Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Appealing to the Masses

Dear Friends and Family, the time has come. My friends and I are building a regional animal welfare organization The Underground Tailroad, and we are asking for your support. I am asking for your support. Ever since I felt called to this part of North Carolina, I have been surprised time and time again with how pieces of a puzzle have fit together. The final pieces for The Underground Tailroad are finding their place.

One of those pieces was finding a group of people of similar mind and the energy to do some really big work - creating better communities through the human-animal bond. Kindness, creativity, collaboration, and cooperation motivate us to help both the animals and the people in our community. We believe that animals help humans in so many ways, and we have a responsibility to be stewards for living things.

Another piece is simply the process of pursuing our tax write-off status...the 501c3. We are an incorporated Nonprofit in North Carolina, but it will take us up to a year to have that piece of paperwork which says, yep, you can write off your donation, folks. In the meantime, we still have a lot of work to do, and because our work is about ending euthanasia, we don't just get to sit around on our fannies and wait for that 501c3. This work needs us to be available every day and almost every hour. We need you to invest in us, to reach out to those who might want to invest in us, like any start-up. In the nonprofit world, the rewards aren't in big stock percentages and monetary payouts; the rewards are in making the world a better place.

What do we do? A lot. We work with animal shelters to improve relationships and save animals - we foster animals ourselves and network them to adopters and rescues. We transport animals from high-euthanasia shelters in the south to safe-for-life facilities in other parts fo the country. Why? Because transport works. Of the 51 dogs and cats sent to a rescue partner in New Jersey two days after Thanksgiving, only 5 are still looking for homes. And we are doing it again the day after Christmas.

We try to help people with animal emergencies and to keep families together - that means helping someone keep their dog or cat, whenever we can. We strive to improve awareness about spay/neuter as a key element in ending the euthanasia of 3-4 MILLION animals a year in the USA. Indeed, improving access to spay/neuter in our rural mountains of Western North Carolina is a top priority. And we know that people so often don't know where to turn to for help here. We want to be the place they know to turn to. What about wildlife? For those of you who know me, I have a wildlife rehabilitation background, as do others on the team. Because we are in isolated geography, finding help for injured wildlife is often a challenge, and that is also something we want to assist with. A wildlife program is in our list of goals for the next 3 years.

Right now we just need to be able to dedicate ourselves to this effort fully and wholeheartedly. We are looking for support which would include partial salary support for two people, myself being one of them. We need to be able to go out in the community and work, make the connections that need to be made, in order to build The Underground Tailroad into what we have dreamed of. It is not some ephemeral dream. It is real. We have created real success in this region, and it is also because we see our community asking for us to take the next steps that we feel the time is right. One in 10 people cannot read in this part of the country. Unemployment is rampant. Animal welfare AND community welfare are far behind where any of us would like them to be. It is up to us to do something about it.

We see organizations like Best Friends Animal Society, Animal Compassion Network, Asheville Humane Society, and The Washington Animal Rescue League, and we know we have the capacity to evoke change just like they have. That is what we are striving for. What about our name? The Underground Tailroad was built with the idea that we are responsible for guiding our communities to freedom and prosperity, and that our communities are made up of living things, in general. Just as humans helped other humans through the Underground Railroad, so do we see our responsibility to be a beacon for hope in our current age, and we hold the significance of the Underground Railroad close to our hearts and with utmost respect as we pursue this through the human-animal bond.

Do you have questions? Would you like to support us, but want to know more? Please email us at undergroundtailroad@gmail.com or message us on our Facebook page The Underground Tailroad. We are working on our website, but the fact of the matter is that Facebook is a powerhouse for helping animal welfare advocates do their work. The Facebook page is also an excellent resource for you to see what we are about, the cases we have handled, our rhetoric and passion.

I thank you for your time. I thank you for following this blog and for following our work. We couldn't be here without you, and so many, MANY animals are alive because of your support. Just as so many people are thankful for the help we've been able to provide. We want to do more. To do more we need you.

Happy Holidays.

Love from the Tailroad,

Chandra

President & Executive Director

The Underground Tailroad

If you would like to donate, make checks out to The Underground Tailroad and send to:

Chandra Spaulding

The Underground Tailroad

8381 US Hwy 441 S

Sylva, NC 28779 USA

Donations can also be sent via Paypal to undergroundtailroad@gmail.com

Again, thank you for supporting our vision and mission!

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Welcome to the Land of Misfit Toys (Toy Breeds, That Is)

Minion is doing his best to distract me. He is indignant and seeking revenge after being crated for a few hours while I ran errands, so this six week old kitten is alternately attacking my clothes, biting my nose, and swatting at my eyeballs as if to say, "If you aren't going to look at me, then I'll make it so you won't see at all." He's my precious pearl of a fosterling. Very charming. And lonely. His two siblings passed away within a couple days of each other this week. If you ask me why, you'll hear me say, "Because people don't fix their pets." It's nearing the end of what has been a very long year of trying to save cats and kittens...of trying to make people care about saving cats and kittens. I'm not sure where we are with that.

The Jackson County Animal Shelter has continued to be full to bursting with purrballs, and I'd like to see the community care more about that. I'd like to see my community stand up against that. We need a new shelter. And people need to spay and neuter the animals in their care. Indeed, yesterday a woman took turns pleading for help and screaming at me because I wouldn't take her two 'very unique' kittens. She'd couple that with how irresponsible people are when it comes to fixing their pets. I admit, I'm confused. And as for 'very unique,' well, all kittens are unique. Every kitten in animal shelters across the United States is UNIQUE. Unique kittens die every day in numbers the general public doesn't want to digest. And since the general public isn't facing the reality in Jackson County, NC, very little is being done to change it. The work that is being done is being carried out by a handful of taxpayers who work jobs, raise families, and fight tirelessly to make a difference. I'm one of those.

Last night I spent a few hours of one-on-one time with my son Eli. I took him to the State Fair. It was actually our second time, but the first was marred by our watching a newly hatched chick drown in its water dish behind the glass panel of its hutch. Sure, Universe, just wait for the gang of animal advocates to show up to have the chick take its last breath a few seconds before we finally got help (slow, plodding help). Eli even snuck behind 'enemy lines' so to speak to make sure it was dead, because the attendant seemed dazed about the whole thing. Eli, who has witnessed enough of animal welfare struggles this year, deserved a fun trip, so I tried to make that happen by returning to the fair with him for Mommy-and-Me time. I have to say, the results were impressive.

So impressive that after an enormously heavy work load this past week, I was beat by the end of our night out. My eyelids kept closing, and I finally pulled over at a gas station to catch a few zzzzzz's, setting the timer for an hour. Nine minutes later, I kid you not, I bolted awake certain that I was asleep at the wheel and careening off the highway, with the green grass right in front of my eyes. I wasn't. I was safely parked. But I was awake after that. I hadn't been that wiped out since working overnights as a critical care veterinary nurse in California. I can remember those days of leaving work at 7 a.m. and having to pull into a drive-through's parking lot or off the road by a cow pasture to get a little sleep before finishing the trip home. It's all good, though. It's just been a busy week.

Haywood Spay/Neuter had its largest spay/neuter day yet on September 11th, sending out ninety dogs and cats between trap-neuter-return and owned pets. And, yes, September 11th. That loaded date where time seems to stop and the air seems to be knocked out of one's lungs. That was the date for our spay/neuter trip. We commemorated the day by tying memorial ribbons to all the crates being loaded to go to Asheville Humane Alliance. For a couple of weeks beforehand we would say over and over again throughout the day, "Our next spay/neuter trip is on September 11th." We just had to do something. Sometimes when there seems to be nothing one can do to make something better, a small act, such as tying ribbons on crates, becomes significant, especially when owners of dogs and cats want to participate, and we join together to be a community in the wake of sadness.



 So that's a very brief synopsis of my week. Very brief and incomplete. And it is just a lead-in for the rescue magic I was able to partake in today. Rescue magic coming on the tails of exhaustive diligence is the most rewarding magic there is, I believe.

From Left to Right: Eli, holding Rae, Kessa with Rock Star,
and Sandy with Blue, her new foster.

