Tag Archives: pets

Not a question, but a reminder?

To those of you in hurricane areas the ASPCA and Humane Society websites have lots of good information about disaster preparedness and your pets. Actually these plans would work for just about any natural or otherwise disaster. The Red Cross will not allow pets into emergency shelters, so we need to figure out our alternatives.
Best,
Susan

http://www.aspca.org/site/PageServer?pagename=pets_emergency

I read that 30% of people who refused to evacuate during Katrina had no place to take their animals. Sad!

why are people being fooled by Science Diet pet food?

I am always surprised to see so many people endorse Science Diet as a good food for pets.. it isnt.. it is OVERPRICED, WELL MARKETED, C R A P ! ! !

read the label here is one I looked up quickly – Adult Cat Original top ingredients Chicken By-Product Meal, Ground Whole Grain Corn, Brewers Rice, Animal Fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols and citric acid), Corn Gluten Meal, Chicken Liver Flavor,

OMG by-products are beaks feet and feathers… this isnt even meat and is preserved with a chemical pesticide Ethoxyquin which is Banned in many parts of the world because of health risks..CORN?? that isnt meat either..where is the meat?? liver Flavor?? OMG cats are true carnivours where is the meat??

this food PAYS for vet endorsement – knowing vets receive little or NO trianing on ingredients or brands.. this food is OVERPRICED CRAP -

so why do so many people support and promote it???
if the vet sells the food – OF COURSE THEY ARE GOING TO TELL YOU TO FEED IT

there are soooo many BETTER foods for LESS COST… (from pet supply stores of course not grocery)

Emergency Preparedness For Your Pets

Here are 5 simple steps that you can take to prepare your pets and keep stress and worry for your entire family to a minimum.

1. Get a Pet Emergency Supplies Kit. Have it readily accessible and make sure it consists of at least the following items:

Pet first aid kit that will cover your pets’ emergency medical needs. If your pets take any medications, add some extra supplies.
Food (in water proof container) and water, 3-day ration.
Collars with ID tags – make sure the information is current and updated. You might consider micro chipping as permanent identification as collars get lost.
Safety harness and leash.
Sanitation Items.
Rescue Pet Decals – to alert rescue teams to save your pets inside the house.
Comfort toys and blankets to take with your pets if you have to evacuate.

2.  Pack a picture of your pets in case you get separated. It will help rescue workers to identify and reunite you with your pets faster.

3.   Get your pets familiar with their carriers or crates.  Usually, pets associate them with visits to the vet and become stressed at the first site of them. Let your pets play in the carrier or get them some treats to make the transition easier when the time comes.

4.   Know your pets hiding places in and out of the house.  At the first warning of a disaster, you might consider putting them in one room in case you have to leave in a hurry.

5.   Have a Pet Emergency Plan Ready:

Map out a get-away plan: how you will pack your pets and where you will go.
Check with the nearby shelters, veterinary hospitals, and hotels to see if they would take your pets in an emergency.
Develop a pet-care buddy system.  Arrange for friends or extended family to take your pets in if you must evacuate to a shelter that doesn’t allow pets. Instruct your caretakers on the location of the emergency supplies kit and anything else you might find useful.
Learn about various disasters that could strike your particular area. You might have to wait at home longer before getting an order to evacuate, so get some extra supplies of food and water.
If you have to evacuate, take your pets with you if possible.

I specialize in survival supplies/gear for you and your family whether at home, in the car, at school or at the office. The immediate things you’ll need for a disaster (fire, flood earthquake, tornadoes or hurricanes) include food, water, shelter, and first aid supplies. I encourage you to prepare today for every tomorrow.

Nick Johnston

Survival Supplies 4u

can pets actually taste their food and how do we know that they taste the flavors?

how do we know that our pets taste the flavors ov pet food that we give them.

Can I let my snapping turtle go or have I gotten myself into a life-long commitment?

Now before I get ripped on for taking him out of his natural habitat, I rescued him from a beyond disgusting trailer filled with beyond disgusting lice-ridden alcoholics with other neglected pets. I mean these people got their water shut off and their poor dogs had to drink pee out of the toilet. I had to use their bathroom (thankfully I made it out without contracting any diseases) and next to the sink was a tiny cereal bowl full of multi-colored slime. I looked closer and saw a little turtle head poking out of the slime and looking up at me. I was horrified and decided to take him. A week later one of their cats crawled out from under the bed and just died so they figured that it swallowed the turtle and died from it. It was already freezing outside so I figured he wouldn’t have a chance if I let him go. He was only the size of a quarter.

So I’ve had him for a little more than two years now. He’s getting bigger and bigger and I’m wondering if he would live if I let him go back into the wild. I really don’t want to give him to anyone because I won’t know how he’s being taken care of. And the nearest zoo (1 hour away) can’t even affort to pay its workers. They aren’t going to take my snapping turtle. It’s not a problem keeping him here right now but pretty soon I am going to have a pool in my kitchen and my Dad isn’t going to like that. So would he be able to live in the wild? I’m thinking not, because he doesn’t have basic survival skills. If he was born with they’ve been pampered right out of him. Am I right or would he be just fine like everyone is telling me?
If he won’t be able to survive then I am for sure keeping him, don’t worry about that. I’ll just have to figure things out as far as what to keep him in as he grows.