Showing posts with label horses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horses. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2014

It's a slaughterhouse out there

Update:

The study How many other animals did pit bulls kill last year has been published by animals24-7.org - please follow the link for details

The animal people organization have been collecting and analyzing data on dog attacks against animals in 2013. While the complete report has not yet been published, some statistics have been released, and the sheer number of horrific attacks occurring daily is heartbreaking for any animal lover - nay, to anyone with a heart. Some of the pertinent statistics which have come to light are as follows:


Ann Ziegler's hearing ear dog, brutally massacred by a pit bull

About 31,400 dogs attacked about 61,500 other animals in the U.S. in 2013, killing 43,500 and seriously injuring 18,100. 

The animals killed included about 12,000 dogs, 8,000 cats, 6,000 hooved animals, and 17,000 other small domestic animals, primarily poultry. 


Another victim of pit bull advocacy

The seriously injured included about 12,400 dogs, 4,000 cats, and 1,700 hooved animals. Few small mammals and poultry survived reported dog attacks.

Pit bulls inflicted 99% of the total fatal attacks on other animals (43,000); 96% of the fatal attacks on other dogs (11,520); 95% of the fatal attacks on livestock (5,700) and on small mammals and poultry (16,150); and 94% of the fatal attacks on cats (11,280). 


About 30,000 pit bulls were involved in attacks on other animals, many of them killing multiple other animals. 

There are about 3.2 million pit bulls in the U.S. at any given time, according to the annual ANIMAL PEOPLE surveys of dogs offered for sale or adoption via online classified ads. 

Thus in 2013 about one pit bull in 107 killed or seriously injured another animal, compared with about one dog in 50,000 of other breeds. 

Complete details of the year-long epidemiological survey that produced these estimates will appear in the January/February edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE. 

Merritt Clifton has added the following clarifying comments: The forthcoming ANIMAL PEOPLE study is taking an epidemiological approach to estimating the dog attack & pit bull attack tolls on other animals precisely to address the underreporting factor. Figuring out how to compensate for non-reporting is among the most common problems in epidemiological research, and we have used standard methods for doing it.

More info will posted here as it becomes available. In the meantime, there are many interesting articles to be found at the web site -  Animal People News

Friday, March 9, 2012

The story of Blue




In the spring of 2007 an American Paint Horse was attacked by a pit bull in North Olmsted, Ohio. Fortunately, he survived, but was psychologically damaged by the attack. From our vantage point nearly 5 years later, it's instructive to take a look at the events of the attack, its aftermath, and the propaganda war that followed.

When Carol Miller took her horse, Blue, for a Sunday ride, it began peacefully enough, but what should have been a quiet Sunday morning ride turned into a nightmare. There was no hint of trouble as they approached a pit bull, sitting calmly and quietly at its owner's feet alongside the trail. Carol, an animal lover, was happy to see that the dog was behaving calmly, and was just about to say "good dog" when the pit bull "somehow" broke free from its leash and attacked Blue, sinking it's cruel jaws mercilessly into the sensitive flesh of the horse.

Both horse and rider tried to defend themselves. "He bucked, he kicked," recalled Miller. "I just grabbed a tree as one went by, and pulled myself on the tree." The pit bull pressed the attack, chasing Blue down the path. After half an hour, rangers found the traumatized horse a mile away, bleeding from the wounds on his neck, belly and hind legs, which required 26 stitches.


Two witnesses to the attack, each of whom provided park rangers with their names and contact information, remain anoymous here, for their protection.

Witness #1 -
 “Driving on parkway south near pond on right hand side of street between Maple Grove  and Lagoon Park, opposite to beginning of Fisherman’s Wall, the older white car stopped in front of me.  To the left a light brown horse with a saddle on was whinnying frantically.  There was a dog about 50 to 60 pounds, a (chestnut ) light brownish color hanging from the horse’s back leg.  The dog fell off the horse’s leg and continued chasing the horse.  The dog was jumping up trying to grab onto the horse’s legs and upper tail area.  I called 911 and gave location and was told to stay where I was . The horse ran down the bike trail going toward Cedar Point Road and I lost sight.”

Witness #2 -
“I was parked in a small lot past Maple Grove after walking my dog, sitting in my car. I heard and saw people stopping to see what the noise was. There coming down the trail was a horse running, he was wimpering running scared, alone and no rider as he came down my side of the car, I noticed a dog chasing him biting at his legs, the horse was lifting his legs trying to get away, he came past my car and ran back towards Maple Grove in the street with the dog still chasing him, jumping up on his lower legs trying to grab them.”

