crime drama CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.


Animal lover Marg Helgenberger is also of CSI fame, and plays Catherine Willows.


Just a few of Jennifer Coolidge's best-known parts include roles in Legally Blonde, American Pie, Best in Show and Waiting for Guffman. She's lent her star power to organizations such as Louisiana SPCA, PETA and Farm Sanctuary.


Oscar-winning actor James Cromwell became a vegetarian in 1974 after visiting a Texas stockyard and witnessing the "smell, terror and anxiety."


Professional football player Jarrod Cooper volunteers with abused dogs at a San Francisco animal shelter.


Michael Vartan of Never Been Kissed and One Hour Photo is also known for his role as Michael Vaughn on the American television action drama Alias. He's also an avid animal lover.


Emmy-nominated Wendie Malick of TV comedy Just Shoot Me plays Nina Van Horn. She's a vegetarian and committed to animal welfare causes.


PETA member Emily Deschanel plays Dr. Temperance "Bones" Brennan in the crime drama Bones. She's a vegan and an animal rights advocate.


Ellen and Portia accept the Wyler award.

Above photos courtesy of Long Photography and HSUS

More to come…

The 2009 Genesis Awards ceremony was dedicated to ending the senseless slaughter of baby harp seals in Canada. I spoke with renowned British-born fashion photographer Nigel Barker of the reality TV show America's Next Top Model about his work out on the ice documenting the bloodshed. That story’s coming up, so stay tuned.


Photography courtesy of Nigel Barker.

Genesis Awards harness star power to save animals

Portia de Rossi and Ellen DeGeneres strut their stuff on the red carpet. Photo courtesy of HSUS.


When you make a career in show business, creating a fantasy becomes your reality.

But this past Saturday, it wasn't make-believe that took center stage at the 23rd annual Genesis Awards in Beverly Hills. Animal cruelty and neglect grabbed the spotlight when celebrities, directors, writers and producers were honored by the Humane Society of United States.

America's largest animal welfare organization handed out 20 awards for films, television programs and news stories that raised public awareness of animal issues. The biggest honor of the night went to Ellen DeGeneres and her partner Portia de Rossi, who accepted the Wyler Award together for spreading the word on the inhumane treatment of factory farm animals. DeGeneres spoke to viewers of her talk show about Proposition 2, which addresses the issue in California.

"This stuff haunts me now," DeGeneres said.

As the star-studded crowd began to arrive at the Beverly Hilton hotel, uninvited bystanders crowded against the velvet ropes with cameras in hand, hoping to get a glimpse of the noteworthy parading past on the red carpet. The eclectic crowd featured big-name stars mingling with hard-core animal activists.

But the most popular celebrity was one who strolled in on four legs, not two. It was Clyde, the dog who starred in the hit film Marley and Me with Jennifer Aniston and Owen Wilson. He stood to the side of the red carpet and enthusiastically greeted everyone who walked by, even giving my face a friendly lick when I kneeled down to pet him. It was better than an autograph.

This was my second year attending the event that's held in the same massive ballroom used to host the Golden Globes. Guests nibbled on a delectable vegan meal of artichoke salad, tasty soy protein with black rice, and a rich chocolate mousse dessert.

"I called myself an animal lover, and I ate them," DeGeneres told the crowd. "It really is so much easier to say, ‘I can't think about it - I don't want to know about it - it's horrible' - and when we finally took the time to force ourselves to look at the reality of the lives of these poor animals, you can't ignore it. You can't say, ‘Yeah, but I want a cheeseburger so badly. I don't want to look at that."

The footage that rolled as the nominees were announced was gut-wrenching to watch. At every table, tears flowed down perfectly coiffed cheeks. Some guests had to step out when the images got to be too much.

The clips spared no tender hearts. A has-been racehorse was killed at a slaughterhouse. The tape cut to another that lay dying in the mud. Abused elephants were beaten and chained until they performed tricks for a circus crowd. A whale was massacred in the ocean, its blood staining the seawater bright red. Factory farmed pigs and chickens were miserably crowded into tiny cages, unable to enjoy basic behaviors like standing up or spreading their wings.

DeGeneres wasn't the only talk show queen to win a prize for speaking out against the atrocities. The Oprah Winfrey Show also garnered an award, picking up the outstanding talk show accolade for reports on factory farming, puppy mills and dog fighting. Another big win was for Walt Disney Pictures' Bolt, in the feature film category. The Academy-Award nominated movie reveals the sad truth about the fate of abandoned cats and dogs. For the fifth time, Fox picked up the Sid Caesar comedy award for The Simpsons, which recognized them for a show that painted a bleak perspective on the horrors of factory farming. ABC TV's Grey's Anatomy won best drama for an episode that discussed the ethics of using live animals in medical research.

