Thursday, November 23, 2006




A Story of a Turkey...

By Karen Dawn At DawnWatch.com


During the 12-1 hour today, on Thanksgiving, Washington Post Radio broadcast a 3 minute piece I recorded about my meeting with the turkey Olivia. It was broadcast right in the middle of a call-in show where people were chatting about turkey cooking recipes. Perfect! I will paste the text below so you can read it.

Earlier in the hour, before my piece was broadcast, I heard a caller, warm and friendly, tell the hosts that she had seen footage from the Butterball turkey plant (check out http://www.goveg.com/feat/butterball/butterball.asp ) and was horrified by the treatment, so she was cooking veggie pot pies this year, and adopting a turkey from Farm Sanctuary. You'll find a lovely article and a beautiful slide show about the Farm Sanctuary "Feed the Turkeys" and adoption programs at http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/16073776.htm. You can post comments on that page. Please do!

And here is a video from the turkey celebration at Animal Acres near Los Angeles:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SEDFwQB-GRQ

The caller on today's Washington Post Radio show made me realize what a wonderful opportunity we have to add a warm voice of compassion to the turkey talk on the airwaves today. If you are having a veggie feast, please consider making a friendly call about it when your local station takes callers. And please let me know if you do -- you will make my day!

Here's the text of my Olivia piece broadcast on Washington Post Radio. It would be great if Washington Post Radio got some notes of appreciation. Positive feedback for animal friendly coverage encourages more of it. The station takes comments at comment@washingtonpostradio.com
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At Thanksgiving, I remember Olivia. I met her in the year 2000 at Poplar Springs farm animal sanctuary near Washington DC. Having fallen for Babe, the movie star, I thought I was there to meet the pigs. But Terry, the sanctuary owner, started our at the turkey coop.

Terry opened the gate, and introduced Olivia. Olivia had been living on a turkey factory farm till Hurricane Floyd wiped out it. Ironically that hurricane saved her from a particularly gruesome death; turkeys are not covered under federal Humane Slaughter laws.

Olivia hobbled through the gate – "hobbled" because the ends of her toes had been cut off. That's standard practice on farms where jam-packed birds sometimes attack each other. For the same reason the end of her beak had been seared off. That procedure is painful, since turkeys use their beaks to explore for food, so they are loaded with nerve endings. But Terry explained that it is cheaper to hack off the ends of toes and beaks then to give animals enough space.

I was sitting cross-legged on the grassy hill near the coop. To my surprise, Olivia limped in my direction. She came close enough for me to reach out and touch her – gingerly. She moved further in, and I could pet her. It was surprisingly like petting my dog.

I reached my fingers under the outer feathers on her back and could feel a layer of soft down underneath. I had only ever felt that down in luxury pillows. How odd, and lovely, to feel it warm, on a living being.

Within a couple of minutes, Olivia had edged herself into my lap! I continued to move my fingers through her down. She lay her head in the crook of my elbow. She fell asleep. I fell in love.

And I adopted her. I couldn't take her home, but her photograph has been in the middle of our Thanksgiving table, surrounded by a vegetarian feast, for the last five years.

Olivia showed remarkable longevity for a modern turkey. Bred to be deformed with a grotesquely huge chest with lots of 'white meat', she'd been too weak to stand when she had arrived at the sanctuary. But apparently a home with space to move, grass to enjoy, sunshine in which to bathe, and loving care, had given her the will to live. And live she did, happily, until last year when we received the sad news that the sanctuary's lovely little turkey ambassador, my little ward, had died of cancer.

This year we are heading to a local farm animal sanctuary to adopt another rescued turkey. We'll add a new photo to our Thanksgiving table arrangement. But Olivia’s will stay in the center. She changed our Thanksgivings forever, and nobody can ever take her place.
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Wishing all a wonderful Thanksgiving,
Karen Dawn
Dawnwatch

Monday, October 23, 2006





A good friend of mine, one of the nicest people I know, has her cat, Darby Dawn in a contest. Could you all take a few minutes of your time to vote for her?




http://www.animalattraction.com/PhotoContest.asp?PhotoID=6926


Thanks

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Sunday, September 24, 2006





Don't Let Halloween Bring a Scare!

