Archive for the ‘Animals’ Category

  • Doggies for the win! Pups and critters

    3

    I originally penned this story for Maria who’s just been through an operation  (just rest up, M!) and thought you might get a chuckle from it as well.

    We were overseas recently. And discovered, upon returning, that life at the tropics doesn’t stand still. Due to our diligent pre-trip spraying, we didn’t get the Invasion of the Ants that we so feared, but we did get a mini-infestation of cockroaches that has now sent the kids into a regular cleaning frenzy (can’t be all that bad then, can it?), a spider the size of your fist (and they bite too, as J can attest), as well as two other critters.

    The first was a juvenile spitting cobra. Yeah, you know those snakes you see on National Geographic, where the camera is up close and waving around, and this snake rears up and shoots venom and it smears on the camera lens? Yeah, one of them. We found it in the pantry. They are endemic to this region and can just as easily be found in urban areas as forested ones. (It doesn’t help that our house sits in a combination of the two.)

    The poor thing was just looking for a place to call home but we didn’t have a choice. At first we looked around for something to trap it in but we barely had two long sticks! How the hell could we manoeuvre it into a jar or something? Where’s that little noose on a long stick thing when you need it? In the end, we had to kill it and did so with regret. The juveniles are supposed to be more aggressive than the adult cobras, but this one was so desperate to just get away and only got angry when J pinned it against the wall with one end of the broomstick. You would have lost your temper before it did.

    Meanwhile, the dogs were going berserk on the other side of the baby gate to the kitchen. They couldn’t see what was going on but they knew that Something Bad was in the pantry and were rearing to have a go at it. They didn’t get the chance. J had brought in Squeak to help him out but all Squeak wanted to do was get out and go back to lazing on top of the scratch post. (This is not the first of Squeak’s iniquities.) J finally despatched the snake, we toasted it that night for the forbearing animal with unfortunate choices that it was and moved on.

    But then, a couple of days later, Sausage started sniffing around the library like a bloodhound, culminating in one solid hour barking at the shoe cabinet. I didn’t think it was another snake, but I did think it was either one of those large-arsed spiders again or a cockroach. The kids and I got ready. Various insect sprays. Check. Torch. Check. Broom. Check. Dustpan. Check. A long stick. Check.

    I took the torch and shone it around and between spaces. Didn’t see a thing. But Sausage was still barking like mad. The Wast brought Fluff and Squeak into the room to help out Sausage but they looked as if they didn’t know what was going on. No sniffs, no curiosity. Nothing. So I tried moving the cabinet a little, shifting one side, to give us more working room. Little Dinosaur and I saw a flash of grey-brown and a long tail before we all ran screaming from the room. (I’m not ashamed to admit that.)

    We regrouped in the living room. “Right,” I said, “it looks like we’ve got ourselves a rat.” Meanwhile, Sausage was still barking around the cabinet because she didn’t see the rat take off for one of the bookshelves. “Let’s go get some rat poison.”

    We piled into the car, drove to the nearest supermarket, purchased some poison and headed back. Meanwhile, from Sausage’s investigations, we gathered that the rat was penned up around a particular bookshelf. The kids hightailed it upstairs to their room but I had my working machines in the library, so I didn’t have a choice. I did put some shoes on though.

    When we went to pick up J from the bus-stop a couple of hours later, I thought we had a plan all figured out. We’d pack up the cats and dogs for the night, put out some poison, then collect it (and, hopefully, a dead rat) up the next morning before letting our pets out again.

    It wasn’t to be. While we were gone, Rat obviously decided to head for somewhere safer. She must have darted to another bookshelf but, unfortunately for her, Sausage saw her this time. Our dog pawed an entire bottom shelf of books out of the way and Rat must have panicked.

    Instead of heading back to the sanctuary of the shoe cabinet, she must have decided to chance it in the rest of the house. Under she went, below the library baby gate, and that would have stopped Sausage cold. However, what Rat wasn’t to know was that Cookie was on the other side of the gate.

    Now, while Sausage is fast, Cookie is faster. Our smaller mini bully loves to run, looks like she’s half-whippet and is able to catch arrogant birds in mid-air on take-off from our front garden. Rat didn’t stand a chance.

