Archive for July, 2006

Tortoise rustlers in second raid on shop

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

TORTOISE-RUSTLING is the bizarre criminal craze currently sweeping Nuneaton.

Police believe the creatures are being stolen-to-order after the latest raid on a pet shop in the town.

Staff arrived to open up on Monday to discover the front door smashed in by raiders.

The only thing stolen was a baby tortoise called Victor valued at £175.

It is the second time in a month that tortoises have been targeted at Martins Pet Supplies in busy Queens Road in Nuneaton town centre.

Today, pet shop owner Chris Martin, aged 43, who runs the family business with his father and mother, Brian and Jean, condemned the thieves and offered a reward for the safe return of the pets or information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.

He said: “Victor is only two years old and about two inches long. He is captive-bred and needs special care and a special diet.”

Mr Martin said the other tortoise stolen last month was also called Victor.

“I call them all Victor - after Victor Meldrew, from the television series One Foot in the Grave, where a tortoise is featured on the credits.

“They are a desirable and highly sought-after pet and they can live for a very long time.

“We know they are being stolen-to-order. In the latest raid, they smashed in the front door and took nothing else except Victor.

“Last month they came in while we were open and stole a tortoise.”

Mr Martin now has no more tortoises on the premises.

He said: “We sell about 12 a year, but we have had two disap-pear in a month now.”

Tortoises have been highly prized pets since the UK banned their live import.

Only tortoises captive-bred in Britain - and with the necessary documentation -are allowed to be sold.

Mr Martin said: “The stolen tortoises will obviously not have the proper certificates so we would ask people to keep a look-out for them.

“They should either let the police know or, if they prefer, hand them in to Geoff Grewcock at the Warwickshire Wildlife Sanctuary in Oaston Road, Nuneaton.”

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PERIL OF THE PET MONKEYS

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

HUNDREDS of pet monkeys are being abused by careless owners with no idea how to look after them.

Incredibly, one was allowed to SMOKE rolled-up ciggies and gorge on SWEETS while another was forced to live in a HAMSTER CAGE.

The Monkey Sanctuary is now urging people to think twice about taking on a primate and launching a £15,000 appeal to boost capacity for its abandoned apes.

It is LEGAL to keep! monkeys in the UK although bigger ones require a “dangerous animals” licence. But many people don’t realise what they’re letting themselves in for. Rachael Hevesi, of the sanctuary in Looe, Cornwall, said: “All monkeys are wild animals and suffer terribly if taken out of their environment. “Breeders take babies from their families which causes huge distress and behavioural problems. We’ve seen monkeys who just pace around, grind their teeth or pull out hair until they bleed.”

Negligent owners also deny their pets vital sunlight, space and a proper diet I - which can lead [ to bone disease or worse. Others get bored when they realise they can get smaller breeds such as marmosets and squirrel monkeys. Rachael added: “We took in a 30-year-old monkey called Missy who’d lost most of her fingers and toes and half her tail.

“Her diseased bones were barely visible on X-rays. She was full of worms and she’d lost so much fur we couldn’t tell her species.

“We managed to get her eating again but she died six weeks later. Another owner was keeping a monkey in a hamster cage. They didn’t realise how big it would grow.

“Another was brought in carrying a bag of sweets. The owner said they were his favourites and that he also liked a roll-up cigarette every day. We had terrible trouble weaning him off those - he had to go through cold turkey.”

The sanctuary is home to 21 rescued monkeys and aims to house 10 more in two new indoor areas and three outdoor zones. Rachael added: “It’s heartbreaking to turn away animals.”

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SCREECHY POLLY GONE

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

A PET parrot faces eviction after upsetting neighbours with its ear-splitting cries.

Blue - a blue and yellow macaw - squawks constantly during the day, and calls out phrases such as “thanks dad”.

The Hanks family received a warning after neighbours called environmental health.

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Mum Shelley, 37, who got the bird six weeks ago for sons Thomas, 11, and Marcus, four, said: “If I go out he cries until I come back.”

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Snails that held up a bypass have died out

Saturday, July 29th, 2006

A snail species which almost stopped the A34 Newbury bypass being built has died out in the area, according to a wildlife group.

Buglife said no Desmoulin’s whorl snails were left on the site they were moved to before the construction of the road.

Matt Shardlow, director of Buglife - The Invertebrate Conservation Trust, told BBC News: “What happened was that the pipes that fed the water the snails needed on the translocation site became silted up; hence, the fen dried out and this is when the snails got into trouble and became extinct.

