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Tag: animal control

  • This Riverside County man is on a mission to save California’s abandoned ducks

    This Riverside County man is on a mission to save California’s abandoned ducks

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    A warehouse in Orange County had received a late order of balut, a Southeast Asian delicacy of fertilized duck eggs, but now the warehouse had a crisis on its hands: Hundreds of the eggs were hatching.

    The distributor was racked with indecision. She knew she couldn’t possibly raise hundreds of these ducklings that were meant to be eaten before birth, but now that they were out of their shells, it felt immoral to abandon them next to the dumpster to die.

    So she called around, asking friends and friends of friends if they knew anyone who might be willing to take the furry creatures. That’s how she landed on The Duck Pond Inc., a waterfowl sanctuary for domesticated birds run by Howard Berkowitz.

    Newborn ducklings from a failed balut order feed inside a baby playpen.

    (Jireh Deng / Los Angeles Times)

    “This is the largest rescue we’ve been involved with,” Berkowitz said. When he picked up the baby waterfowl, he was appalled at their condition, starving and dehydrated by the Southern California heat.

    “Some of them that [had] been alive for one, two or three days had zero food, zero water,” he added. Of the 350 ducklings he retrieved, only 140 were successfully nursed back to health.

    A week after the rescue, Berkowitz put out a call for foster parents to care for the newborn ducks; by the end of the day, only a few scraggly dozen were left of the tiny yellow fluffy beings. Berkowitz lifted a duckling up from a playpen that was repurposed into a duck nursery. It squawked in protest as he cupped it in his palm before relaxing, relenting to his gentle caress.

    Howard “Howie the Duck” Berkowitz is a bespectacled man in his 60s with a salt-and-pepper beard and curly graying hair that pokes out the sides of his baseball cap, not unlike the flicked feathers of a duck’s tail. A former biochemist and part-time classic car mechanic, he spends most of his days now answering urgent calls for duck rescues.

    A woman under a shade canopy holds four yellow ducklings.

    Volunteer Valerie Norris holds her foster ducklings.

    (Jireh Deng/Los Angeles Times)

    Berkowitz’s sanctuary, a nonprofit officially known as the Duck Pond (but also as the Duck Sanctuary), is based on less than an acre in rural Winchester in Riverside County. It’s home to a motley crew of 400 ducks, geese and chickens, including a hybrid goose that belongs to one of the world’s rarest populations of geese, the Hawaiian Nene. Berkowitz has his hands full feeding them daily and making sure their kiddie pools are replaced with clean water every few hours.

    He has no children of his own, he said, so the ducks are his kids. “If something ever happens to me,” Berkowitz said, “I have a half a million dollar life insurance policy [to cover] the duck sanctuary.”

    Why does he care so deeply about the plight of these waterfowl? “Birds are completely different,” Berkowitz said, citing his pet goose, Goosifer, who rides with him in the car everywhere. “When they bond with a human, you actually become part of their flock.”

    With the latest rescue, Berkowitz said, he hopes the favorable media coverage will raise his visibility and help finance his work.

    “We’re hoping to either find some corporate sponsorship or someone who’s willing to write a check,” said Berkowitz.

    Berkowitz’s zeal for waterfowl, however, has detractors along with supporters.

    Waterfowl gather around a pair of wading pools.

    In total, the Duck Pond hosts 400 permanent residents, many of them domestic nonnative birds abandoned by former owners.

    (Jireh Deng/Los Angeles Times)

    “I’m actually divorced because of this. My wife couldn’t handle the responsibilities any longer,” Berkowitz said. “She left me because of the duck sanctuary.”

    His operation has also drawn the ire of neighbors, who haven’t appreciated the cacophony caused by hundreds of ducks and geese.

    To the casual passerby, this scrappy operation might look disorganized and cluttered. Among the sights are dozens of Amazon boxes haphazardly stacked on a picnic table and a basket of once fresh, now rotting peaches that Berkowitz hadn’t managed to feed to his ducks. Battalions of flies circle the duck pens. But to Berkowitz the untidy appearance hasn’t diminished what he sees as quality care he’s provided to his ducks.

