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ACTIN, making changes for animals in Spain.

Animal care Treatment International Network has been set up to make changes for the animals in Spain, who suffer abandonment and cruelty. What we plan to do is to bring awareness of the problems to the world’s media. We need to promote education, new legislation and support neutering campaigns. It is necessary to get support Internationally to put pressure to bear on the Spanish government and to persuade them to take more responsibility for the lack of animal welfare in Spain. ACTIN plans in the future to bring about these changes through media awareness. Actin will tell the truth of how it is on an everyday basis, particularly in the country villages of Murcia, where there is a lot of ignorance and abuse. They will tell of what the volunteers deal with and how the abuse of animals is getting worse. ACTIN will endeavor to bring about campaigns for sterilization and education in schools. There is a need for a Society to protect the animals and this is what ACTIN aim to do in the future but we need much support to achieve our aims.


Mamma Mia & her puppy Toby, need homes
Sunday, October 21, 2012

Please read about these dogs in the previous post >> 

It's time for these two to go to a forever home. These two were living wild in the campo, Mamma had two pups, Toby and Troy. We tried to catch them for around 12 weeks, Toby was first to be caught, then Troy and many weeks later we managed to get Mamma. They were all extremely frightened and have taken a lot of work to get them socialised.

Toby has really improved, he jumps up to greet me in the mornings and in the last few days started getting on the sofa with us. Mamma is just a lovely girl and very intelligent, she was always friendly but would not let you touch her, she cowers a lot and has clearly been ill treated and dumped in the campo to have her babies. she weighs around 13 kilos now and, because she was treated for Erlichia (she is at the end of her treatment now), she has not yet had all her inoculations. These will be done next week. She is frightened of cats.

Toby has all his inoculations, rabies and passport and chipped. He needs a home with lots of love and other dogs around. He weighs around 5 to 6 kilos and although his body and head look big, he has unusually short legs (like his dad)!! Neither are neutered yet * but will be, as I wanted to wait until they were settled and less frightened...you can read the story of their rescue on www.actin-spain.com   ... please help me find them homes .. thank you. Obviously they would love to stay together but we, at ACTIN, realise this likely will not happen.

* UPDATED: Toby is being castrated on 20th November.

BELOW: Mamma Mia

BELOW: Toby

Both Toby & Mamma have been socialising with more people & loving it. 

See Mamma Mia walking on her lead, an achievement. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQ2qgjUJhY8&feature=plcp

    Troy is the slightly bigger puppy and he was the most nervous of the 3, so Actin have put him in foster care with a lady who is good with dog behaviour problems.

Toby had been rehomed 2 wks ago but hid under the sofa or the bed the whole time, as he was frightened with no other dogs around him but now he has so much more confidence. He was there for a week and has been back with Actin a week today and he was so happy to be back with his mum & friends.

Join us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain

 

Below: Toby trying to get a cuddle from Pati.



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The Petrol Station Family
Wednesday, October 3, 2012

 

When I found this little Family, I wasn’t sure what to do, there was no room at the Inn and I wasn’t going to be able to home a Family of feral dogs very easily. I had found them a short distance from my house begging for food at the local petrol station. A lovely female about 3 years old with a strange but beautiful face, that seemed to smile when I greeted her and then her companion, a little boy with short stubby legs that were bandy, no tail just a little excuse for a stump, that wagged with pleasure when I talked to him. The little boy’s head seemed to be too big for his body and he also had a smile, his lips would curl back in a slightly nervous way but he was a really sweet happy little chap.

I was stopping for petrol the first time I met them and had my emergency stash of dog food in the boot, so I sat on the ground and tried to coax them to me. They were very happy to take the food but definitely wouldn’t let me touch them.

