Friday, 22 November 2019
Remember to include pets in your disaster evacuation plan
The Daily Examiner, 19 November 2019:
With 99 per cent of NSW officially in drought and 53 per cent, including the Clarence Valley, in high fire danger, residents getting ready to evacuate need to remember to include pets in their disaster plan.
Bushfires, floods and tropical cyclones are an increasing reality around the country.
World Animal Protection is encouraging people to be prepared by planning ahead – and have disaster packs for cats, dogs, horses, birds and small animals available to help.
“Many people don’t have a disaster plan that includes their pets,” World Animal Protection director Simone Clarke said.
“We know from looking at past disasters that people can make last-minute decisions to try to keep their pets safe, putting themselves in danger in the process.
“Pets must be part of emergency planning, not just to protect them but to keep your family safe too.”
World Animal Protection’s top disaster preparation tips are:
Prepare a disaster survival kit for your pet with food, water, medicine, identification and a favourite toy for comfort.
Put it in an easy-to-access spot and check it regularly to keep it up to date
Identify a “safe house”, such as a friend’s house, pet-friendly motel or animal shelter where you can take your pet during a disaster
Practise your plan so your pet is used to moving into their carrier. This will ensure you and your pet can move fast and stay calm in an emergency
Display a rescue sticker on your doors and windows to alert emergency responders that there are pets in the home that need to be rescued.
Put your pet’s name on the sticker so emergency personnel can call out to them Update your pet’s ID so that rescuers can contact you if they find your pet in an emergency. It’s best to get your pet microchipped so it’s easy to update contact information.
Visit www.protectyourpet.org.au to plan for your pet.
Thursday, 22 August 2019
One hundred & thirty-three dog attacks have been recorded in Clarence Valley so far in 2019
The Daily Examiner, 20 August 2019, p.6:
There have been 133 recorded dog attacks across the Clarence Valley this year, with most of the attacks avoidable.
In an attempt to curb the problem, Clarence Valley Council has released a brochure to inform dog owners of their responsibilities.
Council regulatory services supervisor Tim Brenton said if people had taken two simple steps most of this year’s dog attacks could have been avoided.
The first was to make sure dogs were always on a lead when being taken for a walk and the second was to ensure yards were properly fenced.
“The seriousness of the attacks varied, but these were the common threads,” Mr Brenton said. “Unless they are in an off-leash area, dogs must be on a leash if they are outside their property.
“Dog owners need to take all reasonable steps to ensure their dog is confined to the property where it is kept.”
The brochure, called Take the Lead, will be distributed widely around the Clarence Valley and available at the council’s customer service centres in Grafton and Maclean.
“Having a dog is wonderful,” Mr Brenton said. “But having a dog comes with responsibilities and this brochure aims to make people aware of those.”
The brochure also contains a list of off-leash areas around the Clarence Valley and some of the penalties that apply for breaches of the Companion Animals Act.
Saturday, 22 December 2018
Pet care in the home at during the festive season
https://www.123rf.com |
The Daily Examiner, 18 December 2018, p.7:
Saturday, 11 August 2018
Quotes of the Week
Monday, 5 February 2018
Who can provide Coco with a permanent loving home?
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Doggone right to have fun
Saturday, 8 December 2012
The Story of Floss
Monday, 26 November 2012
Sunday, 20 November 2011
Catvertising - the new reality?
Thursday, 5 August 2010
Have you seen Chloe the Staffy?
I vaguely remember hearing something but didn't pay too much attention.
On Saturday night while our family was away it happened again.
Apparently though, it went on for sometime and rumour was that it continued until around 1am.
Our six-year-old staffy dog is very sensitive to these sounds and so would be many other dogs.
Since Saturday night our dog has been missing.
I hope she has been found and kept safe, as a search on Sunday morning failed to find her.
She is a loving dog and would not hurt anyone.
Her name is Chloe and she is black and dark brown.
To the senseless idiots (there is no other word) that created this disturbance, that's all you are - idiots.
TONY FOULSTONE Grafton NSW
Sunday, 1 November 2009
Oh for goodness sake - leave me with something!