    “We’ve had animal control called on us several times,” Berkowitz said. “And animal control comes out and does their due diligence, and we’ve passed every inspection.”

    The mess of the duck sanctuary is sometimes unavoidable. Ducks poop everywhere because they’re impossible to potty train — they don’t have sphincters to control when and where they defecate.

    That cloudy water that the ducks swim in, drink from and treat as a toilet? Not brackish at all, according to Berkowitz, who says the ducks dig in the soil for bugs, then bring the dirt into the water. Ducks, like pigs apparently, love mud. “That is two-hour-old water.”

    Berkowitz has been served notice by Riverside County code enforcement officers twice at two different locations that he has brought an “excessive” number of animals into a residential zone. Because of issues with neighbors and code enforcement, he’s had to move his original duck sanctuary from his property multiple times.

    “This man had way too many ducks to take proper care of,” said Mo Middleton, chief animal control officer at Animal Friends of the Valley. She said the group has Berkowitz on a “Do Not Adopt” list barring him from taking any additional waterfowl from their shelter. “If we have ducks in here, we don’t let him take them.”

    Bags of bird food sit in the back of a car.

    Every day Berkowitz feeds his birds 250 pounds of food, costing him $170 daily.

    (Jireh Deng/Los Angeles Times)

    But Berkowitz is already aware of the capacity issues at his current location in a backyard volunteered by a Winchester homeowner, and he’s in the process of selling his home to purchase 20 acres of land where his rescues will have a bigger plot to roam. GoFundMe efforts have raised him more than $17,000, but Berkowitz said he needs $200,000 to build a permanent home for his rescues.

    “The dream is to have a functioning sanctuary that also has an educational center, where young people can learn about how to respect and treat animals,” said the Duck Pond’s Chief Financial Officer, Tylor Taylor.

    Middleton is wary of rescuers who use the plight of abandoned animals for personal financial gain. Although the IRS recognizes the Duck Pond as a nonprofit eligible for tax-deductible donations, the organization has yet to register with the Registry of Charities and Fundarisers maintained by the state attorney general’s office. According to the attorney general’s office, “failing to register may lead to penalties, administrative or legal action, and the loss of tax exemption status with the [state] Franchise Tax Board.”

    But Taylor said that as far as he knew, everything the organization is doing is legal and in compliance with the Internal Revenue Service rules since it first registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit two years ago. He added that the work hasn’t been profitable for Berkowitz.

    “He has had to almost bankrupt himself in order to keep that place going,” said Taylor.

    According to Berkowitz, he has been strapped for money since Day One. On top of water bills and food expenses of $170 a day, he has a vet bill of $3,000 to pay. He estimates spending about $1,000 of his own money each month on operations that aren’t covered by the donations to his nonprofit. He’s has had to sell more than a dozen of his antique cars to continue funding operations. On the side, he said, he still restores vintage cars for the rich and famous, which helps cover his personal expenses.

    Berkowitz’s services appear to be in high demand, with nearly every day bringing another crisis to address. But while wild care facilities can often apply for conservation funding such as the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Wildlife Rehabilitation Grant Program, Berkowitz’s sanctuary cannot.

     A gosling held in a man's hand.

    Berkowitz holds the Egyptian gosling rescued from the golf course.

    (Jireh Deng / Los Angeles Times)

    Debbie McGuire, executive director of the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center, said she has worked with him for 10 years, referring nonnative waterfowl to Berkowitz’s sanctuary. She commends his dedication and will to sustain his operations almost single-handedly. When she’s visited his sanctuary, she said, she hasn’t seen any issues that would raise red flags with animal welfare.

    Many duck sanctuaries have tried and failed to stay open, she said, leaving Berkowitz’s as one of the last left. “I always admire the ones that can keep going.”