Witches, bats, and scaredy cats
Halloween is a great holiday for kids, but it can be hard on pets if you don't take some precautions.

Keep your pet safely indoors, away from noisy groups of small ghouls and goblins. And keep pets away from the door where they can accidentally escape as you open the door for trick-or-treaters.

If you have a black cat, you have a special problem. The mythology about black cats being related to witches can lead strange people to do strange things to them. Even kids who mean no harm may yell when they see a black cat -- scaring the cat much more than the cat scares them.

Pet costumes are the latest Halloween craze. Who can resist dressing up their pet in those cute little hats and witches capes? But make sure your pet can move freely and won’t stumble over a costume that hangs to the ground. And never tie anything around his neck that can choke and strangle him. Opt for a fancy collar instead. Let your pet be the judge. If he struggles and is uncomfortable, then maybe it would be best to let him stay dressed as a Corgi rather than a ghost!

Candy can make a pet sick or may be lethal. Chocolate contains a stimulant called theobromine, which can make dogs very ill, and could even cause death if consumed in enough quantity.

If you want to treat your pets, stock up on dog biscuits or catnip toys.
If you suspect your pet has gotten into a potentially poisonous substance, call your veterinarian immediately! Have the telephone number to your local emergency animal hospital readily available, as well as the number for the national animal poison control center.

Animal Poison Control Center: (888) 426-4435

Have a safe and Happy Halloween!

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Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Sunday, August 27, 2006




Cats are wonderful! Here are 3 of mine.

Please sign my petition regarding a very sick 13 year old boy who set fire to a cat. It had to be euthanized. The petition asks for accountability and treatment.

Thank you.

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/112291305



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Thursday, July 20, 2006



Yesterday evening a terrible storm come through.

With 80 mile an hour winds!

It was very unexpected. Usually, I keep this link up on my computer, and watch what is going on with the weather.

http://www.crh.noaa.gov/forecast/MapClick.php?CityName=Saint+Clair&state=MO&site=LSX

There was no indication until it was upon us. I had just gotten out of a nice relaxing shower. The first thing that clued me in was the lights started blinking. I looked out the window and it looked like it does when a tornado is coming. (I think they did have one in De Soto, not to far from here.) The trees and shrubbery, which are plentiful here, were whipping back and forth like there weighed nothing. All of a sudden there was a strong gust that seemed like it wanted to pull the bushes from the ground. A lawn chair went sailing past the window! (In my heart I know this is when my tree went.)

The good news first, we are all ok, humans and pets. Sadly, one of my beloved trees didn't fare so well. It was a giant old tree, in front of my house. Most of the branchs came down. Many of them were blocking the highway. The police and fire department were here to cut away some of the branches blocking the highway. Then MODOT, to bulldoze the larger tree limbs back on my property.I hope my tree, the majority of which is still standing, makes a comeback. Time will tell.

Obviously, we do have power. We are so lucky. Many, 480,000 from what the radio says, don't. It is supposed to be 102 degrees today with heat index values as high as 114. I pray for the elderly and pets.

I have one favor to ask. As you all go about the day, say a prayer for the people and pets of the St Louis area who are left without power on this the hottest day of the year. I know there will be some who won't make it. There always is.

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Monday, July 03, 2006



I want to wish everyone a safe & happy 4th of July!

