Blind wild horse rescued from sea

adminAlerts Leave a Comment

Lifeguards rescued a blind wild stallion caught in a rip current along North Carolina’s Outer Banks this month, the director of a horse protection group said.

The horse, already blind in one eye, had its other eye damaged in a fight with another stallion May 2 near the small community of Corolla in Currituck County. Karen McCalpin, director of the Corolla Wild Horse Fund, told The (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot the injured older stallion ran into the ocean and was caught in a strong current that carried him away from the beach and more than a mile down the shore.

The wild horse reached a sandbar where he was able to get his footing, allowing lifeguards to use rescue buoys to push the horse from behind and gradually guide him to land, McCalpin said.

Chief Sylvia Wolff said saving a horse was a first for the Corolla rescue unit.

The stallion, since named Amadeo, meaning “blessed by God,” is recovering but remains nearly blind and will not return to the wild herd.

“He’s going to be our responsibility for the rest of his life,” Wolff said. “He can’t go back.”

www.bignewsnetwork.com

Service Dog Arrives At College Graduation In Cap And Gown, Becomes A Celebrity

adminHumor Leave a Comment

A young woman and her service dog caused quite a stir over the weekend when they both showed up to her college graduation ceremony dressed in matching caps and gowns.

On Sunday, this photograph — which shows the graduate at the side of the stage in a wheelchair accompanied by her pooch — went viral after it was posted online by Redditor tcjones54:

“The girl and the dog received the loudest applause hands down. Very adorable,” tcjones54 wrote.

According to posts on Reddit, the photo was taken at the Saturday convocation ceremony of the College of Applied Health Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign.

“This picture is everything that is right in the world,” wrote Redditor AndreThreeHundred.

Then, a day after the original post went viral, the woman in the photograph uploaded another picture to Reddit.

“This is my service dog, Hero, after we graduated with our Master’s degrees at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,” she wrote in a caption accompanying this Imgur photo.

Read More.

Get a pet, protect your heart

adminAlerts Leave a Comment

If there was any doubt about the benefits of sharing your home with a pet, here is something to mull over — scientists claim that the presence of a pet greatly reduces the risk of heart disease.

According to a report in Science Daily, the American Heart Association has published a scientific statement attesting to the benefits to the heart from a pet.

The statement is published online in the association’s journal, Circulation.

“Pet ownership, particularly dog ownership, is probably associated with a decreased risk of heart disease,” said Glenn N. Levine, MD, professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas.

“In essence, data suggest that there probably is an association between pet ownership and decreased cardiovascular risk,” Levine said.

“What’s less clear is whether the act of adopting or acquiring a pet could lead to a reduction in cardiovascular risk in those with pre-existing disease. Further research, including better quality studies, is needed to more definitively answer this question.”

Big News Network (IANS)

Scientists: Ubiquitous household chemical could be killing cats

adminAlerts Leave a Comment

SEATTLE — A chemical threat lies hidden in millions of American homes, and top government scientists believe it could be killing cats.

Right now in the special session of the state legislature, lawmakers are fighting powerful interests to ban versions of the chemical.

Dr. Dennis Wackerbarth is a top expert on hyperthyroidsim, and he said countless numbers of cats die from the disease each year.

Millions of indoor cats have been hit in recent decades by thyroid glands that go crazy, switching their metabolism into high gear. They become ravenous, yet their bodies waste away until they die.

Scientists examined the places where indoor cats spend their time, especially on furniture and the floor. A groundbreaking government study found “significant association” between the cat illness and certain flame retardants.

The chemical, in one variation or another, is added to all sorts of things found in nearly every American home, including foam padding, carpet pads, appliance chords, electronics, children’s clothes and more.

At precisely the time flame retardants became heavily used in the 70s and 80s, indoor cats started dying of thyroid problems. Now those flame retardants are widely viewed with concern about unintended effects.

The next question scientists asked was that if the chemicals are harming cats, then what are they doing to humans? That’s where the state legislature comes in.

“I mean, everything right now has these toxins in it. And we’re not giving our kids a chance, at all,” said Sen. Sharon Nelson, D-Maury Island.

Nelson is among the lawmakers fighting to extend existing bans on flame retardants that have become so pervasive they’re now found in nature, wildlife and almost certainly in people. Experts believe you would find traces of the chemical in everyone.

“We’re hearing a lot from citizens,” Nelson said. “The difficulty of being in Olympia is the strength of different lobbyists.”

The chemical industry and business lobbyists say it would be too expensive and burdensome to ban more kinds of retardants, which several other states have already done.

Some of the more toxic forms have already been banned. The chemical industry creates replacement forms of flame retardants they feel are safer, but critics say they’re still too toxic.

Read More.

Cat displaced by Sandy makes 8-mile trek home

adminAlerts Leave a Comment

CHADWICK BEACH ISLAND, N.J. — A pair of New Jersey women whose cat escaped after they evacuated their home after superstorm Sandy said the cat showed up six months later.