I'm doing my best to reduce my consumption level and live within a smaller environmental footprint in response to the threat of global warming - like a lot of other Australians I suppose.
I re-use where possible, limit the amount of household waste I produce, purchase second-hand goods in preference to new, shop locally, buy Australian almost exclusively when it comes to groceries, avoid buying food with ingredients which were produced by denuding rainforest, limit my meat eating to flesh that is less carbon intensive, walk everywhere I can or get public transport, don't load my garden with chemicals and I'm getting quite miserly when it comes to electricity and water.
So why do I feel like too much is being asked of me?
Because Larvatus Prodeo has opened my eyes to the fact that someone somewhere has written a book called "Time to Eat the Dog? the real guide to sustainable living" and those authors obviously want me to feel guilty about having a pet.
What next will I have to offer up on the altar of climate change - the heart of my first born?
Katz
Grafton
Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segment allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents. Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.
Monday, 7 September 2009
Mischief's bad utterances cost him a date with Max
After the news about Mischief the talkative cat broke another NT cat's owner declared that her cat Max was also a talking cat.
Mischief, who featured previously on this site, was all set to meet and have a chat with Max. Well, that's what Mischief's owner Robert "RJ" Duncan thought was on the cards.
However, Max's owner Mrs Snowball put a stop on any dalliance involving Mischief and Max.
The Northern Territory News reports that Mrs Snowball declined Mr Duncan's invitation because she doesn't want her cat picking up Mischief's bad habit of swearing.
According to Mrs Snowball, her cat Max can pronounce all her family members' names. Clever Max can even pronounce names with double syllables.
Sadly, there are no pics of Max - he's camera shy.
Sunday, 30 August 2009
Heard about Mischief the foul-mouthed feline?
The Northern Territory News reports that ex-boxer Robert 'RJ' Duncan, of Palmerston, claims his cat can say seven words: mum, no, now, what, f**k, pr*ck and why.
"He can't say 'dad' yet, which is a bit of a pr*ck. That's how he got the word 'pr*ck' I reckon, because I say it a lot."
When the Northern Territory News first visited Duncan, 34, and his wife Sandra, 32, at their Gray home, the house-bound moggie grumpily declined to comment.Instead, he scratched Mr Duncan a few times before bolting to his bedroom and barricading himself in his cupboard.
During a second visit, Mischief was much friendlier - and more talkative. All gathered heard him speak to Sandra, calling her "mum".
Mr Duncan said the two-year-old cat - which he and his wife adopted from his feral mother in Katherine - was most vocal at night.
Thursday, 5 March 2009
An den iz sed - cats out number p@rn on the Internet?
Salon and Sarah Hepola via a link from Larvatus Prodeo:
For what it's worth, I didn't mean to be a cat person. I grew up with a healthy, sneering disdain for the painfully middlebrow antics of "America's Funniest Home Videos," for the "Hang in there!" posters of kittens clinging precociously to a tree limb. But there was this orange tabby, and blah blah blah, and suddenly my clothes are covered in stubborn fur. Thing is, to be a cat person is something of a private affair. We don't meet at the park and throw sticks. We don't parade our animals down the block or stand around, chatting awkwardly while our pets sniff each others' rear ends. Whatever your cat does -- the way he curls up like a croissant and snores, the way he pads frantically about the bed at 4:30 a.m., paw to your face -- is largely between you and the torn furniture. Which is another reason I think cat culture erupted online, the same reason people get pets in the first place: It's nice to know you're not alone. Other people's cats do this stuff, too.........
In fact, I would submit that cats and kittens might outnumber porn at this point.
"You're probably right about that," says Scott Lamb, a senior editor at the trend-spotting site Buzzfeed. "That might be for the very prosaic reason that producing anything involving kittens is just so much easier than producing porn." After all, we're a nation of shutterbug narcissists, and cats are the closet thing at hand. "Panda ownership is not so common," he says, "but perhaps if it were, panda videos would be even more popular."
Hear that Senator Conroy? We're all probably more interested in kittehs than ti - well you get the picture.