News outlets were also honored. ABC News took home the TV newsmagazine national prize for 20/20. World News With Charles Gibson won for a national news feature. HBO's Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel received the national newsmagazine cable award.

Among the print journalism winners were USA Today for a series of newspaper articles, and the magazines Sports Illustrated and Newsweek were also recognized.

Animal activists are accustomed to being abused and misunderstood for their viewpoints. But it was evident that among this crowd, being kind to animals was ultra-cool. Celebrity chic, in fact. Ellen herself embraced the title.

"The more labels I add to myself, the more I risk alienating people, but I'm openly gay, and that's worked out okay...so now I'm openly vegan, and I will do everything I can to help."


Here's me with Clyde, the lovably rambunctious canine celebrity from Marley and Me.


Jorja Fox of CSI fame has been voted sexiest vegetarian by PETA. She plays forensic scientist Sarah Sidle on the CBS crime drama CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.

Animal lover Marg Helgenberger is also of CSI fame, and plays Catherine Willows.


Just a few of Jennifer Coolidge's best-known parts include roles in Legally Blonde, American Pie, Best in Show and Waiting for Guffman. She's lent her star power to organizations such as Louisiana SPCA, PETA and Farm Sanctuary.


Oscar-winning actor James Cromwell became a vegetarian in 1974 after visiting a Texas stockyard and witnessing the "smell, terror and anxiety."


Professional football player Jarrod Cooper volunteers with abused dogs at a San Francisco animal shelter.


Michael Vartan of Never Been Kissed and One Hour Photo is also known for his role as Michael Vaughn on the American television action drama Alias. He's also an avid animal lover.


Emmy-nominated Wendie Malick of TV comedy Just Shoot Me plays Nina Van Horn. She's a vegetarian and committed to animal welfare causes.


PETA member Emily Deschanel plays Dr. Temperance "Bones" Brennan in the crime drama Bones. She's a vegan and an animal rights advocate.


Ellen and Portia accept the Wyler award.


Above photos courtesy of Long Photography and HSUS


More to come…

The 2009 Genesis Awards ceremony was dedicated to ending the senseless slaughter of baby harp seals in Canada. I spoke with renowned British-born fashion photographer Nigel Barker of the reality TV show America's Next Top Model about his work out on the ice documenting the bloodshed. That story’s coming up, so stay tuned.

Photography courtesy of Nigel Barker.

Monday, March 30, 2009

A bird's eye view

The second little bird flew off when I pulled out my camera and started snapping photos. But she hovered nearby protecting the nest.


I was picking up my rental car at the Budget Fastbreak drop-off station near Los Angeles International Airport when I spotted two little birds tending to their nest in the rafters. I stopped and watched their activities for almost an hour. I wondered: what motivated them to pick such a high-traffic location to raise their precious babies?

I'm tempted to make a Budget -- or is it Budgie? -- joke. But I'll restrain myself.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Louisiana's lead ACO weighs in on Hollywood

LA SPCA's Kathryn Destreza gives this shelter dog a big smooch.


It seems not all animal control officers are as angry as I am about the way Hollywood portrays them.

Earlier I posted an entry about the subject (Hollywood depicts ACOs as the bad guys again, March 18, 2009).

So I was surprised when I received the following note from Kathryn Destreza, director of humane law enforcement for the Louisiana SPCA. Rather than pointing fingers at the entertainment industry, she's turned the blame back on those ACOs who fuel the negative images. That's what I call big-picture thinking. No wonder she's garnered so much respect in the field.


A COOL KAT SPEAKS OUT

"Although I have not seen Hotel For Dogs, I have seen Turner and Hooch, Man's Best Friend, and other movies where animal control officers are depicted as over-confident, or bumbling idiots who don't seem to know one end of a snare pole from the other.

As a professional in the field for more than 17 years, I am asked if I get angry when I see that. Honestly, not really. Because I know the people I have the honor to work with in this field, and I take comfort in knowing how professional we have become. This field is light years from where it was when I started, and we are striving to become even better. Our communities see this too.

On the other hand, there are people in the animal control field that could be better ambassadors for us. That's the reality of any profession. And those people make me angry because they are real, and they have affected the lives of some family or some animal in a negative way. Instead of changing Hollywood's portrayal of us, let's change the percentage of us that still put that image out there."

- Kathryn Destreza, director of humane law enforcement and chief humane officer for the Louisiana SPCA

Friday, March 27, 2009

Puppy love


Does anyone know a human being who could offer this kind of warm and fuzzy comfort?

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Birds fly circles around human pilots

Yesterday I was driving along the freeway when a flock of about 30 birds appeared to follow my trail. I watched them playfully dip and swoop across the sky in perfect formation, like an expertly trained pack of Canadian Forces Snowbird Tudor jets.

The birds' instinctive, playful display takes years for the most talented human pilots to perform. And the results are still less than perfect if you consider the proliferation of air-show accidents.

We pay money to gaze in awe at the stunts performed by our best pilots. But hunters don't think twice about picking up rifles to shoot birds out of the sky. Instead of cutting down these majestic creatures in flight, shouldn't we just stand back and watch the free show?

Sunday, March 22, 2009

The Littlest Hobo hits the road again

Hobo director Allan Eastman is even more dedicated to travelling than the famous TV dog. Submitted photo.

Maybe tomorrow, he'll want to settle down
Until tomorrow, he'll just keep moving on...
-- lyrics from The Littlest Hobo theme song

Ask any Canadian older than 30 about The Littlest Hobo television series and you will get an instant reaction. Memories will flow for the wonder dog who played the starring role. His intelligence and bravery will be recalled with wonder and affection.

The wildly popular family show -- one of the first to cast an animal in its lead part -- featured a German shepherd character who travelled from place to place helping people in trouble. He was the orphan version of Lassie.
For more than a decade, I've had the lyrics from the theme song Maybe Tomorrow pinned to my corkboard. Littlest Hobo validates the animal heroics I've witnessed. You need only mention that title to a group of animal rescuers and you'll get an impromptu, rousing rendition of the song made famous by the show.
So you can imagine my thrill at meeting the man who directed Hobo's action on set. From 1979 to 1983, Allan Eastman directed 44 episodes in the series. The former Winnipegger's laudable directing career includes gigs on shows like Star Trek: Voyager, Deep Space 9, and Outer Limits. He's worked with iconic talents such as Christopher Plummer, Hugh Grant and Kiefer Sutherland.

Over dinner in Vancouver last week, he told me the behind-the-scenes story of The Littlest Hobo's antics. It turns out that the carousing production crew wasn't what you would expect for a show aimed at families with small children.

"We were young up-and-comers. Never has wholesome family entertainment been done by such a group of degenerates," Eastman joked. "It was sex, dogs and rock and roll."

But that wasn't the only reason I was fascinated.

For the director, life has imitated art. Eastman has turned into something of a Littlest Hobo himself. The 60-year-old recently realized his lifelong dream to travel full time. He's left the comfort of his villa in Croatia and his home in Toronto to visit 110 countries, looping around the world three times. His odyssey spawned a book called Tickets, Money, Passport...Around the World and Then Some. It documents what happens when someone decides to trade the structure of home for a life on the road, devoting years towards adventure and meeting new people.

Just like Hobo did.

Hobo was always a lone wolf. At the end of each episode, the people he'd helped tried to adopt him, but Hobo had his own plans. He'd take to the open road, nosing out his next adventure.

In reality, there were several Hobos who played the part billed as "London" in the star credits. Dogs came and went on the set according to age and ability. A pack of five dogs nearly identical in appearance shared the spotlight. But like a mother and her twins, the cast and crew could easily discern which dog was who, Eastman said.
There was one London, but there was also Toro and Lance, and more than one Bo and Hobo. They had their own trailer, and were kept by Chuck Eisenmann, who was their breeder, guardian and trainer.

"There would always be a star dog who would get most of the scenes," Eastman said. "He would be experienced, about eight years old. There was an older patriarch who kept the others in line. And the other three young dogs would do all the running and jumping, all the fast-action shots."

Eisenmann taught the dogs to understand English at the level of an eight-year-old child. "It was amazing to watch. You kind of wish you could give commands to [human] actors the same way we did with the dogs."
Hobo was a magical creature to viewers who tuned in regularly to see what destination and dilemma awaited the dog next -- the circus, the docks, the air force. Parents enjoyed the storylines. And kids had mad love for the dogs.

"We'd have a gallery of the public watching us shoot, and the kids just went bananas. You didn't even really have to do anything for the kids, because they just went nuts for the dogs."

Tapings were mostly done in rural areas surrounding Toronto, but the sheer variety of the storylines fostered a diverse learning ground that created career magic, too. "Every week, we went into a whole new situation. I learned such a huge bag of tricks on that show.
"It was one of the great learning experiences of my career."
For the moment, Eastman has traded his director's bag of tricks for his travel bags.

Maybe tomorrow, he'll want to settle down.

Until tomorrow, he'll just keep moving on.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Hollywood depicts ACOs as the bad guys again

Whatcom Humane Society ACO Paul Evans enjoys a breath of fresh air with a shelter dog he adores.