    Thankfully, Berkowitz said, the detractors and critics are few, and the support for his work continues. On $5 Fridays, 50 to 60 people donate to the Duck Pond. Others have donated food to the ducks; on various days he gets cabbage, watermelon and strawberries, as well as worms — a favorite of the waterfowl.

    Taylor is just one of the people who originally dropped off a rescued bird only to be pulled into the orbit of Berkowitz’s work. At least a dozen volunteers take turns visiting every week to clean and feed the birds — some driving from as far as West Hollywood for two hours just to help.

    “This place is amazing,” said Bunni Amburgey, who adopted several newborn ducklings. Amburgey attended junior high and high school with Berkowitz and has known him for 45 years; she said his work comes from a place of true selflessness. “Are shelters or sanctuary ever perfect?” she asked rhetorically. “No, but at least have a place to go to get vet care, get fed, be safe.”

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    Jireh Deng

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  • Children’s cat-killing contest axed following backlash in New Zealand | CNN

    Children’s cat-killing contest axed following backlash in New Zealand | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    A contest planned for children in New Zealand to hunt and kill feral cats as part of a drive to protect native species has been axed following backlash from the public and animal rights groups.

    The event would have been part of a fundraiser organized by the North Canterbury Hunting Competition for the Rotherham School, located in the Canterbury region of South Island.

    Organizers on Saturday had announced a new junior category for children under 14 in the annual competition – to hunt feral cats for a top prize of 250 New Zealand dollars ($150).

    The announcement drew public anger leading organizers to withdraw the event on Monday.

    In a statement issued Wednesday, organizers said “vile and inappropriate emails and messages had been sent to the school and others involved.”

    “We are incredibly disappointed in this reaction and would like to clarify that this competition is an independent community run event,” the statement read.

    While cats are a popular and beloved pet among many New Zealanders, feral cats have been a long-standing issue between animal lovers and authorities because of the impact they can have other wild animals.

    In neighboring Australia, authorities say feral cats threaten the survival of more than 100 native species. Feral cats are blamed for killing millions of birds, reptiles, frogs and mammals, every day, prompting authorities to arrange regular culls.

    Organizers of the contest in Canterbury maintained that the junior hunting tournament to kill feral cats, using a firearm or other means, was about “protecting native birds and other vulnerable species.”

    “Our sponsors and school safety are our main priority, so the decision has been made to withdraw this category for this year to avoid further backlash at this time,” it said.

    “To clarify, for all hunting categories, our hunters are required to abide by firearms act 1983 and future amendments as well as the animal welfare act 1999.”

    Addressing concerns from the public, organizers had earlier announced rules to discourage young participants from targeting pets.

    Any child who brought in a microchipped cat would have been disqualified, organizers said.

    The group also noted that scheduled hunts for other categories like local pigs and deer would still proceed.

    The New Zealand Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it was “both pleased and relieved” that the cat-killing contest for children had been removed. “Children, as well as adults, will not be able to tell the difference between a feral, stray or a frightened domesticated cat,” the SPCA said.

    “There is a good chance someone’s pet may be killed during this event. In addition, children often use air rifles in these sorts of event which increase the likelihood of pain and distress and can cause a prolonged death,” it added.

    Animals rights group PETA also welcomed the decision to cancel the event.

    In a statement,Jason Baker, the group’s Asia Vice President said,”Encouraging kids to hunt down and kill animals is a sure-fire way to raise adults who solve problems with violence … We need to foster empathy and compassion in kids, not lead them to believe animals are ‘less than’ humans while rewarding them for brutality.”

    The event attracted significant overseas attention, including from British comedian Ricky Gervais, a known animal lover with more than 15 million followers on Twitter.

    He slammed the proposed cat hunt in a sarcastic tweet, saying: “Right. We need some new PR ideas to make the world love New Zealand. Maybe something involving kids & kittens. Yes, Hargreaves?”

    New Zealand is one of the world’s last remote island nations and has no native land mammals besides bats.