If you'd come in my office today, you would have seen three adults all wrapped up in helping three little dogs. First, there was Blue, the little middle-aged dachshund with the nose that goes on for forever. We jokingly referred to him as a pelican, for when you'd hold him in your arms, it was as if he were perching, bird-like, his nose a loooooong beak. We pulled him from the Jackson County Animal Shelter this morning, thanks to a foster coming forward to give him a place in their home while we figure out where he will go rescue-wise.

Blue, the Dachshund

Kessa was calling me, so I knew it had to be important. Kessa goes up to the Jackson shelter about once a week to take photographs of as many animals as she can. This was something I used to do, and I'm thrilled to have her taking a lead role in it now because there don't seem to be enough hours in a day. And pictures save lives.

Rock Star after bath & trim
Rock Star's wounds, front right shoulder/leg

















Rock Star is all of 11 pounds. He is a miniature poodle mix, though it was hard to tell under the matted hair, gloppy goopy eyes, and, well, the malodorous (okay, ahem, Reeeeking) wounds under his one front leg. She wanted to know if there was anything we could do for him. Meanwhile, my dogs all heard the phone ring and were expressing their excitement through barking, whining, and general tail-beating-against-crates. Eli slept through the whole thing.

We put our heads together, and we decided to call ARF Jackson Humane, so I hung up and called our go-to gal in the organization to see if we could get them to take on the little bugger and get him medical attention. It was a go. Kessa drove him to Sylva Animal Hospital, had his wounds assessed, medications dispensed, and then brought him to the office. You wouldn't have known he was grossly injured, the way he toddled around the back office, happy-go-lucky, content to go sit in a crate or be petted.

Christy Swanton showed up with toy dog number 3. In fact, this dog even has numbers...in its ear. Rae is a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel who was at Haywood County Animal Services. Supposedly she was 'found in a barn.' Who knows what the reality is. But she does have a tattoo with letters and numbers in one ear. She has obviously had litters of puppies, and her eyes have that cloudy misty appearance that comes with advancing age in dogs. She is also darling. Absolutely endearing. Three people, three toy dogs.

Sweet 'Baby' Rae, upon arrival at rescue, before grooming/bath


Thankfully it was a fairly low-key day in the office, and Christy brought clippers. Rock Star and Rae each received their trimmings, followed by major baths. Rock Star has a thin coat and flaky, icky skin, plus he has those big wounds. Rae, well, she just smelled. Blue, Rae, and Rock Star are all about eight years old, and both of the boys are neutered. Just goes to show that small dogs do end up in our shelters...more often that we'd like, most certainly.

Blue left with his foster family. Rock Star left with Kessa, and he'll be bounced around a couple foster homes until he settles in with a longer-term ARF foster to heal from what looks like abscessed bite wounds, judging from the four deep punctures. He's receiving antibiotics and pain medication, as well as eye ointment. It looks like he has vision problems and is hard of hearing too.

Rae is with me. She will be dropped off with my landlady in the morning. My landlady is a hobby breeder of Cavalier King Charles Spaniels. Fancy that. No one is allowed to criticize her in my presence for being a breeder. For three years she has allowed me to freely foster cats and dogs out of my rental. She never complains. Her dogs are healthy, beautiful, and receive excellent veterinary care...what a breeding program should be. She raises Cavaliers because she grew up with them in Ireland, and you basically have to work from home to own one of her pups. She knows the breed. She loves her dogs. And I thought I'd ask for her help on Rae's behalf.

Sweet Baby Rae will either stay with my landlady permanently or be worked into one of our transport programs. Only time will tell. The important thing is that she, as well as Blue and Rock Star, are safe. Because people were motivated, creative, and willing to work together, Blue, Rock Star, and Rae are SAFE. That's what it takes. We have to move beyond being a community in name only to being an active and responsible community that wants to change our reality. The animals deserve it. Assuredly so. But so do we. Our shelters reflect us as citizens, as taxpayers, as human beings. The way we treat our animals reflects humanity, or the lack thereof.

I don't mind a stretch of lack of sleep. I don't mind answering the phone call from a friend. I don't mind finding a space for a fifteen pound dog to spend the night so she can get out of a shelter and feel loved again. That's what it takes. I wouldn't trade it for the world, and I wake up every day grateful for my life and the people and animals in it. I know each day is an adventure, even if just a virtual one, such as dreaming I am careening off the road. More often than not, though, the adventure is real. There is a lot of work to do in Western North Carolina to make our Community better, and I'm game for that adventure. You can bet on it.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Life was good with Velvel. Then you had kids.


Oh, dearest Tailroadies...grant me this response to the following article published on www.slate.com. While I believe in kindness and compassion, I also believe that writers have a responsibility to recognize the power of their words. When it comes to animal welfare, what seems like a little damage can go a very, very long way. So, read Ms. Benedikt's article, if you will, and tolerate my response, for it is mouth, sarcastic, and scolding...not in my normal style. Just humor me. Love from the Tailroad, Chandra

http://www.slate.com/articles/life/family/2013/07/kids_and_dogs_if_you_re_having_a_baby_do_not_get_a_puppy.html


Dear Ms. Arnold, oh, I mean, Dear Ms. Been-a-dick…oops, I mean Ms. Benedikt,

It’s too bad you can’t take your own advice: “…If you do get a dog, don’t have kids.” The least you could have done, though, is stop at one. Your piece reads like you have been stuck in a nightmarish PPD haze for, uh, how long…oh, yes, four years. Seriously, you have to wipe your four year old’s bottom, but you can’t find time to take your dog to the groomer so HIS butt is trimmed and you don’t have to, as you put it, “grab a pair of scissors and hack off a clump of his hair” when he goes potty? Certainly it can’t be about money, since you’ve had three kids and own 2,459 tiny fucking Legos. Okay, maybe grandma gave the kids the Legos, though I’d be surprised if she gave you tiny fucking Legos. I’ll give you that one, though. And maybe she gave you those go-go-gadget-knock-me-up genes, but there is such a thing as birth control. I recommend you start using it, because with your luck Velvet, no, wait, Valet, or was it Velcro…oh, wait, VELVEL, that’s right...Velvel will live to be about 20 years old regardless of kidney or liver issues. At your rate you will be giving the Duggar family a run for their money. 

Maybe you should put a little less time into baby-making and take the kids for a walk with your dog. I wouldn’t be surprised if you have one of those three-child strollers so your kids’ feet never have to touch the ground.  (Actually, do you even let them go outside? I mean, the germs! And the dog poop they could step in! Oh my!) Here’s an idea: tell John to put his pants back on. Have him put the baby in an Ergo carrier like the cool dads do, and tell him to take the dog for a walk. Then you can change that shirt covered in baby puke, because that’s gotta be a drag. I’ve never heard of a mom being urped up on before by her baby. What an inconvenience.

Oh, wait, let me think for a minute…YES! I can remember baby urp up! It’s hard to dredge up that memory. It’s covered up in dog hair and cat shit from all the foster animals I take care of. Foster animals which come with bylines such as: “Surrendered to shelter because of new baby,” or “Moving to new apartment that won’t allow pets.” Or maybe “Found it along the road, and it must be a stray” (yeah, buddy, because that is why he was sitting there politely at your side looking at you like he’s ready to play fetch while you signed him into doggy death camp). Another oldie but a goody is “allergies.” Uh-huh. Allergies, my ass. Can’t you come up with some better excuses, people? Oh, but I digress. We were talking about baby urp up, weren’t we? I DO know about baby urp up. Do you know why, Ms. Benedikt? Because I am a mom. Yup. Birthed a baby out of this here vajayjay. That was nine years ago. I’d have had more, but, well, other people’s pets’ hair and poop have kind of gotten in the way of that. Looks like it’s going to stay that way, since you are telling lovely, loving, doting couples to never grow up and to never get a dog. So there will just be more pets not getting homes in your fairy tale, which means more work for those of us who care about living things other than ourselves. I guess you think 3 million animals dying in shelters in the United States each year just isn’t enough. Oh, wait, you also said that thing about if you get a dog, skip the kids. That’s right. How very Peter Pan-ish of you. Actually, your life sounds very Generation Millenial…maybe we should get you on Sixteen and Pregnant?

