When a beloved companion animal strays from home, it can be a traumatic experience for both the owner and the pet. The Humane Society of the United States offers these tips to help you should you find a lost pet or if your pet should become lost:
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Contact local animal control shelters and animal control agencies for reports of lost pets. If you have lost your pet you should file a lost-pet report with every shelter within a sixty-mile radius of your home. If there is no shelter in your community, contact the local police department. provide these agencies with an accurate description and recent photograph of your pet. Notify the police if you believe that your pet may have been stolen.

Search the neighborhood. Walk or drive through you r neighborhood several times each day. (Early morning and evening are the best times to look for lost pets.) Ask neighbors, letter carriers, and delivery people if they have seen your pet. Hand out a recent photograph and an accurate written description of your pet.  If you have found a pet, ask neighbors if they recognize the animal or if they know of someone who has lost their pet.

Advertise. Post signs of your lost pet at grocery stores, community centers, veterinary offices, traffic intersections, and other locations and place advertisements in newspapers and with radio stations.

Leave items with a familiar scent outside your home to help guide your lost pet back home. A litter box, pet bed, or a sweatshirt recently worn by a loved one can attract a pet who has strayed and become disoriented.

Be wary of pet-recovery scams. When describing your pet, leave one identifying characteristic. When talking about your pet to strangers, offer no information, ask many questions, and carefully answer, and carefully answer questions posed to you. Be wary of people who insist that you wire them money in order for them to return your pet.

Don't give up your search - even when you have little hope left. Animals who have been lost for months have been reunited with their owners.

A pet (even an indoor pet) has a better chance of being returned if he/she always wears a collar and ID tag with current information. Ask your local animal shelter and veterinarian if permanent methods of identification (such as tattoos and microchips) are available in your area.

For more information about responsible pet care, write to the Companion Animals Section, The HSUS, 2100 L St. NW, Washington, DC 20037.
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BJC Animal Control's Pet Adoption Trailer

 


What Does It Mean to Spay or Neuter a Pet?
Male dogs and cats are "neutered" by removing their testicles.  Female dogs and cats are "spayed" through a routine surgical operation to remove their reproductive organs.  The male or female pet feels no pain or discomfort during the operation since the veterinarian puts the animal to sleep with a general anesthesia.  Once the procedure is finished you can take your pet home to rest with only a few stitches..
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Why Is It Important to Spay or Neuter Your Pet?
The answer is simple.  Every year their are about 30 million puppies and kittens born in the United States.  Unfortunately, 4 to 6 million of those adoptable animals are euthanized every year because no one will give them a good home.  Many unwanted animals suffer terribly without shelter, good food, and worst of all -- a loving human companion.  Nationwide, animal shelters report that they take in over 10 MILLION animals every year -- far more than they can possibly adopt out to good owners.

Did you know that a single, unspayed female cat, her mate and all their offspring can produce, on average, over 1.5 MILLION kittens in as little as 9 years?  The good news is that pet overpopulation is a problem that YOU can do something about if you want to end this tragedy.  Talk to your vet about spaying and neutering your pet.  Prevent a litter and be a part of the solution to the problem.

Spaying and Neutering is Good for Your Pet
It is a fact that spayed and neutered pets live longer, healthier lives.  In fact, spaying and neutering can eliminate or reduce the incidence of a number of health problems that can be difficult to treat once they occur.  Such health problems include uterine or ovarian cancer, animal breast cancer, testicular cancer, and prostate disease.  Spaying a female eliminates its heat cycle and thereby reduces nervous behavior in the female.

It is very common for the pet to become a more affectionate companion following spaying or neutering.  Bad behavior (such as biting, fighting, or running away) and temperament problems are less likely to occur.

Pet Population Control is a Community Responsibility
Communities spend millions of tax dollars every year to control unwanted animals.  Animal control officers commonly have to deal with irresponsible breeding which contributes to the problem of dog bites and attacks on people and other animals.  Stray pets get into trash containers, defecate in public areas or on private lawns, and frighten or anger people who have no understanding of their misery or needs.  Some stray animals also scare away or kill birds and wildlife. A responsible community teaches children the true meaning of responsible pet ownership and love by making sure that all dog and cat pets are sterilized to prevent the birth of more homeless animals.

There is one more thing that you can do as a concerned citizen in your community:  Adopt a homeless pet.  Adoptable pets at your local animal shelter make the best companions you can ever imagine and will likely bring much joy to your life.  Click here for a current listing of adoptable pets at BJC Animal Control Services.

When Should a Pet Be Spayed or Neutered?
Pets can become capable of reproduction as early as 6 months of age.  That is why pets should be spayed or neutered by age 6 months.  Sterilization can safely be done before that age, as endorsed by the American Veterinary Medical Association.  The chief veterinarian of the Humane Society of the United States recommends 4 months as ideal.  Older pets can safely be sterilized as well.  It should be emphasized that animal sterilization is a routine procedure and does not cause the pet pain or stress.  Most pets recover from the procedure within a day.

For more information about spaying and neutering pets you can visit the Human Society of the U.S. at: http://www.hsus.org

 

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