“The site could sustain the snails but it is a high-maintenance location. It is high maintenance because it is artificially created and unless you keep it going then troubles begin.”

A spokesman for the Highways Agency, which maintains the site, said he completely “refuted” the suggestion of mismanagement.

He said: “We have put a lot of time and resources into the site ever since the snails were moved.

“We still go out and monitor that site continuously.”

Mr Shardlow said: “We are in the midst of a biodiversity crisis. The loss of Desmoulin’s whorl snail on its translocation site is a timely reminder of the fragility of the wildlife around us.

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New wildlife agency in jeopardy after cutbacks

Saturday, July 29th, 2006

England’s high-profile new wildlife agency, charged with bringing rare and endangered species back from the brink, is being crippled before it starts by massive budget cuts demanded by the Government, its chairman says.

Sir Martin Doughty, the chairman of Natural England, which begins operations in the autumn, has made an outspoken behind-the-scenes protest about the size of the funding cutbacks.

In a private letter to the Environment Secretary, David Miliband, which has been seen by The Independent, he warns: “The scale of these cuts risks the wheels coming off the organisation before it even reaches October’s launchpad.”

Environmentalists too are up in arms about the proposed cutbacks, fearing that they will deal a crushing blow to the recovery prospects of many endangered habitats and species such as the corncrake, the once-familiar farmland bird which is all but extinct in England.

“These cuts will put back the recovery prospects for a whole range of species for years,” said Mark Avery, director of conservation for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. “This is meant to be an exciting new agency, but this is a terrible start.”

The Government has made great claims for Natural England, which is to be a beefed-up version of the present wildlife watchdog body, English Nature. But with its proposed cutbacks it is looking at an environmental public relations disaster similar to the row earlier this year over the scrapping of Britain’s leading wildlife research centres.

The new agency is taking over English Nature’s wildlife responsibilities, such as looking after sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs), and implementing species recovery programmes. It is also taking over the landscape and access work of the Countryside Agency, such as maintaining the footpath network and implementing the right-to-roam. The result is meant to be an all-singing, all-dancing agency which can look after the countryside and its wildlife.

But the proposed slashing of its budget by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) is putting a very large question mark over its ability to do its job, according to Sir Martin.

In his letter to Mr Miliband he writes: “I am deeply concerned that current financial demands being placed upon us by Defra are eroding our capacity to deliver these benefits before we even begin.

“I understand the need for Defra to live within its budget and Natural England is committed to playing its part in that - we are already committed to £7m of cuts. This is on top of nearly £8m in cuts imposed in December last year. However, [Defra] has now asked us for an additional £12m to be obtained in-year from Natural England and our founding bodies.

“Given that in-year cuts would largely be programme rather than staff-based, this equates to a 40 per cent cut to the remainder of our programme on a pro-rata basis. This comprises a 54 per cent cut to the remaining uncommitted programme.”

Sir Martin said yesterday that the cuts, if implemented, would make it difficult to achieve two key government environmental targets - to get 95 per cent of SSSIs in good condition by 2010 and to reverse the 40-year decline of farmland birds such as the skylark, the grey partridge and the turtledove by 2020. He described the proposals as “most unfortunate”.

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Rabbit Rescue!

Saturday, July 29th, 2006

AT least once a week, busy trainee solicitor Toyah Marshall travels from her home in Didsbury to a rabbit rescue centre in North Wales.

On a recent visit, the 24-year-old was accompanied by six baby rabbits she’d taken from a perfectly respectable-looking house after seeing them advertised on a website.

She discovered the rabbits’ ears had been neatly cut off, a hideously painful procedure for the animals, whose ears are extremely sensitive.
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The 24-year-old said: “When I see rabbits advertised for free it rings alarm bells as snake breeders tend to snap them up as food for their pets.

“I was shocked when I saw their ears. The owner told me the mother had done it, but a vet assured me later that this was impossible and those ears had come off with scissors.”

Such treatment cannot always be blamed on ignorance - one of the explanations given this week as to why animal cruelty cases have dramatically increased.

Trimmed

Toyah explains: “The woman I saw used to show rabbits so she knew a lot about them and I have come across a breeder before who “trimmed” the ears to try and pass them off as an interesting breed.”

There has been a happy ending for the ear-less bunnies, though, after they taken to Bowden Bunny Rescue in Mold.

“Most have been re-homed, they are wonderful, lovely animals,” says Toyah, who has three rabbits of her own, including Homer.