And all that whining coming from Velvel, is it as whiny as your writing? Then you should probably know exactly how he feels, because I’m pretty sure he knows exactly how you do. After all, people domesticated dogs, not the other way around. People spent year after year after year across time luring the canine spirit to crawl into our laps. We heap our abuse upon them, and they know us often better than we know ourselves. Maybe he is saying, “Legos on the floor and Desitin-painting by small children are normal, as is your life. Love it, and pet me, and remember I am old so if I fart, forgive me. People fart all the time and dogs don’t complain. Oh, and just let me lick up that urp up. It looks good.”

What if you used your pen to, oh, I don’t know, say something along the lines of, “Hey, it’s tough. I’m a tired mom with three kids, a lazy husband, and an old crotchety dog. It’s hard to be a grown up. The economy sucks. I have to write stupid drivel in order to buy Legos, Desitin, a new shirt, and liver meds for my dog. When you go get that puppy for your partner, remember that the growing up didn’t start there. It started the first time you kissed. Life’s tough. Grow up. And when that puppy or the kids are driving you nuts, remember the first time you kissed and put Marley and Me in the DVD player.”

Maybe you could use your experience as a real world parent to help those of us who are fighting to build better communities by saving the lives of cast-off animals. Was Velvel a rescue? What’s his story? Use your words to help others who are struggling. Help lift them up. Let them know they aren’t alone. Maybe that’s what you were trying to convey, but we animal advocates can be a sensitive lot. That’s because we work ALL THE TIME to fix other people’s mistakes, and we don’t like it when someone makes it worse when they have the talent to make it better. My kid spends his spare time going to the animal shelter with me so we can try to save another life. Then there are the really cool field trips we take to the veterinarian. Oh, and it’s really awesome after school when he gets to hang out with me at the spay/neuter office, watching me try to help people get their shit together to fix their pets. Saturday mornings are for sleeping in. Yeah, right. Saturday mornings in our house are like any other day. Dogs start barking before dawn. Actually, my neighbors fighting cocks start crowing an hour before that, oh Glory. Then the cats start meowing for food. The litter boxes have to be cleaned. The bottle-baby kittens need to be fed. Oh, and on that topic, don’t you even try to say that my having only a nine year old means I don’t get what you are going through. You try bottle-feeding kittens for one whole kitten season. You wouldn’t last a week. You’d be too worried about your shirt.

I’d love it if someone used their considerable talent to make things easier for those of us who pull more hours out of a day than one can think humanly possible. I thought I was exhausted when my son was a toddler. I was wrong. I’m bone-tired every single day. I see sadness pretty much every single day, too, but I try to make the best of it, because I want my son to grow up to be part of a generation that looks out for each other and the planet. I also know that any suffering I may have in my life is nothing compared to the suffering that takes place in other parts of the world. We are damn lucky to be able to have our kids and dogs. We are damn lucky that our kids in most cases get to grow up, and that dogs get to be part of our self-serving lives to calm us, to challenge us, to keep us safe. In some places they just end up in a cooking pot. Gives your ‘dog food scare’ home cookin’ scenario a little different perspective, doesn’t it? And how nice to live in a country where we can have more than one child not because we hope that one will survive, but because we can be selfish. Hell, I’m all for reproductive rights, but enough is enough. We can’t even fix all our dogs and cats. Stupid humans. But we can just keep having more kids because we want to nah nah nah booboo you can’t stop me and then complain about the dog. So there you go. I’m sure you have more baby vomit to deal with, and don’t forget those Legos. There are still probably about 1,982 of the tiny fucking things on the floor, and by now they are covered in Desitin too (ever heard of child locks?) We wouldn’t want to keep you from your life’s major catastrophes.

One last word of advice, though…how about this: instead of spending so much time writing about how awful it is to have a dog when you have kids, you spend that time WITH YOUR DOG. Maybe then he’d stop whining. He probably just wants to pee. 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Breathing In, Reaching Out

It was 2 a.m. last night when I finally turned off the light. I was caught up in a document 168 pages long, and I'd only made it through half, but what an inspiring half it was. I didn't realize how quickly it would lead to a real world impact. Twelve hours was all it took. The document is the Pets for Life Community Outreach Toolkit. Big name, I know. But inside the Toolkit was an ethic I believe in. It is an ethic that inspired the creation of The Underground Tailroad. It is an ethic that motivates me every day.

Click HERE to Find Your Own Downloadable Copy of the Toolkit

I believe in the Human-Animal Bond. I believe that animals bring a lot of goodness to our lives - intrinsic and extrinsic rewards which improve human health and well-being. I believe that it is our human duty to bring such goodness to the lives of animals, as well. Call it what you may: stewardship, compassion, care-taking, dominion. Although I don't personally ascribe to the latter label, I've been approached by more than one individual who sees from a spiritual perspective that humans have dominion over the creatures of the earth by Grace of God, so it goes on the list. Whether stewardship or dominion or somewhere in-between, aren't we laden with the responsibility of creating goodness?

I do ascribe to the Pets for Life (PFL) model. All too often I hear animal advocates and animal lovers pushing humans to the side with judgment and hostility. Do I ever feel that way? Most certainly. I don't believe that animal cruelty should go unnoticed or uncorrected. I see neglect. I react like the majority of humans with disgust and dismay as animals suffer under our care. But I also know that if I want things to improve for the animals, I better not forget the people behind them, or I will never win. I will never be contributing to fixing what is a broken system of animal welfare. I will be an actor, a player with a part, and I may have impact in the moment, but I won't be creating the impact I want to see across time. I better put on my big girl pants and swallow my ego, because that's the only way I'll get the world that I want. The more I tell someone what to do or put my expectations on them, the harder I will have to work in my life. I don't want to work that hard, so I choose a different course.

Which brings me to today. 2 p.m.

I'm sitting in the bustling office at Haywood Spay/Neuter, where I am Executive Director, and the phone rings. A gentleman is looking for the phone number for animal services. That's easy enough, but oh so often there is much more behind that request, and without my prodding, he laid it upon me. He has a dog that he needs to give up. 

Stop. 

How many of you know this moment? This is THE moment, folks. This is the make it or break it moment. This is a crossroads with multiple destinations, and this is where the real work begins. What do you do?

Judge? Say, "You horrible human being"? That's the easy one. It gives you an immediate sense of worth by making another person worthless. It doesn't take much work at all to get to that destination.
Escape? Haywood County Animals Services is 828.456.5338. There. done. I'm an Executive Director at a spay/neuter nonprofit. This isn't my responsibility. I've got a million things to do today, so this can be someone else's problem. NIMBY. Not in my backyard. 

In all honesty, I am not very good at pressing the 'escape' button. In fact, I'm sure there are lots of people who think I need to press the 'escape' button more often, but that's not my path in this life. But I am not you, so I'm just putting that option out there.

I'm pretty sure it was because I was reading the Toolkit that I found myself taking a deep breath. In. That quiet space we all know exists but takes an effort to tap into. Unless you are a practiced yogi or a sage or a priest, I suppose. I like to think that our social workers and our teachers are good at this too, this breathing in and pause. Breathe in so as to reach out. 

It wasn't just a dog. It was a pit bull type dog. Big strike against the dog if it goes to the shelter. The fellow then stated that the dog had mange. How about just putting a big red X across that dog's intake sheet if it ends up at animal services? Maybe I'm being a pessimist, but I think I'm being more of a realist. Rescue resources for pitties in our area are few and far between. Complicate that with a medical condition, and whammy. No happy ending. Just an ending instead. So what now? 

