The Woolwich Observer

Donkey Day is worth the road trip

-

OUR REGION HAS VARIOUS destinatio­ns where you can learn about animals of all types ... but if it’s donkeys that intrigue you, a visit this weekend to the Donkey Sanctuary of Canada is a must.

The sanctuary, located just outside Guelph, is holding its 23rd annual Donkey Day open house Sunday from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.. To me, it’s worth the price of admission ($15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students, $5 for kids) to see what’s going on up the lane and across the pond on this idyllic property, on the donkeys’ special day.

There, you’ll see about 90 donkeys, mules (a male donkey-female horse cross) and hinnies (a male horsefemal­e donkey cross) that could no longer be looked after by their owners, or were rescued from difficult or abusive environmen­ts.

This year, the sanctuary is expanding with land next door, to accommodat­e more animals.

Donkeys are a connection not just with agricul-

ture’s past, but with its present day activities too. On working farms, donkeys are sometimes kept as guard animals, to frighten away predators of sheep and cattle.

Normally, donkeys are quite calm. But when the likes of dogs or coyotes are threatenin­g a herd they’ve become associated with, donkeys get defensive and do what they can – kick, bite, bray – to chase predators away.

Here’s the downside though, at least for donkeys – it’s not unusual for them to live to be 35 years old or more. And during that time, conditions can change significan­tly for their owners or keepers. That can result in some tough situations for donkeys.

Here’s how the sanctuary puts it:

“The donkey is the forgotten equine, too often a subject of ridicule, and too often considered disposable at the end of its working life. Donkeys are often abused and neglected, and, once no longer wanted, placed into an equine auction. Then, if a buyer is not available at the moment of sale, the animal is sold to a slaughterh­ouse. Whenever possible, we put an end to this inhumane cycle in which equines are bred, bought and sold over and over, and then disposed of callously. We provide a sanctuary for these animals, where they may live out their lives naturally, in peace, and without obligation to humans.”

The sanctuary is run by charitable donations, volunteers and foster farms, the latter of which take donkeys in need of special care and rehabilita­tion.

Since opening its doors in 1992, the sanctuary’s good intentions have touched the hearts of thousands in Canada and abroad who, for assorted and sometimes inexplicab­le reasons, want to do what they can to help these storied creatures.

Administra­tively, it’s in the third year of a four-year strategic plan that saw its mission expand to include promoting the responsibl­e stewardshi­p of all animals through humane education.

That’s consistent with the growing movement towards improved animal welfare for all species, led locally, nationally and globally in theoretica­l and applied research circles by the University of Guelph’s Campbell Centre for the Study of Animal Welfare .

At a recent animal welfare forum at the university, challenges facing species from domestic livestock to tigers in zoos were on the table. I didn’t see anything about donkeys, but given the rough treatment they’ve received historical­ly – the same kind of treatment that led to the developmen­t of the donkey sanctuary in the first place – I wouldn’t be surprised to see them there eventually.

Learn about the challenges facing donkeys yourself this Sunday. If you can’t make it then, the sanctuary is open every Sunday from now until October.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada