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March 25, 2010

Resource Guarding – Brooklyn’s Story

Filed under: Animal Training — admin @ 11:00 am

This week’s blog is a tribute to the compassion, commitment, and efforts of one shelter worker and two positive trainers.

Brooklyn is a four-month-old Shepherd/Rottie mix pup who arrived at the Humane Society of Washington County at the tender age of 6 weeks. Since pups can’t be made available for adoption until they are at least eight weeks old, Candida, one of the shelter staff, offered to foster her.

Candida realized in very short order that this sweet-faced, innocent-looking pup had some difficult behaviors that would preclude her from adoption. She had a very low tolerance for frustration, would snarl and snap angrily at attempts to restrain her, and offered very intense, fierce resource guarding behavior. All at the age of 6 week. Phew!

One of our trainers, Lori Kobayashi, was assisting me with assessments the day I met Brooklyn. We did the pup’s assessment and indeed, she was unable to pass the handling and resource guarding sections of the protocol. Things were looking grim for Brooklyn, until Lori offered to work with Candida and Brooklyn for a week, to see how she progressed with appropriate behavior modification interventions.

When we assessed Brooklyn the following week she had made significant progress, especially with her guarding behavior, but she was still not an adoption candidate, and Candida couldn’t continue fostering her. Things were looking grim for Brooklyn.  In the intervening week, however, Lori had convinced another of our trainers, Katie Ervin, to take Brooklyn on as a longer term foster if necessary. There was still hope for her after all.

Katie worked diligently with Brooklyn, and documented her work, reporting to me each week on their progress with detailed written reports. In addition to the behavior modification program, Katie signed the pup up for a 7-week Peaceable Paws Puppy Good Manners class and worked on her basic training.

A week ago Tuesday (3/16/10) Katie brought Brooklyn back to the shelter for her final assessment. She watched nervously through the observation window of the assessment room as I worked the pup through our assessment protocol.

Brooklyn was still quite tense with the handling procedures: Check teeth 5 times, touch, tug, push and pinch on various parts of her body, and the safe vet-tech hug. Tense – but there was no sign of the alarming snapping and snarling she exhibited in her first assessment. Katie’s training work was clearly evident as Brooklyn responded to commonly used cues and easily offered new behaviors in the training part of the protocol.

Finally we got to the resource guarding piece of the procedure. We all held our breaths as I approached Brooklyn with her head buried in the bowl. Brooklyn wagged her tail, glanced up and me, and happily continued to eating with no sign of tension as I touched her, petted her, stuck my hand in the bowl, pushed on her face, and finally took the bowl away. I took a deep breath, and handed Brooklyn the high-value pig ear. Again, a total absence of tension as I took it away from her four times in succession, and finally traded her for a large chunk of tasty chicken.

She had passed!!!

Immediately following the conclusion of the assessment Katie filled out her adoption papers and took Brooklyn back home with her.

Our small shelter doesn’t have a behavior department. Yet. Opportunities to repair behaviorally damaged dogs like Brooklyn are still very limited. However, with Brooklyn, Katie, Lori and Candida as shining examples of what can be done to reduce euthanasia numbers one dog at a time, we’ve moved a step forward.

With Brooklyn’s story in hand, I proposed we create a behavioral foster care program for dogs, like Brooklyn, who can become good canine citizens with a reasonable investment of resources. The program is still in the planning stages, but we are hoping to soon be able to offer more opportunities to rehabilitate some of our shelter dogs who show promise, but need an extra boost to be considered good adoption candidates.

Wish us luck!

Lori and Bugsy, her foster/rescue Boston Terrier - a fine guarder of resources in his own right!

Katie and Harley, a hound mix she previously adopted from HSWC.

Comments (7)

March 24, 2010

A Blogger Virgin

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:11 pm

Well lookee here – I’m actually doing this! It’s exciting to have a place of my very own where I can share thoughts and events on the spur of the moment without worrying about pleasing an editor, thinking up topics a month in advance, or complying with word counts.

I’ve procrastinated on this because it feels like a relationship commitment and I don’t want to risk not fulfilling my end of the bargain. And because I had to figure out how this darn blog-thing works – I’m not the most computer-savvy dog trainer.

I expect my blogs to run the gamut from trivial and amusing to, hopefully, significant, informative and thought-provoking. I’d like to share a bit of daily life at Peaceable Paws as well as momentous events in the lives of animals around the world, and the people who care for and about them.

Like… I got a first kiss from Sturgis, our pot-bellied pig the other day! He was lying down while I was scratching him (which he loves – eyes closed in sheer bliss) and I was lying next to him on the barn floor, raised on one elbow. When I stopped scratching he stood up, leaned forward and planted his flat, wet, wonderful pig nose square on my cheek. I was enchanted!

So… welcome to my world – where, today, I’m delighted that it’s pouring rain because that means it’s too cold to snow. Hopefully spring is truly and finally here, with spring peepers singing in our pond last night, a fox in the bottom of Jorel’s meadow yesterday morning, geese walking in the geldings’ pasture, daffodils coming up in the flower beds, and the first groundhog of the season spotted in Rafiki’s pasture on Monday

Comments (4)

No-Kill Animal Abusers

Filed under: Animal Cruelty — admin @ 4:08 pm

No-Kill Animal Abusers
This week a Friend on Facebook posted a link to an animal cruelty case involving a “so-called no-kill” “rescue” organization, the Humane Sanctuary of Kinsman, Ohio, that had (allegedly) badly neglected the animals under its care.

http://tiny.cc/3Pfou

On Friday, February 12, 2010 the Animal Welfare League of Trumbull County (AWLTC), the county sheriff’s department and other agencies executed a search warrant at this facility and impounded one hundred sixty-two dogs, 18 cats, two horses and multiple fowl and chickens. The woman (not) caring for the animals has been charged with nearly 200 counts of animal cruelty.