The answer for me is simple: try to find a solution to keep this dog out of the shelter. He wasn't trying to give up the animal to the shelter out of lack of love. As the story unfolded, I could hear his voice waver. He'd found this dog over a year ago. It was a mellow dog, good with kids and other dogs, well-behaved, laid-back. All wonderful qualities. So why give it up? I asked that, and he gave me reasons. Real reasons.
  • He's done everything he knows to do to treat the skin disease and nothing is working. 
    • Hear yourself judging? You might be.
  • He has four other dogs, and this one is chained.
    • Judging yet? 
  • He is unemployed.
Ah. This is something I can relate to. My family, in general, has had lots of up-and-down financial struggles since I was about eight years old, so I relate to the stresses we encounter in life with a fairly long-arm view. I also was unemployed for twenty months while creating the Tailroad movement, putting myself through grad school (almost done!), caring and educating my son, and trying to find an awesome job in animal advocacy, such as I have now.
By taking the time to listen and ask open-ended questions, I was able to find out quickly that this was a man who was overwhelmed. He wanted help, but didn't seem to quite want to accept it. The more we spoke over the phone, the more I thought that, "Wow, I think he is embarrassed!" I may never know, but it sounded to me like he felt horrible about how bad his dog looked, and that he didn't want anyone to know this was his dog, his responsibility, and, in his eyes, his failure. Nothing he'd tried had worked. Mange can make a dog look appalling when it goes systemic - a dog covered by festering skin. Maybe he should have taken the dog to the vet, you say, perhaps with a little bit of a tilted nose, a sniff, and a hint of sarcasm. Yes, there is that. However, low-cost veterinary services can be hard to come by. Also, from a cultural context, which I highly believe everyone needs to think about as they live their lives, we live in a location where people tend to do what they can with what is available, including doing their own shots for their pets, and home remedies if something is wrong with them, or reaching for a product at a farm supply store. It's common practice here.
What next? Time for action. We made a plan. I took his contact information and asked if I could try to secure veterinary care for his dog. He acquiesced. It took quite a bit of time to get to this point. Before we reached that point, I asked about his other dogs, because I really wanted to know more about them. I found out one had been adopted from a local humane society and had come fixed. Great! Another was a female feist. Fixed. Woohoo! The third was a 13 year-old pit bull. Wow, sounds like a good caretaker to me. Not fixed, he admitted, but given the dog's age, that's fair, and he was the one to bring up how he needs to keep an eye out for prostate and testicular cancer. Fantastic. The fourth is a small-breed puppy, not yet fixed. A mutt. So we talked about signing the puppy up for our spay/neuter trip at the end of the month when it is old enough to also receive a rabies vaccine. Kind of glad we kept that conversation going.

Why is the dog chained? Because he has a smaller home, and this dog is a larger dog, and there may be too many dogs, and he, the human, is stressed out about life right now. That situation isn't ideal, but it goes on a to-do list to come back to in the future. At least he doesn't seem to want to chain this dog up, which is still considered common practice here in Western North Carolina.

I gave him my cell number so he had a way to reach me, because I told him it might take me a day or two to align assistance. Honestly, if I was going to have to solicit the volunteers and staff in the office for donations, I was willing to do it. I gave him my number because I wanted him to know that I wasn't just listening and giving up on him and his dog.

During the next hour I spoke with an animal hospital twice. I spoke with Linda from SPARK, a pit bull organization which funds medical care. I spoke with Joanna from Francis Fund, Haywood County's emergency veterinary expense resource. Between all these partners, we managed to make him an appointment to have his dog seen so it could receive the treatment it needs.
The veterinary receptionist was helpful beyond words. She was thoughtful and understanding. And I appreciated two organizations joining together to offer to fund the treatment this dog needed. Did I hear the familiar refrain about how he needs to pay something because we don't want him thinking he doesn't have any responsibility? Yes. I did. And I could only reply that he was paying in other ways. In the back of my head I couldn't help but think how a little giving now could lead to goodness being paid forward down the road, how it could keep this dog in its home with a person who loves it, how it could bring another community member into our hearts and into this process of change. We have the potential in these scenarios to make friends. To find a new volunteer. To find a spokesperson who takes our message and spreads it across a neighborhood, a community. We have the potential to save a dog. To help a family. That's about all I need.

This is still an open case. But I will say, though, that when I called him back with the good news, well, it warmed my heart to hear his gratitude. I could hear his voice lift with some real hope and optimism. And surprise. I didn't expect that, so for me, the reward was very great, even if the time investment was high. I received three cell phone photos of his dogs today. In a way, I've already met his family. I told him I'll be calling him tomorrow to remind him of his upcoming appointment, and, yes, this whole thing could fail. This blog could be for nothing. He could simply -poof- disappear, but I don't think he will. I may have to find a rescue for this dog. He may really need help rehoming him. Or maybe not. We'll just have to see. He loves this dog, so if we have to rehome him, well, we're doing it out of love, and I'll work with that.

I did offer him a word of caution: "Be nice to the veterinary staff." Just to be safe. Just a reminder that a lot of people were going to bat for him and his dog, so be polite. Maybe I shouldn't have, but, basically, in this blog I am saying to you and to me the same thing, "Be nice." Be part of the solution. 

And although I am the Executive Director at Haywood Spay/Neuter, Haywood Spay/Neuter is STILL Haywood Animal Welfare Association at its root. I see it as my duty and my destiny to strive to help us all fare well. And I will continue to work my way through the Pets for Life Toolkit, because I don't think it is done teaching me lessons. Indeed, I believe it is just a beginning to something incredible, a path to a destination I want to reach where we all work together, and the animals are safe and loved, and so are the humans.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra


Monday, June 24, 2013

Smitten With Kittens: Baby Exxon


Baby Exxon was trapped on June 23, 2013, at an Exxon station in Sylva, NC, where she'd been surviving on her own for some time. Folks tried to nab her, and she just wouldn't give in. Food was being left out for her, but finally we procured a live trap, got rid of all the old food, and trapped her cute little spirited hissy self within a few hours.

We made a video blog about her transformation. So many cats are trapped and euthanized each year across the United States. Classified traditionally as 'ferals,' we like to use the more-appropriate term 'Community Cats.' Community Cats range from being, yes, feral, or quasi-wild, to tamed or tameable kitties. But in our shelter system, they often face a sad fate: euthanasia. The blanket euthanasia policy which these cats face rankles us to no end. Community Cats were created by humans over the centuries, and we have a role as stewards upon this planet to care for them. Yes, we need to eliminate the proliferation of such cats in our society, but the best way to do that is through spay/neuter and education. Trap-Neuter-Return programs do just that, and they work.

Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) means trapping Community Cats, fixing and vaccinating them, and placing them back with the rest of their colony. The population of these cats quickly stabilize, unless people, yes, PEOPLE, continue to dump unaltered cats in these locations. These cats are provided food and, often, medical care as needed. Upon weaning, kittens can be removed, at the initial stage, and placed for adoption. 

What about wildlife impact? Well, in Western North Carolina trap-neuter-return programs exist where people do, not in national parks, national forests, and other protected areas. They also are set up in communities that are not serving as major wildlife habitat, particularly because people, yes, again, PEOPLE, are living in close quarters, such as trailer parks and apartment complexes. What do you find in such locations? Endangered species? Not likely. What IS likely is trash, scraps, and an over-abundance of small rodents. Also, in TNR programs often food is provided for colonies, taking the impact off local wild animal populations. Further, I find it ironic how some groups push for cat eradication programs, i.e. killing these cats, when human impact, the over-abundance of PEOPLE, is acceptable. Humans build roads and multiple houses and businesses across the landscape. Humans pollute the earth and waste resources and eradicate species daily. But it is easier to point a finger at something other than ourselves.

Baby Exxon transformed within fifteen minutes of her rescue. She had been lonely and scared. She had most likely been dumped by a human being. She is safe and loved. She is a success story. For us, trap-neuter-return and looking out for the well-being of our community cat populations are better options than eradication.

We thank Kaleb of Catman2 for chatting about Baby Exxon on Facebook so that we heard about her situation and were able to help. She is now part of Smitten With Kittens 2013, and we look forward to the day when she is spayed, and to the day when she finds her Furever Family. No more smelly mackerel behind the kerosene pump for her.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra


Friday, June 21, 2013

Smitten With Kittens Videos

Hi, All!

Just a quick post to bring together some loose ends, as we work our way through learning about this blog's capabilities! We've created some videos this spring/summer to accompany the Smitten With Kittens 2013 campaign, so I am posting them here, now, too. Some are teachable moments. Some are fun.

1) Baby Raymond, our first bottle baby of the season, who found a fantabulous foster mama, thanks to our incredible WNC rescue network, over at Duke's Animal Haven!



2) Learning through our orphans - What to do if you find one!!!