Mother and daughter Uranie Roberts, 86, and Carol Baumann, 62, said they evacuated their Chadwick Beach Island home after the storm in November and stayed with in-laws about eight miles away in Point Pleasant from where their cat, Porsche, escaped, Philly.com reported Wednesday.

Roberts, 86, said Porsche’s tags were attached to a breakaway collar that he could have easily removed, but she still believed she might find the feline.

“I never gave up hope,” she said, but she admitted she feared that “maybe he crossed the rainbow bridge, as they say from that poem about animals that pass on.”

The women said they returned to their home April 29 and two days later they heard a noise on the back deck.

“I saw the green eyes and I said, ‘My God in heaven, it’s Porsche!'” Baumann said.

Roberts said Porsche appeared fit and well-fed after his “journey of a lifetime.”

“I would not be surprised at anything,” Roberts said. “It’s like waiting for the other shoe to drop or the other piece of the puzzle. … It clearly looks like he must have been somewhere.”

Big News Network (UPI)

Does where you live impact your pet’s longevity?

adminHumor Leave a Comment

None

A new study shows that dogs and cats have a better chance at a long, healthy life in some states than in others. How does your state rank?

Some dogs sleep outside and guard the house. Others have wardrobes and spend their day in a purse.

It’s not clear which lifestyle is pet-preferred, but a new study shows that dogs and cats have a better chance at a long, healthy life in some states than in others.

Louisiana and Mississippi have the shortest lifespan for dogs and cats, while pets in Colorado and Montana live longer, according to the 2013 State of Pet Health Report released by Banfield Pet Hospital, the world’s largest veterinary practice.

Why the difference? Experts say states with the healthiest and longest living pets also have the highest neutering and spaying rates, more pets living inside and fewer regional infectious diseases.

“It’s all about lifestyle, what your pet means to you and how you take care of them,” says veterinarian and epidemiologist Dr. Sandi Lefebvre. “There are different attitudes, different levels of education and they tend to cluster in certain areas of the country.”

Cats live the longest in Montana, Colorado, Rhode Island, Illinois and Nebraska and they have the shortest lifespan in Delaware, Ohio, Louisiana, Kentucky and Mississippi.

States with the longest lifespan for dogs are South Dakota, Montana, Oregon, New Mexico and Colorado. As for the shortest: Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana Delaware and Massachusetts.

Southern states have high rates of heartworm because of heat and mosquitoes. Northeastern states are most likely to have Lyme disease because of the ticks that carry the disease.

State-by-state lifespans for dogs from the Banfield Pet Hospital State of Pet Health report.,(Photo: Banfield Pet Hospital)

In warmer states more pets live outdoors where they are more susceptible to these diseases. If they haven’t been neutered or spayed they will have more aggressive behaviors, says Lefebvre. “They are out roaming, fighting, looking for partners.”

Because of the roaming, unneutered dogs are more than twice as likely to be hit by a car or bitten by another animal. Unneutered cats are four times more likely to be hit by a car and three times more likely to be brought to the veterinarian for treatment of an animal bite compared to a neutered cat, the study shows.

For homes in the north, pets are more likely to be indoors because of the weather. “You do not want a sexually intact cat in your home,” Lefebvre says. “It howls, pees all over the place so spaying and neutering is obviously important.”

Adonica Jones-Parks, 45, Cincinnati, Ohio says she learned the hard way, “When I had my first cat I did not have him neutered and he was spraying everywhere – which really makes your house stink – and then he ran off for a few days. Now I know it calms them down and it’s the responsible thing to do.”

Nearly 20% of the cats in Louisiana and Mississippi aren’t spayed or neutered but in Montana and Colorado, the states with the longest lifespan, that number is closer to 8%.

Neutered male dogs live 18% longer than un-neutered male dogs and spayed female dogs live 23% longer than unspayed female dogs, according to the report.

“But even if a pet is spayed or neutered it still needs shots, training, nutrition, dental care and parasite control to live a long, healthy life,” Lefebvre says.

Julius Caeser, an 18-year-old Yorkshire Terrier lives in Rapid City, South Dakota. The average Yorkshire Terrier lives to about 11.3.

Mike Deal, 55, Julius Caesar’s owner, says Rapid City has been an exceptional place to have a dog.

“Having a hard winter kills the ticks and sand fleas and the summer doesn’t get too hot,” Deal says. “I have never seen such a pet friendly area.”

And Julius Caeser certainly lives like a king. “He has an actual seat at the table,” Deal says. “He’s never really been treated like a dog. He has always been part of our family.”

In Mississippi, the state ranking lowest for pet longevity, 44% of the dogs are not neutered or spayed, says Dr. Brandy Boykin a veterinarian in Jackson, Mississippi.

“When people come in and don’t spay or neuter their pets – they usually say they want to breed their pet or they are afraid to put them under anesthesia,” Boykin says. “A lot of Mississippi is still rural.”

Unneutered or spayed pets are also at greater risk for certain cancers, she says.