She spends much of her free time raising funds for the rescue centre in between preparing to qualify next month as a solicitor, specialising in employment law.

“I love them because they are so comical and fun to watch. I don’t think people realise what fantastic pets they are. But they have to be neutered, otherwise they can get aggressive.”

For a devoted rabbit lover like Toyah, and right-minded people everywhere, it is shocking to see the prevalence of animal cruelty in a nation of supposed animal lovers.

Alarming figures from the RSPCA revealed there were 151 convictions for animal cruelty in Greater Manchester during 2005, compared to 75 the previous year, while RSPCA inspectors investigated 6,804 complaints. Horrific cases included a horse starved until his muscles wasted away in Tyldesley.

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‘Pets are better than Prozac’

Wednesday, July 26th, 2006

Dogs, horses, even rabbits - all can provide therapy for the mentally fragile, as Lucy Atkins discovers

”Pet therapy” used to mean sending your sad pooch to see a doggy shrink. These days, however, your pet is less likely to see a therapist than to be one.
Two pet dogs
Are you barking? Some say that their pets should have the same rights as guide dogs

The change is down to the growing scientific evidence demonstrating the therapeutic potential of animals.

Guide dogs, or hearing dogs, which are trained to help people with physical disabilities, are already part of our national consciousness. But now dogs, cats, horses - and even rabbits or fish - are being used to provide psychiatric assistance to humans suffering from agoraphobia, addiction, depression and schizophrenia.

In the US, where this trend began, the notion of “emotional support animals” has become so mainstream that a pet which helps you to stay sane now has the same legal rights in housing and transportation (including air travel) as a guide dog.

There is even a debate currently raging in Manhattan over the increasing numbers of people who claim their mutts are emotional support animals, then bring them along to restaurants and cafés.

This is not, apparently, as crazy as it sounds. According to Ingrid Collins, a consultant psychologist at the London Medical Centre, the idea of an emotional support dog getting these rights is completely valid.

“A pet is better than Prozac,” she says. “Animals have a completely different agenda to humans, and bring things back to basics. They want comfort, feeding and love. In return, they give huge affection.”

This calming, restorative doggy function means that canines in America are now commonly used as companions for people suffering depression or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. “Depressed people tend to be inward looking,” says Collins. “To care for another soul, an uncomplicated one, is therefore extremely therapeutic.”

One US pet support website summarises its philosophy thus: “A dog is better than a wife, because the later you come home, the more happy the dog is to see you.”

It is not only dogs that can help people with psychiatric problems, says Collins. Even a rabbit can be beneficial.

“The simple benefit of touch, for someone who is lonely - perhaps after a divorce or bereavement - or suffering from low self-esteem, is enormous,” she says.

What is more, she adds, animals, unlike spouses or bosses, can be highly tuned to a human’s emotional state.

This notion lies behind an emerging form of psychotherapy that uses horses to treat people with psychiatric problems. ”Equine Assisted Psychotherapy” (EAP) originated in the States, but is now being practised in Britain.

“Horses are a mirror to humans: a horse will pick up on someone’s mental state and react to it clearly,” says Wendy Powell, addictions therapist at the Stepps Rehabilitation Centre in Gloucestershire.

“Horses, unlike people, do not worry about hurting your feelings.”

EAP therapists set their clients horsey tasks such as feeding or grooming. This helps people to face their fears and to build self-confidence. In the two years that Stepps has been using EAP, horses have helped dysfunctional families, warring couples, addicts, and people with eating disorders, anger issues and depression.

“It is a very powerful therapeutic method,” says Powell. “When you are faced with a ton and a half of horse, there is no hiding your true feelings.”

“There has certainly been a recent surge of interest in the relationship between companion animals and human health,” says Dr Deborah Wells, a psychologist specialising in animals at Queen’s University, Belfast.

Some pet benefits are physical: dogs have been known to sniff out malignant tumours or anticipate epileptic seizures in their owners and to lower cholesterol levels and blood pressure.

A recent British study found that the presence of a dog during potentially painful medical procedures reduced chronically ill children’s physiological and psychological levels of distress. Research from Israel, meanwhile, suggests that animals can help people with schizophrenia to feel calmer and more motivated.

The psychological support potential of animals is now being studied in depth too. “Studies have found that merely having a dog in the room acts as a stress buffer,” says Wells. “In trials of people doing stressful tasks, such as mental arithmetic, individuals functioned better when there was a dog in the room - even better than they did with a friend for company.”