    When we came home from the bus stop, we found a dead rat in the dining room with its throat crushed, but otherwise intact. I pieced the rest together from the evidence available. Lowest bookshelf in a mess with network switch unplugged. Squeak still in the middle of the library, having a nap. (Fluff had buggered off back upstairs, the lazy sod.) Baby gate moved out of position but still holding. (Sausage must have slammed into it, chasing Rat.) Said dead Rat. Cookie outside sunning herself by the koi pond.

    We were never so proud of our dogs than at that moment. They may not be what people think of when they think of working dogs but it looks like they’re our working dogs, perfect for our current environment. They got extra treats that night and the cats got a lecture on the responsibilities of being part of the household…but I don’t think it took.

    Have a good weekend and I’ll catch you next week.

  • Why people like kibble: one hypothesis

    1

    Here in south-east Asia, the food for pets is kibble. I had thought it had something to do with the fact that kibble doesn’t spoil in this equatorial heat and people just don’t have time for the previous tried-and-true pet food, home-cooked stew in rice.

    But I think I also just stumbled across another reason.

    It was bad enough when J mentioned at work that we have bull terriers and was told in horrified tones that they “kill children”. I’ll cover that topic in another post. J’s co-workers started to get really agitated when they asked what we feed our pets and he replied, “raw meat”.

    “Raw meat?” they repeated. “Aren’t you afraid they’ll…attack you as a result?”

    Now, isn’t that interesting? There was an implicit assumption here (for both dogs and cats) that if we feed our domestic animals a raw food diet (as we have done for the past 6+ years), the animals will start to look at us as potential food.

    It got me wondering if this kind of thinking melds very well with the choice of kibble as a food. Kibble doesn’t resemble raw meat in any shape or form. It looks and smells processed. Or, to use another term, it appears more “civilised” than a plate of raw meat with bones.

    It occurs to me that we constantly try to distance ourselves from our biological heritage. Say to someone, “you and I are both animals”, and there’s a frozen moment of disbelief and outrage. I know this because I’ve done it. And while people have had to agree in the end that, yes, they are animals, there is always a “BUT” floating around at the end of the admission.

    So therefore, if we deem ourselves to be “civilised”, then the animals who inhabit our personal space (with the exception of those who yearn for “exotic” pets for ego or vanity reasons) must be “civilised” as well. Which means we don’t feed them anything raw. We feed them the kind of cooked, civilised meals that we eat ourselves. Roast Lamb with Vegetables. Seafood Platter. Beef With Gravy. Calamari in Prawn Jelly.

    Admit it. You’ve seen those labels too, haven’t you? Who do you think those words are meant to appeal to? Illiterate domesticated animals? Or human sensibilities?

    I’m thinking this out as I write this post so I’m not sure if I’m hitting everything clearly, but it could be that one reason people choose to feed their pets kibble to show they’re “civilised” pets and therefore promoted above the rest of the animal pantheon into a rarefied human circle. Which might also make sense of the horror when one of these so-called domesticated animals dares to attack us. We’re just not expecting it.

  • A two-bully household

    1

    I haven’t spoken much about the bull terriers recently and thought I’d rectify that today. Including the problems we’re having.

    Before we got Sausage, our first mini bull terrier, I did a LOT of reading. We got “Dogs for Dummies”, “The Essential Dog”, “Veterinary Care for Dogs, Cats and Farm Animals” and “Bull Terriers” by Carolyn Alexander, to name a few. And this was all after having already been exposed to bull terriers via my uncle-the-breeder.

    About eight months after we got Sausage, we decided to get another mini bull terrier. I know that you shouldn’t get two female dogs. Now. I didn’t when we got Cookie. We had no problems until last month when Cookie suddenly started challenging Sausage for dominance.


    Who me, try to hump Sausage? I wouldn’t do such a thing!

    When we got to four bloody fights in four days, after unsuccessfully trying a variety of techniques, we separated the dogs. It was then that I started researching fighting between dogs. And it was only then that I read what a problem it was.

