IFAW South Africa - Helping Cats and Dogs in Happy Valley
This post was written
by Christina Pretorius, Programme Manager for IFAW
(8 September 2009) Nearly two weeks ago IFAW’s dog and cat
project in
It’s hard to imagine what was on the mind of the bureaucrat
who named this desperately poor community of shacks and lean-tos built on the
sandy Cape Flats about 30 kilometres from Cape Town – as this Happy Valley in
no way recalls the glamorous, if dissolute, lives of the wealthy aristocrats
and adventurers of Kenya’s renowned Happy Valley set of the 20’s and 30’s.
But
In our first two visits to the settlement 35 dogs and cats were removed for sterilization and then returned home – as I write this more than 80 dogs and cats have received this vital surgery that IFAW’s project provides.
From kick-off it struck me that to follow our work in
To give some context I did a little research on
And according to a recent report by the African Centre for
Cities (associated with the
There are no statistics to tell us how many dogs live in
these communities but
Similar to most of these communities
The area in which we are working is home to 5,000-odd people, relying on communal taps for (cold) water and portable lavatories for sanitation – those that are able claim their “own” lavatory by securing it with a padlock, so they don’t have to share.
Housing is rudimentary with everyone living in shacks, some smaller and some a little larger, some fairly robust and some very ramshackle. They line the grid of sandy access routes that criss-cross the settlement – it’s this web of well-demarcated paths that will help us in our door-to-door work to identify dogs and cats in need. And, you might ask, how shall we know where to return a sterilized pet? Well, believe it or not, each sandy track has a name and each shack a number, so every pet has a home address!
On our first visit to
Few people in communities like this will allow their dogs into their shacks – the space is too small, and it’s hard enough to keep the sand out without having a dog bring more in, and not everyone can afford a kennel or realizes that a dog needs a warm, dry bed if they are to sleep outside.
Fortunately the owners of two of the litters were persuaded to let us take the moms and their pups back to clinic. A quick conversion turned our run into a maternity ward with a couple of cozy kennels and once the puppies are weaned, the moms will be sterilized and returned home and loving homes found for their offspring. All are doing well.
On a much less happy note, on Monday we had to rush a female dog that had been stabbed by a drunk back to clinic and into surgery. The dog was hurt after it started to bark at the man who had intruded onto her owner’s shack property. The knife wound had punctured her large intestine in three places.
“Lappies” (the name means “rags” in the local vernacular) was operated on for nearly three hours by our volunteer vet Esme Wilson. It’s still touch and go whether or not Lappies will make it but we are hopeful.
In the meantime, we understand her owner knows the man who stabbed her and he will be encouraged to lay a charge against him – but, in this small, tight-knit community, the owner may prefer not to do so. I’ll keep you posted.
So that wraps up the first
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More power to you guys - the work you do is an example to us all!
Posted by: Derek | September 29, 2009 at 04:10 AM