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Safe solution resisted in pet-breeding crisis


A few days ago, a well-meaning person came to the shelter with a litter of puppies bred with the plans to give them to someone else. For a multitude of reasons, the arrangement fell through and she found herself with puppies she was unable to care for and felt she had no choice but to bring them to the shelter. We urged her to have the mother spayed and she protested, saying the mother was a pure breed who hadn't gotten herself pregnant by any old stray.

When you're involved with an animal shelter in any capacity, nothing affects you more than seeing the number of animals entering shelters. I often imagine what it would be like if there were enough homes for the millions of animals in shelters across the country?

I wonder if there's a formula that animal-welfare professionals haven't discovered to solve the problem -- one that would solve the problem of animal overpopulation, which ultimately leads to millions of animals having to be euthanized because perpetual life in a shelter is not the answer?

A colleague who has consulted with others about animal-sheltering issues all across the United States, Russia, Brazil and Taiwan often says that the biggest animal shelter ever would not have room for all animals requiring shelter. Unless we find Utopia, a place lacking the things that ail our planet, including homeless animals, what is the answer?

Any scientist will tell you that before you solve a problem, you have to find that tiny cell or that core source that creates the problem. Find the cause and you're halfway there. The cause in our case is humans facilitating the breeding of millions of animals.

It doesn't dominate headlines, but a safe solution was discovered years ago by animal-welfare professionals and volunteers. Some of you know it as "fixing," others use the term "altering." Technically, it's spaying and neutering.

If "s/n," as shelter folk call it, was welcomed by every individual with a companion animal every day for a full year, all around the world, we would still have an endless supply of animals needing homes, but it would be a great start. And if "s/n" was practiced every day, and every year, then I'm convinced we would witness life-changing advances for every companion animal.

For some people, financial hardships make it difficult to take advantage of spaying and neutering, but there are organizations in communities like ours that offer low cost s/n options. Unfortunately, finding a way to get each and every person to embrace the concept has been the greatest challenge.

Myths lead many to believe that the procedure somehow changes our pets for the worse. In fact, it improves their lives for the better. For example, the odds of testicular cancer in males are reduced when they are neutered.

Our pets also don't need to experience breeding "just once." It's not a right of passage for them, and they won't have to run to an analyst's couch to bemoan what they've missed. It's a nonissue. Some men who own pets resist the idea, mistakenly thinking that neutering is somehow removing a male pet's manhood. But again, our pets are not us.

So for those who have their doubts, take a deep breath, erase all the myths you've ever heard, and embrace the ultimate cure to end animal overpopulation. For our companion animals, that would be the beginning of something resembling Utopia.

 

Complete list of Tail Talk articles

 


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