    I don’t consider myself the sort of person who does something without researching it. But, believe me, nothing I’d read prepared me for the blood and violence of two (spayed) females going at each other hammer and tongs. There are lots of articles on how to arrange the newspaper on the floor to facilitate toilet-training, but very little to the impending owner on the problems of getting a second dog. If I had my time again, I wouldn’t have got Cookie.

    From what I’ve now read on fighting dogs, the spur is Cookie’s adolescence. Being adored by the kids and thinking she’s all cock o’ the hoop, she decided to provoke normally staid Sausage. Sausage has whipped her arse four out of four times Cookie tried it on but, in true bully form, Cookie has absolutely refused to yield.

    I know about a firm hand with bullies. I regularly clicker train them. I’ve started a bit of agility work to get their minds off things. I am consistent about time-outs and commands between the two of them. They are already trained, for example, to wait until the cats have finished their meals before being allowed to have theirs. When it comes to bullies, I consider this a MAJOR achievement.


    The chow-time line-up

    Cookie, as the youngest animal in the family, has consistently been fed last and shown that Sausage has seniority when it comes to training, walking and treats. Until last month, I thought that was enough. I was wrong.

    I read somewhere that the time between 12 and 18 months of age is the toughest for dogs and their owners. I’ve read that more dogs are given up by their owners during this difficult adolescent stage than at any other time. That gives me some hope that we may survive this and get back to the kind of happy home life that we had before December last year.

    In the meantime, the dogs remain separated. When one is in the house, the other is either in the courtyard out back or in the front fenced yard. They eat separately but Cookie is always fed last. Next month, I’ll start re-acclimatising both dogs by giving them go-to places on the ground floor, and training them so that when one of them is on their mat, it becomes a no-go area for the other. I might keep them on trailing leads while I do this, in case we run into any trouble. In the meantime, I’m also hunting for a child security gate so both dogs can still be in the house but stay separated.

    I really hope we can solve the problem with these two. They are both wonderful, affectionate, loyal, protective and more entertaining than an MST3K marathon.


    I love snuggling up

    If you ask me if I would get another bull terrier after these troubles, I would say YES in a heartbeat. It’s not the dog, it’s more the dynamic, which is a topic I think more dog-owners should be educated about. I’m not too proud to say I sure as hell needed it, and I’m sure others need it too.

  • Dog talk

    0

    Cookie was getting spayed today and, while The Wast and I were waiting at the vet’s for the operation to finish, two Chinese men walked in. One of the men wanted some medicine for his dog. The receptionist told them to wait while she got a vet. Here is a bit of their ensuing conversation:

    Dog Owner: I was having some work done on my house and one of the workers was Vietnamese. My dog was so scared of him! Wouldn’t go near him.

    Friend: (laughing) Really? Why, ah? Had he been to your house before? Did he kick your dog?

    Dog Owner: No, he’s Vietnamese. He’d been eating dog meat and my dog could tell.

    Friend: How? Looking at him, how can you tell if someone’s eaten dog meat?

    Dog Owner: It must be the smell of the dog meat. Once you eat it, somehow the dogs can smell it on you and they won’t go near you. They’re terrified of you.

    Friend: Vietnamese, ah? But I thought it was the Koreans who ate dog?

    Dog Owner: Vietnamese, Korean. Even Indonesians eat dog.

    Friend: Wah, really?

    Dog Owner: There’s a tribe called the … (now it could be Datak or Patak or something like that. I don’t know Indonesia and I’m working from memory here so apologies if I got this wrong). They eat dog at special ceremonies. Actually, they eat cat too! Cat at the beginning of the year, dog near the end.

    Friend: So, both dogs and cats run away from them?

    Dog Owner: (laughing) Yeah, lah!

    And all this time I was thinking, hey I thought it was you guys who ate dog! (Bruce Lee munches on one (spit-roasted and looking a bit tough, to be honest) in the park scene of “Fists of Fury”. And there’s also a mention of it in the Jean-Claude van Damme flick, “Bloodsport”.)

  • When a cat gives you lemons….

    1

    So, stalwart reader, you know by now that we have a new member of the family. Cookie. And you’ve probably gathered that the resident cats, Fluff and Squeak, are none too happy with this state of affairs.

