Tag

spay

Shake The North

[The end of the trip and the entirety of our equipment packed away, leaving nothing more than an empty firehouse with a few disused sets of equipment on the wall where hours ago had been 50+ dogs, three surgery tables, two prep tables, a recovery area, a pharmacy, a makeshift reception table, and a crowd of people.]

In 2015, I went on a trip with the Canadian Animal Assistance Team to two small communities in northern British Columbia (Fort St. James and Hazelton). With 11 team members during the first round and 12 during the second, we sterilized and vaccinated two hundred and eighty two animals, along with performing an additional one hundred and forty one vaccination/wellness exams. The time will always stay in my mind as an example not only of the amazing camaraderie in the volunteering veterinary community, but also the incredible generosity of the communities which hosted, housed, and fed us along with bringing us their animals. To see so many people come together from so many different walks of life and unite in the common goal of improving animal welfare was inspiring. As Mahatma Gandhi once said, “In a gentle way, you can shake the world.” Our last day in Hazelton made that clear for me.

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#6, F, Shaggy Brindle(Pregnant)

Kenny, our team’s MacGyver, uses rebar, barbed wire, and twine to set up a saline drip.

Back to Botswana. Both at the clinic and on the road we were working in less-than-ideal conditions, performing less-than-ideal surgeries. Weighing the risks against the benefits, particularly in communities where we knew we’d only be temporarily, with no option for aftercare or allowing a week or so to perk up prior to sterilization. I monitored more than a few hair-raising spays and neuters (and will never stop being in awe of the vets who not only performed those surgeries, but did so with a smile), but one that always sticks with me took place our last day of my first outreach, in Gumare. We had intended on only doing a quick morning there before hitting the road, but as anyone who’s ever worked in vet med knows (and with apologies to Robbie Burns), the best laid schemes o’ techs an’ vets gang aft agley. We met her in the late morning, one of those difficult cases of sterilization trips where one has to weigh lives in the balance and make a decision for the benefit of all. These are not easy decisions and these are not easy cases. But this is what we do.

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