I hope the rest of you on this site are
not dealing with this situation in your
community. A neighbour has approxmiately
60 cows, 1/3 of them with calves on
them. He turned them into an old pasture
in October and that is where they are
still. Prior to Christmas the
temperatures dropped to -42 here, they
had no feed, no shelter as the entire
quarter section has no trees. The ALERT
line was called, as were the RCMP.
The owner takes one large bale of hay to
these cattle every three or four days,
or he takes a few square bales and
tosses them out on the ground. Of course
only a few of the cows eat, the rest are
shoved away. The cows have eaten the
branches of all the trees along the
ditches adjacent to the property.
Yesterday one cow was down, and this
morning she is deader than a doornail
with coyotes all around her.
This property has 14 residences within
half a mile all but two are acreages, so
what image are they getting of the
cattle industry ?
The ALERT line was called again today,
contact numbers were left but nobody has
returned the call.
The ALERT line is supposed to be
directly connected to the SPCA livestock
inspectors, and either they don't care
or are so busy dealing with other cases
like this they don't have the time to
respond. The local RCMP will be
contacted again tomorrow.
The owner should be horse whipped and
banned from ever owning even so much as
a cat. Every one of us who has animals
in our care knows the challenges we are
dealing with in a winter like this one.
Regardless of the price, or whatever
hardship any particular farmer has,
there is no excuse for starving animals.
not dealing with this situation in your
community. A neighbour has approxmiately
60 cows, 1/3 of them with calves on
them. He turned them into an old pasture
in October and that is where they are
still. Prior to Christmas the
temperatures dropped to -42 here, they
had no feed, no shelter as the entire
quarter section has no trees. The ALERT
line was called, as were the RCMP.
The owner takes one large bale of hay to
these cattle every three or four days,
or he takes a few square bales and
tosses them out on the ground. Of course
only a few of the cows eat, the rest are
shoved away. The cows have eaten the
branches of all the trees along the
ditches adjacent to the property.
Yesterday one cow was down, and this
morning she is deader than a doornail
with coyotes all around her.
This property has 14 residences within
half a mile all but two are acreages, so
what image are they getting of the
cattle industry ?
The ALERT line was called again today,
contact numbers were left but nobody has
returned the call.
The ALERT line is supposed to be
directly connected to the SPCA livestock
inspectors, and either they don't care
or are so busy dealing with other cases
like this they don't have the time to
respond. The local RCMP will be
contacted again tomorrow.
The owner should be horse whipped and
banned from ever owning even so much as
a cat. Every one of us who has animals
in our care knows the challenges we are
dealing with in a winter like this one.
Regardless of the price, or whatever
hardship any particular farmer has,
there is no excuse for starving animals.
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