The photos are horrendous – pictures of emaciated live animals, and dead dogs partially consumed by their starving companions. Horrendous, but not atypical for a hoarding case.

I have long been troubled by the link between the so-called no-kill movement and the proliferation of hoarding cases in the animal protection world, especially hoarding cases connected to alleged “rescue” organizations. During the 20 years I worked at the Marin Humane Society, hoarder cases (we called them “collectors” then) were few and far between, and tended to be the “little old lady living with 150 cats in her home.”

Granted, there was no Internet then so we didn’t have as easy access to the information, but my husband Paul and I edited and published for 13 years a quarterly magazine called the C.H.A.I.N. Letter (Collective Humane Action and Information Network) and we collected and reported all the cases we could find. We found a few hoarder cases per quarter. Today I receive at least three or more per week. Did you get that? Per week. The experts tell us there are even more.

Hoarding
“Hoarding” is a long-recognized psychological condition when it comes to the extreme collecting of inanimate possessions. Only beginning in the 1990s has the term been applied to animal collectors, and animal collecting is still not universally recognized as a hoarder syndrome. An animal hoarder has been defined as “someone who accumulates a large number of animals; fails to provide minimal standards of nutrition, sanitation and veterinary care; and fails to act on the deteriorating condition of the animals (including disease, starvation and even death) or the environment (severely overcrowded and unsanitary conditions), or the negative impact of the collection on their own health and well-being.”

Dr. Gary Patronek of Tufts University conducted a survey (1999) of shelters that had dealt with hoarder cases. He estimated that there were between 700 and 2,000 new hoarder cases every year in the United States. Dr. Randall Lockwood at the ASPCA in New York suggested in 2009 that there were approximately five thousand new hoarder cases reported every year. That’s approximately fourteen new cases every day! In 69 percent of the cases Dr. Patronek surveyed, animal waste accumulated in living areas. Over 25 percent of the hoarders’ beds were soiled with feces or urine. Hoarders’ justifications for their behavior included an intense love of animals, the feeling that animals were surrogate children, the belief that no one else would or could take care of them, and the fear that the animals would be euthanized. According to Patronek, a significant number of hoarders had nonfunctional utilities (i.e., bathroom plumbing, cooking facilities, heat, refrigeration and electricity). Indeed, if you make your way through the photos of the AWLTC case you will see at least one of a barely functional toilet.

I don’t believe it’s just the power of the Internet raising awareness of the extent of the hoarding problem and making it seem like there are more of them now than there were 20 years ago. A significant number of the cases reported in my news searches now involve hoarders posing as legitimate rescuers. That wasn’t the case then. I lay the blame for this tragic phenomenon squarely on the shoulders of the so-called no-kill movement. Here’s why:

So-Called No-Kill Shelters
I have no beef with shelters who don’t want to euthanize – as long as they do it responsibly, by being selective about taking in animals, honest about the fact that every responsible shelter euthanizes sometimes, and doesn’t hold the full-service shelters in their communities out to be evil because they do the necessary heartbreaking work of euthanizing animals for whom there are no homes.

Shelters are under tremendous community pressure to call themselves no-kill. As a result, several things have happened.
• Shelters have lowered adoption standards in their efforts to get dogs (and cats and other animals) out the front door. Where once most good shelters did landlord checks, confirmed regular veterinary care for past animal companions and checked animal control records for past violations, now many do not.
• Shelters work more closely with rescue groups which, on its face, is a very good thing, but shelters that are panicked about being no-kill often don’t check the credentials of so-called rescuers, and may put their shelter animals directly into the hands of hoarders. A large number of Hurricane Katrina rescues, for example, ended up in the hands of a hoarder who was later charged with cruelty.
• Hoarders have learned how to make themselves look legitimate by incorporating as 501(c)3 non-profit organizations. There are now many of these.
• The no-kill movement has convinced many in our society that no-kill is possible, today (and it simply is not), and so many people giving up their animals look for any no-kill option, inadvertently feeding the hungry maw of the rescue hoarder.
• Many excellent shelter administrators have been forced from their positions rather than succumbing to no-kill pressure, and their replacement are often no-kill devotees, pushing once-legitimate well-run shelters into institutionalized hoarding. We see those stories routinely on Internet news as well.

The allure of the no-kill promise is understandable. Those of us who love animals would love to see that dream become a reality – and we are all working, in our own ways, toward that day. But let’s be real – that day is a long way off. Meanwhile, those who travel the country and write books and blogs promising a no-kill fix are like the Sirens of ancient Greek mythology, who lured sailors to their deaths on the rocks with a promise of love, only today’s no-kill Sirens are luring animals to their deaths in the arms of the hoarders who claim to love them.

I remember my first collector case. Louise Ritchie was living in her Volkswagon van with 18 Siberian Huskies in upscale Marin County. We impounded the dogs and won the case. Ritchie’s defense, as is common in hoarder cases, was that she loved her dogs. The words of Prosecuting Attorney Linda Witong ring in my ears to this day.

“Louise Ritchie claims she loves her dogs. God help us if she had hated them!”

I do know that no-kill advocates love our animal companions and don’t want to see them suffer. I just wish they could recognize what they are doing to the animals they profess to love. The “quick fix” promised by no-kill advocates is no better than the quick fix promised by trainers who use shock collars, alpha rolls and other dominance-based coercive methods. In the end, they only harm the very animals they profess to love.

God help us if they hated them…

Comments (5)
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