Posts Tagged ‘shelters’

What If Your Pet Becomes Lost?

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Did you know that The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) estimates 6-8 million animals enter shelters each year? And of those, only about 30 percent of dogs and less than 5 percent of cats are reunited with their owners? 

How would you be able to identify your pet if it were lost? Is your pet tagged, chipped or tattooed?  

Collars and Tags – Outfit your pet with a collar and tags that include your pet’s name, your name, contact information, your veterinarian’s contact information and rabies vaccination information. Be sure to keep the collar on at all times. Consider adding your pet sitter’s name as a secondary contact.

Microchip Identification System – This option involves implanting a capsule under your pet’s skin. If lost, your pet’s microchip can be scanned for relevant information that you provide to one of the registering agencies.

Tattoo Identification System – This is a permanent identification system that involves marking a code on your pet’s skin. The person who finds your pet can then call whichever registry is associated with the tattoo to find the owner’s contact information.

 The HSUS recommends following these steps to help increase the chance that you and your pet will be reunited if the unthinkable ever happens and your pet becomes lost:

 • Contact local animal shelters and animal control agencies. File a lost pet report with every shelter within a 60-mile radius of your home and visit the nearest shelters daily, if possible. To find your local shelter go to Pets911 or check your phone book. If there is no shelter in your community, contact the local police department. Provide these agencies with an accurate description and a recent photograph of your pet. Notify the police if you believe your pet was stolen.

 

Search the neighborhood. Walk or drive through your neighborhood several times each day. Ask neighbors, letter carriers and delivery people if they have seen your pet. Hand out a recent photograph of your pet and information on how you can be reached if your pet is found.

 

Advertise. Post notices at grocery stores, community centers, veterinary offices, traffic intersections, online at Pets911and Findtoto.com, at pet supply stores and other locations. Also, place advertisements in newspapers and with radio stations. Include your pet’s sex, age, weight, breed, color and any special markings. When describing your pet, leave out one identifying characteristic and ask the person who finds your pet to describe it.

 

Be wary of pet-recovery scams. When talking to a stranger who claims to have found your pet, ask him to describe the pet thoroughly before you offer any information. If he does not include the identifying characteristic you left out of the advertisements, he may not really have your pet. Be particularly wary of people who insist that you give or wire them money for the return of your pet.

 

Don’t give up your search. Animals who have been lost for months have been reunited with their owners. A pet—even an indoor pet—has a better chance of being returned if she always wears a collar and an ID tag with your name, address, and telephone number. Ask your local animal shelter or veterinarian if permanent methods of identification (such as microchips) are available in your area.

 

Reprinted by permission of The Humane Society of the United States.

LAA Looking For Volunteers

Monday, October 12th, 2009

The Lincoln Animal Ambassadors’ Pet Food Bank has received a wonderfully generous donation of 10 pallets of cat and dog food.   It is stored in a storage unit currently and we need to physically inventory and re-arrange it in the unit so we can easily distribute food when it is requested.   Looking for volunteers who can help with this project on:

 

Sunday, October 18th

1:30 p.m.

Integrity Storage

1542 South 1st Street

Lincoln, NE

Unit # M-04

 

The LAA Pet Food Bank distributed its first pet food on September 13th and has distributed food on a weekly basis since that time.  

 

Please e-mail Mary Douglas at  mdouglas@remboltludtke.com or call Mary at (402) 540-7017.  Mary can provide a map to the storage unit if you are willing to help. 

Pilots N Paws 5000

Monday, September 14th, 2009

The Pilots N Paws 5000 is going to rescue 5000 animals in one week, FREE. Pilots are volunteering their time and their own planes to transport these animals.

The Pilots N Paws 5000 is taking place September 12 - 20, 2009. This event was organized to draw public attention to three issues:

- Serious problem in this country resulting in about 4,000,000 animals, or more, euthanized annually. This number would be less if there were more/better spay & neuter programs and laws in place.

- Adoptable animals could find permanent “forever” homes if they could be transported away from high kill regions.

- Aviation is proven to be highly successful in transporting animals to safety; however, general aviation is becoming threatened by tedious Homeland Security directives as well as increasingly expensive fees.

Please see their website for details: http://pilotsnpaws.org/news/29/15/PNP-5000/

You can contact them to report animals that can be rescued, volunteer to foster rescued animals, donate to their cause, etc.

Here is the Good Morning America article: http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/popup?id=8551659

They started to rescue animals on 9/10 and have rescued dogs and rabbits so far.

About The Cat House

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

The Cat House was born in 1998 after a trip to a veterinary convention which included a long drive and a long discussions of what we would like to do with our lives. During the next four years, our steps have increased in size and sense of purpose. In July of 1999, The Cat House was invited to use the Luv-a-Pet adoption center at our local PetsMart. In April of 2000 we obtained a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit status that allows most contributions to be tax deductible to the donor. The number of dedicated volunteers continues to increase and as of December 2004, over 700 cats and kittens have been placed in homes.

We then added the Nebraska Alley Cat Alliance, a feral cat management program. NEACA put into place a Trap/Neuter/Release program that works with individuals and communities who need help with stray and feral (unsocialized cats) in their area. We can provide information, guidance and assistance enabling the individuals to have these cats neutered or spayed, tested for infectious diseases and vaccinated. In return, these individuals and communities become “caretakers” for these cats upon their return and the population stays healthy and non-reproductive - a proven and more humane solution than the traditional trap and euthanize policy.

Dr. Arnold (All Feline Veterinary Hospital) has provided us with important veterinary assistance, including writing articles for our newsletter, training volunteers to care for and treat ill cats, and sharing her extensive knowledge of cats as well as her friendship and emotional support. We truly could not have come this far without her help.

At this time, most of our operating expenses come from our adoption fees. As a small, all volunteer group, large fund raising efforts are not easily accomplished. Donations to our cause are always welcome. Our mailing address is:

The Cat House
Box 23145
Lincoln, Nebraska 68542

Our hotline phone number is (402) 441-9593. Should you wish to talk with one of us about our activities, please call and leave a message. We will get back to you as soon as we can.

Our ultimate dream of a cageless shelter here in the city of Lincoln was realized in the summer of 2003. Our goal of a location with a large front window where people can walk by and see the cats lounging in the windows, sleeping in sunbeams - not confined to cages was realized in 2004 with our p street facility and this year with our larger Q street facility. Caged cats are not happy cats.

Help The Cat House win a $25,000 grant!

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

Vote for us at www.theanimalrescuesite.com and we could win $25,000 to help pets in need.

The Animal Rescue Site is hosting a special challenge for eligible Petfinder.com member shelter and rescue groups. The grand prize is a $25,000 grant, and they will be awarding many other grants to rescue groups with the most votes — a total of $100,000 in grants for animal welfare organizations.

Think how many animals we could help for $25,000!

Help us win! All you have to do is click to help rescued animals, and then vote in The Animal Rescue Site $100,000 Shelter+ Challenge (scroll down to the bottom of the page). Both of these actions are absolutely free! You can vote once a day, every day, from September 29 through December 14, 2008. Every time you vote, or tell a friend to vote, you are making a huge difference for us.

Vote today!
Visit: www.theanimalrescuesite.com