Neutering male pets decreases their chances of developing prostatic enlargement and disease and eliminates the risk of testicular cancer. Spaying female pets eliminates the risk of pyometra, a life-threatening infection of the uterus. If a female is spayed before her first heat cycle, chances of developing breast cancer drop dramatically as well, according to the report.

Pamela Cropley, 42, Staten Island, N.Y.’s first dog, Shadow, a German Sheppard Collie mix, was not spayed and developed mammary cancer.

“It came on so quickly, Cropley says. “We devastatingly had to put her to sleep. It was horrid. The doctor said that if we had just spayed her it would have significantly dropped her chances of getting the cancer.”

Now Cropley has four female dogs, all of which are spayed.

“Shadow was my first dog so it was all a learning experience,” she says.

None

State-by-state lifespans for cats from the Banfield Pet Hospital State of Pet Health report.(Photo: Banfield Pet Hospital)

However, cost is an issue when it comes to pet care. Prices range for spaying and neutering, but on average, dog procedures cost $278-$395 and cat procedures cost between $135-$248. Additional fees may apply based on a pet’s weight and other variables.

Read More.

Kevin Spacey Rescues Dog, Names Her to Honor Boston

adminHumor Leave a Comment

Kevin Spacey Adopts Dog, Names Her to Honor Boston Marathon Bombing

Kevin Spacey and new dog Boston

Kevin Spacey found a very special – and, well, very adorable – way to honor an American city that has seen both tragedy and triumph in the last few weeks.

“New member of the family,” he Tweeted Saturday, sharing a photo of his new puppy (seemingly adopted from the North Shore Animal League America). “Her name is Boston in honor of the city.”

Since three people were killed and more than 260 injured on April 15 when two bombs exploded near the Boston Marathon finish line, the actor, 53, has visited both victims and the cops who came to their aid.

He “had to get on a plane,” he told the Boston Herald. “I’m not a doctor or first responder, but if people know me from movies, and walking into their work space or room brings a smile to their face – with the challenges these amazing citizens have in front of them – then that’s worth coming.”

Read More.

State Assembly bill would ban pet tattoos and piercings as animal abuse

adminAlerts Leave a Comment

Ernesto Rodriguez, a tattoo artist, said he put the intricate tattoos on the bellies of his two dogs so they could be easily identified if they were lost.

Ernesto Rodriguez, a tattoo artist, said he put the intricate tattoos on the bellies of his two dogs so they could be easily identified if they were lost.

ALBANY – A Manhattan pol is trying to stop tattooing and body piercing from going to the dogs.

Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat, has introduced legislation to ban the piercing or permanent tattooing of companion animals.

“These are living beings and they should not be subject to human whims and fashion choices,” Rosenthal told the Daily News Thursday.

Rosenthal said subjecting pets to body piercing or tattooing is cruel and “just like any other abuse.”The bill has the support of the Humane Society of New York.

Read More.

Thousands of Britons scrap holidays because of fears for their pets: Rising cost of kennels and lack of goodwill from friends are blamed

adminHumor Leave a Comment

Faithful friend: A quarter of us are scaling back our holiday plans because we can't leave our pets behind

Thousands of Brits will sacrifice a holiday this year because of their pets, according to new research.

A new survey has found that the rising cost of kennels and sitters will prevent a quarter of families with pets from taking a vacation this summer.

Many say they are unable to rely on the goodwill of friends and family to help out, or are too embarrassed to ask.

Faithful friend: A quarter of us are scaling back our holiday plans because we can’t leave our pets behind

Others feel guilty about ‘abandoning’ their pets, even on short breaks, and worry about their welfare in cheaper boarding.

Two per cent of respondents said financial constraints or ’emotional ties’ had stopped them from taking a holiday without their pets for five years.

The figures were released yesterday by the free pet-sitting service Petaround.com, which polled 1,250 pet owners about their holiday plans.

Founder Phil Harris said: ‘Pets bring so much joy to people, but they do require constant care and as the survey shows, this can cause problems when planning to go abroad.

‘Family members and friends aren’t always there to help, and a professional pet-sitter or boarding can prove very expensive.

‘There’s also the issue of trust. Pets are part of a family and like with children, you wouldn’t entrust them into someone’s care without being certain it’s the right environment for them.

It seems we can't bear the thought of leaving our four-legged loved ones in kennels when we go on holiday

It seems we can’t bear the thought of leaving our four-legged loved ones in kennels when we go on holiday

‘Finding a service or professional that ticks all the boxes can be a time-consuming task and stressful task. With all these obstacles in the way, it’s no wonder that so many pet owners are planning to stay at home this year.’

According to figures released in 2012, 49 per cent of British households own at least one of the UK’s 27million pets. But the demands of looking after one can impact on travel plans.

Some 24 per cent of those polled said they planned to take at least one weekend break this summer, but were forced to ‘scale back’ their holiday arrangements because of the hassle and cost of prolonged pet-sitting.

.