Hi Mark,
thanks for your response. I agree that many people will get an animal by any means. There is only one way to make that more difficult although, sadly, not impossible. When my friend took over a pet shop, the first thing that she did was to stop selling animals. She found homes for those that she inherited and simply stopped as she felt it cruel to keep them in cramped conditions. I would stop pet shops selling pets.
I appreciate that it only addresses one area. The real problem are the backstreet breeders who only see cash signs. How can you stamp them out and wouldn't we all love to? It can often start with the simplistic attitude of
We wanted our cat to have one little in fairness to her. Sometimes that stops there and then but the more unscrupulous see it as a money earner, whilst pleading poverty in finding money to neuter. It is amazing how some disappear when the larger charities produce neutering vouchers to help with the financial burden.
I don't know if it was central CP policy but I recall a few years ago thatsome local CP branches would not have a collection can in any pet shop selling cats. They did not want to be seen to support that shop's practice. Personally I think this is a correct approach, unless the conditions in the shop regarding their cat care, attention and refusal to sell to anyone or do home checks was adequate and in place. My list would rule out every shop I know.
Hi Team Svartalfheim,
Can I call you team for short?
Could you enlighten me on two things as I honestly don't know the answer, so bear with my ignorance.
1. Are all registered breeders obliged by the GCCF (or similar body) to register the birth of
all cats or
only those that they wish to show or breed from?2. How many pedigree cats are bred in the UK per annum? I assume that there should be an idea (although not necessarily the final number) by the number who are registered with GCCF or similar bodies?
General.
Re-homing can never be an exact science insofar as uniformity of approach from rescues and nor should it. There need to be common denominators but common sense has to prevail. I know that can work both ways. I honestly believe it is one of the toughest jobs, if done properly, in cat rescue. I have never gone down this road but have seen the results of either no or totally inadequate home checks. Hindsight? No, not in the cases I speak about where conditions were such that warning bells should have been ringing like mad. Some of the worst is where re homing is a long way from the rescue and no check or a next to useless telephone check has been done. Everybody, without exception, wants to re home cats but
not at any price