A fast-moving film plot needs a villain. And when the story revolves around animals, there's an easy target.

Animal control officers are consistently cast to play that part.

ACOs are convenient scapegoats. It's true that every profession faces the critical eye of art sometimes. But has there ever been a positive portrayal of the work done by ACOs, who are on the front lines saving animals from heartbreaking circumstances?

Lady and the Tramp. Shaggy D.A. And now the latest film sensation, Hotel for Dogs. In each, ACOs are portrayed as "blundering villains who are awkwardly incompetent and enthusiastically sadistic in their treatment of canines," says Mark Kumpf, president of the National Animal Control Officers Association based in Kansas.

I've ridden along with ACOs many times in a multitude of communities. Watching them at work, I saw that they aren't just "dog catchers" -- they are first responders just like police, fire and ambulance workers. In California, for example, ACOs are required by law to report cases of child abuse when they encounter them. Abused animals often indicate that children in the home might be in trouble, too.

Penny Cistaro is now the executive director of Whatcom Humane Society in northern Washington State. But when she started out in animal sheltering 30 years ago, her career began as an ACO.

What she saw out there still haunts her.

And while all animal rescuers are exposed to stomach-turning images of cruelty and neglect, ACOs see much more than most because they arrive on the scene first.

This past summer, I interviewed an ACO who had just attended the scene of a head-on collision. One of the drivers, a woman on her way out to celebrate her 30th birthday, had her two dogs in the car with her. An ambulance took the woman to hospital. And ACOs were tasked with saving her dogs. One of the dogs died in his rescuer's arms on the way to the shelter.

As a society, we are all responsible for the epic pet overpopulation crisis. Villianizing the people who have dedicated their careers to being part of the solution doesn't make sense.

Yes, it's just a movie. But it's no fun being constantly belittled on the big screen for doing difficult and heroic work that you pour your heart and soul into. No wonder the burnout rate is outrageously high. Leaving the job before the first year is up isn't uncommon.

Isn't it time we give ACOs the respect they deserve?

Now that would be a happy Hollywood ending.


Kathryn Destreza, Louisiana SPCA's director of humane law enforcement, romps in the shelter yard with a rambunctious pit bull.


Animal control officers fight back in this editorial

By Mark Kumpf

The quintessential negative depiction of the "dog catcher" in American movies and television has once again been cast in the film Hotel for Dogs. Following the cinematic tradition of Shaggy D.A. and Lady and the Tramp, animal control officers are portrayed as film antagonists: blundering villains who are awkwardly incompetent and enthusiastically sadistic in their treatment of canines.

While those associated with the film should be lauded for their off-screen efforts to promote proper dog care, nutrition, exercise and the adoption of homeless animals, the unfortunate typecasting of animal control officers in film continues to be an affront to the thousands of professionals across the country dedicated to promoting ethical and responsible animal care and ownership.

The National Animal Control Association (NACA) was established in 1978 as an independent, nonprofit organization fostering the highest standards of professionalism in the practice of animal control. As the primary professional association for animal control practitioners, NACA members participate in extensive instructional programs with the goal of improving their knowledge and skills in order to protect the animals and the communities
they serve.

Each day, our membership of 3,400 animal control officers, agencies and affiliated state members are at work in urban and rural communities across the country. These hardworking professionals are responsible for transporting a significant percentage of the estimated six to eight million cats and dogs entering shelters every year. Often they also care for and treat them.

Between 600,000 and 750,000 of these animals (nearly 30% of dogs) are reunited with their families annually, and approximately half are adopted from the more than 5,000 shelters operating across the country. And that is thanks partly to animal control officers. They are also called upon to safely and compassionately euthanize tens of thousands of dogs, cats and other animals too injured, sick or aggressive to be adopted. Or in the most unfortunate circumstances, such as space and budgetary constraints.

Animal control officers investigate thousands of animal cruelty cases and are often called upon to testify in court. They perform their duties and protect the public. Sometimes that comes at great personal risk, whether attempting to free a terrified trapped pet, facing a wild, diseased animal or rescuing animals from abusive and neglectful environments. Officers have been threatened, injured and even killed in the line of duty, shuttering puppy mills, investigating cases of animal cruelty, and prosecuting organizers of dog fighting and blood sports.

The cinematic adaptation of Lois Duncan's 1971 book Hotel for Dogs is certainly entertaining to young audiences. What dog lover wouldn't love to imagine himself as the keeper of an inn for canines, a "Dalmatian plantation", or a similar facility based on breed of preference? However, NACA encourages adults to explain to young moviegoers that the film's "dog catchers" are a slanderous portrayal of the highly trained, compassionate and professional animal control officers patrolling our streets to rescue animals in need.