3) Hissy kittens can become precious, loving additions to a family. In a shelter, though, kittens and cats like this are often overlooked. We'd like to change that! These three ended up being pulled as part of the Smitten With Kittens campaign.




4) Sharing the LOVE! These started out as bottle babies on the Tailroad, but a loving mama kitty was done nursing her own, and she jumped in to help, so these three kittens are now under her tender loving care.


5) These four kittens came from a feline leukemia colony. At the time of rescue these two girls and two boys tested negative, so they are in strict quarantine until they can be retested. We are taking it a step at a time. They were dying from flea anemia, but the fleas are taken care of, the kittens are being wormed and fed good food and given lots of love. We take our responsibilities seriously!




Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra

And we'll post videos from now on as we make them, now that we've learned!
xoxoxo

Spay, Neuter, Adopt, Adore, Support, and SHARE!

Friday, June 14, 2013

Smitten With Kittens 2013 - Mercy is a Mission

7 am, the time of reckoning. Ellen Kilgannon, the Executive Director at PAWS Bryson City (NC), and I had arrived at the trailer where we were set to remove sick kittens for euthanasia. Yep, that's right. Animal advocates were advocating for euthanasia, a humane end to the suffering the kittens were living through. When we'd first been to the home a couple weeks ago, there was rampant upper respiratory infection circulating through at least a dozen of over twenty kittens. Yep, that's right. Twenty-plus kittens among assorted adults. A nightmare which only got worse. Upper respiratory infections were a complication, but Kaleb of Catman2 Shelter returned about a week later to start testing the lot for Feline Leukemia.

FACT SHEETS FOR FELINE LEUKEMIA: 

http://www.vet.cornell.edu/fhc/brochures/felv.html

http://www.sheltermedicine.com/node/43

Feline Leukemia testing quickly became more than just a step in the process of helping the kittens. Three mother kitties and two larger, healthy-looking kittens tested positive. So what had started as a mission to assess, improve the health, and rescue kittens, while fixing the adults to remain behind, turned into a mission of mercy, whereby we'd remove the desperately sick kittens for euthanasia, which we assumed to be about half of them judging from the last time we'd been on site, and then testing the remainder. Those testing positive would be euthanized. Why? No one wants to euthanize kittens, but weak, fragile kittens fade, sometimes slowly, and suffer, and Feline Leukemia requires extensive quarantine and retesting. We don't currently have the infrastructure across the region to foster positive kittens for months on end. We don't even have space for healthy kittens. The caregiver suffers from various ailments, and she was incapable of providing the standard of care for potentially that many kittens for such a duration of quarantine either. It was the right thing to do, and a gut-wrenching task for all of us involved, right down to the health workers who alerted us to this situation.



But on June 14th at 7 am, when Ellen and I arrived to commence the Mercy Mission, we found the majority of the kittens had cleared their respiratory and eye infections. Whether this was on their own or this was due to administration of antibiotics by their caregiver is unknown (she had been provided with antibiotics by Kaleb, but we're not sure whether she followed through or was capable of doing so). What it meant, though, is that we had to re-assess our action plan. We chose to remove the smallest, youngest kittens and whichever larger ones we could get our hands on. Some were hiding under the home with mother cats, and they would be retrieved at a later date, and there were more in a shed on another part of the property that would be dealt with later, as well.



All told, we picked up ten fuzzy, fluffy purrbabies ranging from five to eight weeks old, including the only one that we could see with any remnant of severe eye infection. Also among the kittens was the caregiver's favorite, the smallest, most frail of them all, a fluffy tortoiseshell. Animal advocacy is community work. It requires diplomacy, and in this case the negotiations that come with diplomacy. Mercy. Understanding. The caregiver was already struggling with the situation - the number of kittens, the reality of euthanasia. A couple kittens had already died on premises and another in rescue with Kaleb. Slow, agonizing deaths. But euthanasia, death at human hand with purpose, is a difficult concept for a caregiver to grapple, too. So we negotiated, as she strove to keep this frail kitten, one she had taken to nursing and nurturing. The deal was this: if the kitten tested positive for Feline Leukemia, I would return it to her, alive. If the kitten tested negative, I would do all in my power to return it to health, and we could cross the bridge of where it would live when older when, well, it was older, if it lived. Thanks to the woman's partner and supporter, we were able to reach this compromise.

Ten kittens were removed from the home. Of the ten, six tested negative for Feline Leukemia. We are very glad we opted for this new action plan. Four were euthanized after many kisses and tears and being nestled against pounding, hurting, compassionate hearts. One of the kittens who was euthanized was the very first that came to greet us this morning of reckoning - a fluffy dilute tortoiseshell - who lay on her back in the crook of my arm. And so too she slipped away, as the veterinarian gave her a sedative prior to death. They were all beautiful kittens, some of the prettiest kittens we have seen in a long while.

Ellen took the two remaining older kittens into quarantine at PAWS, and I took the remaining four. The veterinarian cautioned, wisely, that we needed to nip the fleas in the bud immediately. Their blood was like water from the fleas ingesting red blood cells, and the little ones had very little fight left, which is why the smallest one was so absolutely debilitated. Fleas, not upper respiratory infections, were killing the kittens that were left. The kittens' gums were pale as ghosts, and we hopped to work. It is only day one in rescue, so we do not know what the future holds. All are eating, and all we can do is try. And all of these kittens will need to be retested for Feline Leukemia a few weeks down the road. If they test positive, we will have to say goodbye, and I am not looking forward to that. Weeks of bonding and then purposefully ending a life takes its toll. Yet it is part of our journey, a reality we are facing, because we are in the early stages of a tide of change. At some point will we have a strategy for feline leukemia positive kittens whereby they have a foster, and eventually a home? There is a good chance that yes, that can be so, in time and with Community Support. Without Community Support, options are limited to a severe degree. And part of that Community Support, an integral part, is supporting low-cost spay/neuter programs wherever one lives. Yes, foster if you have space and the time and the will, but if you don't, then please support spay/neuter, even if it is for pets that don't belong to you. Even if you don't agree with a situation, a person's way of life, their journey, their story. There is a lot of judgement in a human being, but there is a lot of humanity too, and we need humanity to kick in if we are going to improve our world.



Next week we will try our best to assess the rest of the kittens. We will also assist the caregiver in dealing with the flea infestation in her home. And we hope that health professionals continue to assist in her healing journey through life. The adult cats? They will be fixed and remain with the caregiver regardless of Feline Leukemia status. They are considered owned, and, again, we are animal advocates, but we are also community advocates, and there is compromise in working with humans, and compassion. She loves her cats. Her daughter loves her cats. If this family had fixed, or been able to fix, their adult cats prior to their giving birth, we wouldn't be struggling through this awful situation. Sometimes reality bites. Like fleas. Throw a bandage on the bite, and it may heal, but if you don't take care of the fleas, then you'll just have more bites, so spay/neuter and wish us well on our journey.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra



Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Smitten With Kittens Takes Heart

Today is a video blog. I was thinking about it as I was driving today...how we can sit through 24/7 news feeds of tragedies around the world...how we can turn blind eyes to suffering or simply shut off the channel. But if we let something touch us, is that a bad thing? So I ask you to watch. And, yes, I'm fine. Of course I'm fine. I'm a tough cookie. But that doesn't mean that I don't feel pain or sadness. Smitten With Kittens isn't derailing me. It makes me stronger, a fighter, a better person. I'm strong enough to share with you true emotions, because anything else would be false and doesn't do justice to the Smitten With Kittens Initiative.



Spay/Neuter, Adopt, Adore, and Share.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra

Thursday, May 2, 2013

2 a.m.

It is 2 a.m. Thursday morning. I wake, stretching my arms protectively, lovingly around…no, not a human significant other…but around what is akin to a black hat box on my bed. Inside is tiny precious cargo, a newborn kitten alone in the world. I roll back to find myself up against seventy-five pound Clayton, one of our family dogs. He is snoring gently, his jowly lips fluttering against his breathing. It is a peaceful time where night is deep. His steady presence is almost enough to pull me back to slumber, but in kitten season, such gifts as long nights of sleep become far-off wavering mirages, much the same as mothers with newborn babies experience.

