Dog survives 300ft jump off cliff, UK

Feb 24, 2010

A “remarkable” dog had a lucky escape after jumping off a 300ft cliff to chase a seagull and landing in the sea below.

Poppy the springer spaniel ran over the edge of the clifftop during a walk at a beauty spot in East Sussex.

She plunged into the water but survived and managed to swim to shore where she waited until a RNLI crew arrived.

The three-year-old’s owners – Kelly Ixer, 26, and Ben Markwick, 31, said they were “indebted” to the lifeboat team.

On the day of the accident, the couple – who have a three-week-old son, Henry – had suggested Mr Markwick’s sister Lia and her partner Stephen Winslade, who were staying with them in Ansty, West Sussex, should take Poppy out for some exercise.

Mr Winslade, 31, said: “She ran to the edge and just disappeared.

“She is really well trained and well behaved but I think she ran so fast there was no chance of her stopping.

“I threw myself down and looked over the edge and saw her paddling.

“I could see there was a beach she was heading for.”

Amid the panic, he raised the alarm on his mobile phone while Miss Markwick, 29, called down to Poppy.

Missing Dog Turns Up 600 Miles Away From Home in Florida

Source: FoxNews.com, Feb 25, 2010

A Virginia couple has been reunited with their missing German shepherd, which somehow made its way to Florida.

Pamela Holt lives in Stuart, Va., and says she thought the phone call from an animal control officer in Florida was a “mean trick.” Then she realized the man really had found her missing pet, Deacon, hundreds of miles from home.

The dog hadn’t been seen since December. Holt and her husband eventually decided the dog must have died.

According to police reports, a convenience store clerk saw Deacon and another dog running in traffic last week in Deland, Fla. The clerk called authorities and the dogs were taken to a kennel.

Deacon had an implanted microchip, which helped track down the Holts. The Virginia couple have made the more than 600-mile trip to pick him up.

Study Shows Small Dogs Evolved in Middle East

Source: Sciencemag.org, Feb 24, 2010

Mexico may claim the Chihuahua, and Tibet the shih tzu. But a new genetic study indicates that all small dogs have their origins in the Middle East.

The origin of the domestic dog is a hot topic in evolutionary biology. Scientists agree that today’s Fidos came from the domestication of the gray wolf, but they are at odds over where this took place. Previous genetic studies focusing on mitochondrial DNA—inherited only from the mother—have suggested that modern domestic dogs are descended from animals that lived in East Asia between 5000 and 16,000 years ago. But archaeological excavations in Europe and the Middle East have found remains of what appear to be domestic dogs dating back as far as 31,000 years.

Now, a team led by evolutionary geneticist Melissa Gray of the University of California, Los Angeles, has examined nuclear DNA to fill in a crucial piece of the puzzle. The researchers took samples of blood, tissue, or saliva from three populations: large domestic dogs (those weighing more than 30 kilograms), small dogs (weighing less than 9 kilograms), and wild wolves, foxes, and coyotes from around the world. They then looked at a gene called insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1). All canines, wild or domestic, have some form of this gene—precisely which form is strongly associated with the size of an animal’s skeleton.

The team found that the version of IGF1 carried by all small dogs is found in very few large dogs and no wild canines. But a very similar form of the gene is found in gray wolves from the Middle East. That means that this region is probably the birthplace of the common ancestor of all the world’s small dogs. Because they all carry the same variant, it is extremely unlikely that small body size evolved more than once. And for the gene to have had time to spread all over the world, it must have evolved shortly after dogs were first domesticated.

Gray emphasizes that the study, published today in BMC Biology, doesn’t necessarily mean that dogs were first domesticated in the Middle East. But it’s a “strong indication” that that region “has played a significant role in the early history of domestic dogs.” The authors note that archaeologists have found remains of small dogs dating to 12,000 years ago in the area. There are older sites in Europe and Russia, but they contain larger dogs. She says humans living in small agricultural communities may have deliberately bred small dogs because they ate less and could be kept in small spaces.

Adam Boyko, a geneticist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who specializes in the evolution of the domestic dog, is impressed by the study. “This really pokes a hole in the argument of this relatively simple domestication in East Asia, … which is what people have been arguing based on mitochondrial DNA,” he says.

Dog Survives 40 Days Stranded In Mountains, CA

Source: kdka.com, Feb 22, 2010

A very strong-willed dog has returned to its owner after surviving 40 days in the freezing wilderness of the Santa Cruz Mountains, CBS station KPIX-TV reports.

Buck, a black lab, got lost near his home Jan. 6. Owner Terina Held thought he got swept up in a swollen river during a rain storm. Flyers went up and calls were made to shelters, but Held gave up after five weeks of searching.

“We figured he was probably dead or what not. Or someone fell in love with him and (they) weren’t going to give him back,” Held recalled.

