Articles of Interest
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more articles Pets
are for life, not just for Christmas
by Christie Keith
What is the best kind of pet to ask for as
a Christmas gift?
A stuffed one.
Imagine a puppy, delivered the night
before and kept in a corner of the garage
until the kids get up. Along with the toys
and books and video games, there is also a
tiny living creature, in a strange and
confusing new place with young hands and arms
grabbing at it. Is it a thing, a toy or game?
What do you think it's like for that puppy or
kitten when your friends come over to see
your new pet? Pets have needs, for rest and
training and love and play and quiet time,
just like human babies do.
Maybe a family saw the cutest little dog,
an adorable little bear-like creature. This
puppy, who was in a pet store at the mall,
was so bright and perky, and ran right up to
the people who bought him. "How cute," they
thought. By 10 PM on Christmas night, this
little guy is exhausted from trying to play
with all the kids in the family, and is
curled up in a corner. He feels pretty sick
from the turkey and stuffing and pumpkin pie
he had on top of his dinner, and he throws up
under the coffee table. When he was outside
he was so distracted playing with the kids
that he never relieved himself, so he finds a
private corner and does that too - say, on
little Susie's new coat.
A
couple of weeks later, the new puppy has been
shut up in the garage while the family is out
all day. He has piddled and pooped all over
the house, chewed up the baseboard in the
kitchen, and destroyed the VCR. In the
garage, he destroys his own bedding, a rolled
up carpet, and the tires on the kids' bikes.
He's bored, he's lonely, he's a baby.
Dogs and cats are not "things." If the
holidays are a good time for your parents to
take some time off work or you to be out of
school and ease a new pet into your family,
that's great. Ask for a collar and leash, or
scratching post, and a book on pets, under
the tree, and head for the shelter or breeder
a couple of days after Christmas. Lynn Spavik
of San Francisco's SPCA recommends giving an
adoption gift certificate, and actually
adopting the pet at a quieter time.
Said
Sherry Richert of California's Peninsula
Humane Society, "Puppies and kittens are a
lot of work, as much work as having a new
baby. An older dog or cat, mellow and
well-behaved, is often a much better choice
for a family." PHS, which does not do any
adoptions for the week before Christmas, also
requires the whole family to be interviewed
when placing pets in homes with children.
They instigated both these policies after
noticing a sharp rise in abandonments and
surrenders about two months after Christmas.
The American Kennel Club, the largest
registry of purebred dogs in the world, makes
most of its money on puppy registrations, and
you would think the idea of hundreds of
thousands of purebred puppies under
American's Christmas trees would make them
happy. Instead, over the years they have
sponsored several public education campaigns
about Christmas puppies, including its "A Dog
is for Life, Not Just for Christmas"
campaign, followed by "Look Before you Leap;
A Dog is for Keeps."
Animal experts agree: Pets don't make good
Christmas presents!
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