Raymond is, we say, about two days old. His little umbilical cord is still attached. His eyes are sealed shut, and he has all the frail bearing of a newborn kitten. He is a wee orange tabby. Mother was hit by a car and died. Two siblings died before he and his sister were brought to the rescue yesterday. Then sister died. They weren’t in knowledgeable hands; they were cold and being fed human formula. Blessedly, the person who found them did reach out for help, and because of rescue camaraderie, we were able to coordinate to bring the pair into our care. Kaleb of Catman2 Shelter tried to get them off to a new, fresh start, warming them, doting upon them, along with his amazing volunteers, but it was too late for the one, and heartbreakingly so. However, Raymond, a little to our surprise, is rallying thus far.

Late last night we brought him home in his hat box. He was nestled in a soft receiving blanket on top of a Snuggle Safe disk…a microwaveable heated pad in a soft fleece cover. We warmed up his kitten formula and fixed the nipple on his bottle so he could drink easily. The combination of warmth and the right food seemed to make a difference, and he ate well, then settled into a peaceful little ball. We can only hope that intervention has come soon enough, and that he is hardy enough, that Raymond will make it through the next twenty-four hours. We have to worry about those first twenty-four before even considering what might be his future.

Raymond is part of Jackson County’s Smitten With Kittens initiative. Last year I found myself working persistently to assist our animal shelter with its heavy kitten season, because the thought of all the animals being euthanized, and the toll that must take on a human being working in that environment, made me ache inside. But a lot has happened in a year, and because of community support and rescue friendships, we have an opportunity to prevent so many unwanted litters and save lots of kittens who have already been born. It was often the case that pregnant cats and litters of unweaned kittens could be euthanized at the animal shelter, because their needs are very high, and we have an abundance of amazingly adoptable young adult cats that sit in the shelter day in, day out, waiting for homes. But we’re working together – Catman2, Jackson County Animal Shelter, ARF Jackson Humane, and my son and I of The Underground Tailroad, in order to help ALL the cats which make up this equation.

We want people to adopt adult cats, as well as kittens. We want to eliminate needless euthanasia. We want to increase awareness of just what it takes to raise a kitten, the toll it takes on those of us who pick up the burden our community drops at our door because spay/neuter is not the norm. Sleepless nights. No languid summer vacations. Watching kittens die because of their fragility, their circumstances. Making the decision to spay a pregnant cat because there are hundreds of kittens born in just our one county during a year’s kitten season, which starts in spring and lasts through early autumn. Personally, I also want the community to see that we are in this together. Rescue groups and animal control are not magical entities. They are made up of human beings who work tirelessly to make a difference. We have varying motivations, but we come together for a common good.

It is time for me to feed Raymond now. I heard him squawk from within his blankets. Perhaps after he has eaten, I will be able to enjoy a cup of coffee while putting my own work day in order. Every two hours he will need to be fed. I have a job. I have a son. I have pets of my own and bills to be paid. I have friends who I’d like to see. All of that is still there. So fix your pets. And if your pets are fixed, and you have the means, help someone else fix theirs, and support those of us who are trying to grow a better community one life at a time.

Love from the Tailroad,

Chandra

Smitten With Kittens 2013

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Fixing our Communities

It didn't begin so well, the day, that is. Maddie, a foster dog, decided that her last day with us before heading to New Jersey would be best begun by trying to eat my cell phone...again. Last week it was the battery cover. This time it was the transmitter, you know, the part you speak into. I could hear people just fine: "Hi, Chandra. Chandra. Hulloooo. Are you there? Chaaaaandra?" Click. If ever there were an opportunity to say whatever you wanted to me without me talking back, it was the time. Eli, my son, also had a day off from school in the middle of the week, and I had a job to get to, and it was transport day. Transport day...foster dogs Maddie, Taco Paco, and Cupcake, all from the Jackson County Animal Shelter, were slated to leave western North Carolina for New Jersey, pending successful health checks. Another thing to work into the day. A typical day as an animal advocate, though.

Then there was the voicemail from an animal control associate, asking me to call him. Would have been nice to call him, but, again, the cell phone. So the text messaging began. Can I help a mama cat with kittens...four day old kittens...slated to come to the county shelter? Oh, no, not already. Kitten season. I'm not ready. The onslaught of babies with nowhere to go, the mamas forgotten, the euthanasia or the battle to evade that dire fate. Timing was such that I thought I might be able to help this particular family of kitties, but it would take some doing, one more thing to work into the day. But then Rescue Magic happened, again!

The text message came. A rescue friend asked me if I knew of any eight week old kittens to add to our transport that night. Well, eight weeks old versus four days old, not a big difference, right?! I had to ask. The flurry of text messages between the animal control officer, my rescue friend, and myself eventually led to my speaking with the shelter director at our recipient group in New Jersey from my office phone, when I rolled in to work.

"Can you take a mama kitty with four day old kittens? I'm not sure how many."

There was a brief discussion in the background. "Yes," was the reply.

I also knew of eight week old-'ish' kittens in Haywood County's animal shelter. We spoke briefly about these kittens, and before I knew it, the gal had a plan in place to attach those to another transport heading out the next day. Timing is everything.

Great news, right?!

Another text message came. Something about mama cat has a pregnant sister already at the shelter - a ready-to-pop pregger sister. It's hard to think that one might go because she has kittens, and another might miss her chance, but that IS a reality in our work. The window for sending cats and kittens up north is usually very narrow. We luck out when they ask for a litter, and it usually comes in the early part of the year because our kitten season heats up sooner than the northern climates, in general...at least the most intense onslaught of kitten season. Once kitten season heats up for real up north, though, then the window slams shut. Would this pregnant kitty have a shot at a future in New Jersey. Another phone call was made.

"Mama cat has a pregnant sister who is ready to pop. Can you take her? I'm so sorry to be asking! You've been so generous already!" That's basically how it went. Another brief discussion in the background.

"Yes."

Why? Because, again, even when these yet-to-be born kittens are eight weeks old, their kitten season will just be beginning. We made the cut.

Wow. I couldn't believe what happened. Miracle. And now off to health checks for the dogs. Never a dull moment.

Would we be able to get health checks for these kitties on the day of transport? Yes. The veterinarian was willing to squeeze them into the day's busy schedule...a day of in-and-out rescue weigh-ins, heartworm tests, and transport physicals, interspersed among their regular clientele.

The next question was whether or not we would actually be able to get the cats to the vet. The mama cat and kittens were still underneath a sink in an apartment. The pregnant cat was at the shelter. The animal control officer had a very busy day of tasks and appointments. I was in the middle of getting my dogs ready for transport and taking care of work duties while enduring my son's boredom with the whole thing. I'd have made it work...I'd do anything to help those cats. But I didn't have to.

The animal control officer volunteered to get them to the appointment. He'd bring them himself.

This is the kind of stuff I live for. When we can come together to make a difference, when we can bend with the breeze, we can accomplish almost ANYTHING. We can definitely create better, more dynamic communities, communities full of caring and innovation and change. We have to remember to appreciate these moments every single time, because they MAKE us better than we are. As an animal advocate living in these mountains where poverty is rife and animals are considered property, trying to improve the system can be frustrating, to say the least. The problems are so many that it can be difficult to decide where to start. I'm also the type of person who tends to see the forest and the trees, which I like about myself, but it can be overwhelming at times when needs are intense and immediate and assistance can be scattered and spotty, lacking coordination.

But I believe we are tending to the trees with the goal of creating a healthy, balanced forest. We strive to rescue as many animals in need in the now, assisting their families or the folks who find them. We strive to support our animal control officers so they can have a meaningful career where the day-to-day does not include a constant string of killing (call it euthanasia - or gassing in some regions - it is still killing). We strive to help people spay and neuter animals in need...their own pets, found strays who will end up staying put, or pets tended to in a community. The last one is the long-term solution. Fixing our dogs and cats will be the ONLY thing that ends the killing of millions of shelter pets every year.