But the story changed on Feb. 16 when neighbor Mark Smith took the day off to go hiking on his birthday. Smith and his dog Copper heard whimpering and found the weak, emaciated black lab stranded on a patch of dry river bed not far from where Buck went missing.

Smith scooped him up, waded 200 yards through an ice-cold creek, and carried Buck to safety.

“I would think that anybody who loves animals and was walking and seeing what I saw probably wouldn’t have hesitated to do what I did,” said Smith.

Buck lost 50 pounds as he lay in the cold without food for more than a month. Held is relieved to have her companion back at home.

“I know he knows that we love him, and maybe he didn’t want to leave us hanging dry,” said Held. “Maybe he wanted to make sure to give us more love before his dying day.”

A Colombian city that’s gone to the dogs

Source: LATimes.com, Feb 18, 2010

An estimated 30,000 stray dogs roam the streets of Mosquera, a suburb of Bogota, Colombia’s capital. The mayor’s order to ‘capture and kill’ has led to efforts to raise funds for a dog pound.

Listening to yet another constituent complain about the thousands of neglected, scruffy mutts that prowl the streets of his town, Mosquera Mayor Luis Alvaro Rincon went ballistic. “A street dog,” he ground out, “is a dead dog.”

His fist pumping and voice rising as applause at the community gathering grew, he said, “It’s an order. Round them up and kill them!”

Rincon’s exasperation last summer was in some ways understandable. This suburb of Bogota has long been a dumping ground for canines whose owners are too uninterested or financially strapped to care for them. Now there may be 30,000 stray dogs here and in two adjoining suburbs, Madrid and Vaca.

“I know environmentalists won’t like it, but if they don’t, they should come to Mosquera and take a dog home with them,” Rincon said.

Driving around the Porvenir Rio barrio, one gets the impression that there are more dogs than people. They seem to be everywhere: foraging for food, lounging in the shade or sauntering across streets and alleys.

Animal control has been a foreign concept in Mosquera, a city of 90,000 with no dog pound. One of Colombia’s fastest-growing municipalities, Mosquera in recent years has had more pressing budgetary needs, including building a new hospital and roads and buying uniforms and lunches for the growing numbers of poor schoolchildren, the city’s health officer, Paola Linares, said in an interview.

As the stray dog population has grown, so has the health and safety crisis. The level of fecal dust is alarming, and rising, and 89 dog bites were reported last year, a 27% increase from 2008. “We had more cases of dog bites than measles last year,” Linares said.

Rincon’s outburst sparked little outcry at first. But in October, an animal rights activist put the video of Rincon’s speech on YouTube. That led to hundreds of angry phone calls and e-mails to City Hall from animal rights groups.

“This kind of discourse contributes to a disrespect for life in Colombia. Is it that much of a leap from mass murder of animals to that of humans?” said Albeiro Ulloa, an animal rights organizer in Bogota.

Protests were capped by a march here last month of 300 animal rights defenders, who were confronted by an equal-sized crowd of Rincon’s defenders.

Subsequently, tempers cooled and both sides agreed to work on a happy, or at least more humane, resolution of Mosquera’s canine crisis. Rincon retracted his “capture and kill” order and agreed to join a task force with animal rights leaders aimed at raising private funds to build a regional dog pound.

The panel also will try to change laws to restrict the sale of dogs and enforce vaccination laws.

“We have an imbalance in that there are too many dogs,” said Ivan Duque, a veterinarian who is advising the task force. “But it’s not the dogs’ problem, it’s ours, the human beings. We are the rational ones.”

Customs patrol dog attacks child at Dulles Airport

Source: USAToday.com

A girl was taken to a northern Virginia hospital after being attacked by a Customs and Border Protection K-9 in training at Washington’s Dulles airport, reports W-USA Channel 9 of Washington. The girl was at the airport with her mother to pick up a friend arriving from Argentina.

W-USA says the dog bit the girl “just under her pelvis and refused to let her go. The dog would not release her, even as the handler gave the command to release.” The child’s mother tried to help, but was bitten in her hands before the dog eventually was subdued by its handler, according to W-USA.

W-USA says it “has learned (the girl) has received more than 20 stitches to her mid section as a result of the attack” and has since “been released from the hospital into the care of her family.”

The child’s family says nothing was done to provoke the dog, reported to be a Belgian Malinois. “He attacked her, pulled her to the ground and bit her in the stomach and wouldn’t let go of her,” the child’s mother tells W-USA.

“You feel helpless when your child is on the floor, and you can’t take the animal off your child, and your screaming can’t get this dog to release your child it’s very hard,” the mother adds. “My daughter is going to remember this for the rest of her life and there will be a big scar on her belly to show for it.”

Still, the child’s mother didn’t appear to take  issue with the agency’s dog-training efforts. W-USA writes the woman “believes the dog training is good but says there should be added precautions such as wearing muzzles and keeping them away from children.”

