K9 Advisors

April 19, 2009

ASPCA Call for Nominations: Do You Know Any Humane Heroes?

Filed under: ASPCA Newsletters — admin @ 2:33 pm

Call for Nominations: Do You Know Any Humane Heroes?

Humane A 12-year-old girl from Oregon launches a website that now helps provide food for dogs and cats at eight shelters across the country. A tabby serves as a guide cat for a blind and deaf dog, helping her canine companion accomplish daily tasks. These are just two of the ASPCA Humane Award winners of 2008, and now we’re once again inviting you to nominate the most special people you know who have worked on behalf of animals and the animals who have performed heroic acts during the past year.
 
Nominations are being accepted now through Wednesday, July 15. You’ll be asked to provide your contact information, your nominee’s contact information and a short statement (400 words or less) telling us why your hero deserves to be honored.

Winners will be invited to New York City this October for our Humane Awards Luncheon at the newly renovated Pierre Hotel.

ASPCA Where’s the Best Place to Get a Dog?

Filed under: ASPCA Newsletters — admin @ 2:32 pm

Where’s the Best Place to Get a Dog?

Dog

With everyone from news announcers to next-door neighbors weighing in on the Obamas’ quest for the First Dog, we’re not surprised to hear from folks who want to know where to find their own perfect pet. Here’s just one of many queries we received:

I’m always hearing from naysayers who want to get their dog from a breeder or pet store because they’re worried shelter dogs won’t be healthy. What can I tell them?
—Carol N.

We turned to our ASPCA veterinarians for an answer.

The ASPCA recommends avoiding pet stores because so many get their puppies from puppy mills—commercial breeding facilities that keep animals in terrible conditions and use canine parents for breeding purposes only.

As a consequence, many pet store animals suffer from congenital health problems, not to mention poor socialization and numerous other issues. Well-run shelters, on the other hand, examine the animals carefully, then vaccinate, deworm, spay or neuter, and perform a behavioral assessment on each adoptable pet. That information is then used to try to match an adopter with an animal who meets his needs and fits into his lifestyle.

Many shelters also provide follow-up health care and behavior advice, and will even take the animal back if things don’t work out. Adopting from a shelter turns out to be a much better deal!

ASPCA Learn the Truth About Puppy Mills

Filed under: ASPCA Newsletters — admin @ 2:30 pm

Learn the Truth About Puppy Mills—Today at Noon

Puppy Perhaps you’ve wondered how puppy mills can possibly be legal, or what you, as a member of the public, can do to help put an end to these large-scale commercial breeding facilities. The ASPCA’s Bob Baker has the answers, and he’ll be available today—that’s Friday, April 17—from noon to 2:00 P.M. EST to answer your questions during a live online discussion.

A nationally recognized authority on animal cruelty investigations and a key player in the ASPCA’s efforts to combat puppy mills, Baker has visited more than 700 puppy mills throughout the country, successfully closing hundreds of them, and his investigations have led to more than 1,000 related arrests.

Visit the ASPCA Online Community to learn more about the live chat with ASPCA puppy mill investigator Bob Baker.

ASPCA Happy Tails

Filed under: ASPCA Newsletters — admin @ 2:25 pm

ASPCA Happy Tails: Executive Assistant

Tulip

Working with animals requires patience and compassion, but if Tulip—a sassy black-and-white cat—could talk, she might say the same is true for people. This four-year-old feline originally arrived at our shelter in January 2006 and got to know ASPCA staff members very well when she was fostered in an office on the fifth floor of the ASPCA’s headquarters in Manhattan. 

As much as the fifth floor crew loved their finicky mascot, they desperately wanted to find her a real home. Staff members talked up Tulip to whoever would listen, and one such effort online proved golden. Patrick O’Keefe, Vice President of the ASPCA’s, posted a status update about Tulip on Facebook, which linked to a video of the cat in her habitat. Patrick’s friend, Stacy Butler of Warwick, NY, saw the video and was smitten.

“There was something about her that just seemed so right,” says Stacy. “I’d been considering adopting kittens, but I didn’t have the time to take off from work to get them acclimated. When I saw Tulip, it dawned on me that an older cat would be perfect.”

Stacy drove two hours to the ASPCA Adoption Center, where she met the tentative Tulip. “She sat in the chair next to me in the waiting area of her office, but she didn’t really want to be touched,” Stacy recalls. “She kept edging closer to me, and I thought with time she’d be okay. When we got home, she stretched out right next to me on the sofa.”

Months later, Tulip is happy as a clam in her new digs. Never one to conceal her emotions, she continues to express herself in a variety of ways with a tap of the tail or a swat of the paw. “Tulip’s tail is like a separate being—it moves even when she’s sound asleep,” says Stacy. “I think she uses it as a form of communication—I’ve even seen her tap along with music!”
 
Perhaps a bit nostalgic for office life and the workaday world, Tulip likes to play “queen of the desk chair,” and according to Stacy, will race you for it if she thinks you’re about to sit down. “She also likes to help make the bed by sitting on each new layer of bedding,” says Stacy. “While Tulip’s participation in routine daily tasks can make them more challenging, it also makes them more fun.”
 
Stacy adds: “Tulip’s a reminder that good things come in unexpected packages. Even though she’s a tough cookie, she’s really a mushball deep down inside—and I just love her.”

ASPCA Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Month

Filed under: ASPCA Newsletters — admin @ 2:22 pm

It’s Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Month—Have You Gone Orange Yet?

ASPCA This April, the ASPCA is asking compassionate folks everywhere to celebrate Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Month by going orange for animals. On April 7, we held a festival in New York City’s Union Square Park as iconic buildings across the country lit up orange. Following last week’s event, the ASPCA will host special activities for animal lovers in Austin and Los Angeles.

But the question is—have you taken the orange plunge yet? If not, you’re in luck—you have the entire month of April to participate! The fact is, everyone could use a little more color in their lives—and to help brighten yours, we have a list of easy, effective ways to go orange for animals. Whether you find that orange shimmer by wearing orange glow sticks, decorating your office with orange ribbons or tricking-out your car with orange paint, we thank you for going orange and helping the ASPCA spread the word about preventing cruelty to animals.

Here’s a sneak peek at some simple, yet successful ways to go orange for animals:

- Purchase orange string or rope lights, available online and at hardware and specialty lighting and novelty stores, and wrap your house, terrace, trees, lamppost, porch steps, mailbox…even the family swing set.

- Open your closet and get out those bright orange pants, shirts, ties, shoelaces and socks and don them for the next two Fridays—or any other day of the week—for the month of April.

- Vroom-vroom for animals! Write some animal-friendly messages on your vehicle— “Go Orange for Animals!” or “Celebrate Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Month!”

- Got a green thumb? Plant an orange garden for animals. Ask your local garden center which orange flowering plants thrive in your area, and do some creative landscaping.

P.S. While April is a special time to get your orange groove on, we’d love for animal lovers across the nation to keep the orange glow throughout the year. It is our hope that one day the color orange will be synonymous with animal welfare everywhere!

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