Author Topic: The bad news and then the good news  (Read 513 times)

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Offline kevinbythesea

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The bad news and then the good news
« on: 26 March 2010, 21:09:35 »
The Bad


Seals expected to drown in iceless waters
Last Updated: Friday, March 26, 2010

Most of the seal pups born in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence this year will drown due to a lack of ice, a government scientists says.

It's not a very  big impact at all.'— DFO biologist Mike Hamill

But biologist Mike Hammill of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans told CBC News Thursday there is no cause for concern yet.

Hamill spent a few days earlier this week flying over the Gulf of St. Lawrence, seeing how much ice and how many seals are left. He estimates 70 per cent of seal pups won't make it. Seals need ice for birthing and nursing, but there is so little ice this year Hamill said that won't be possible for many seals.

But Hamill said the impact of one year of bad ice is minimal.

"We predicted the population in 2009 was 6.9 million and after this year probably the population for 2011 will be 6.7 million," he said.

"So really it's not a very big impact at all."


And Now the good



N.S veterinarians ban tail docking


Veterinarians in Nova Scotia will no longer cut the tails and ears of dogs for cosmetic reasons, prompting an outcry from some breeders.

Tail docking is popular for certain breeds like Doberman pinschers.Tail docking is popular for certain breeds like Doberman pinschers. (CBC)The Nova Scotia Veterinary Medical Association is forbidding its members from doing surgeries that alter an animal's appearance solely for cosmetic purposes.

Veterinarians say docking a Doberman pinscher's tail, for example, is unnecessary and cruel.

"In my opinion, Dobermans and Great Danes look great with their ears down and their long tails, so there's no reason to mutilate them by causing them to meet an arbitrary breed characteristic that has been around for so long that we can't remember why it's been around in the first place," said Dr. Frank Woodbury, a veterinarian in Halifax.

Mary Spinelli, a Doberman breeder in Dartmouth, disputes any suggestion that ear cropping and tail docking is cruel, and therefore can't see any need for the new rules.

"There was no impetus from anybody in the dog community to say, 'Please, consider this procedure,'" she said.

"These procedures have been performed for the better part of 100 years. They're not new, they're not revolutionary and, by and large, they're not cruel. They're done in proper conditions."

Spinelli said a Doberman's tail is removed when the animal is about two days old, while the ears are cropped at eight weeks.

She finds it hypocritical that the veterinary association is still allowing the declawing of cats.

"They have no qualms whatsoever about declawing cats, which is a far more invasive procedure done when the cat is significantly older," she said.

The new rules go into effect on April 1, though they won't be enforced until October. Similar bans on cosmetic surgeries are already in place in New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Spinelli, a registered breeder with the Canadian Kennel Club, won't crop the tails of her dogs herself. She said the procedure should only be done under safe and clean conditions, like with veterinarians.

Another Doberman owner, Lendra Barker, fears that some owners will do whatever it takes to get their dogs to conform to a certain look.

"The people who own these dogs want them performed and without a vet to be permitted to perform these procedures, where is it going to go? Some people that aren't reputable may end up doing it themselves without the benefit of anesthesia or sanitary conditions," said Barker, a past-president of the Doberman Pinscher Club of Canada.

Non-veterinarians who attempt the surgeries on their own could be charged under Nova Scotia's Animal Protection Act.



Offline PaigntonPearl

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #1 on: 27 March 2010, 06:33:36 »
That's good news about mutilating dogs for cosmetic reasons, although the breeders will probably just take them to another province. 

Of course, I'm very un-PC and think Dobermans should probably have their necks docked rather than their tails!

Offline dreamer

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #2 on: 28 March 2010, 00:41:39 »
I think lots of dog breeds should be annhialated along with certain owners,especially the ones that encourage children to come along and pet their unmuzzled pooch, because as they say, they wont hurt you!! thats just before they take a chunk out of childs face. :halo:
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Offline 99

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #3 on: 30 March 2010, 23:38:56 »
It's mostly not the dogs it's the owners,  have a staffie in the house and he is very friendly.  likes to be close to people. He is very smart.
He does worry visitors though being a staffie. That said I would not ever leave him or indeed any dog alone with a child.
a next door neighbour used to have a doberman and the dog was fine.
Any dog can get jealous, they are pack animals and like to test to see who is boss. in much the same way as small kids do with there temper tantrums when they do't get their own way
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Offline PaigntonPearl

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #4 on: 31 March 2010, 06:16:49 »
Well, perhaps a miniature poodle . . . .

Offline dreamer

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #5 on: 04 April 2010, 19:13:19 »
if all dog owners were like you 99 it may be a safer place for children, as you say you would never leave a dog alone with a child. :halo:
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Offline 99

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Re: The bad news and then the good news
« Reply #6 on: 05 April 2010, 23:06:12 »
mostly it's owners who lose interest when they get out of puppy stage. My daughter being one, was very keen to get a pedigree staffie. and al was fine while he was a puppy. I did try and put her off, now of course it's everyone else who looks after him. She has totally lost interest, she puts it down to uni and work and not having the time. but I did tell her that the dog would need a lot of looking after
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