Popular Post snoop1130 Posted February 16, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 16, 2022 The Animal Army Foundation, who is a registered Foundation in Thailand and licensed veterinary clinic and whose primary focus is the lifesaving medical care of homeless street animals sterilized and vaccinated roughly 60 stray dogs in the Pattaya area over the weekend with the help of the local community, including a local school. 60 DOGS (3 TVT) + 1 CAT NAJOMTIEN RABIES RED ZONE STERILISATION & VAX TALLY Today was a really tough day, with some tricky catches. Our dart ninjas managed to apprehend 10 very clever dogs. That brings our total to 60 dogs (over the weekend), 3 of which need chemotherapy for TVT and 1 dog with a large hole in the head. Full Story: https://thepattayanews.com/2022/02/16/animal-army-sterilizes-and-vaccinates-60-stray-dogs-over-the-weekend-with-help-from-the-local-pattaya-community/ -- © Copyright The Pattaya News 2022-02-16 - Aetna offers a range of visa-compliant plans that meet the minimum requirement of medical treatment, including COVID-19, up to THB 3m. For more information on all expat health insurance plans click here. - Follow ASEAN NOW on LINE for breaking COVID-19 updates 3
scubascuba3 Posted February 16, 2022 Posted February 16, 2022 Maybe if you focused on set areas then locals may be more willing to contribute, for example if you were going to 100% resolve the dog issue on Pratumnak Sois and did a campaign you'd get decent money 2
Popular Post Benmart Posted February 16, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 16, 2022 Sadly, like corruption, the soi dogs are everywhere and impossible to keep in check as long as people keep feeding the beasts. 3
Popular Post jacko45k Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 Sixty..... there are more than that on the road at the bottom of my street some days. They can come do my neighbours dogs anytime.... cyanide please! 3 2
Popular Post mikebell Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 I passed sixty dogs on the 2 kilometre round trip to Tops on Kao Noi. Does sterilising them stop them crapping everywhere; running in and out of traffic; biting people; spreading diseases; disturbing the peace at night? 2 1 1
Popular Post RichardColeman Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 14 minutes ago, mikebell said: I passed sixty dogs on the 2 kilometre round trip to Tops on Kao Noi. Does sterilising them stop them crapping everywhere; running in and out of traffic; biting people; spreading diseases; disturbing the peace at night? We live in the same area, and I have to say there are about 60% less dogs now than before. That said, just one scares the toilet out of me. Should be, no owner, then put them down , or locked in a field until dead. I'd also put 1 year Thailand ban on all the people on here feeding the mutts too or make them responsible for all the hospital bills of every person they bite ! 5 1
Popular Post Lee4Life Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 While we all would like to see the aggressive soi dog problem go completely away, and it's easy to be negative in regards to them, I applaud the Animal Army's efforts! It would be great if there were more of you. 3
Popular Post G Rex Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 This is a small step in the right direction. I am a big proponent of responsible pet ownership. The glaring issue is that these soi dogs are not anyones pet. Neither are they a natural species in the Thai microcosm. In my opinion the answer is to cull these feral animals. The money and time spent on this project, and others like this, would surely be better if directed at humanitarian issues or even mental health awareness and help. 1 2
ivor bigun Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 my wife runs ,and in the hills a lot of the time ,she says that there are loads of these dogs even up there on the trails . 1
digger70 Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 2 hours ago, mikebell said: I passed sixty dogs on the 2 kilometre round trip to Tops on Kao Noi. Does sterilising them stop them crapping everywhere; running in and out of traffic; biting people; spreading diseases; disturbing the peace at night? No ,and it is a Waste of time and money . They could've spend that money to exterminate a lot more Soi dogs than 60 and make the place a lot safer . But hey this is Thailand they know best ,So they think. 2
Mr Meeseeks Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 17 hours ago, snoop1130 said: 3 of which need chemotherapy for TVT Why bother?
Popular Post DefaultName Posted February 17, 2022 Popular Post Posted February 17, 2022 Treat and release. These dogs will still be a problem for the rest of their lives and, by example, will train the next generations of pack members to be a problem too. I love dogs, most of my life I've had dogs, but a radical cull is the only real solution for the safety of humans - especially little humans. 5
natway09 Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 I have a much better & cheaper idea to get rid of most of ,,,,,,,,,,Oh, never mind
Harveyboy Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 14 hours ago, jacko45k said: Sixty..... there are more than that on the road at the bottom of my street some days. They can come do my neighbours dogs anytime.... cyanide please! mate i was going to comment the same its a pi## in the ocean..a cull is needed...
Stargeezr Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 60 dogs is not even a drop in the bucket. Keep up the sterilizing. 1
clivebaxter Posted February 17, 2022 Posted February 17, 2022 Just shows what a waste of time all this doggie do gooding is, 60 which can still attack and spread diseases. Only about another 4 million to go then
mikebell Posted February 18, 2022 Posted February 18, 2022 On 2/17/2022 at 8:30 AM, RichardColeman said: I'd also put 1 year Thailand ban on all the people on here feeding the mutts too or make them responsible for all the hospital bills of every person they bite ! Good idea but many of the dog feeders are Thai as they believe it is a way of making merit and a path to a better afterlife. Deporting them for a year may be a bit extreme though I do believe strongly in an eye for an eye. 1
Golden Triangle Posted February 21, 2022 Posted February 21, 2022 I've said it before, give me a licence to own a 9mm pistol & I will happily despatch as many as I can, horrible, noisy, smelly, disease ridden mutts. 1
itsari Posted February 21, 2022 Posted February 21, 2022 One dog with a large hole in its head . Then give it one more hole in the head 2
grain Posted February 21, 2022 Posted February 21, 2022 I recently spent a week in Pattaya, first visit for close to 3 years. The thing that made the biggest impression on me was the terrible stray dogs situation. Every soi I walked around had packs of the filthy things. During the day when they mainly slept it wasn't so bad, but from sunset on it became terrible. And dogsh*t everywhere. You really have to keep a keen eye out while walking...there must be an incredible number of people who pick up dogsh*t on their shoes and bring it back to their hotels/rooms. Sterilization of bitches helps but it's not enough, they need culling. Every stray dog caught and killed. There's no other solution, Thailand can't run a "rescue dog" plan like they have in Australia and elsewhere, nobody in their right mind, would want to bring one of these filthy dangerous diseased animals into their home. 1
Will B Good Posted February 21, 2022 Posted February 21, 2022 2 minutes ago, grain said: I recently spent a week in Pattaya, first visit for close to 3 years. The thing that made the biggest impression on me was the terrible stray dogs situation. Every soi I walked around had packs of the filthy things. During the day when they mainly slept it wasn't so bad, but from sunset on it became terrible. And dogsh*t everywhere. You really have to keep a keen eye out while walking...there must be an incredible number of people who pick up dogsh*t on their shoes and bring it back to their hotels/rooms. Sterilization of bitches helps but it's not enough, they need culling. Every stray dog caught and killed. There's no other solution, Thailand can't run a "rescue dog" plan like they have in Australia and elsewhere, nobody in their right mind, would want to bring one of these filthy dangerous diseased animals into their home. Estimated to be around 9 million stray dogs in Thailand......absolutley ludicrous situation.......but I would put my shirt on the situation either never changing or only ever getting worse.
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