I went away with a heavy heart as they are just two more to add to the many abandoned strays here in Spain. They were not going to be easy to help, as they weren’t a breed, or desirable looking, they weren’t hurt and clearly knew how to survive, so it wasn’t like it was an emergency either. However their situation was still dangerous, with the many lorries and coaches driving into the petrol station and cruel people who may hurt them. The weather was starting to warm, it was May and I knew it would soon be very hot for them. In the summer heat, Spanish stray dogs are prone to many diseases, such as Erlichia from Tick infestation and leishmania, a potentially lethal disease caused by a sand fly bite. Plus there was the constant danger from the road and possible dehydration in the heat.

So I needed a plan of action, as there was no way these two would survive here for long, in spite of their intelligence and resourcefulness. Well it really was the female who was doing the most work but the boy seemed to rely on her. They were companions and often I would turn up and they would be lying on the kerb, literally wrapped around each other like lovers.

The only thing I could do for now, was to see that they were fed and watered and to try to build their confidence in humans.

The Petrol Station Family - Toby and TroyOne day I turned up to learn that the petrol attendant had seen in the distance some pups. I came that evening with a lovely lady on holiday from Germany, who was giving up her time to help Spanish animals and we went in search of the pups. The land behind the petrol station was rocky and parched, with piles of rubbish and some huge rocks and a mound. The female led us to her pups that were hiding out, under the rocks. Tiny pups – one was half the size of the other, with a little stump for a tail, short legs and looking just like his Dad! The other looked just like Mum. We named Mum and Dad, Smilie and Desperado and the pups Toby and Troy.

All through the hot Summer I came, every day. It was getting too much for me and too much for them; they were clearly suffering in the heat. I had to do something, so I started a plan to rescue them. A good friend had offered to foster them and then all we could do, was our best to home them. I tried not to think about that and just thought to catch them first.

Once we started trying to rescue them, we realized just how nervous they were and very determined not to be caught. My partner and I spent hours and days out there. We took camping chairs, water, sausages for the dogs and tranquilizers but every time we almost caught them, they would slip out of our hands and run for their lives, as far away as they could. I didn’t want to risk them losing confidence in me and I didn’t know what to do.

Some weeks on, I was doing my usual visit but felt worried about Desperado, he wasn’t responding as usual and seemed sleepy and lethargic, unless of course I tried to catch him and then his little legs couldn’t run fast enough but this day I didn’t feel he could cope, so I decided to leave him and see how he was the following day.

I thought it was the heat and hoped he would be better on my next visit. But for the next few days I did not see him. I was so worried that chasing and trying to catch him had put his little body under too much pressure, what with the lack of nutrition and the impossible heat and he could have a disease that needed treatment for all I knew.

I was busy with work and other commitments but I was so worried, my partner Dan decided to go and do a thorough search for Desperado. He returned after a few hours and I asked where he was. He put his arms around me and told me he had found little Desperado’s lifeless body. I was devastated and cried buckets over that little dog. Dan buried him properly and we said a prayer. We learnt from the petrol station lady that he had been hit by a car and so poor little mite, must have been suffering from internal injuries, when I thought he was suffering from the heat. I only hope he did not suffer too much.

The Petrol Station Family - Toby after being caughtThe next day, I was so damn determined not to leave that place without one at least of the dogs that I would not go, it was hot, I was sunburned and I wouldn’t give up. Sheer dogged determination and I managed to trap the smallest pup, Toby, with a blanket against a rock.

He squealed as though I was killing him, he was so scared, I thought he would have a heart attack, his little body under the blanket, I could feel hyper ventilating and I talked to him as I carried him to the car, softly, to try to calm him.

He was petrified and he did not move out of the box for about 24 hours. Sherlie, who looked after him was brilliant, she tried to coax him and get him interested but he was lost without his Family and completely vulnerable and terrified of us. So much so that he managed to escape after a week, out of his box and his enclosure and disappeared completely. Sherlie’s house is in the countryside with nothing but dry and arid vast areas. We looked for him but had to accept he would probably not survive and no bigger than a rabbit and the same color almost, we didn’t have much hope for him to survive long. We were broken hearted!