Mark Kumpf
President
National Animal Control Officers Association
http://www.nacanet.org

Mark Kumpf is also the Director of Montgomery County, Ohio's Animal Resource Center.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Happy birthday to a little Bunny who is being nursed back to health



In January, I told you the story of Bunny, a New Orleans animal rescuer who was shot in the face by her landlord in a parking lot. The crime was sinister and puzzling.
Here are the links to the original stories:
Update on rescuer shot recently -- she's home! January 18, 2009

Animal rescuer shot in the face, January 13, 2009

Many of you have asked about Bunny, wondering how her recovery has been going.

Her sister-in-law Shelly Patton has an update:


I spoke with Bunny. It’s her birthday today. She’s 61. A young 61. I learned she has three cats. I don’t know why I hadn’t remembered that. She had five cats when Hurricane Katrina hit. Bunny spoke fondly of her old girl, whom she lost a year ago January. She was 26 years old, an amazing life span for a cat.

Physically Bunny couldn’t be doing better. She is healing rapidly. Several bullet fragments that had lodged in her cheek had to be removed because of infection. She has several more surgeries in her future, but she is handling it all Bunny Style, with courage and optimism.

Now that her jaw is unwired, she can eat soft food. She can’t chew, but that is preferable to a liquid diet. As I was on the phone with her, she was eating the contents of a can of tuna. Every few minutes she was shooing one of her three cats away. It was comical listening to her plead with them to leave her alone. Being surrounded by love brings little irritations as well as wonderful blessings. Bunny loves her ferrets and her cats, gladly paying any price necessary to have them close. I never asked if she shared her tuna with them, but I’m sure she did.

Although she’s doing remarkably well physically, Bunny still struggles emotionally. The emotional toll is the hardest part of this whole ordeal. She stays busy from early morning until late at night, not giving herself time to think about what happened. But images and sounds flash through her mind in unexpected places, at unexpected times, causing panic and anxiety to grip her heart.

Last week, an errand took her to the street were she was shot. She hadn’t been thinking about the shooting until the memories flooded her in that instant. Before she could go into the building, she had to calm her pounding heart and slow her breathing. A cold sweat formed on her forehead. But Bunny wasn’t about to let anxiety rule her. It was important to continue with some semblance of normality, and she did. That’s what she does. She continues to move forward regardless of the obstacles, no matter the fear.

Bunny told me it is easier to cope because the man who shot her is still in jail. With any luck, he will never get out. Without luck, he should be behind bars for a good ten years.

Animals are always there when you need them...can you say the same for humans?





Thanks to these precious models from Old Dog Haven for participating in this visual commentary. Their grassy stylings prove that the wisdom of age trumps the beauty of youth.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Quote of the day


What makes human beings want to exploit, dominate and consume the animal kingdom instead of co-existing peacefully with our furred and feathered friends who share our planet?

In his enlightened book An Unnatural Order, author Jim Mason explores this issue with persuasive, intelligent prose. This quote was so poignant and on point that I felt compelled to share it with you.

"Animals have been regarded as property for way too long. It's high time we took on a more loving and responsible relationship with our kindred beings in the web of life on this beautiful planet. I always think and act as a guardian towards my kindred beings, never as their owner."

Monday, March 9, 2009

Tragedy strikes at an animal shelter



Some applicants hoping to work at an animal shelter think the job is just about endless cuddles -- romping with tiny kittens and frisky puppies.

Seeing a parade of the cutest and most loveable animals is heartwarming. But that is a small part of working at a shelter.

There’s a dark side, too.

Workers on the front lines are there when cruelty happens. Often before the police and other first responders show up, animal control officers -- known as ACOs -- face animals who are frightened and skittish. Sometimes the animals instinctively defend themselves the only way they know how.

With force.

Human dynamics can be confusing for an animal. Human beings -- who might have been responsible for torturing, maiming or neglecting them in the past -- are coming at them trying to help with catchpoles, traps and nets. And with the best of intentions.

But how do they know that?

Sometimes they strike out in fear.

As people, we might technically be in charge of the animal kingdom, but we need to respect animals for who they are, and understand what motivates them if we are to co-exist safely.

That’s easier said than done. And when you are working with rescued animals every day, you can’t be perfect. Mistakes happen. When shelter staff have a bad day, it takes on different context than when an office worker makes an error.

An animal dies. Or a person gets injured, as the following email that showed up in my box this morning illustrates.

For everyone out there reading -- whether you are a shelter worker, a renegade rescuer, or a citizen who might find yourself in a position to rescue an animal, or if you are introducing a new one to your household -- we all need to remember to be cautious. To use common sense.