The reason for this is hardly mysterious: “A dog will not have an opinion about how well you are performing. Dogs are a non-judgmental safety net.”

Wells says that dogs “can genuinely alter your mood”. She believes they can also act as social lubricants for people who would otherwise be entirely isolated: “They can improve self-esteem and confidence, and your ability to deal with humans.”

If you suffer from agoraphobia, anxiety disorders, or are simply debilitated by low self-esteem, taking your ”emotional support pet” with you on trips to a café or supermarket could, therefore, be a genuine psychological bonus. Indeed, if you are really debilitated, the presence of your pet could mean the difference between going out or staying home.

Britain seems likely to follow the US, where organisations such as Paws with a Cause or Pets Are Wonderful Support (Paws) are now taking pups into prisons to help rehabilitate inmates. “Studies show that if you are kind to animals, you tend to be kind to humans too,” says Wells.

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Animal Cruelty on the increase

Wednesday, July 26th, 2006

ANIMAL cruelty has sadly increased in the UK in the past 12 months. Today, The Sun Online profiles the most shocking incidents of animal cruelty in the past year.

In the most disturbing case a woman put her cat, Fluffy, in a washing machine on a boil wash cycle killing it within 10 minutes.

Fluffy broke all her claws as she struggled to free herself from the machine.

Holly Thacker from Norwich was jailed for six weeks and banned from keeping pets for life.

RSPCA Inspector Rob Melloy said: “In my seven years as an inspector I have never come across anything as heartless as this.

“It was a deliberate act of cruelty and she knew the cat would die in the washing machine.”

Another sad example took place in Aberfan, South Wales, where an electric knife was used to saw off a dog’s leg.

Griffith Prosser from the valley town was banned for keeping animals for a decade after admitting he amputated Bouncer’s right foreleg.

Inspector Simon Evans said: “This case beggars belief and it’s impossible to imagine suffering experienced by Bumper over a year.

“This unhappy tale illustrates the perils of doing nothing and the disastrous consequences of taking matters into your own hands.”

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Ideas to help your pet beat the heat

Sunday, July 23rd, 2006

PET RESCUE
1.Never leave an animal in a car - Not even with the windows open. In this warm weather a vehicle heats up quickly and an animal could be cooked alive in a matter of minutes. For the same reason, take care in conservatories, caravans and greenhouses.

2. Pets get sunburnt, too - Cover any exposed parts, like ears, with the highest factor sun cream before they go outside.

3. Water, water everywhere - Make sure your pets have a constant supply of fresh water in their bowls.

4. Beware of fleas - Nasty creepy-crawlies come out in the heat so check your animal regularly for fleas and mites.

5. Keep them clean - If you have a rabbit, guinea pig, dog or cat clean them every day as flies like to lay their eggs in the faecescovered fur of these animals. Also make sure you change their bedding every week.

6. Change your dog-walking time - Instead of heading out in the heat of the day, take the dog out in the morning when it’s cooler and there is less chance they will get heatstroke or burn their paws on the hot pavement.

7. Move the tank - If you have an indoor fish tank, keep it out of direct sunlight. If you have fish in a pond outdoors keep topping up the water levels.

8. Don’t abandon them when you go on holiday - Never leave your pets alone. Ask someone responsible to take care of them.

9. Be shady - If you have a pet like a rabbit that lives outdoors, keep it in the shade. And remember that different parts of your garden get more or less sun at different times of day so keep the cage well-shielded.

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Pet cat pulled from wreckage of digger house

Sunday, July 23rd, 2006

A cat missing after a man used a JCB digger to destroy a house was pulled from the rubble alive and well yesterday.

Ashley, a pedigree Korat with luminous green eyes, was one of six cats in the four-bedroom home in Bradwell-on-Sea, Essex, when it was torn apart by a caravan park tenant in a row over his rent.

The other cats and a dog all fled but no trace was found of Ashley and it was feared she had been crushed. James Harvard and Janice Gledhill, the owners of the house and caravan park, had spent more than 24 hours searching for Ashley who was seen cowering in a bedroom by a police officer yesterday morning.

Mr Harvard, 47, was at first prevented from re-entering the house because of its perilous condition and the fact that it was still being treated as a crime scene. However, at 2pm, he clambered over the rubble and grabbed seven-year-old Ashley, who is believed to have hidden under floorboards when the house started to collapse.

Beaming with joy and cradling his pet, he said: “Nothing else matters any more now that we’ve got her back. She’s certainly used up one of her nine lives.”

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