In the meantime we had discovered that a Spanish group of animal volunteers had also found our special little Family and we were not the only ones who wanted to help them. There was something special about this Family, as many stray dogs here just get ignored and forgotten because of the sheer numbers. But now we had someone who would join forces with us and perhaps give the other two, Mum and Troy a better chance.

So we agreed to help each other, they had more experience in catching dogs and we would try to care for them after they were caught.

And so it was with great joy a few weeks later, when I had a call to say that Troy had been caught. I raced there to collect him…I was as happy as if I had won the lottery, I couldn’t believe this wily, fast little puppy would ever be caught!! Amazing girls, showed no fear for themselves, even though the terrified pup was trying to bite.

On the same day apart from the call from the Spanish girls to say Troy was safe, I had another call from Sherlie…..to tell me Toby had come back, that little tiny boy. Sherlie had heard a cry at the gate and could not believe her eyes, there he was a dirty little bundle, and god knows where he had been hiding out. He didknow we were trying to help him after all!! He was going to be re-united with his Brother, at last!!

But now we had a bigger worry, of course the pups were safe but poor Mama Smilie, was all alone, she had lost her companion and her pups and she was so sensitive and sweet, we knew that this would be bad for her. In fact the Manager of the petrol station phoned to tell me she was frantically howling. For the next few days we could not get near her, she kept well away; she had lost trust in us completely!!

So the next plan of action…to take her pups to the petrol station and hope she may smell them and allow us to catch her. It didn’t work; in fact it was damn stressful. We had to get the terrified pups into a cage and put them in the car. They could not be handled without gloves and they pooed and weed with fear every time we touched them. So I decided to take them home with me, even though I had a busy schedule, I had less dogs than Sherlie, who’s latest count at that time was around 21 dogs in her care. I thought if I could keep them in the house with my gang of 7, I could get them confident and maybe they would then be easier to help catch Mama.

Toby started to settle but he had now been in captivity for around a month and that extra time for Troy out in the wild with Mum had made him a harder nut to crack, he really seemed lost without his Mum. Seeing them out in the wild I had realized how close they were. I felt so guilty for disrupting this little Family’s life but I knew it was for the best.

I tried to see Mama but she wouldn’t come near us anymore, I was so sad and thought we may have to give up on her but the Spanish group came to the rescue and around two months after capturing the first pup, I had a call to say Mama was safe at last. One of the girls had got her tough guy Husband to capture Smilie, she still had to have a tranquilizer and it was not easy but now we had them all safe at last…

Mama was a delight to have; she is a beautiful but terrified dog. If she could speak I would have to close my ears as I couldn’t cope with what she may tell me. This dog cowers to the floor when I come close and lays down and wets herself, shaking with total fear. It hurts my soul when she does this and she has clearly passed this fear on to the pup.

The Petrol Station Family - Mama and Troy looking confidentNow they are all safe and have been with me for a while. Toby lives in the house and he is a little devil, full of fun and naughtiness. He will run and hide under the sideboard if I attempt to pick him up for a cuddle. I think the hidey hole reminds him of his little house of rocks that he was born under and there he feels safe. The other day I found my Ray Bans chewed up in his bed… but what can I say, he is safe and happy.

Mum and Troy were so happy to be re-united. I have some great video footage of the moment Troy realized his Mum was there. Mum gets better and better every day. She is an adorable and intelligent creature, that has dignity and she loves people, in spite of her history. Troy is still very afraid and needs some specialist care. I do my best and spend as much time with them each day as possible. But they need to have a loving home and a forever Family.

I would like to keep Mama and Troy together; I think they will be lost without each other.

They will have to have a very special home this little Family and I will find it, as Desperado is probably watching from Rainbow bridge..

This rescue story is in memory of Desperado and all the suffering stray dogs, who to survive when they should be taken care of. The only answer is to sterilize….