Spooky

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Monday, June 12, 2006



Today I read something that blew me away. I am a fervent supporter of spay/neuter. It is my hope after reading the following, you will be too.... Helter ShelterPublished: Sunday, June 11th, 2006 BY TY PHILLIPS BEE STAFF WRITER It is early morning at the Stanislaus County Animal Shelter. And for you, the animal care specialist, the day opens in minor chords.You walk to the computer and print out the list of dogs that fill dozens of the agency's kennels. You sit there with your coffee, highlighting in yellow marker the ones that have been here for five days. They've all got a story.Someone stopped loving him. No one ever loved her. He got too big. She started chewing on sprinklers. He bit a child. Her owner is out of town, and the house sitter noticed the dog got out but didn't bother to call the shelter. Whatever happened, it doesn't matter now: Their time is up.You move to the first noisy cage. As you open the door, a few dogs try to escape, while others cram themselves into the far corners to avoid you. Everyone on the outside says the animals have no idea what's coming, but you've seen too much proof to the contrary. Yes, on some sad level, they know.You squeeze into the cage and slip your leash, your noose, around the neck of one. You lead him back to the gate and open it just enough for you to squeeze through. You pull his head closer to the gate, and get ready. Then you jerk him out quickly and slam the door so the others don't get out. He's scared and whimpering, looking around frantically, but he does what he's told and follows you, faithfully, to the end of the line.The killing room is a large, cold place with a small row of metal cages along one of the concrete walls. There's a large, stainless-steel table in one corner, holding syringes, needles and bottles of tranquilizer and Fatal Plus, a solution of sodium pentobarbital that usually kills within seconds.As a co-worker readies the syringe, you're kneeling, holding the dog still, cuffing one leg with your hand. Sometimes you have to fight them. Sometimes the battle is so fierce, you resort to forcing them between a gate hinged on a wall, immobilizing them long enough so you can get the needle in.But not this time. This one's calm. He trusts you. He even gives you his paw: He's obviously someone's pet. So you stroke his head softly as the co-worker finds a vein. Then, just like that, he melts in your arms. You grab his paw again and drag his limp body to a corner.One by one, you lay them out on the cement floor. One by one. Though county records show roughly 15,000 animals are killed each year at the shelter, it's a number, like eternity, that defies comprehension. But when one considers the solitary act of each animal death, and the people who do the dirty work, the number 15,000 comes into better focus. One death is a tragedy; anything more than that is just a statistic.On this morning, and every morning, there will be about 15 to 20 of these canine executions, not counting the ones that come in throughout the day that are injured or unadoptable. As you walk to the cages to retrieve another, the anger swells inside you. Because you know most of this daily ritual easily could be avoided. Spay and neuter, people, you say to yourself.Spay and neuter!Time runs out on a mother pit bull and her puppies. When she showed up here last week, your only hope was that she wouldn't give birth before her five days were up. But she did.You hardly could stand to watch her care for her pups, licking them, dragging them around to protect them. Finally, you gave in and fed her treats, telling her, 'That's a good girl.'Because, sadly, you knew all her efforts were in vain. This day always comes. Once you've got them all gathered in the room, you put her down first. Because you've learned the babies cry when they're injected, and that only adds stress to the mother.One by one. One after another. You stack the singles into piles. You load the piles into 55-gallon barrels. You push the barrels into the walk-in freezer, where rows and rows of barrels fill completely about twice a week. The barrels are emptied into trucks. It's like a factory here. And they call this a shelter?The stench of death permanently haunts the air: It's a dull fragrance you won't forget the rest of your life. Someday years from now, you'll be served food at a restaurant, and something will trigger the memory of that awful smell. Just like that, the meal will be over. You wash your hands incessantly; trouble is, what you're trying to clean doesn't go away with soap and water. That would take a psychologist, better than the one you have.An hour into it, you're nearing the last of the morning's kill. Next up is an adorable pop-eyed Chihuahua you had thought someone might claim. Or adopt. You start for her, but then you make a grave mistake: You look into her eyes. In a flash, your mind acknowledges that this is a living, breathing thing. Damn dog, now she's under your skin.Suddenly, you can't bring yourself to do it. Not this one. Your back yard already brims with the dogs and cats you've personally spared over the years, and there's simply no more room. So, you sneak her off the list and move her to another kennel. Your day off is tomorrow, and you just put it out of your mind. That's all you can do.Now, through the bars, you spot the big mongrel. You squeeze into the cage, and he moves away. He's scared and hungry; he's not the alpha male in this lot, so he hasn't eaten in five days. And who knows what he went through before he ended up here? So you kneel and call to him in a pleasant voice. Now he's wagging his tail because he thinks you're going to rescue him from this awful place.You get him outside and pet him to try to keep him calm. But he's excited, jumping up and