Just look at those cats. Mama cat with what turned out to be five four-day-old kittens, and her sister ready to have even more, and the male cats who were turned out with them. We HAVE to fix them. If we don't, they multiply before our eyes, and there aren't enough places for them to go. We can't stem the tide without spay/neuter. Every puppy and kitten born deserves to be cherished and cared for instead of dead because we screwed up. We've screwed up royally, and we are making animals pay the price. We are duty-bound as stewards on this planet to do better. We also have to look beyond our own and reach out to our brethren, our communities, and ask, "Where can I help? Can I volunteer? Can I donate? Do you know someone who needs help?" That is our duty.

My friend, this animal control officer who was so willing to go the extra mile...my friend has done more to help these animals in need than many a member of the surrounding community...members who blame or are utterly apathetic, irrational, or irate. I also know, though, that there are lots of members of our communities who are open and willing and simply want to know what to do.

Here's what to do:

Support your local shelter - county or private.

Speak up about what your community needs.

Speak up for those whose voices go unheard.

Recognize your role as a leader, as a steward - we all are leaders and stewards in our own way.

Fix your pets...help the animals in your community get fixed.

Remember that you might think you know how someone else feels or lives their life...but you really don't...we each have our own journey.

Be a friend to those on their own journeys - strive to make things better, not worse.

Be kind. Be Compassionate.

Keep the forest in view...it is beautiful...and nurture those trees.

Love from the Tailroad,

Chandra

P.S. The kitties, when I saw them, were beautiful!!! Wee kittens, umbilical cords still attached, were snuggled up to a doting mother in a comfortable crate. Pregnant mum was settled into her cushy crate as well, and they began their journey north. The older kittens should be leaving tonight, February 21st. Life is beautiful. Living things are divine. Twenty-one dogs, two adult cats, five kittens, and a litter on the cusp of birth had their ride to freedom and families. Let's wish them many happy beginnings in New England, and may we revel in the Rescue Magic whenever it comes upon us.

And, Josh, Thank You.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Surrender or...

It was a difficult day yesterday. It started off well enough...one of my favorite volunteers showed up at the Haywood Spay/Neuter office to lend a hand, and a board member brought us lunch from a local Waynesville soup fundraiser...but then it took a turn. On January 2nd we had sent out our first spay/neuter trip to Asheville Humane Alliance, who handles the bulk of the dog and cat fixes from Haywood County. On that trip we had sent out a lovely pup, not quite a year old. Layla was a little Blue Heeler...maybe a mix...lovely, sweet, quiet, demure. The next day when she came home I snapped a picture of her, freshly spayed, posing with her caretaker. It was one of my favorite photos from the day...one of the first pictures I took as the new Executive Director with the organization. Yesterday during lunch her caretaker came in to tell me Layla had been shot and ultimately died from her injuries late last week. Probably by a neighbor. Probably for the heck of it or out of some sort of feudish spite. I live in a state where most of the time these innocent voices are lost. Law enforcement lets them slide. No charges. Hence no prosecution. Life goes on. And a little girl loses her dog. And we lose integrity as a community.

I wish we would get with the program, folks, and start being proactive, standing up against animal abuse. First, animal abuse in and of itself is WRONG. It's our job to care for one another and care for living things to the best of our ability whether they are pets in our home or a deer we are hunting in the woods. It is our job to show integrity in our care for the life on the planet. Beyond that, I always come back to the famous quote by Mahatma Gandhi: "The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated." If we abuse animals, we are abusing ourselves. Violence against animals often begets violence against humans. If someone shoots a neighbor's dog, stabs a dog, burns a cat...what is going on in his or her head? What is happening in that person's life and the people IN that person's life? Are the children in the home safe? Is the spouse safe? Are we safe? We so often act like violence in our world is status quo or shockingly surprising: "How could that happen???" It happens because we let it go. We ignore the clues. We ignore each other. We ignore empathy and consequence.

But one thing  we're really good at is blaming the animals.

"The dog wasn't on its own property."

"Pit bulls are vicious."

"The cat is my neighbor's and was pooping in my yard."

We trample our planet with our arrogance. We blame whilst we are to blame. If the planet could talk to us...if the planet had its own cable channel where it could show us who we are...what would it say to us, show to us? Pollution, deforestation, war, rape, roads, pipelines, species dying away with the tick of the clock, persecution and prejudice...We act like we're so great. We're really just so very small. It's our egos and apathy that are great.

Where did my day go from there...from that point of despair and disappointment in my community? I found myself answering the phone knowing I only had sad news to say. I'd been at my local animal control in the late afternoon, and the cat room was full. One of the kitties was a beautiful little white gal - one blue eye, one green eye. Winter was 14 years old and precious. She'd had tons of dental work and had a toothless grin. She came up to my son behind her cage bars and said hello. The problem was twofold. The shelter was overfilled with cats, and she was an owner surrender, given up because her owner lost a job and felt he couldn't provide for her. I get that. The economy is tough. Losing a job can be a major blow to one's confidence and sense of well-being. We in rescue don't have the 100% outreach we'd like so that people like this feel they have somewhere to turn...a place for advice, a provision of services. So he took her to the shelter, this little cat he'd had since she was just a wee young kitten.

Trust me, we tried to help. I was hoping when I called him from the shelter that he would answer. I was hoping he'd reply to my text message. He did, but it was too late. It's a sad thing when you have to tell someone their cherished pet was euthanized the same day it was brought to the shelter. It's a sad thing to know that time can make such a difference. We would have tried to get his kitty back to him. We would have tried to get him food and litter so they could stay together. There are no guarantees that he would have taken us up on it, but we would have tried. So she wouldn't have to die. Instead, I had to tell him it was too late. He summed it up as the word, "Wow," escaped his lips after a pause while I stood in my kitchen and told him the news. I don't think he knew the reality his cat faced. I don't think a lot of people understand the reality of what animal control is. I think a lot of people think they can take an animal there, and it will find a home. Millions of animals never find that home. Owner surrenders can be at the top of a list for euthanasia because they don't have to be held as strays. Older animals can be the first to be put down.

And in these cases I also feel for the animal control officers (ACO) who are making the decisions of who should live and who should die. Often maligned, our animal control officers really have a difficult job. I know the officers didn't want to euthanize Winter. When an ACO comes up to me and asks if I'm going to basically hate them forever if they do their job, it breaks my heart. And I was asked that late yesterday afternoon as it came time for such decisions to be made. What am I supposed to say? Should I recommend that they kill the three kittens instead, or the eight month old tabby cat who likes to be heard above all the others, all of which could live another 18 to 25 years and are considered "more adoptable?" What I can say is, "It's not your fault." And it isn't. It's our fault. We need to be spaying and neutering our animals. We need to be reaching out for help. We need to practice fair stewardship. We as a nation abuse animals through our neglect of the shelter system, lumping blame on each other or upon animal control officers. We need to be placing attention on ourselves. We need to help each other, provide services, be kind, and fix the problem we created. That's integrity.

If we want to be a great nation, then we need to act like one.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra




Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Zeke, Rescue Magic, And Steps Toward Being A Humane Nation


Oh, geez. Not another one.” That pretty much sums up my response when I received a phone call from a local rescue group about a puppy in need of rehoming. My response wasn’t really linked to the rehoming part of this case. It came from that gut reaction that makes me want to hurl when I hear a puppy was bought from a local pet store.

See, when I moved to western North Carolina in 2009, I really was out of touch with the reality here. In all the other places I’d lived, the puppy-selling pet store quietly seemed to disappear, replaced by high-end boutiques marketing holistic pet food and Lupine® collars, and box stores like PetSmart and Petco, where one could peruse a plethora of pet products while also seeking an animal to adopt through local partnerships with rescue groups. I didn’t know that selling puppies in a pet store was still considered an acceptable practice in this part of the United States. The rose-colored glasses quickly fell off.

One of my first foster dogs when I came here, Miss Paisley, was a wee terrier mix purchased from this same local store. She was ravaged by mange, and her family surrendered her to PAWS in Bryson City. It took almost a year for her to beat it, poor thing. When she first came to my home, she was virtually hairless and covered with red oozing sores. Yet, she had an indomitable spirit, and through a lot of team work and veterinary care, we got her healthy and into a Furever Family.