Hundreds of thousands of stray and abandoned animals meet their fate on the roads by being killed outright, some suffer for days before they die. Many are deliberately thrown from cars onto the motorway. How many accidents has this caused? I know of many and also near misses, where people have been hurt,including myself. Does the Spanish government think it is acceptable to cause such danger on the roads? Many strays will die from hunger, dehydration or disease; does the Spanish government think this is acceptable to put the general public’s health at risk by allowing people to abandon their animals in the streets? Does the Spanish government think it is acceptable for tourists and visitors to see the roads littered with dead animals, or starving dogs? In some countries we may expect this but isn’t Spain in the EU and a country to be respected in the modern world?
 
One male and female pair of mating dogs will, in 6 years have procreated 67,000 dogs. Only 10% of dogs will ever be homed. Please support our campaign for awareness to sterilise pets.

If everyone castrated & spayed their pets, perhaps this little family wouldnt have suffered for many months in the campo - Please encourage neutering and sterilising to all your friends, neighbours and family, it is the only answer to reducing the over population of abandoned and stray animals here in Spain HELP US SPREAD THIS VERY IMPORTANT MESSAGE!

Website is http://www.actin-spain.com/ 

 

Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain



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Little pup, Stevie's short life (RIP)
Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Stevie was almost strangled and then put into 2 tied bags and thrown in the village bin.

I was upstairs on Sunday, cleaning and feeding the cats when I heard one of the Moroccan children calling me, he sounded very distressed. He went on to tell me that an animal was in the bins, he heard cries when he was emptying the families rubbish.

We managed to get the plastic bag out of the bin, not only one bag but two both tied tightly so there was no escape for the poor puppy inside.

The Moroccan boy frantically worked at untying the rope from around the puppy’s neck, a failed attempt by someone to strangle him.

I took him into the house, his hip was so swollen, it looked like it was broken and he also had a wound on his back which was bleeding.

I put him into a warm bed and tried to clean his wounds, all through he was whimpering pitifully. It was breaking my heart but I carried on doing what I could to make him feel comfortable and safe.

It was Sunday and no local vets were open, I knew he wouldn’t make the long journey to the veterinary hospital, I felt so helpless.

He was in so much pain and after 4 hours his little body couldn’t take it anymore, he died in pain and distress, there was nothing I could do. I just cuddled this little limp body close to me for an hour; I just didn’t want to let him go.

I feel so angry that people throw animals into the garbage; something needs to be done to stop this. Spain is part of the EU and this behaviour and all cruelty to animals is unacceptable.

Little Stevie is now buried in our garden, at peace under our Jasmine tree, I named him after a good friend called Stevie, he also died tragically too young.

Puppies are normally so happy and full of fun, it is so sad that he never had a future but at least he had a short time of knowing he was loved and someone cared enough to cry at his death.

1,000’s of pups, kittens and even adult animals are disposed of in bins on a regular basis. The Spanish seem to think it is acceptable and normal. They don’t die quickly these animals, they suffer terribly. Most people who have lived here and love animals have had the terrible stress of rescuing animals thrown away like this. Animals rescued from this hell don’t survive if they have been left long. Is it acceptable that a nation thinks it ok to throw sentient creatures into rubbish bins, like unwanted trash? I think not; SHAME ON THE PEOPLE WHO DO THIS!

“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated” Mahatma Gandhi

We propose stickers on bins, in the hope to deter and shame. Please support us in this campaign.

info@actin-spain.com

Website is http://www.actin-spain.com/ 

Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain



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Welcome to our blog- ACTIN SPAIN
Wednesday, October 3, 2012

We aim to bring awareness to the problems that are experienced by animals in Spain.

Please follow this blog.

We are on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain

Our website is http://www.actin-spain.com/



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Sterilisation Campaign
Wednesday, October 3, 2012

By now most people who care for animals will have realised that there is a huge problem here in Spain, of terrible animal suffering.

We, when forming ACTIN, asked ourselves how we could stop this. We have continually rescued animals that are suffering on a voluntary basis and for every one we have saved and found a home for, there are hundreds more waiting.

