My college was offering free neuters and spays to students and pets. I was behind a golden retriever in line to get spayed.
#ryland grace#phm#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




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My college was offering free neuters and spays to students and pets. I was behind a golden retriever in line to get spayed.

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the council has no idea what they should do to him
I have a cat and I had no other choice but to spay her and neuter her two baby boys. But I was so unbelievably upset about it that I cried for days despite knowing it was the right thing to do. I was just horrified with having to make the decision but regardless I was just wondering what you think about things like that.
Which I know broaches a whole myriad of topics like domesticating animals. It’s so sad that so many are in shelters it also seems like a never ending cycle. I don’t see how something like having pets would ever stop happening. It’s incessant and people just make it worse!
I live in pinellas county Florida and I had learned last year that the director of the county animal shelter paired up with a big wig of puppy mills and used government funds to tour around the country with them and host conventions on how puppy mills and shelters can work together? Idk it was appalling to say the least…
I guess I’m just wondering what your take is. I been following you since I went vegan in 2016.
I think that spaying/neutering is the responsible thing to do, at least for cats and dogs. We will never be able to tackle our pet overpopulation problem without reducing the number of animals being bred into existence, and properly funding animal rescue centres and sanctuaries. I can totally understand you feeling bad about it, but it was absolutely the right thing to do for your pets and for the wider animal population. Try not to dwell on it, it is your role to make decisions on their behalf that they may not like in the short term, but are in their long-term interests. It sounds like you have done that, so try not to dwell on it.
What You Need to Know About Spay And Neuter Myths
Pet overpopulation and euthanasia are a continuing problem. Be a part of the solution: spay or neuter your pets.
Spaying or neutering your dog is an important part of responsible pet ownership. Unneutered male dogs that are not able to mate experience frustration, which can lead to aggression. Unspayed female dogs attract unwanted attention every six months. From a psychological and biological point-of-view, it is the best thing for your dog.
When you get your dog spayed or neutered, be sure your dog is in a calm and balanced state. Never spay or neuter a frustrated, nervous, tense, aggressive, or anxious dog!
In the United States, seven puppies and kittens are born for every one human. As a result, there are just not enough homes for the animals, and according to the Humane Society of the United States three to four million dogs and cats are euthanized every year.
Sterilizing dogs and cats has been hailed as the most effective method for pet population control. You can help save lives by spaying and neutering your pet. If pets can’t breed, they don’t produce puppies that end up in animal shelters to be adopted or euthanized. Currently, over 56% of dogs and approximately 75% of cats entering shelters are put to sleep.
The perpetuation of myths about spaying and neutering and the high cost cause many people to avoid the procedures, but the fact is sterilization makes your dog a better behaved, healthier pet and will save you money in the long run.
Myth #1: A dog will feel like less of a “man” or “woman” after being sterilized.
This myth stems from the human imposing their own feelings of loss on the animal. In fact, your dog will simply have one less need to fulfill. A dog’s basic personality is formed more by environment and genetics than by sex hormones, so sterilization will not change your dog’s basic personality, make your dog sluggish or affect its natural instinct to protect the pack. But it will give you a better behaved pet.
Neutered dogs have less desire to roam, mark territory (like your couch!) and exert dominance over the pack. Spayed dogs no longer experience the hormonal changes during heat cycles that turn your pet into a nervous dog that cries incessantly and attracts unwanted male dogs. Sterilized dogs are more affectionate and less likely to bite, run away, become aggressive, or get into a fight.
Myth #2: Spaying and neutering will cause weight gain.
Dogs do not get fat simply by being sterilized. Just like humans, dogs gain weight if they eat too much and exercise too little or if they are genetically programmed to be overweight. The weight gain that people may witness after sterilization is most likely caused by continuing to feed a high energy diet to a dog that is reducing its need for energy as it reaches adult size.
Myth #3: Dogs will mourn the loss of their reproductive capabilities.
Not true. Dogs reproduce solely to ensure the survival of their species. They do not raise a puppy for eighteen years. They do not dream of their puppy’s wedding. They do not hope for the comfort of grandchildren in their old age. Female dogs nurse for a few weeks, teach the puppies rules, boundaries, and limitations and send them off to join the pack. Male dogs are not “fathers” in the human sense of the word; they do not even recognize puppies as their own.
Myth #4: Spaying and Neutering is expensive.
Today there are enough low cost and free spay and neuter programs that this can no longer be an excuse! Even if these programs are not available in your area, the emotional distress and money spent on medical treatments you will save down the line makes it an investment that will be worth every penny.
Sterilization reduces the risk of incidence of a number of health problems that are difficult and expensive to treat. In females, it eliminates the possibility of developing uterine or ovarian cancer and greatly reduces the chance of breast cancer. Also, some females experience false pregnancies and uterine infections that can be fatal. Prostate cancer risk is greatly reduced in males. By sterilizing your pet, your dog will live a healthier and longer life.
Efforts by programs such as SPAY/USA already seem to be having an effect. In 1980, approximately 23.4 million animals were euthanized. Twenty-two years later, the estimate was down to 4.6 million. In towns and cities that have already implemented sterilization programs, the number of companion animals who had to be euthanized is showing a decline of 30 to 60 percent.
The truth is that neutered and spayed dogs are better pets. And though we’re heading in the right direction, the problem of euthanasia continues. Be a part of the solution. Spay or neuter your pet today!
23.1.22
Currently in Goa, India for a 2 week veterinary surgical training course in animal birth control, with WVS. Practicing my sutures,ligatures and modified miller’s before my first surgery 🩺🥼tomorrow. The weather is quite chilly unlike the humid beach 🌊 state that it is.
Travelled (in our free time) to :
Baga beach 🏝️
Anjuna beach food trucks 🛻🍔🍟🫔

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I remember when my parents got our two kittens spayed like 10 or so years ago. One turned into a collar of shame escape artist. And the other acted very pathetic "woe is my why must i have this done to me.
Tho one thing about their spays that suprised me was they did the surgery from their side instead of their belly is that normal? Just curious
vet-and-wild here.
There are basically two approaches for a spay: ventral midline or flank. AKA the belly or the side. Ventral midline is the most common in the states at least, but the flank approach may become more popular in the future. Especially for exotics. There are definitely advantages for keeping the incision further away from the ground. I've been told that flank spays are not necessarily harder, we just don't get taught them so most vets aren't comfortable with it. Other countries do them more commonly though.
Is it normal for a dog to cry and cry after being spayed? I’m new to this and I’ve googled it but I’m still really scared that this isn’t normal. I tried calling the vet but forgot that they close early on Friday’s and don’t take messages.
yoooooooo edgy edge lord booiiioooooooo UwU ❤ i hawz a qwuestion fwer ywe! what would u do if Doomfanger accidently got kittens when she no longer one?? as i recall she still babeh but like what if she got kittens would u even be able to let go of them or would u keep them????? :>c
Edge Lord: First of all, Doomfanger is an indoor cat. I don’t let her out at all for her safety, which also means she doesn’t get a chance to... well, get pregnant. She does complain profusely about that issue sometimes though.
Edge Lord: I didn’t think about what to do with the possible litter because there won’t be any. I do plan on spaying her when time allows me to take care of that properly. I wouldn’t abandon them if that’s what you’re asking about.