Cape Times

Free pet sterilisat­ion welcomed

- Tracey Adams

IT’S a school day when inspectors Angie Stanbridge and Rob Richmond from the Animal Welfare Society of South Africa (AWS SA) are met by Elsies River residents at New Mews Complex in Leonsdale.

The residents – some of them young adults, others children – are eager to sign up their dogs and cats for sterilisat­ion.

AWS SA recently embarked on a mass animal sterilisat­ion project, sponsored by The Rolf Stephan Nussbaum Foundation and Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

The project was started in commemorat­ion of Internatio­nal Homeless Animals Day on August 18.

Dog owner Wilfred Pieters places his puppy, “Pot Doom” on the bonnet of the AWS SA vehicle and explains that he wants to have his dog sterilised to prevent disease and unwanted puppies.

Once the pup is in the trailer, Pieters lingers in front of the cage, and reaches out to touch the puppy through the bars.

Above the noise of dogs barking franticall­y and residents’ laughter and conversati­on, Stanbridge fills out forms while Richmond rounds up dogs and cats, labels them and puts them into cages.

The unit then move on, signing up and loading patients into the trailer at every stop. This is a three-step process, with patients being operated on the following day (after collection) and returned to their owners two days later.

Twenty-one patients are collected, and a couple of hours later, the team are on their way back to the AWS SA premises, where the pets are placed into cages in preparatio­n for their sterilisat­ion procedures.

The head of communicat­ions and resource developmen­t for AWS SA, Allan Perrins, said the goal of the mass animal sterilisat­ion project was to sterilise a minimum of 390 pets in Elsies River and Mitchells Plain, owned predominan­tly by indigent members of the community.

Perrins cited pet overpopula­tion in the vast majority of the Cape metro area, as well as backyard breeding, as the main reasons for the project, which involves humane sterilisat­ion of the animals.

Perrins added that sterilisat­ion of pets which have owners goes a long way to addressing the problem of stray animals.

The benefits are confirmed by Dr John McMullen, the AWS SA vice-chairperso­n and chief veterinari­an, ín the AWS SA booklet Teaching Today’s Kids About Animal Welfare.

“By spaying and neutering just one male and female cat, more than 2 000 unwanted births can be prevented in just four years – and more than 2 million in eight years,” McMullen wrote.

If anyone would like to donate, please contact Perrins on 021 692 26 26/078 631 5126/ allanperri­ns@awscape.org.za

 ??  ?? HUMANE EXPERIENCE: The Animal Welfare Society of South Africa recently embarked on a mass animal sterilisat­ion project. Pictures: Tracey Adams/African News Agency (ANA)
HUMANE EXPERIENCE: The Animal Welfare Society of South Africa recently embarked on a mass animal sterilisat­ion project. Pictures: Tracey Adams/African News Agency (ANA)
 ??  ?? IN GOOD HANDS: The project aims to sterilise a minimum of 390 pets in Elsies River and Mitchells Plain.
IN GOOD HANDS: The project aims to sterilise a minimum of 390 pets in Elsies River and Mitchells Plain.

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