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Family Pet Animal Care - Feel a Need to Breed? March 2012

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The Family Pet Animal Care - March 2012

Feel a Need to Breed? Get Over It.

by Dr. Michael Trapani

Spring is just around the corner! In six week’s time every un-spayed cat in Sonoma County will be in heat or pregnant! Isn’t that joyful?

No, not really.

It’s time we stopped making excuses for people who insist on breeding their pets. And it’s really, really time we stopped making excuses for ourselves when we succumb to the temptation. In 30 years of veterinary practice, I think I’ve heard them all:

“We always find homes for the kittens.” Really? Congratulations, all you’ve managed to do is kill a different set of babies. For homeless animals, life is a deadly game of musical chairs. When you insist on throwing kittens –or puppies - into the game, you ensure the death of other kittens elsewhere. Really.

“I want my kids to witness the miracle of birth.” Really? How often does an animal give birth with an audience? Seldom. Then, after you’ve added to the population of homeless animals, do you take the kids to the local shelter to witness the “miracle of death?” That’s what’s in store for millions of the unwanted puppies and kittens we allow to be born each year. Get a video instead. Really.

“I want to get her spayed, but I can’t afford it.” Really? Humane organizations (and local vets) have been subsidizing spay/neuter programs for decades. A few phone calls are all it takes to locate a low-cost, or even free spay/neuter program: Call Forgotten Felines (for feral cats) at 707-576-7999, or Humane Society of Sonoma County at 707-636-1716. Heck, call ANY shelter or humane group and you’re likely to find your pets welcomed in for inexpensive spay and neuter surgery. Spaying or neutering are the minimum responsibility of a pet owner, as necessary as providing the animal with food and water. If you can’t afford to pay 30 bucks – or nothing – to spay your pet, you can’t afford to own a pet. Really.

“But it’s not my cat.” Really? So what? You care enough about the poor stray or feral cat to put food out. Suck it up and take her in for free spay surgery NOW, before she gives birth to 30 more like her. Really.

“I’m going to breed her and sell the puppies.” Really? Oh, please! The shelters are full of mixed breed animals whose owners planned to make big bucks selling the puppies – that is, until some enterprising dog from down the street or mysterious stranger arrived and (oops!) romance bloomed, screwing up their best laid plans. Even pure bred pups are not guaranteed a home, and the breeding of healthy, high-quality animals – that smart people are willing to pay for – requires a huge investment of time and effort from a responsible breeder. The truth is, fly-by-night animal breeders, who turn their pet into a “cash crop,” are a menace to pets and pet owners alike. No nice person aspires to become one, and who wants to buy their next pet from someone who’s not nice? This behavior is nothing but greed, a temptation we must all resist. Really.

I’m convinced that only about 3% of pet owners allow their pets to breed irresponsibly – and that those same 3% are responsible for the entire pet over-population problem. The rest of us – the 97% - are enablers. We sit quietly by as the same people spout the same tired lies year after year, while their pets spew out litter after litter. We can’t remain silent any longer. Really.

And what becomes of those poor homeless animals? The lucky ones find themselves in a shelter, where they have a chance of finding a home. Then, if they are beautiful or outgoing, their lives may be saved. Pity the shy animal, or the all-black dog that blends into the crowd of all-black dogs with nothing to make him stand out. These shiver in the animal control facility until their time runs out and they are killed – at the taxpayer’s expense – because there is no one to love them and no money to provide them care. In an era of dwindling tax revenue to support schools or aid the needy, is this how we want our tax dollars spent? Really?

There was once a time when our society tolerated reckless driving. Someone could blast through a crosswalk, taking out some innocent pedestrian, and then be excused because of drunkenness. “Oh,” we’d say, “the guy was drunk. It’s just one of those things.” There was once a time when we tolerated adults who provided young teenagers with alcohol. “Kids will be kids,” we’d say. Won’t it be nice when we no longer tolerate selfish, greedy, irresponsible animal breeding? I think that time should be now. Really.

Every litter is a tragedy. Spay your cat, now, before it’s too late. Your dog too!

Comments:

THANK YOU Dr. T, for your amazing article, "Feel A Need To Breed? Get Over It!" The general public sorely needs to be educated on how breeders contribute to pet overpopulation, and how inhumane breeders are. As someone who has brought my two foster puppies (saved from the euthanasia list at just 6 weeks old) to your practice, I cannot thank you enough for preaching the truth, even when it may cost you some business from people who are too ignorant to recognize how buying a pet from a breeder creates problems for the lost souls in our state shelters. Thank you again, Dr. T. You're the best.

No more pussy-footing around, Dr. Trapani nails it with his piece on allowing animals to breed. I've seen so many articles dance around this subject that is near and dear to my heart. When you've rescued dozens of homeless cats it's hard for me to face someone who feels the need to allow their dog or cat to go un-spayed or un-neutered. If you ever have the urge to allow your animal to breed, take a look at the euthanasia statistics of our own Sonoma County animal 'shelters' . . . it should stop you dead in your tracks.

Darris Nelson

Bodega Bay

What a thrill to see Dr. Michael Trapani's frank and much needed piece 'Feel a Need to Breed?  Get Over It'. It was wonderful to see a veterinarian go out on a limb and say what, unfortunately, too many people would just rather not hear. It's the inconvenient truth in the pet world. Those of us who volunteer and get our pets from the shelters know all too well that there are far more cats and dogs than there are responsible homes, particularly in these hard economic times. Anyone who allows their pets to breed or who buys from a breeder is directly contributing to the pet overpopulation problem and feeding the killing machine that animal shelters everywhere are forced to operate. I have heard every excuse in the book from those who choose to breed or buy from breeders --- 'I just love the breed', 'I grew up with this breed', 'I'm allergic to other dogs/cats', 'Animals in the shelter have problems, 'My breeder is 'responsible''..... Folks, the sad and simple equation is that every dog or cat bred equals a dog or cat put to death in your local shelter for lack of a home. As they said in the '60's, if you aren't part of the solution, you are part of the problem. Please, everyone, neuter your pets and adopt from the shelter. Be part of the solution, not the problem. 

Nancy Hair - Sebastopol

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