down, because you helped him out of the chaos. You're his friend now; he'll follow you anywhere. So you lead him toward the room and he trots along happily.But halfway there, something shifts in him. You figure he's starting to smell that stench coming from the freezer. Yes, on some level, they know. He starts jerking his neck back, usinghis front legs to try to pull you back. The more you fight him, the more he realizes he should fight. So you drag him the rest of the way.Once you get him into the room, he's still fighting pretty hard. Your arms are getting tired. To get him to the table, you both trip over piles of dead dogs that now cover the floor. Finally, you get him stopped. The soft talk helps a little, and you're able to hold him still enough for the co-worker to find a vein. Once it's in, you let go. He moves away, woozy. They don't always die immediately. He wanders over to the corpse of another dog, and sniffs it a little before collapsing onto the floor.Spay and neuter, people!Leaving the room, you remember something you wanted to tell a co-worker. She's working alone in the cat room, putting down several dozen to start her day. You open the door, but the scene makes you forget what you wanted to say. There she is, sitting in a corner, crying, surrounded by dozens of dead cats that litter the floor. You make eye contact and get ready to say something, but she waves you off. It's a quick shake of the head that says, 'I'm fine; just leave me alone.' So you do. For those who do this for a living, it's mostly business as usual, life goes on. But there are occasional meltdowns. Not to mention divorce, denial, alcoholism, nightmares, antidepressants and all sorts of other ugly side effects.Walking away from the cat room, a simple question forms in your head, one that plagues you often throughout your days here: Does anybody care about animals? Anyone at all?Inside, you know there are thousands of people, just like you, who cherish their pets and treat them like family. Or even royalty. Working here, you rarely see those folks. They take care of their animals.Instead, you get the people who before business hours drop off a cardboard box of mangled kittens that were used to train pit bulls to fight dirty. Usually, they just toss the dead alongside the road somewhere, but for some reason, someone brought these in. You open the box to discover all but one are dead, and the only one alive is using its front legs to crawl toward you because its back legs are crushed.Or you get the people whose hobby is trapping feral cats and bringing them to the shelter. Once you asked about strange lines etched into the stick they use to hold the trap shut, hoping you were wrong. But, yes, like notches in a gun, that's how they track how manycats they've captured. It's a game to them.Or you get the man who brings in three kittens in an ice chest he placed in his trunk. In the middle of summer. When you open the lid, most of the horror has played out. You look up and scold him, asking him what he was thinking. And he shrugs. Not like it matters, he says, they didn't belong to anyone.Or you get the people who pull up in a moving van to drop off their family pet, saying that they can't take the dog with them and that they were unable to find the animal a home. They drive away, conscious clear, leaving the dirty work for you. Like you're some kind of sin-eater.And to think, you took this job because you wanted to save animals. Standing there at the kennels, lost in the flashbacks, you ask yourself again: Does anybody care?Anyone at all?A friendly face pops into your mind. Yes, there is one, you finally remember, trying to cheer yourself up. That poor young woman from the west side, the one who's been coming by twice a week for the last six months, looking for her beloved red Doberman pinscher. She keeps asking you, 'How long should I keep looking?' And you keep telling her, 'As long as your heart needs to.' Who are you to take away hope?And now, come to think of it, you did notice a nice-looking Doberman in the back kennels this morning. Nah, couldn't be, you think. He disappeared six months ago. But, needing a miracle, you go and check anyway. You look him over for a while. There is some red in his coat, but you're not certain.Cautiously, you have someone call the woman. Be sure to tell her we're not sure, you say, but let her know we might have her dog. An hour later, the woman is scurrying through the hall toward the back kennels. You can barely keep up with her.I think I hear him, she keeps saying excitedly. She keeps calling out his name. All you hear is what you always hear: the deafening din of scores of barking dogs. When you get to the back kennels, a lowered metal guillotine door is keeping everything outside. So you raise the door, and 80 pounds of frenetic dog come bounding inside, wildly running around the cage. You think to yourself, how would he even know she was coming? Yes, on some level, they always know.Just like that, this huge dog plasters itself against the chain-link fence, licking the fingers of a woman who's pressing herself against the fence, too. The scene is reminiscent of lovers on a beach. It's him, it's him, she keeps saying. All the while, this enormous dog is emitting the strangest high-pitched yipping you've ever heard, almost like a puppy.Overcome with emotion, the woman sinks to the cement gutter and starts sobbing into her hands. You sit next to her to offer some comfort. Then, before you know it, you're right beside her, bawling uncontrollably. She's crying because her life is complete again. And you're crying because, after working this job, your life never will be the same. Because for every animal that leaves with its owner, half a dozen are hauled off in garbage trucks.No, you think, wiping away the tears, this is no place for an animal lover.