Sadly, Paisley wasn’t the last sickly pet store puppy I encountered. As a veterinary technician, it was heartbreaking to see young college kids walking in the door with a recently purchased puppy limp in arms, vomiting, wasting away from diarrhea because of parvo. These college kids don’t know what they’re doing, most of the time. Often they don’t have the life experience or background in animal advocacy to react like those of us in the field do when we see the sign on a store stating, “Pit bulls for sale.” They see a cute puppy and a cuddly companion for those all-night study sessions, a friend during a time when life can seem tumultuous, the next step in a romantic relationship…the list goes on. Sometimes they see the saddest looking creature and think they can help it, only to find themselves overwhelmed by the puppy’s needs…and they often don’t have the money to take on the needs of a parvo case, for example, which can require lots of medicine, intravenous fluids, and intensive care. That’s the reality.

So, the phone call came, and with it came an exasperated sigh and a roll of the eyes. The rescue group was dealing with it, and I’d really only heard about it as part of a conversation. I didn’t have any responsibility in this equation at the time. But then I received another phone call. It was the puppy’s owner. In my conversation with her we had the beginnings of that curious, wonderful phenomenon called Rescue Magic.

Zeke was no ordinary puppy. He might have been ordinary in the sense of being a pet store puppy, and he might have been ordinary in having issues which we often see in such puppies. But Zeke was extraordinary because he had an extraordinary family. We’re not exactly sure what kind of dog he is. What we do know is that he is not the breeds the family was told he was while they shopped at the store…there was something about border collie and/or lab in there, I believe, and the result as he was growing seemed to be leaning more to the Rottweiler department. Zeke didn’t have a medical issue, but he did have some behavioral quirks…jumpy, nippy…more than the normal puppy behavior stuff. And he was living in a family with three children six years old and younger. It was a horrible mismatch, and I think it came with a lot of guilt for his family. This was a family who didn’t want to fail their dog and who didn’t want to be judged as awful people for trying to rehome him, and they didn’t need to be judged and chastised for buying him from a store. They simply didn’t know any better. Zeke’s family has a heart of gold.

They took him to see a certified dog trainer, and she quickly agreed this fella needed a different environment, and the family needed a different dog. The trainer also remarked that this was the third pet store puppy in about as many weeks that she had evaluated for behavioral issues. I was so proud of Zeke’s family for taking the time and effort to take him to the trainer in the first place. It showed their mettle, and I knew we were dealing with a very special, magical family. In talking with his Mama, we quickly made a plan. Anything I asked, she did. I needed better photographs; she went that very day and shot beautiful pictures of the happy-go-lucky four-month-old pup. I talked to her about utilizing the local dog park, so the kids could run off steam in the nearby playground, and he could run off steam in his own zone, and she did it. I asked her to take him down to the local rescue group’s adoption event so the trainer could do a full temperament evaluation on him, and they were there. He needed to be neutered and up-to-date with vaccines, and, yep, you got it…she took charge, and he was fixed before we knew it! And she taught him to play the piano. That’s right. His Mama used positive reinforcement and taught Zeke to play on a kiddie piano. She even videotaped it. Magic!

What Zeke’s human mother did was take the steps to get him into a new, better home. She was proactive, kids and all. We talked about cross-posting him on Facebook, and she became his spokesperson. We talked about the transport option to homes in New England. She was game. The local rescue group was also willing to host them at their Saturday adoption events, and she was there. And you know what happened? Last Saturday Zeke found a new home.

Rescue Magic takes a lot of sacrifice sometimes. It often involves a combination of linking rescues together, and it is at its best when an owner embodies the Magic themselves. It requires being proactive, nonjudgmental, and diligent…and sometimes very patient. Zeke found a happy new beginning very quickly because of this.

Zeke’s Mama has asked me, quite basically, if it’s a horrible thing for them to want to rehome this puppy yet still look for another dog. Now, take a second. Strip away the gut reaction, you animal advocates, you, who may  (just sayin’) latch onto, “They bought a dog from a Pet STORE!” Or, “They want to get rid of the dog they have, and they want to get another one?” Take a second. Let’s get humane here. I like to think that I live in an animal welfare generation that can see the whole picture, that can see the animals AND the people in their lives. I believe if anyone deserves a dog, this family does. They are kind, loving, and supportive. 

They did more for Zeke than a lot of folks would. Zeke was not the right dog for this family, and now they know about pet stores, and they know about the temperament they are looking for in a dog. They know that not all dogs are prone to nipping kids. And they know that although they can take the time to teach a puppy to play the piano, that doesn’t mean that puppy is right for them. Someone else might truly have the time to not just teach Zeke piano…they might be able to teach him to play fly ball, too, or take him biking for hours on the trails. That’s the kind of home he needs. And they may see that a puppy might not even be what they are looking for. In fact, last time I checked they were talking about adopting an older, more settled, calmer dog from a shelter. I know they are equipped now to make the right decision for their family, and that whatever dog they end up bringing home, that dog has got it made. I can’t say that for the millions of dogs euthanized every year, many of them simply surrendered. Surrendering Zeke to the shelter is something a lot of other people would have done. I’m very, VERY proud of this family for working with the animal welfare system to keep him out of a shelter and get him into a family where he can hopefully live a long and very happy life.

As for the pet store, yep, it’s still here. They are all over North Carolina, in fact. This particular one advertises all over its walls that it doesn’t get its puppies from puppy mills. Personally, I’d like to see the paperwork so we can see where the puppies come from. I also know they do a lot of ‘puppy consignment,’ and they probably see themselves as, um, helping keep animals out of the shelter? Yes, I mean “?????”. I’ve been in there and have seen puppies on display who are really far too young for adoption, let alone for sale. I’ve seen a kennel crazed mini sheltie running in desperate circles. And I think to myself, when they close shop on Sunday, do they take all those puppies home and love on them, socialize them? Don’t think so.

We had over ten…10…puppy mill busts in North Carolina last year. Hundreds of dogs were taken in by shelters and rescue groups. One of those busts was for Great Danes. Puppy mills deal in dogs of all breeds. Many of them are AKC registered, but the AKC has such poor inspection oversight that these facilities get away with inhumane, appalling conditions for years. These puppies end up being sold to pet stores or via the internet. When a breeder closes shop, it’s often the case that the remaining animals get dumped at animal control. It’s a horrible system. We have too many dogs and cats in this country, as it is. I support small hobby breeders, don’t get me wrong. There are people who work to improve breeds and who ensure the animals they are putting out in the world are loving, attentive, stable, and healthy, and that they are ending up in Furever Families, perfect matches. They would never dream of having their animals sold in a pet store or to any random person online. Pet stores are really middlemen. They allow us to turn a blind eye and eschew responsibility. We need to realize this and start owning our part in it.

If you live in North Carolina, then you live in a state with minimal protection for animal wellbeing. If you buy from a pet store that sells puppies, even if you are purchasing crickets for your lizard, you are telling the pet store owner, “Hey, it’s okay. I don’t care about where those puppies come from. I don’t care where they end up either.” I’d much rather we send a clear message to pet store owners that we aren’t okay with this at all. Stores could support rescues or the local animal shelter and host adoption events, for example. Educate shoppers. Don’t do “puppy consignment”…link those people instead to places who can help them. And encourage spay/neuter. And please, stores, PLEASE don’t sell pit bull puppies. I’m so tired of seeing them end up in the animal shelter. I’m so tired of dead pit bulls.


Honestly, if you live in North Carolina, there is another simple step you can take. Go to this link and sign this petition: http://protectourpuppies.com/petition/.

Yeah, it’s something I care deeply about. I care about the people in my community who don’t understand the system in place. I care about the people whose job it is to kill unwanted, beautiful animals because we have just too many unwanted pets. I care about the dogs and cats WE domesticated. I care about those poor college kids who are sucker-punched with animal care they can’t handle. I care about pretty much anything that lives and breathes, and I just want my son to live in a world that gets better every single day.

And if you don’t live in North Carolina, take a minute and find out what the reality is in YOUR state. A lot of animal welfare falls to state and county controls. Puppy mills and pet stores are not just found in North Carolina. They are all across the country. And animal advocates, just remember, we have lots of opportunities to help the Zeke’s in the world, and their families…and to be better animal advocates for it. We can be a HUMANE society.

Love from the Tailroad,
Chandra