    There have been official campaigns against cats in previous years – including one that encouraged cat lovers to avoid replacing their pets when they die.

    “Cats are the only true sadists of the animal world, serial killers who torture without mercy,” said then-Prime Minister John Key, who himself had a cat named Moonbeam.

    “Historically, we know that feral cats were responsible for the extinction of six bird species and are leading agents of decline in populations of birds, bats, frogs and lizards,” Helen Blackie, a biosecurity consultant at Boffa Miskell told CNN affiliate RNZ.

    Blackie, who has studied feral cats for two decades, said numbers had exploded in the last decade, and in some areas where pests were tracked by camera, feral cats outnumbered other species like possums.

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  • The fatal mauling of 4-year-old forces India to grapple with stray dog problem | CNN

    The fatal mauling of 4-year-old forces India to grapple with stray dog problem | CNN

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    New Delhi
    CNN
     — 

    For nearly a minute, the 4-year-old boy attempts to valiantly escape the hungry pack of stray dogs as they circle around him.

    He tries to run, but one of the animals pulls the boy to the ground. Two more dogs close in, offering the victim little respite.

    The boy, who has not been publicly identified, is dragged by the pack for several feet, writhing in pain as the strays pounce. He strives to wrestle from their grip, but his small and fragile body cannot compete with the aggressors.

    His piercing screams alert his father nearby – but it was too late. The child was declared dead upon arrival at the hospital.

    The brutal attack, captured by a security camera in Hyderabad in February, a sprawling city in the central Indian state of Telangana, has horrified the nation of 1.3 billion and placed focus on an issue that long divided opinion: what to do with India’s vast number of stray dogs?

    The issue is a sensitive one in a country where there is an ingrained cultural respect for animals and an aversion to culling. Most agree stray dogs are an issue, but there is a fierce debate over how best to respond.

    According to the Press Trust of India, there are around 62 million strays in the country, although experts say the real number would be nearly impossible to verify.

    Most of these animals – lovably nicknamed ‘Indie’ dogs – live in harmony with humans. Often, residents of gated communities come together to feed them, some even adopting them as family pets.

    But over the years, bites and killings by stray dogs have put many cities on edge, with politicians, the media, and citizens scrambling to present various solutions.

    Long before the death of the 4-year-old boy in Hyderabad made headlines, local media have run similar tales about India’s “killer dogs” – stories that are then often picked up by international outlets.

    “”Man-eater’ dog terror back in Bihar,” wrote The Telegraph India in a story last month after a series of bites in the northern Indian state.

    It is illegal to kill stray dogs in India. A 2001 law states strays should instead be picked up, neutered, and vaccinated against rabies, before being released.

    But in light of the gruesome attacks, many of which have happened to children, some have attempted to challenge the law.

    In 2016, a campaign to kill stray dogs after a series of bites in the southern state of Kerala gained traction in the local news.

    But animal rights activists were angered, instead urging authorities to offer clemency and find other solutions. The hashtag #BoycottKerala began trending on social media, and the plan was later abolished.

    While the law requires strays to be neutered and vaccinated, experts say there is a lack of strict implementation.

    “Of course we have a stray dog problem,” Anjali Gopalan, managing trustee at the All Creatures Great and Small, a Delhi-based non-profit that cares for animals, said.

    “Not only do we have a stray dog problem, but we also have a problem with rabies in this country. So, steps have to be taken to deal with both.”

    Rabies is a vaccine-preventable disease which can spread to humans if they are bitten or scratched by an infected animal. It is almost always fatal unless a series of jabs can be administered soon after someone is bitten.

    Dogs are the source of the vast majority of human rabies deaths, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) and contribute up to 99% of all rabies transmissions to humans. India is endemic for rabies, the WHO said, accounting for 36% of the world’s rabies deaths.

    A key way to reduce rabies within a stray dog population is to capture and vaccinate as many animals as possible.

    But veterinarian Sarungbam Devi, founder and trustee of Animal India Trust, said India needs to do more.

