Hard times for Queen of the Desert

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

CASSELBERRY, Florida––Cat Fanciers Association
board members conferred on June 30 to discuss penalties
they might impose against Sheila Gitlin Dye, 52, breeder of
Queen of the Desert, the brown tabby exotic who was the 1997
CFA “Best kitten.”
Casselberry Animal Control supervisor Vicky
Hilburn and staff, with local police, on May 18 removed
Queen of the Desert and 13 other cats from Dye’s allegedly
feces-and-trash-filled home. Three dead cats were reportedly
found among the debris. Dye was charged with cruelty.
CFA president Don Williams, of Ocala, Florida,
told Orlando Sentinel reporter Doris Bloodworth that he knew
Dye as a fastidious housekeeper who pampered her pets.
Williams’ daughter lived with Dye circa 1992, while attending
the University of Central Florida, Bloodworth wrote.

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COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

Dog-related
Federal judge David Down of
Portage County, Wisconsin, on June 2
reduced to $300,000 an April jury award of
$940,000 to county dog warden Beverly
Kirkhart as an alleged victim of gender discrimination
when she was rejected for permanent
appointment to the post in 1994––after
she had been a member of the dog warden’s
staff on an interim basis since 1984, and had
been acting dog warden for about six months.
A man, Jon S. Barber, was hired instead, at
$3.00 more per hour. Kirkhart was then fired
in 1996, because of purported physical disabilities.
Kirkhart returned to work as dog warden
on May 17. Barber was offered a job in another
county department.

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Some good news, for a change

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

While the Makah tribe of western
Washington killed a whale on May 17, as
described on page one of the June edition of
ANIMAL PEOPLE, the Blackfeet tribe of
Montana dedicated a corner of their reservation
to a private effort to reintroduce the swift
fox, described by predator expert Todd
Wilkinson in the May 22 edition of The
Christian Science Monitor. Sacred to at least
six Great Plains tribes, swift foxes were
trapped to declared extinction in Montana by
1970, but isolated subpopulations survived in
Kansas, Colorado, and Wyoming. Winning
tribal approval of the reintroduction in August
1998, Blackfeet wildlife manager Ira
Newbreast obtained 30 captive-bred swift
foxes from the Cochrane Ecological Institute,
which is supervising swift fox recovery
in Canada, and released them last fall.

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Shooting dogs as if it’s going out of style

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

PETERSON, N.J.; MEBANE,
N . C .––Firing three shots into a pit bull/
Labrador mix named Disciple, as the dog
mauled Terrance Tate, 4, police officer
Edwin Rodrieguez on June 9 accidentally hit
Tarik Beach, 12, in the left leg with a richochetting
bullet fragment.
Tate’s mother, Christchelle Tate,
indicated to the Hackensack Record that
Beach was the real hero, was already restraining
Disciple before Rodrieguez fired, and that
the gunplay menaced both boys more than the
dog did. Disciple survived all three shots, but
was euthanized later by a veterinarian.
Almost simultaneously, in Mebane,
North Carolina, police sergeant Terance
Caldwell, 33, fired three shots at an alleged
pack of stray dogs. One shot hit Little League
outfielder Nathaniel Tilley, 11, in the calf.
Tilley, not seriously injured, was standing at
the Mebane Arts and Community Center baseball
diamond drinking fountain, a quarter of a
mile away.

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BOOKS: Taking Care of Puppy Business

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

Taking Care of
Puppy Business
A Gentle Approach for Positive Results
by Gail Pivar & Leslie Nelson
Tails-U-Win! Canine Center (175 Adams
St., Manchester, CT 06040), 1998.
74 pages, stapled. $11.50 inc. postage.

Gail Pivar and Leslie Nelson teach
puppy-rearing as a parenting skill. Most of
their advice makes sense to me. One recommendation,
reinforcing and rewarding bravery
(not to be confused with territoriality), seems
especially important but often overlooked as a
means of preventing future behavioral problems,
including fear-biting.
But, having never had a dog who
was younger than about six months old, I
solicited outside perspective on Taking Care of
Puppy Business from people who have raised
and trained hundreds, also using affirmative
rather than punitive approaches, and was surprised
at the strength of the negative response.

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BOOKS: Animal behavior studies

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 1999:

The Dog Who
Would Be King:
Tales and Surprising Lessons
from a Pet Psychologist
Rodale Press (33 E. Minor St., Emmaus,
PA 18098), 1999. $18.95 hardcover.

Is Your Cat Crazy?
Solutions From the Casebook
of a Cat Therapist
Macmillan (1633 Broadway,
New York, NY 10019), 1994.

John Wright has long been popular
with members of the animal welfare and animal
care and control communities. As one of
about only fifty certified animal behaviorists
in the United States, he is a frequent speaker
at conferences as well as an instructor at the
National Cruelty Investigators School.

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BOOKS: Girl On A Leash

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 1999:

Girl On A Leash:
The Healing Power of Dogs
by Betty Lim King
Sanctuary Press (1114 Applegate Ct.,
Lenoir, NC 28645), 1999.
224 pages, paperback, $19.95.

“Every religious, racial, age, ethnic,
and gender group builds a wall to protect
what it believes sets it apart from other
groups and makes it superior,” Asian scholar
and dog rescuer Betty Lim King observes
toward the end of her memoir Girl On A
Leash. “Unfortunately, such verities and
myths not only exclude but often demean
those who are different.”

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Fixing the problem in Connecticut

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

WESTBROOK, Ct.––If the
Guinness Book of Records had a line for
most animals fixed in a year by a mobile clinic,
the Vernon A. Tait All-Animal Adoption,
Preservation & Rescue Fund’s TEAM
Mobile Feline Unit would be in it––twice.
Put into service on March 1, 1997,
the TEAM unit had by March 1, 1998 fixed
8,000 cats, at $35 each including all standard
vaccinations. That shattered the old mark of
just over 6,000 animals fixed set by Jeff
Young of the Denver-based Planned Pethood
Plus mobile clinic back in 1992.
Then, from March 1, 1998 to
March 1, 1999, the TEAM unit fixed another
10,000 cats, for a two-year total of 18,200:
more low-cost neutering operations than the
six Connecticut Humane Society facilities
appear to have done in the past five years,
and more than all but a handful of the biggest
and busiest fixed-site clinics anywhere.

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Reptile refuges are real rarity

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:
Tens of thousands of former pet reptiles are abandoned each year in the U.S. and Canada–and ANIMAL PEOPLE files indicate the numbers are rapidly rising. Yet the number of sanctuaries able to give reptiles quality care can just about be counted on the fingers of one hand.

Apart from the Rainforest Reptile Refuge, ANIMAL PEOPLE has identified only two other sanctuaries which either specialize in reptiles or have reptile experts on staff: Wildlife Waystation, of Angeles National Forest, California, which mainly handles mammals and birds but also has a reptile house; and Star Inc., of Culver City, California, whose storefront facilities reportedly resemble Rainforest Reptile Refuge. A few others focus on mammals and birds but also keep some reptiles, notably Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation and Primarily Primates, both near San Antonio, Texas.

Otherwise, herpetological rescue is left to individual members of local herpetological societies. Rescue networks are
usually not in close touch with animal control agencies and humane societies. The public tends to be unaware of them. One can hardly criticize individual rescuers for lying low, as more reptiles are dumped than any one person could handle, and thefts of reptiles are increasingly common, due to a misplaced belief that they can be sold for big money. In truth, only the healthiest reptiles of the rarest species have resale value. For most legal dealers, the money is not in the animals but in the paraphernalia needed to keep them.

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