    While Squeak is content to merely voice his disapproval, shifty grumpy Fluff is much more nefarious. Quite simply, he figured out who was actually responsible for the introduction of the interloper and promptly relieved himself (Numbers One and Two) on my new fabric beanbag. Then, just to be sure I got the message, he did it again on my black suede handbag.

    While the handbag could be rescued (it was a lot drier, and I’ll just leave that up to your imagination, if you don’t mind), the beanbag — a more thorough assault — could not.

    My problem? Emptying the beanbag of all beans and junking it. But where to put the beans?

    Actually, I think I’ll leave it at that. What to do with the beans? I’ll tell you on Monday what I did with them but, in the meantime, if you can think of anything, put it in a comment. And have a good weekend.

  • Pets in Malaysia: some thoughts

    2

    While J and I were waiting at the vet’s for Cookie’s operation to finish, a man walked in with a puppy. Again, not on a leash and not in a cage. The man was a Buddhist monk and he answered all the receptionist’s questions very abruptly before walking outside with the puppy and setting it down. The puppy started scampering all around (there are automotive body shops next door, so it was obviously a safe environment to do that) while the monk lit up a cigarette.

    Living in Malaysia again has hammered home a point about religion. Whatever you know, or think you know, about Buddhism gets knocked for a loop when you start living in Asia. Buddhism isn’t a religion here, it’s a business. And the sooner you realise that, the quicker you’ll not be shocked when monks start inviting themselves to your home because they want to see what’s inside, shaking down grieving families for as much money as they can get for necessary “rituals” for the dead, and expecting preferential treatment because of the type of clothes they wear.

    As I mentioned before, belief in God is supposed to be one of founding principles of Malaysia. (Gardenia brand bread. Wrapper. Read it.) Yet I have never met a population that’s so dismissive of animal welfare, so selfish, so arrogant, and yet so ostentatiously religious. Whether Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Taoist or Muslim, they’ll all rabbit on about God’s goodness, but they’ll let their pets starve, beat them at the slightest provocation, abrogate the slightest responsibility for their welfare and think themselves superior to atheists like myself.

    And it’s not just pets. Where’s the morality in forcing your choices onto your children? Of expecting blind obedience based on nothing more than your age? Of dismissing or physically pushing children out of the way merely because they’re children? Where’s the morality in skimping on your child’s education due purely to the reason it’s a girl? Of lauding your wastrel sons to the heavens while disparaging your daughters?

    The treatment of pets is only the last in a long line of purely selfish and misogynistic Asian behaviours. I cannot stand the Malay men who expect me to let them go first anywhere just because they’re men. They think they’re so damn superior? Well they can suck up some grace and damn well wait till I get through that door. For the same reasons, I refuse to give up my MRT seat to a Chinese man of my age. And I will sit next to an Indian man taking up more than one seat on public transport and push his leg over so he doesn’t have things his own way. And do you know what each of those men do in such cases? They don’t say a word. They may glare at me, as I glare at them, but they don’t dare open their mouths. Such is the manner of true bullies.

    If this is how fellow humans are treated then, women and children, what chance do our silent fellow members of the animal kingdom have? Asian values? Give me a fucking break.

  • Pets in Malaysia: Rescuing Cookie

    2

    I’m writing all this because Cookie had a fall down a flight of stairs a couple of weeks ago and, much to my surprise, she broke a leg. We couldn’t figure it. It was onlya tumble but Sausage has had falls from higher heights (like the time she decided to jump out of J’s arms and timed it all wrong) and not injured herself. What went wrong with Cookie?

    We rushed her to a vet who specialises in treating such injuries. “This injury is very rare,” he said. I wondered why that was because there seemed to be a huge body of papers and information on tibia fractures in dogs. (Of course I did an internet search the minute I heard the diagnosis.) The vet didn’t say much during the initial consultation, but he opened up during the second visit (the actual surgery) when we told him we’d only had Cookie two days before the injury had occurred.

    We mused out loud that we thought Cookie’s muscle condition was poor for a bull terrier of five months of age. (It wasn’t for nothing that J referred to her as his “cow on chopsticks” when he first set eyes on her.) The vet agreed with our remarks and further suggested that she had not been fed very well.

