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Welcome to Spring or Autumn. This is a transitional month with something for everyone. Internationally, it is Women's History Month, focusing on the achievements, needs, and challenges that women ...
The world steps into the second month of 2025 with hope and trepidation. The United States has a new administration. Canada is finding its way to a new administration. Germany and several other European nations...
There are several unique focuses for 2025. I covered the first 12 in Part One. The following are the rest I have discovered for this year. As with all issues of LEEP Ink, the following descriptions are a...
July 5th is the single day that more dogs go missing than any other each year according to PawBoost, most likely due to the fireworks and festivities the night before. Because of this Paw Boost has established National Lost Dog Awareness Day to highlight pet safety and help owners reunited with lost pets.
Personal note from Laura for anyone whose pet goes on walk-about:
On December 6, 2017, my cat Miss Zoe got out of our new home in South Philadelphia as I was bringing in the garbage cans. We had just moved in two weeks prior and she had endured a traumatic two months moving to the United States from the Middle East and living in AirBnB's until I could secure us a new home. A desert stray when I rescued her, she found herself lost and caught in the snow in a major US city 8,000 miles away from anything she knew. Every night and early morning I went out looking for her, calling her name, shaking treats, papering the neighborhood in posters, working NextDoor and Paw Boost, visiting shelters and vets. It was excruciating.
Miss Zoe is chipped and was wearing a collar with a tag. In the Middle East she also had a GPCats collar (GPS), but it wasn't working in the US. Seventeen days later, I received a call from a neighbor three blocks down and two over. My neighbor recognized her from the posters I put up around the neighborhood and the forwarded PawBoost Alerts that people featured on their social media pages.
Services like PawBoost notify the local vets and shelters, create posters for you and post your notice on Facebook to their network of rescuers. Still, as a pet parent, you have to put in the work, walk the blocks and talk to people. Most lost pets stay within a half mile to mile of your home. It can take months, and you can't give up. Miss Zoe is a shy cat. Even with cat treats, it took time to coax her out; then she thanked me by shredding my hands and arms with her teeth and claws as I wrestled to get her into the carrier. That earned me a blood soaked trip to the Urgent Care. In retrospect, I recommend thick gloves, like those for dishwashing. All Zoe needed to go spazz-cat was see the carrier she'd occupied for an 18-hour flight! At least a dog will walk on a leash.
The other tool I used was Nextdoor.com. This was critical in keeping my spirits up and getting everyone in the vicinity looking for Miss Zoe. She became infamous in our Point Breeze neighborhood. For several weeks after I found her, people would stop me to ask if she'd been found, or wave at us when they saw her sitting in the front window.
Today Miss Zoe (and her brother Sinatra) is happy and home (in fact, she's sleeping on my desk next to me right now...snoring). Use this day, Lost Dog Awareness Day, to familiarize yourself with the tools available should your pet, (dog, cat, bird or ferret), go on walk-about. If you know what to expect and what to do, you'll greatly increase the chances of a happy ending.
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