    “At the time of the sterilization, we vaccinate the dog only once and then they are released. That’s all the vaccination a stray dog gets in his lifetime and that’s not enough,” she said.

    A lack of resources in the country means it is difficult to push government bodies to increase the inoculation of street dogs against the virus, Devi added.

    But when it comes to dog bites, Devi said, education plays the biggest role: “The government hasn’t done anything to increase awareness or educate the masses. We need to educate people, we need to be more vocal and visual about the (anti-bite) programs,” she said.

    “People need to know what to do when a dog bites you, how to you prevent it … I don’t think I have ever seen anything on this anywhere.”

    The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) recommends avoiding unfamiliar dogs and wild animals, not running when approached by an unknown dog and always supervising children and dogs, among other things, to avoid bites.

    According to the government, more than 6.8 million Indians were bitten by stray dogs in 2020 – and increase from 3.9 million in 2012. And experts say those numbers are likely not the full picture.

    CNN has reached out to the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying but has not received a response.

    “The problem is lack of awareness towards how to live around dogs,” Devi said, adding there needs to be an “intense anti-rabies drive and sterilization program everywhere in India.”

    But many Indian cities and states have been successful in bringing down their feral dog population and eradicating rabies.

    In the financial capital Mumbai, as many as 95% of the city’s stray dogs have been sterilized owing to “consistent” implementation of re-vaccination and welfare programs, said Abodh Aras, CEO of the non-profit Welfare of Stray Dogs.

    A robust public health system for post-bite treatment and regular school programs about dog bite and rabies prevention has also contributed, Aras said.

    “There are other places that have success stories. There is Goa that has eliminated rabies, (the state of) Sikkim that has got its state of operations around, and eliminated rabies,” he added. “It needs a combination of government support, will and infrastructure, and animal welfare NGOs working in that area for this model to be successful.”

    But not every city has the resources to implement this model.

    Take for example Noida, a satellite city of more than half a million on the outskirts of Delhi that is a comparatively wealthy place and home to many middle-class families.

    Devi, from the Animal India Trust, said Noida remains “very disorganized,” and her organization is the only non-profit covering the entire city – a colossal and tedious task for a small team, she said.

    Stray dogs caught by authorities in Noida on October 18, 2022.

    Gopalan, from All Creatures Great and Small, points to even more difficult operations in rural India, where electricity is lacking and maintaining cold storage for vaccines is an issue.

    Following the 4-year-old’s death in Hyderabad, officials promised swift action to prevent future tragedies.

    “We have been sterilizing dogs and anti-rabies injections are being given to them,” Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation Mayor Vijayalaxmi Gadwal, told local news agency, ANI.

    “So far in Hyderabad we have identified more than 500,000 dogs and sent more than 400,000 dogs for sterilization. We are following every guideline which is being given to us by the Supreme Court. We’re also going to adopt these dogs so that the number of stray dogs will be reduced.”

    That campaign may have an impact locally. But it many fear it is likely only a matter of time before another pack of dogs somewhere in India takes a child’s life.

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  • The ‘Cocaine Cat’ Is Recovering at Cincinnati Zoo | Entrepreneur

    The ‘Cocaine Cat’ Is Recovering at Cincinnati Zoo | Entrepreneur

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    Many may be familiar with Cocaine Bear, the comedy thriller based on the true story of a black bear found dead near a duffle bag loaded with $2 million worth of cocaine.

    But have you heard about Cocaine Cat?

    There’s no movie yet— but thankfully, his story has a happy ending.

    Earlier this year, a 35-pound African serval — named Amiry — escaped from a car that police had pulled over for a traffic stop in Cincinnati.

    The freaked-out feline ran up a tree. During the rescue by local animal control, Amiry broke his slender leg.

    Photo by: Cincinnati Animal CARE/Facebook

    He was admitted to Cincinnati Animal CARE, where the medical team tested him for narcotics. The hospital explained on Facebook that this “has become standard procedure for ‘exotic’ animals after we seized custody of Neo, a capuchin monkey who tested positive for methamphetamine in early 2022.”

