Browsing all articles from June, 2010

Lazy Dog (photo by Erik Johansson) Click photo to see full image

I am a rescuer… and a dreamer of greater things. Simple things. But things bigger than just me.

Things like cats and dogs with happy homes and loving companions, food to eat, a roof over their heads, warmth, security. Love. Long lives.

I subscribe to this reality.

I am quick to offer help when an animal is in need. I believe if I take care of the immediate needs – health, food and shelter — the rest will fall into place.

But I am only successful if I have a network that supports me. The larger the network and the more far-reaching the network, the more I can do… the more ALL rescuers can do.

Not everyone can rescue just as not everyone can perform brain surgery or walk and chew gum at the same time, but there are other areas of help that are just as important and just as needed. These include, but are not limited to: fostering, medical assistance, transport, social media support.

Yes, even just using your network of friends and family via Facebook and Twitter to SHARE/ReTweet our messages can help us find foster homes, adoptive families, financial contributors and more members.

Let’s Adopt! is an all-volunteer international animal welfare group that is spreading around the globe to help animals in need. We use the strengths of one area to aid the weaknesses in another so we can offer the same level of commitment and care everywhere we are. And we want you to help us. Join us!

Tell us what your interests are and what talents you bring to the group. Let’s roll up our sleeves and save some lives. Add your info to our community map so we can see where our members are when a situation arises.

The weekend is almost upon us. Maybe there will be more time to peruse the web and catch up with friends. This weekend please share this message with your networks and ask them to join Let’s Adopt! Canada.

I really do need you! And so do Buster and Patches.

Ciao, Holly.



 

Topsy charms the crowd with a "silly hula dance" that he has been conditioned to fear performing incorrectly.

The city of Corner Brook, a city located on the west coast of the island of Newfoundland in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, seems to be one of the next stops for the Cirque Estival. And their track record of animal abuse has already arrived.

A Facebook group to boycott the Corner Brook Circus on June 19 has been formed to persuade the city that Corner Brook is not the place for animal circuses.

While the sight of these magnificent animals and the pagentry that goes into every act is incredible, what is the cost to these animals just for our entertainment?

In a recent interview, Louis Leonard, Director of Cirque Estival, said that during the nearly 3-month 70-show tour, Limba the elephant (who was snared as a baby and enslaved for the past 40+ years) performs for about 7 minutes of each show.

The majority of elephants used in circuses are captured in the wild as babies. In 2000, poachers killed 60 free-roaming female elephants so that their babies could be collected and sold to the entertainment industry. The still-nursing elephants, all under the age of 3, refused to abandon their dead mothers, even attempting to suckle from their corpses.

Baby elephants born in breeding farms are torn from their mothers, tied with ropes, and kept in isolation until they learn to fear their trainers.

One study of traveling circuses observed an elephant who spent up to 96 percent of her time in chains. The circus deprives animals of their basic needs to exercise, roam, socialize, forage, and play.

Repetitive and often destructive behaviors such as obsessive swaying, bobbing, chewing, sucking, weaving, rocking, and licking are common in circus animals, and are manifestations of their extreme stress and boredom.

Abusive training techniques, lack of socialization and other stimuli, and constant confinement often causes animals to become so stressed that they become dangerous, lashing out at trainers and spectators. Deaths and injuries from such incidents are not uncommon.

In the wild, elephants don’t balance themselves on three legs atop a stool while twirling hula-hoops around their trunks and legs.

That’s for our entertainment.

Surely you do not support this abusive treatment of animals. Surely this is not what you want your children to learn. And surely this is not worth spending your money on to support.

Neville Greeley, the Mayor of Corner Brook is a modern man,  he is on Facebook.  He understands social media and how powerful a voice it is. Please send him a Facebook message and kindly ask him, in a polite way, to do the right thing and cancel Cirque Estival in Corner Brook due to overwhelming public demand.

Ask that Corner Brook join the list of other Canadian communities that now ban animal acts:


Argyle
Bridgewater
Bonavista
Burlington
Burnaby
Chilliwack
Clarenville
Coquitlam
Digby
Grand Falls-Windsor
Guelph
Kamploops

Kanata
Kelowna
Langley
Malahide
Maple Ridge
Marystown
Mont Royal
Mount Pearl
Nanaimo City
Nanaimo regional district
New Westminster
North Cowichan

North Vancouver City
Parksville
Port Colbarne
Saanich
Salmon Arm
Shelbourne
St. John’s
St. Laurent
Surrey
Vancouver
Victoria
Yarmouth
..

You can also email, phone or fax the mayor:
Mayor Neville Greeley
ngreeley@cornerbrook.com
Tel: (709) 637-1537
Fax: (709) 637-1543

It’s important that you make your voice be heard. And heard right now! The circus is scheduled to be in town this weekend — June 19.

Speak up against animal circuses. Speak up for the animals.

Ciao, Holly
Enhanced by Zemanta


Come on, admit it… you love us!!!

Enter your email address:

(We respect your privacy)

Making dreams come true!

Here are a few of our 2000+ success stories. JOIN US! Rescue. Foster. Adopt.
 

Let’s Adopt! Community Map


View Let's Adopt Network in a larger map
 

Let`s Adopt Network!

Btn_wht_122x44

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Social Media Advisors





Please share this blog!

Share |

Web hosting for webmasters
V
E
R
I
B
I
R