The animals cannot speak or help themselves, they are vulnerable, we as human beings have an obligation to protect all life on earth and show compassion towards suffering.

Suffering occurs when an animal is starving, thirsty, treated created cruelly, or abandoned and left to die.

Why does this need to happen? It doesn’t but we need to be heard, to help prevent it

An abandoned or stray animal can endanger the lives of people on the roads, and the health of our children and pets. This message must have an impact; we have to spread it to the government and local councils.

Animals here in Spain get thrown away like unwanted garbage into bins, onto the roads, into wells and water deposits, or tied up and left in fields to starve. Puppies found in boxes by bins, in bags, in the bins, or left to die in dry river beds, is a common occurrence in the countryside and villages. This continued habit of doing this to helpless animals, happens on a daily basis. A creature that lives feels pain, fear, hunger and thirst and doesn’t deserve to suffer. Us animal carers know this but isn’t it common sense to all people? Why do humans feel they can inflict that kind of intolerable pain and suffering on a creature? We can only win this battle with education and awareness.

Animals deserve respect. What we feel ourselves, so do the animals.

ACTIN plans to deliver these messages to the perpetrators and the ignorant. BUT in the meantime we cannot deal with the amount of animals that it is happening to.

There is only one answer, and that is to reduce this intolerable suffering to animals, by reducing the numbers that are born. Therefore campaigning for NEUTERING, is the biggest most important effort we have to make initially.

Why don’t the Spanish want to neuter their animals? Because, they believe the animals character may change, that he may not be a good hunter, guard dog, or goat herder; because of religious grounds, macho reasons, financial limitations? None of these are reason enough…

  • These mis-conceptions need to be changed.
  • Incentives need to be given, such as the cleanliness and change in the environment.
  • More vets need to be involved and give concessions.
  • Money needs to be raised for local neutering programmes.

But first we need to bring awareness and this is a going to be a long process. The importance of it cannot be stressed enough.

How do we do it? By many people making a strong message and delivering that message far and wide. Neutering is the only thing that will start to make a difference.

One pair of mating dogs in 6 years will have procreated 67,000 dogs. Only 10% of the whole world’s population of dogs will ever have a home. Imagine the millions that will suffer?

So please help us here in Spain; we are starting with our campaign message and we want to see this message everywhere. We have initiated this campaign with our T-shirts. (MORE LATER) Car stickers will follow and much more. We value your help in delivering this message and we need funds too, for the manufacturing and marketing of the goods.

We are preparing to take this message worldwide; we cannot do it without you.

If you wish to help the animals and you believe in us and our intention to do this, please purchase one of our T-shirts.

If you wish to sponsor us to make our message stronger, please contact us on admin@actin-spain.com

 

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain

Website: http://www.actin-spain.com/



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MISSION STATEMENT
Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Our Mission is to bring awareness and education to the region of Murcia and to the whole of Spain.

The aims will be to focus on what can be achieved in order to make changes in the laws against cruelty, neglect and abandonment. We also look to find the best ways to introduce education of the general care and welfare of all animals in Spain. Please get involved in ACTIN for discussion, information, ideas and information on current laws.

Our vision

  • Persistence – to change and implement the laws
  • Hope – to bring about many changes
  • Loyalty – to the animals we protect and the protectors
  • Teach – about compassion to living creatures
  • Will – to complete the tasks we set ourselves
  • Faith – in ourselves and human nature, that goodness and positivity will always prevail. To teach this to others and to hold our vision that we can bring the changes needed to make Spain a better place for all animals

Association ACTIN – CIF/NIF G30866925

For donations and to help our projects and our volunteers who rescue dogs, please donate to ACTIN Asociation

La Caixa – Micro Bank – 0133-4646-85-4200000332
IBAN: ES05 0133 4646 8542 0000 0332
BIC / SWIFT CODE: MIKBESB1XXX
PayPal: admin@actin-spain.com

CONTACT admin@actin-spain.com

Website: http://www.actin-spain.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StopAbandonementInMurciaSpain



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