I’m guilty of being careless occasionally, as you’ll read about on this blog. We all are. I’ll keep posting stories detailing my hapless mistakes hoping someone out there learns from them.

This is the rescuers’ mantra I hear repeated often: “The rescue of an animal won’t succeed if we have to rescue you!”

Today, my heart goes out to the organization involved in this story. I know you feel defeated. Thank you for sharing it, and helping to educate all of us. Readers, please send a caring thought out to them and all the others who save animals. For very little pay and near-zero recognition, ACOs do the job we wish we had the strength to do.

Editor’s Note:
This story is about two pit bulls, but do not let that fact prejudice you against pits bulls! It’s not a surprise pit bulls are often mentioned in shelter stories because of their sheer numbers -- they fill the kennels of most shelters I’ve seen. People insist on breeding these dogs despite the harbinger of doom the names carries. Many pits won’t get adopted because of the stigma that’s attached. The label “pit” is tethered to them like an anchor to a sinking man.
Companies don’t want to issue homeowners’ insurance policies to pit guardians. And one by one, cities, towns and counties are issuing ordinances targeting pit bulls for more rigorous licensing and containment requirements.
Even gentle, gorgeous pits don’t get homes. Many owners eventually just give up and turn them over to the shelter.
Incidentally, pits -- which are not even a real breed, by the way -- show up way down on the list of biters, after dogs like Chihuahuas, Dalmatians and Golden Retrievers. The pit bull classification usually includes American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, and Staffordshire Bull Terrier, but another 14 dog breeds tend to get branded by the media as “pit bulls” when a hysterical reaction follows an attack.
When pits do attack people, it’s usually because human beings have used them as weapons, victimizing the dogs. The loyal, obedient nature of these dogs combined with their strength makes them the weapon of choice for vicious people, drug dealers, gang members and other criminals.


The names in the following story have been changed.


Chihuahuas are more aggressive than the average pit bull.


Shelter work can be dangerous if protocol isn't followed

We had a dog bite at the shelter yesterday.

Nikki is new at the shelter. She came to us after becoming thoroughly discouraged as a social worker facing constant need with few results.

She has a black pit bull who has never shown aggressive behavior. She brought him to the shelter to introduce him to another pit she was thinking of adopting.

After a morning of staff training, Nikki put the pit she was interested in taking home in the exercise yard. Then – alone - she led her pit out to the yard on a leash. All hell broke loose. The dogs attacked each other. As she was breaking them up, her own pit grabbed her arm and began shaking it violently.

Staff workers heard the fight and Nikki’s screams from the administrative building and came running out. They saw that Nikki was in trouble. Arriving at the gate to the yard, they found it padlocked. The door to the shelter, only feet from the gate, was locked as well. They were trapped outside the fence as Nikki’s arm was ripped and torn apart by her dog.

Banging on the door window, they summoned for help. When someone opened the door, they were able to enter the building and race through the kennels to access the yard where the fight was taking place. Thankfully, the door leading from the kennel to the yard always remains unlocked during the day. Only the gate is secured to discourage thieves, and dogs, from opening it.

Within minutes, we had a police car, fire truck and ambulance on the scene.

One dog’s ear was torn. The other has a few scratches. Nikki went to the hospital.

Nikki's supervisor Samantha is deeply disappointed and angry. She would like to think her officers have the knowledge to keep them safe on the streets. That belief was shattered when she learned that she has some staff members who can’t even stay safe in the shelter.

Mistakes Nikki made:

1) No one knew she was out in the yard with the dogs.
2) She was trying to introduce two very strong, potentially aggressive dogs alone.
3) She isolated herself in a locked area.
4) The only dog she had any hope of having voice control over -- her own -- was the one dog on a leash.
5) She was introducing the dogs in a high-stress area, the yard outside the main kennel.

I am sure Sam’s staff will learn about Nikki's mistakes intimately.

The sad thing is that Nikki had mentioned to several people, ACOs and others, that she would be introducing the dogs after the training meeting. No one offered to help or thought to ask her who would be helping her. Nikki was sadly mistaken about how she decided to handle the introduction. But I can’t help sharing the responsibility for what happened with those who knew what she was planning. Nikki has only been around for a few months. She is still green. Everyone assumed she was knowledgeable, and offered no advice or assistance.

In our profession, we can’t afford to assume. Even at the risk of insulting someone’s intelligence, we have to ask, confirm, and find out for sure that our new people know what they are doing. So often we think people know things so we are afraid to open our mouths, even when we have a fleeting thought that they just might not know. Or a personality conflict causes us not to help someone as we would those we like or feel close to.