    They soon discovered that Amiry was strung out on cocaine.

    Photo by: Cincinnati Animal CARE/Facebook

    Recovering at the zoo

    In Ohio, it’s illegal to own serval cats—not to mention snort cocaine. Amiry’s owner was not arrested, but he did have to relinquish the cat to the Cincinnati Zoo.

    The zoo announced on Facebook that Amiry is on the mend.

    “Amiry’s health has improved enough after receiving care in our veterinary facility that we were able to move him to the Cat Ambassador Program area yesterday. He is still recovering from a leg injury, so the CAP team will keep an eye on that before allowing him to run, jump, and engage in other activities that might impair healing. They will concentrate on helping him acclimate to a new environment and his new care team,” they wrote.

    So where did Amiry get the blow? The police are still investigating if Amiry’s ingestion of cocaine was accidental or forced. Charges against his former owner are still on the table, Troy Taylor, the chief dog warden for Hamilton County, told CityBeat.

    What is a serval?

    The serval is a wild cat native to Africa. It has a small head, large ears, a golden-yellow to buff coat spotted and striped with black, and a short, black-tipped tail. The serval has the longest legs of any cat relative to its body size.

    The cats have grown in popularity as pets recently— and are legal in certain states. According to Pets4You, they can cost anywhere from $1000 to $1500.

    Still, many animal experts don’t support the trend, saying servals require a balanced diet and specialized care way beyond a house cat.

    “There are way better options for pets that are way more safe, economically smart, and sustainable,” Julie Sheldon, clinical assistant professor of zoo medicine at the University of Tennessee, told the Associated Press.

    Photo by: Cincinnati Zoo

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    Jonathan Small

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  • CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Mother in Ashford fends off raccoon that attacked her daughter

    CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Mother in Ashford fends off raccoon that attacked her daughter

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    ASHFORD, CT (WFSB) – An animal control officer reported that a child was bitten by a raccoon in Ashford.

    “It was wrapping its arms around my leg,” she explained. “It really hurt.”

    State police said they responded to the incident on Fitts Road to assist the officer.

    Video of the incident was captured by a surveillance camera:

    A girl was attacked by a raccoon in Ashford. The family gave Channel 3 video of the attack.

    It happened around 7:55 a.m. on Friday.

    “I was going out to get on the bus and a racoon was there and tried to attack me,” said 5-year-old Rylee MacNamara of Ashford. “It didn’t want to go off of my leg.”

    Rylee MacNamara said she and her mother suffered some bite marks and scratches before her mother was able to yank the animal off her.

    Panicking, Logan, Rylees mother, screams for help.

    “It’s a rabid racoon, get some help!,” said Logan.

    The raccoon ran off into the woods after she threw it off.

    There’s no word yet on if the animal was rabid.

    “I thought maybe she slammed her finger in the door. I definitely wasn’t expecting to see a racoon wrapped around her leg,” Logan said.

    The two went to the hospital, received rabies shots, and were back home in a couple of hours.

    “We just kind of panicked at first. I was more scared than anything,” said Logan.

    Neighbor, Jessica Gessay, isn’t surprised this happened.

    “These woods around here… I fear them. There’s things out here. Animals, wild animals things like that,” said Jessica.

    “It’s disturbing that it would be that close to our houses,” added Dave Frank, Ashford.

    Animal control spent Friday morning in the woods to try and track down the animal. However, it was nowhere to be found.

    The Macnamara’s might take it into their own hands by setting traps around the house.

    Rylee and Logan will head back to the hospital every couple of days for the next two weeks to get more shots.

    They Macnamara’s also say their kids won’t be allowed outside alone in the near future.

    An animal control officer reported that a child was bitten by a raccoon in Ashford.

    An animal control officer reported that a child was bitten by a raccoon in Ashford.

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