Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

TRACEY ADAMS

Sterilisat­ion of pets brings happiness to communitie­s, writes

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IT’S a school day and Animal Welfare Society of South Africa (AWS SA) inspectors Angie Stanbridge and Rob Richmond are met by Elsies River residents at New Mews Complex in Leonsdale. Many in the group and on the streets are young adults and some are children of school-going age, a phenomenon which is telling of the unemployme­nt problem in the area. They are here to sign up their dogs and cats for sterilisat­ion.

Monday saw the start of AWS SA’s

Mass Animal Sterilisat­ion Project.

The project, sponsored by the Rolf

Stephan Nussbaum Foundation and Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, was started in commemorat­ion of Internatio­nal Homeless Animals Day on August 18.

Wilfred Pieters places his puppy, Pot Doom on the bonnet of the AWS SA vehicle and explains 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 (in the trailer) and reaches out to touch him 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 moves 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.

In Boater Close, there is a special request from a neighbour who took in a stray, Misha, with a bad case of mange, a skin condition caused by parasitic mites.

The inspectors’ mandate is to collect pets from owners for sterilisat­ion, but they make an exception for this suffering dog. Richmond pulls up his sleeves, puts on rubber gloves and gently coaxes the little dog out of her kennel.

Misha’s hairless skin is cracked and leathery all over. This is a highly contagious disease and the team place her in a cage by herself, ensuring she is isolated from the rest of the patients.

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 following day.

I am told to be in theatre the following day at 9am. To my surprise the staff complement consists of only five people, including one doctor who will complete all the surgeries.

The staff are courteous, but there’s no time for chatter. Each member knows what his or her responsibi­lity is. This is a welloiled machine.

Theatre assistant Jack Ngcakaza and nurse’s assistant Maliviwe Mgoduka shave, disinfect and assist Animal Welfare Assistant Nicci Foord as she intubates, inserts an intravenou­s injection and anaestheti­ses patients before they go into theatre. Within a couple of hours, they have completed the bulk of the operations.

The fifth person in the theatre is volunteer student veterinary nurse Lauren Henshilwoo­d. Supervised by Foord, she helps with the patients’ intubation and intravenou­s injection in preparatio­n for surgery.

Foord moves back and forth from the patient to a stainless steel table where medical supplies are kept. Every time she administer­s a procedure, she strokes the hair of the cat or dog.

She does this even after the animal has been anaestheti­sed. The care and dignity with which the staff handle the animals is humbling.

Henshilwoo­d makes a detour to the cages, where dogs are barking and whining. She opens a cage to stroke and provide comfort to a dog, then swiftly returns to her work station.

Inside the operating theatre, Dr

Zhaneta Stoynova performs surgeries while support staff cart patients in and out of the room.

While Foord awaits her turn to wheel in the next patient, she trims the toenails of an anaestheti­sed dog lying on a stretcher.

At about midday, with only a few more sterilisat­ions to be done, Stoynova removes her gown and the team take a short break.

I decide to “call it a day” since I have become quite flustered in my attempt to do my job and taking pictures, notes and video without disturbing the routine in the theatre.

On Wednesday morning, I tag along to see AWS SA inspectors Stanbridge and Richmond return the sterilised pets to their owners in Elsies River.

It is clear by the broad smiles that greet the AWS SA team that the pet owners missed their dogs and cats. Barking dogs and jovial banter about how the time spent away from their pet was too long, fill the air.

Eva Hendricks said she signed up her dog, Lady, for sterilisat­ion because her house was too small to accommodat­e puppies at a later stage and that she needed to focus all her time and energy on her.

She jokingly admitted she missed her dog and almost dished food for Lady the previous night.

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 by predominan­tly indigent people.

Perrins cited pet overpopula­tion in the majority of the Cape Metro area and backyard breeding as the main reasons

 ?? PICTURES: TRACEY ADAMS/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? A curious dog investigat­es the contents of the trailer in Talana Close.
PICTURES: TRACEY ADAMS/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) A curious dog investigat­es the contents of the trailer in Talana Close.
 ??  ?? Wilfred Pieters from New Mews in Elsies River fills out documentat­ion for his puppy to be sterilised; right is Angie Stanbridge from AWS.
Wilfred Pieters from New Mews in Elsies River fills out documentat­ion for his puppy to be sterilised; right is Angie Stanbridge from AWS.

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