Cleveland metro parks rangers began an investigation, and charges were brought against the pit bull owner. But the pit bull owner claims the attack never happened. He insists that the pit bull slipped out of its collar and approached the horse out of an innocent curiosity.. He called what happened next "a blur," but said both animals seemed spooked and reacted accordingly. Claiming that he never saw the dog bite the horse, the pit owner speculated that the horse injured itself running through the woods, adding that "Animals did what animals do."

The pit bull activist community took to the Internet with damage control tactics as soon as news of the mauling became public. The official response from the pit bull advocacy community was outright denial, as seen in this thread at pitbulltalk.com 

In the version of reality insisted upon by online pit bull advocates, there simply was no attack, period The idea that a pit bull would ever attack another animal was dismissed as utterly outrageous, something only an idiot could think possible.

This is the party line: Ms Miller fabricated the attack report, but was "caught in a lie" and retracted her story. The pit bull community's online activists were duly urged to harass the newspapers and news outlets that had covered the attack, and to demand a retraction. Full contact information for journalists and their managers was provided, with a long list of key individuals to copy on the message, and talking points were provided for use in criticising the journalists for publishing such a story. 


Five years later, the pit bull activists still insist that the attack never happened, and that is the message they continue to preach to all who will listen.


We recently had a chance to talk with Carol Miller and ask her about the attack, and how Blue has fared since then. She responded candidly:

"The morning after the attack I took my dog, the dog Blue saw every day, into the barn aisle way. When Blue caught sight of her he started spinning wildly in his stall, and I knew we were in trouble. But I started the rehabilitation process by sitting in a lawn chair on the front lawn, dog sitting quietly, and moved the chair closer to the paddock every day.I would put the dog on a down stay and work with Blue, clicking and rewarding calm behavior."

Now Blue is OK with dogs quietly sitting, or quietly walking, but running dogs trigger a flashback, he can see my neighbor’s dogs through his stall window and has ripped out the heavy metal screening with his teeth. Blue may be developing some arthritis in the worst injured hind leg, which worries me."

"I got back a whole lot more of my horse than I had any right to expect. I always wondered how he escaped being hit by a car while he was on the road but all traffic in the area stopped dead. In the last few years I have talked to other horse owners who were not as fortunate. Their horses died, horrible and terrifying deaths. Horses who can run, like Blue did, may survive.  Very young horses, or very old horses, ponies, or horses confined in barns and small paddocks almost always die without immediate human intervention."



As Miller points out, many other horses have not been so fortunate.The pit bull problem is real, and there is simply no solution in sight. Dawn James tracked pit bull attacks on various animals over a 2 year period between June 2009 and June 2011, recording over 120 equine casualties in that time - horses, ponies, mules and donkeys. Over the past decade there have been hundreds of horrific, and often too often, fatal horse maulings.

How did we wind up here? Up until the 1980s, pit bulls were owned for the most part by dog fighters, who knew how to handle the creatures. There have always been yard accidents and human fatalities, but they were relatively rare. But in the 1980s, the Animal Farm Foundation started pushing pit bulls as family pets, and increasing numbers of pit bulls were taken in by unsuspecting families. Since the 1980s, serious injuries, maiming and deaths from pit bull attacks have skyrocketed.

As dangerous as pit bulls are, they are just the tip of the iceberg. The situation could never have gotten as bad as it is without an organized and well financed plan to push the pit bull agenda. Whenever pit bull victims tell their story, a cyber mafia rises up to bully, threaten and accuse them. Look at any news report of a pit bull attack and if the site allow comments you'll see the same recurring themes - angry accusations and profanity thrown at the victims, insults for anyone who dares voice the opinion that pit bulls are dangerous, exhortations to "educate" oneself. The message is loud and clear: "Shut up and take your mauling, or else!"

In my humble opinion, the people behind the pit bull problem are the real problem. Blaming victims is obscene. Lamenting irresponsible pit bull ownership hasn't changed a thing - despite mountains of blame heaped on all the irresponsible owners of the world, the number and severity of pit bull attacks has been steadily worsening. Until society finds the will to deal with this problem once and for all, it's only going to get worse.

Call me an idealist, but isn't it time to demand some sanity? Isn't it high time to tackle this problem like we really mean it?