We held Nikki while she cried. After her concern for the dogs, Nikki was most upset about being so stupid. She was also having difficulty as she questioned why no one had told her that her plans were faulty. She was hurt on many levels.


What a harsh lesson to learn. For all of us.


Friday, March 6, 2009

Stumbling across the ghosts of childhood past



When I first met little girl rescuer Calli Vanderaa, I immediately felt kinship with her. Her urge to save an animal in trouble is instinctive and consuming. I could relate to the driving need to rescue an innocent creature in danger.
But when I unearthed some old photographs this week, I didn’t just feel like we were kindred spirits. I felt like I was looking at a ghost. Or at least, a ghost of the child I used to be.
Here’s a photo of me at Calli’s age along with one of her. Can you see the resemblance?

If you want to read more about Calli and her compassionate rescue of her puppy Jessie from an inner-city dumpster, click to these past blog postings:

My day with kid rescuer ends in giggling fit, January 20, 2009


Holiday season sparkles for young animal rescuer, January 5, 2009

Outpouring of generosity brings girl rescuer to tears, January 2, 2009

A tiny tree grows – thrives, even – in the charred remains of an inner-city slum, December 21, 2008

Where to send your gifts and cards for Calli, December 18, 2008

Yes, Calli, there is a Santa Claus...and his name is Winterpeg, December 17, 2008

Girl rescues tortured puppy from inner city war zone, December 14, 2008

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Strays struggle to survive winter's bitter cold

This heated cat house at Heather's place provides cozy and stylish accommodations for feral cats living outdoors.


When the weather warms up enough for spring blossoms to start showing their colorful faces, it's not just human beings who have an extra spring in their step. Stray animals in cold weather climates can finally get some relief from the harsh conditions.

In wintertime, strays might freeze to death, or get frostbitten ears and paws. They have trouble finding water because it's been frozen to ice. Food gets buried under the snow.

I grew up in one of Canada's coldest inhabited regions. In the excruciating deep freeze of Winnipeg, Manitoba, temperatures can dip to minus 50 degrees Celsius with wind chill. Unexposed skin suffers frostbite in less than two minutes. Cars require block heaters that must be plugged in when vehicles aren't running or the engine fluids will freeze.

It was the bitter sting of a Winnipeg winter that brought my first cat to me. It was 1975, and a blinding 23-hour blizzard had shut down the city. I was six, my brother was four. We wandered into the living room and stopped in surprise.

Sitting outside on the ledge of our front room picture window was a grey tabby cat. She stared in at us imploringly. Raging winds swirled sheets of white snow around her. She looked like a guppy as her mouth opened and closed in a pleading meow that was silenced by the glass that lay between us.

We quickly brought her into our warm house, where she promptly made herself at home. "Kitty", as we called her, would live to be 19 years old.

With a bit of effort and a touch of creativity, you can help strays in your community, too. This next story comes from Heather McKnight, another Winnipegger I've known since junior high school. Our mutual love of animals caused us to reconnect recently.

It turns out that besides being an animal rescuer, Heather is also good writer, so I asked her to tell her tale about how she saved two feral cats.

Editor's note: When at all possible, I do not condone cats living outdoors. They are exposed to many dangers including licking antifreeze or other poisonous substances. They crawl into warm car engines where they get ripped apart by fan belts. They get locked in places such as sheds and garages. They might also be victimized by angry children or adults in the neighborhood -- I've seen cats who have been shot by BB guns, wrapped in wire, or otherwise tormented. But in some instances, particularly in the case of feral cats, a life outdoors is unavoidable. The following story illustrates one of those times.


Raven and Finnegan found love, safety and food at Heather's house.


Heather relaxes on her live dog pillow, five-year-old Scooby Doo.


Homeless cats luck out when a guardian angel crosses their path

By Heather McKnight

It was the beginning of April and winter was finally giving up its hold on Winnipeg. The sun was shining, the snow was melting, and the ditches were filling with water. Driving home one early evening, I decided to slow down past the house that some neighbors had moved into the previous summer. They had been renovating and I was curious to see how far along they were.

The whole family was out in the yard. The three boys and their friends were playing in a shallow, ice-filled ditch at the side of the house. Mom and Dad were stacking firewood just a few feet away. But that was not what caught my attention. Outside by the house front window were two tiny black cats.

In the country, this wouldn't normally wave red flags. But my curiosity was raised because there were also two larger cats outside. The owners of the house in question, while nice, caring people, have no patience to take on more than what they feel is necessary.

I pulled into the driveway and got out of my car, making my way over to the small black cats. It turned out they were kittens. The woman told me that the mother cat had abandoned the kittens the previous fall. The kittens had stayed around the house.