    “Having a bully with this kind of injury is highly unusual,” he said, “because, of all the breeds, bull terriers are the most muscular. If you and a bull terrier collide, you’ll feel it, not him! And usually, there’s enough muscle mass to cushion the dog against fractures like this. But not in this case.” He frowned down at a Cookie just coming out of anaesthetic.
    “How old is she again?” he asked.
    “Five months.”
    “Ah. It would have been very difficult for her.”
    I didn’t follow him. “Difficult?”
    I couldn’t understand this. We had pedigree papers for her. She had champions in her bloodline. What could possibly be difficult?
    “Well, for a start, she has white socks. Do you know what white means to a Chinese? Mourning. Chinese don’t like buying dogs with white socks.” (Fyi, the vet was Chinese.)
    “They’ll have problems buying any bull terrier in that case,” J remarked dryly, “as all bullies have white socks.”
    “And she’s old.”
    “She’s five months old,” I repeated.
    “And getting to the end of being a saleable puppy,” he added. “Do you know what breeders do with the puppies they can’t sell? They stop feeding them.”
    “They starve them to death?!”
    The doctor nodded. “This dog was very lucky to find an owner so late in life.”
    “They just starve the puppy?” I repeated. My mind just didn’t want to take in that picture.
    He nodded. “Of course.” He shrugged. “That’s what they do.”

    That reminds me of Hieronymous, a beautifully natured Birman kitten that I was thinking of buying last year. (You could tell I wanted to buy him because I’d already named him in the pet shop!) Hieronymous was also getting a bit long in the tooth, and a polydactyl at that. I think that’s why nobody bought him. His extra toes. The things people are superstitious about here will astound you. The problem was that I wanted a discount on him because he was not up to date with his vaccinations, not microchipped and also not desexed. The deal fell through because the owner refused to drop the price. Absolutely refused … except by $10. By this time, it became a matter of principle. A $10 discount???? I wasn’t sure whether to laugh or be insulted. So I walked away.

    I always wondered what happened to Hieronymous after that failed transaction. Unfortunately now I think I know. As J says, the breeders/owners here are so greedy that they’d rather kill the animals in a terrible fashion rather than discount the price or even give away the pet once they become “unsaleable”. There’s also no sense of responsibility. If the breeders incorporated desexing as a condition of sale, it would stop a lot of the stray problems that plague this country. But that, of course, costs money and spending money, it appears, is not the responsibility of such breeders. They only seem to like receiving it.

    So, even though we paid money for Cookie, J and I realised that what we had on our hands was a badly-fed, almost completely caged “rescue”. A puppy that had never had an opportunity to roam, that was resigned to being crated twenty-three hours a day, and was terribly under-socialised. She didn’t even know how to chew when we first got her. It still makes me angry thinking about it.

    Stay tuned on Monday for conclusions.

  • Pets in Malaysia: Cats

    2

    Because keeping a dog in your house or allowing them to touch you is haram (essentially, forbidden) in Islam, Malays don’t have dogs as pets. The potential for slipping into sin is too great. But they do keep cats. Malays love cats. Malays love cats so much they refuse to desex them. They want the whole world to be full of cats. They let their precious Persians wander around freely, getting knocked up by every available tom in the neighbourhood, but that’s understandable because it’s God’s will, right? Who are we to interfere with Nature?

    The female cat will bear perhaps four litters a year, bringing all those adorable kittens into the world. The owner might try to give as many away to friends as possible, but how can she do that with all of them? Ah, it’s God’s will. Of course, the mother cat will suffer from exhaustion from the constant breeding. And uncontrolled breeding can lead to a host of serious diseases, including feline AIDS and several cancers but, if that happens, it’s just God’s will, isn’t it? But how the Malays love cats, have I told you that?

    Isn’t it strange how God’s will is so often the cheapest way out of a problem? And even if a cat dies, well with all those by-blows getting traded around like sampler containers of moisturiser, another adorable one will come by soon. It’s all up to God’s will and practising any kind of responsible pet ownership is both an affront to God and to Nature…not to mention costing some money, know what I mean? Bugger that.

    But, in the meantime, everyone should know that I’m bowing to God’s will by allowing my un-neutered cats to wander freely, spreading their seed as God intended. I’m so spiritual and religious I could almost canonise myself.

    Wondering what prompted me to write this little series on pets? Tune in Friday.

    ASIDE: You’re probably wondering why keeping dogs inside the house is haram? It’s because it stops the recording angels from entering. If a recording angel (as opposed to an angel of mercy or an angel of death) enters the house, the dog will alert the members of the family and it seems that rec. angels are a bit like the CIA in that regard … they don’t like other people knowing what they’re doing. So, if a rec. angel sees that a house contains a dog, he will tend not to enter and thereby announce their presence. Why is this such a big deal? Well, it appears that recording angels are the clerks of God and take down all the deeds of the family members for later judgement. As with Roman Catholicism from what I can remember, Muslim angels are all male too. Not a female amongst them. Natch.

  • Pets in Malaysia: At the vet’s

    2

    It’s been a flurry of visits to the vet recently so I’ve had a chance to sit back and observe how pet owners behave towards their animals. Now remember that the very fact that a human is at the vet’s with her animal means that that human is more animal-aware than the average Asian. You’d think that’s a good thing…until you actually start watching.

    First off are the owners who bring their dogs in without a leash or collar. Oh no, getting into arguments in the waiting room with another dog, risking the anxious animal running off, securing them so they don’t disturb the other pet owners …. none of this is their problem. It’s up to everybody else to break up the fight, catch the dog or move to another seat, where you could be out of luck if the waiting room’s full. The owner will just sit there and watch you, or call someone on the phone and chat while all this is going on. It’s the servants who show the most care, probably because they’re afraid they’ll get beaten to within an inch of their lives if anything happens to the Shih Tzu while on its annual vaccination visit.

    Then there are the owners who behave inappropriately. A small toy poodle is in the waiting room. A German Shepherd comes in, pulling his owner behind him. The poodle is obviously dismayed and starts yelping. What’s the proper reaction? (Of course the poodle isn’t on a leash, take that as a given.) Yes, of course. Hit the poodle. Did you guess that one right? I’ve seen it done with such smoothness, it’s almost art. One fluid move, reaching down to slip off a shoe and then whacking the anxious dog across the nose with it. The last time I saw such grace was watching some old man fiddle with his katana.

    What about the breeders who come in with their puppies for vaccinations? Oh I saw a beauty last week. A wiry Chinese man came in with a dirty, torn plastic laundry hamper, the top secured by a large piece of cardboard and two bungee cords. At first, I thought that he’d found an animal on the road and this was the only container he had spare. Oh, how naive am I??? This man was a breeder, bringing in two Staffordshire pups for their shots. Each animal has to be weighed upon check-in, and this man delved down and brought up a puppy the way you’d bring a crab-pot out of the water. One hand in to grab the scruff of the neck and pull up. No holding of the puppy’s rump. Oh no, that’s for wimps! Just dig out the puppy and dump it on the scale. Get the weight and dump the puppy back into the basket again. Doesn’t matter if it hits the side. Doesn’t matter if it catches a hind leg as it goes in and yelps. Just flick that offending limb out of the way and get the other puppy. This man’s obviously important and has better things to do than actually — ha! ha! — coddle an animal. After all, aren’t they costing him money?

    While on a walk around a very established and salubrious suburb of JB a couple of days later (very little litter on the side of the road), I chanced across several houses with guard dogs. That’s the security deterrent of choice around here. Do you know how hot it gets in Johor? On an average day it’s 33 degrees Celsius (90+ Fahrenheit) and eighty percent humidity. If you have a dog you want to guard your house, let’s say a full-sized poodle, where would you put it? That’s right. You’d stick it on a short metal chain outside your house in full sunlight with only a square of concrete to rest on. Sitting right next to the road all day is exactly how you’d treat a shaggy-coated, highly intelligent, prone to neurosis, animal. What does such a beast need quality of life? Isn’t it enough they have their lives?

    Malays are thinking they’re getting off scot-free because they don’t have anything to do with dogs. I’ll deal with them next time.