Sunday, June 04, 2006



One more spooky time...

In 1980 I used to drive every Friday night from Phoenix, AZ to Riverside, CA. Then on Sunday back again. Anyway, one time on the trip to CA right after I passed Blythe, a semi, a pretty old looking one, like not any company truck but an independent, started pacing right along side me. It was dark, late and then he started shining a spotlight on me. It was summer, and I was young, wearing a tube top and shorts. I'd slow, he'd slow. I'd speed up, he'd keep up. (I had a VW bug.) After about 45 minutes of this, we came to a rest area. This a$$hole actually pulled in! Well, so did I. I'm way more brave than I can back up but it never stops me. Anyway, some other truckers made a comment to me as I was briskly walking by to confront this boogyman trucker. I told them what was going on and they said "lets go talk to this guy..." Well, "my new friend" saw what was happening and literally ran to his truck and took off. The other truckers were very nice. They followed me to my turn off and made sure I was ok.



Spooky times continued...

Heard of Tommy Lynn Sells? Aka Coast to Coast?
He was in the Mt Vernon IL area in 1987, which is where I was living at the time. In a little town called Ina, which is several miles away. This is what he did....
"Perhaps Sells most heinous crime, and that's saying a lot, was the quadruple murder of the Dardeen family in Ida, Illinois, on November 18, 1987. Befriended by the family and invited for a meal at their mobile home, Sells shot Russell Dardeen in the head in a nearby field and beat his wife and three-year-old son to death with a baseball bat. During the brutal attack Mrs. Dardeen gave birth to a girl, two months premature. Faced with the unique situation Sells simply turned the bat on the newborn and beat her to death also."
I remember that night well. It was very cold, I was with some friends. We were coming home from the store. As we were walking from the car to the house I remember looking up at the moon and thinking somewhere something horrible is happening. I insisted the doors and windows be locked and my friend Susan admitted she was feeling "creeped out" too. The guys tried to laugh it off. Later the murder was in the newspaper and on the TV news.



Spooky times in my life....

I have always been facinated by anything I can read on The Zodiac. With good reason.
The summer of 1972 my husband Phil and I went to Lake Berryessa. I was 20, he was 25. We were not exactly rolling in money. We were camping out, sleeping in the back of an old station wagon we'd bought for things like camping. It was about 3:00 a.m. and we'd been sound asleep. I came awake to a very bright light. It was a car that had driven up the little dirt road to where we were camped. It was sitting behind us a bit with the bright lights on. I have never been so terrified before or since. Something deep inside me said if I didn't move and move fast we were dead. To this day I believe the deciding factor in our survival was a combination of me, moving at lightning speed over that back seat to open the door and Phil's dad's dog Dexter, a black lab who had been sleeping in the back seat. Dex charged out of the car snarling and growling. Still, the car remained for a moment, then backed down the hill excruciatingly slow. Almost insultingly slow. It backed down the hill, pulled on the highway, which at 3:00a.m. was deserted and dark, and sat as if to contemplate the situation. Or maybe to engrave in his memory our likeness for the future...? Then the lights blinked high/low...high/low. The car slowly drove off.
I was shaking. Even after I made Phil drive to a paying campground with cabins and we were locked inside I was still shaking. I fell asleep when dawn broke.
To this day I believe we almost met The Zodiac.

Friday, June 02, 2006



It's the weekend. Again. I hope everyone has a good one.

Spooky

Saturday, May 27, 2006