When the cold weather came, this neighbor had made them a lean-to against the house to keep them out of the wind and snow. She had been feeding them during the winter but she said it now it was time for them to go. She didn't want them to make a mess in her front gardens. This is what she considered beyond necessary.

I asked if she would be taking them to the animal shelter. Her answer was not what I had expected. Her husband was going to put them in a box and drop them off at a barn down the road.

I was horrified. I knew which barn they were referring to. While it was probably great for the cats who actually lived there by rights, it was not a place for young kittens without a mother. I knew that many of the kittens that had been born in that barn or dropped off there had been hit by cars on the nearby road. Or found frozen to death because they had wandered too far away from its shelter.

I was not going to let tragedy happen. I told her I would take both of them.

I took a quick drive home to get a carrier so I could pick up the kittens. They were so tiny. Both had a touch of frostbite on their ears, and they were skittish.

The neighbor said they were very friendly, and that her boys were able to pick up the female and carry her around. It soon became clear to me that if they had been hauling these cats around, it hadn't been because the cats had a choice.

Once at home, I put them in the office. This space worked well because it is large, I could put their litter box in the bathroom, and it got wonderful afternoon sunlight. Also, it was their own space protected from the two dogs and three other cats that already lived in our house.

Until they were used to the family, I wanted them to have their own secure spot.

They quickly adjusted to being inside, but their skittish nature remained. The male, Finnegan, was the most responsive. He would let me get close to pet him, and occasionally he would allow me to give him a snuggle. The female, Raven, was harder to get near. You had to give her a food bribe just to get close. Both put on some much-needed weight in the first few weeks I had them.

Then things got a bit interesting.

I wasn't sure of their ages. Before I could get them fixed, Raven went into heat. I have never experienced this with a cat before because I've always had them spayed or neutered before biology allowed this to happen.

Raven took one look at my neutered male cat Scrappy while she was in heat, and that was it. She was in love. She strutted around him. She was demure, she was coy. And she was very aggressive.

Poor Scrappy. He was out of his league. This behavior was completely foreign to him. He would smack her with his paw and wrestle her to the ground. Her response was to take it, and then wiggle her backside at him. He looked completely confused.

She was at the vet clinic within 24 hours. So was Finnegan.

Having decided five cats and two dogs were just too many animals in one house, my husband built a cat house outside for our new family members. Standing a few inches off the ground, it measures 4 feet by 2 ½ feet by 3 feet. It is completely insulated with a front door and two side windows for light. The door is large enough for the fattest cat, but small enough so the dogs can't get in. It even has a little front porch.

There is enough room for a large bed area, and space for food and water. Intended for year-round use, it includes a socket for a heating lamp to be hooked up inside to keep the cats warm during the coldest winter nights and days.

The day finally came to move the black furballs to their new house outside. It was just a couple of yards from my back door, where it would be easy to keep an eye on them. The nights were no longer freezing, and the days were growing warmer.

Finnegan was first. Gathering him up in my arms, I took him outside for the first time in over a month. Taking him to the new house, I explained what was going on. That I would always feed and protect him. He could come inside anytime he wanted, but this would be his home base.

He didn't buy it. He shot in, he shot out, and he disappeared under the deck of the house. Next it was Raven's turn.

Same scenario. As soon as I popped her inside the new house she bolted out. I thought she went under the deck to be with her brother Finnegan.

My sons and I started circling the house. We looked under the deck, around the woodpile, the shed, the cars. Still no cats. The only remaining option was the woods. There is a small wooded lot to the south of our house, and one to the east. We searched and called to no avail.

As we stood outside wondering where on earth she went, my oldest son said to me, "Mom, maybe you should look at the living room window."

When I looked up at the large easterly window, there sat Raven. She had snuck inside and had been watching us while we had been looking for her. Sitting on the window ledge, she peered through the glass at us with a look on her face that said to me, "Really. You think I am going to settle for that? You think after sleeping on feathers and cushions in a heated home, I AM GOING TO SLEEP OUT THERE IN THAT?"

She has never forgiven me for having her spayed. She and Scrappy have bonded despite the aggressive early dating maneuvers. She spends most of her time in the house.

Finnegan has adapted better to a life outdoors -- hunting mice and roaming with the other wild cats in the area. But he's not a completely feral animal. We spot him on an occasion, silently slipping between the undergrowth of the forest, or sneaking into the herb garden for a hit of catnip.

Sometimes, early in the morning before the sun has started to rise, I spot him sitting on the back porch waiting for the dawn, enjoying the free meal I leave out for his comfort and sustenance. I think he's pretending just for the moment that he's domesticated.

But that's our secret.