Desperate need for help – Gaston Shelter, NC

This post is quite old but the situation at Gaston AC has NOT improved.

Permission granted to forward and cross-post!!

There is an immediate need for a rescue coordinator volunteer at the Gaston County Animal Shelter. Unfortunately, all dogs/cats lives coming into the shelter DEPEND on this non-paid position as shelter management does not have the foresight to see or care about saving dogs/cats lives; it is not now nor has it ever been a priority at this shelter to see that the dogs/cats make it out alive. Shelter management sees the overpopulation of pets as a nuisance to deal with, not as living beings that should be shown compassion and love. It is the animals who are punished, not the uncaring people that continue to allow their animals to breed.

The shelter is only open from 11-5 weekdays (no extended hours for people to come before or after work to see the animals) and only open one Saturday per month. They euthanize EVERY day, sometimes twice depending on how crowded it is. Rescues pulling these animals are usually the only chance they have as many are deemed unadoptable by the judgment of shelter workers without a thorough or repeatable evaluation process. They are proclaimed adoptable or “other” as soon as they are dragged through the door into a building that reeks of urine/feces/death and where dogs are barking and pleading for their lives. It’s truly a traumatic environment that causes all but the very confident animals to retreat and cower into their death sentence of being proclaimed unadoptable. It is especially traumatic for the cats as they are thrown into a pen at the end of the run, so they have to be walked down the loud/echoing aisle past all the barking/shrieking dogs before they are tossed (literally) into a pen with a 5 -10 other cats. When it rains the entire pen gets flooded. There is no heat or air conditioning in the cement/concrete building.

PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE is there someone who has time to devote to try to get the word out about the dogs/cats coming into this shelter and try to find them a rescue??

It is a HUGE undertaking, but these poor animals have no one else to depend on – the kennel workers and animal control officers at the shelter do not care about these enough to devote any time to this effort at all. They don’t care that they get gassed at the end of the day – plain and simple. It’s so very sad for these animals and the conditions that they have to endure for the 3-5 days that they are there. It is truly a jail for animals and they need our help.

If you or someone you know can help, please have them contact:
Leah at lepodz@yahoo.com or Marcie at buckeyepetlover@gmail.com

It doesn’t matter where you are, as long as you can use a computer and telephone during the day. Rescues from out-of-state and the surrounding tri-state area need to be able to speak to someone during the day via email and telephone to coordinate getting the pets pulled from the shelter, taken to foster homes or boarding kennels, and make arrangements for transport. The Rescue Coordinator does not have to physically do these things, but they must be able to communicate freely with people who can.

The few of us trying to do this have been shut down from emailing and taking calls at work, so we are trying to find a person who is either retired, semi-retired, out-of-work, or who works from home that has some time to spare during the day to help the pets in need.

We can give you all the contact information you need: rescue names, emails, phone numbers; names and numbers of people who transport, pull from the shelter, foster, etc.

Please forward this to anyone you know who might be in a position to help. We are DESPERATE to find someone IMMEDIATELY, as we currently have no one able to freely correspond throughout the day.

Animals will die, for lack of being able to communicate in time, if we can’t find someone to help.

Dog Starved To Death, Owner Charged, NE

Source: wowt.com, Feb 19, 2010

An Omaha woman is facing a felony charge of animal cruelty. The Nebraska Humane Society released the disturbing details Friday Morning.

NHS says 32-year-old Yolanda Y. Glover of 4040 Curtis Avenue was arrested Friday morning by the Metro Fugitive Task Force. Thursday afternoon a judge set her bond at $10,000 meaning she’ll have to come up with $1000 cash to get out of jail.

Mark Langan with the Nebraska Humane Society says, ” We had to dismantle the dog house to get the dog out.”

The German shepherd found frozen to the floor of his dog house. An examination showed the dog named ‘Tramp’ died of starvation and hypothermia.

“Obviously, the two weeks the dog was outside did not treat him well. Dogs need to be fed, given water and properly sheltered and this dog didn’t have any of those resulting in a very grisly death for this animal.”

A conviction for felony animal cruelty could put her in jail for five years but rarely does this charge lead to that. In the last five years, only one person in the metro, Anthony Schepis, has received substantial jail time for animal cruelty according to the Nebraska Humane Society. Schepis received two years in prison for beating to death his German shepherd puppy in 2006. He died in prison.

The Humane Society had seen the German shepherd before. It was back in November of 2009 and he was healthy. That’s when the same owner was ticketed for not having a license on either of her 2 dogs.

“She does have another dog,” says Langan. “It was checked today by Omaha Police who served warrants. The dog appears to be in good shape. It looks like an indoor dog so weather conditions don’t come into play with that dog.”

Investigators learned of the frozen dog from an anonymous tip on February 1.

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