Dogs on the Beach
#61
Banned







Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 2,478











http://news.sky.com/home/strange-news/article/16113936
This makes me just want to cry.....
What a beautiful, beautiful animal.
This makes me just want to cry.....
What a beautiful, beautiful animal.
.
#62
.... or is it another Greyfriars Bobby - which was all a fraud / publicity stunt?
AndyD 8-)#
AndyD 8-)#
#64
Thats funny because in China they usually eat them ! Chow Mein on the menu any one.
#65
Forum Regular



Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 125

Also the numbers of strays has gone down and also the numbers of Rabid dogs is very rare now, I wonder who thats down to?
I think you find the IAR.
Please if you don't know whats going on in a place, please don't put your comment forward unless its positive.
#66
Forum Regular



Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 125

There was really nothing wrong with the old method of control until that stupid ignorant idiot from Delhi, Monica Ghandi, sister of Rajiv Ghandi, decided that it was cruel and inhuman to shoot them just before the Monsoon period.The Dog Man was employed by the Panchyats to shoot the bitches and any diseased , old and infirm dogs.He was an ex-army marksman and the gun was a bolt action 2.2 bullet.It was quick and humane.I am a dog lover, in fact i love most animals to a point and to actually see some of the dogs in terrible diseased conditions during the monsoon period was, to put it lightly, stomach churning.Notices were displayed in the areas at least a week before he started operations, so if you owned a dog, you tied it up or bought it a collar.It was simple, cheep and above all effective at keeping unwanted dogs down to levels where they didnt pack up in the night and go hunting.I have personally seem wild dogs, in Baga, attack cattle during the night and believe me they can make a right mess when they get the blood smell.People forget dogs are just domesticated wolves and when they get into packs to hunt they behave just like wolves.Biting and tearing until they over whelm what ever they are hunting.The fault with the original IAR idea is that a spayed dog is still a dog capable of biting.Just because its reproductive capability has gone, its still capable of hunting and biting and dogs carry rabies too.
If the numbers were brought down by de sexing you would not have this problem every year, how can any one claim to be a animal lover and agree that culling is the way!
#67
Forum Regular



Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 125

On a private complex is totally different working situation, if a waiter works in a restaurant does he bring a tiffin, no.
Many jobs in India provide there staff with food and many don't, but when you work for a charity paid or not paid its part of it to be fed and watered.
Many jobs in India provide there staff with food and many don't, but when you work for a charity paid or not paid its part of it to be fed and watered.
#68
#69
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...mal-death.html
I know you will all be disgusted by this although
I know you will all be disgusted by this although
#70
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 21,295











Barbaric, *I cannot believe a educated adult can think this is right, surely prevention is better than this culling.
If the numbers were brought down by de sexing you would not have this problem every year, how can any one claim to be a animal lover and agree that culling is the way!
If the numbers were brought down by de sexing you would not have this problem every year, how can any one claim to be a animal lover and agree that culling is the way!
#71
Forum Regular



Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 245











Barbaric, *I cannot believe a educated adult can think this is right, surely prevention is better than this culling.
If the numbers were brought down by de sexing you would not have this problem every year, how can any one claim to be a animal lover and agree that culling is the way!
If the numbers were brought down by de sexing you would not have this problem every year, how can any one claim to be a animal lover and agree that culling is the way!
Prevention for the future of course, but surely culling can stop this suffering right now?!
#72
No such thing as Chow mein in China its a American dish....
Also the numbers of strays has gone down and also the numbers of Rabid dogs is very rare now, I wonder who thats down to?
I think you find the IAR.
Please if you don't know whats going on in a place, please don't put your comment forward unless its positive.
Also the numbers of strays has gone down and also the numbers of Rabid dogs is very rare now, I wonder who thats down to?
I think you find the IAR.
Please if you don't know whats going on in a place, please don't put your comment forward unless its positive.
I don't know where in Goa you stay cbc, but I can assure you that the number of strays has increased in Calangute and Baga, certainly not decreased. Every year I go there I see more packs of stray dogs and every year the packs seem to grow in numbers.
A few years ago I'd see about 20 or so stray dogs in Calangute Main street, now there is in excess of 80 (in fact last season my ex's son and I counted 81 just in Calangute main street one night ), then of course there are another large number of packs of dogs on the Arpora Road and the side roads going off from there, then another god knows how many on the Candolim road, and again on Baga Road ................
No way have the numbers gone down in this area.
A lot of these animals are mangy with half their fur missing, they look starved, they have to fight each other to scavenge for food, they get injured and the wounds start to look infected, I hear them at night constantly wailing, several of them walk with a limp......
- these dogs are not happy creatures and noone wants them - de sexed or otherwise - and left on the streets in this state turns them vicious which then means they are a danger to people.
Don't get me wrong I have some admiration for what IAR do in pirnciple, but I just don't think there are enough IAR people to sort the problem of the stray dogs out. It saddens me to see the dogs in such a pitiful state, but it also frightens me when I am walking home at night and they start coming towards me.
Dread - x
#73
Forum Regular



Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 245











I don't know where in Goa you stay cbc, but I can assure you that the number of strays has increased in Calangute and Baga, certainly not decreased. Every year I go there I see more packs of stray dogs and every year the packs seem to grow in numbers.
A few years ago I'd see about 20 or so stray dogs in Calangute Main street, now there is in excess of 80 (in fact last season my ex's son and I counted 81 just in Calangute main street one night ), then of course there are another large number of packs of dogs on the Arpora Road and the side roads going off from there, then another god knows how many on the Candolim road, and again on Baga Road ................
No way have the numbers gone down in this area.
A lot of these animals are mangy with half their fur missing, they look starved, they have to fight each other to scavenge for food, they get injured and the wounds start to look infected, I hear them at night constantly wailing, several of them walk with a limp......
- these dogs are not happy creatures and noone wants them - de sexed or otherwise - and left on the streets in this state turns them vicious which then means they are a danger to people.
Don't get me wrong I have some admiration for what IAR do in pirnciple, but I just don't think there are enough IAR people to sort the problem of the stray dogs out. It saddens me to see the dogs in such a pitiful state, but it also frightens me when I am walking home at night and they start coming towards me.
Dread - x
A few years ago I'd see about 20 or so stray dogs in Calangute Main street, now there is in excess of 80 (in fact last season my ex's son and I counted 81 just in Calangute main street one night ), then of course there are another large number of packs of dogs on the Arpora Road and the side roads going off from there, then another god knows how many on the Candolim road, and again on Baga Road ................
No way have the numbers gone down in this area.
A lot of these animals are mangy with half their fur missing, they look starved, they have to fight each other to scavenge for food, they get injured and the wounds start to look infected, I hear them at night constantly wailing, several of them walk with a limp......
- these dogs are not happy creatures and noone wants them - de sexed or otherwise - and left on the streets in this state turns them vicious which then means they are a danger to people.
Don't get me wrong I have some admiration for what IAR do in pirnciple, but I just don't think there are enough IAR people to sort the problem of the stray dogs out. It saddens me to see the dogs in such a pitiful state, but it also frightens me when I am walking home at night and they start coming towards me.
Dread - x
#74
Forum Regular



Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 240
From: Geordieland.











I agree, It's shocking, isn't it?
#75
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 21,295











I don't know where in Goa you stay cbc, but I can assure you that the number of strays has increased in Calangute and Baga, certainly not decreased. Every year I go there I see more packs of stray dogs and every year the packs seem to grow in numbers.
A few years ago I'd see about 20 or so stray dogs in Calangute Main street, now there is in excess of 80 (in fact last season my ex's son and I counted 81 just in Calangute main street one night ), then of course there are another large number of packs of dogs on the Arpora Road and the side roads going off from there, then another god knows how many on the Candolim road, and again on Baga Road ................
No way have the numbers gone down in this area.
A lot of these animals are mangy with half their fur missing, they look starved, they have to fight each other to scavenge for food, they get injured and the wounds start to look infected, I hear them at night constantly wailing, several of them walk with a limp......
- these dogs are not happy creatures and noone wants them - de sexed or otherwise - and left on the streets in this state turns them vicious which then means they are a danger to people.
Don't get me wrong I have some admiration for what IAR do in pirnciple, but I just don't think there are enough IAR people to sort the problem of the stray dogs out. It saddens me to see the dogs in such a pitiful state, but it also frightens me when I am walking home at night and they start coming towards me.
Dread - x
A few years ago I'd see about 20 or so stray dogs in Calangute Main street, now there is in excess of 80 (in fact last season my ex's son and I counted 81 just in Calangute main street one night ), then of course there are another large number of packs of dogs on the Arpora Road and the side roads going off from there, then another god knows how many on the Candolim road, and again on Baga Road ................
No way have the numbers gone down in this area.
A lot of these animals are mangy with half their fur missing, they look starved, they have to fight each other to scavenge for food, they get injured and the wounds start to look infected, I hear them at night constantly wailing, several of them walk with a limp......
- these dogs are not happy creatures and noone wants them - de sexed or otherwise - and left on the streets in this state turns them vicious which then means they are a danger to people.
Don't get me wrong I have some admiration for what IAR do in pirnciple, but I just don't think there are enough IAR people to sort the problem of the stray dogs out. It saddens me to see the dogs in such a pitiful state, but it also frightens me when I am walking home at night and they start coming towards me.
Dread - x
It must be partly to do with feeding by tourists during the season, which I suppose leads them to congregate in beach area.
Over the border in Karwar, there are strays but just not this problem. Only a handful seen near the beach. Some hang about the shops mainly 2-3 together but seem to co-exist with the shop keepers and get some food.
Others are at the fish market where people put their unwanted puppies for others to take in. Around the temples there is usually a small 'group' rather than pack. (All looking alike so must be interbreeding!).
There is no charity help. So I do not know why else there should be such a difference.




