this is a board that talks about issues concerning animals...your own pets as well as animal rights,alerts,bills before congress that need our attention.This is a family board but as abuse cases may be posted it may not always be for the sensitive readers.Please be kind to each other,thanks!
Liste over diskusjonsforum
Du kan ikke skrive meldinger i dette forumet. For å kunne skrive her må ha et Brain Knight medlemskap eller høyere.
Emne: Man buys toy poodles, discovers they’re actually ferrets on steroids
By Dylan Stableford, Yahoo! News
An Argentine man who thought he bought a pair of poodles at an outdoor market in Buenos Aires brought them home to the vet only to be told they were actually ferrets on steroids, reports the Daily Mail. The man, a retiree from Catamarca, purchased the animals at La Salada, Argentina's largest bazaar. The veterinarian informed him the ferrets "had been given steroids at birth to increase their size and then had some extra grooming to make their coats resemble a fluffy toy poodle," the paper says, translating a report from a local Argentine TV station. He paid $150 per poodle. Another woman interviewed by the station said she was tricked into thinking she had purchased a chihuahua at the same market. It's unclear what the duped pet owners did with their faux poodles. But if you're thinking about buying a poodle at an Argentine market, the Daily Mail has a handy guide on how to tell whether the pooch you're purchasing is actually a ferret: • Ferrets typically have brown, white or mixed fur and are around 51 cm in length—which includes a 13 cm tail. • They weigh around three pounds and have a lifespan of 7 to 10 years. • When happy, ferrets may perform a routine known as the weasel war dance—which is characterized by a series of hops and frenzied attempts to bump into things. • This is often accompanied by a soft clucking noise called dooking. When upset, ferrets make a hissing noise. • Toy poodles are known for their intelligence and are around 25 cm tall and weigh around nine pounds. • If a toy poodle exceeds 25 cm height, it cannot compete in any dog show as a toy poodle. • Toy poodles have been known to live as long as 20 years. • Toy poodles are described as sweet, cheerful, perky and lively, and they love to be around people.
Emne: A 900-pound bull escaped on his way to slaughter
DANVILLE, Pa. — A 900-pound bull escaped on his way to slaughter and led his owners and authorities on a two-mile chase through two eastern Pennsylvania townships for an hour.
Wayne Myers of Bald Top was headed to the butcher with the raging 2-year-old bull when he stopped at a red light near a middle school Wednesday. He says that's when then the bull made a break for it.
The bull fled ran at least two miles before being shot to death by its owners.
Tuesday: I'm not a vet, but he is old and apparently in pain, it's a really tough call, but coming back to life kinda makes you wonder if he deserves to go out on his own terms
Artful Dodger: oh please,you fill pages all by yourself all the time.......................scroll down, other than this page there is a variety of posters bark bark.....gotta keep it topical
Tuesday: At the 1992 American Academy of Forensic Sciences conference in New Orleans, a forensic pathologist stated that individuals living alone sometimes died unexpectedly and unnoticed. He claimed that, in his experience, a pet dog would go for several days before it resorted to eating the owner's body. A pet cat would wait only a day or two. What he didn't mention was that cats are obligate carnivores and, unlike dogs (which are more omnivorous), cats cannot consume other potential foodstuffs that might be lying around the home (fruit, veg, cookies). For a dog, the corpse might be a last resort, but for an obligate carnivore, it may be the first resort.
Like other scavengers, those cats are doing a clean-up job. Without scavengers, we would be knee-deep in rotting flesh. Even when bodies are decently buried, it is being invisibly consumed
wetware: I don't see it being a realistic option now that I've learned they are classified as livestock, but from the little I've learned they seem to be able to be trained to live in a house.
Tuesday: I wonder if they are also known as potbelly pigs,I remember hearing of a guy who owned one in the apt I lived in back in the 90's.I think they have been outlawed as pets, at least in an apt
(hjem) Hvis det er noen diskusjonsfora som du følger regelmessig kan du legge disse til i listen over dine favoritt-fora. Bare gå til det/de aktuelle forum og klikk på knappen "Legge til i favoritt-fora" (pauloaguia) (Vis alle tips)