Thursday, April 7, 2011

Cairns Council Impounded animals: wishing they had a microchip!

Check out this list below of pets currently impounded by Cairns Regional Council animal control officers.  Most of these pet's owners are probably looking for them now: it would be much easier if they had a microchip and an ID tag.  Don't let your pet end up lost and unidentifiable.
Throughout April we are offering discount microchipping at only $30 with either desexing or vaccination, or alternatively a free ID charm with microchipping: read the promotion.  Please phone for an appointment today on 4032 9999 or visit our website : Cairns Veterinary Clinic 
 
309910.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
31/03/2011 03:40 pm
Location Found:
Monterey ST KEWARRA BEACH
Description of Animal:
White Kelpie tan patch female
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309910
309912.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
31/03/2011 03:44 pm
Location Found:
Mulligan ST MANOORA
Description of Animal:
Domestic shorthaired ginger cat
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309912
309919.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
1/04/2011 11:05 am
Location Found:
Davis CL MANOORA
Description of Animal:
male Ginger Cat with collar and bell
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309919
309926.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
3/04/2011 12:10 pm
Location Found:
Newby CL EDMONTON
Description of Animal:
Black Male cat
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309926
309931.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
4/04/2011 01:00 pm
Location Found:
Highleigh RD GORDONVALE
Description of Animal:
Cattle Dog, Tan, Female
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309931
308936.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
4/04/2011 02:12 pm
Location Found:
Reef ST PORT DOUGLAS
Description of Animal:
Cat domestic short hair in good condition found in Reef Street Port Douglas
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 308936
309940.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
5/04/2011 03:00 pm
Location Found:
Wolff ST EDMONTON
Description of Animal:
Cat, Grey Tabby
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309940
309937.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
5/04/2011 10:30 am
Location Found:
Cherry CL MOUNT SHERIDAN
Description of Animal:
Staghound Cross, Female, Tan, Choker Chain
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309937
309939.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
5/04/2011 11:00 am
Location Found:
Hyacinth CL EDMONTON
Description of Animal:
Cat, Male, Grey Point
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309939
309938.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
5/04/2011 11:30 am
Location Found:
Glen Boughton ST AEROGLEN
Description of Animal:
Shepherd Cross, Male, Sable
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309938
309934.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
5/04/2011 12:00 pm
Location Found:
Davis CL MANOORA
Description of Animal:
Female Tabby Domestic Cat
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309934
309945.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
6/04/2011 01:12 pm
Location Found:
Yates CT WHITE ROCK
Description of Animal:
male entire Staffy, Tan
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309945
309946.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
6/04/2011 01:18 pm
Location Found:
Sidlaw ST SMITHFIELD
Description of Animal:
Female Chihihua, Tan
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309946
309951.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
6/04/2011 03:05 pm
Location Found:
Supply RD BENTLEY PARK
Description of Animal:
Staffy Cross, Brindle, Female
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309951
309952.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
6/04/2011 05:00 pm
Location Found:
Lobelia CT MOOROOBOOL
Description of Animal:
Pug, Desexed Male, Fawn and black muzzle
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309952
309958.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 01:10 pm
Location Found:
Bruce HWY EDMONTON
Description of Animal:
Female Bullmastif X, Tan
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309958
309960.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 01:39 pm
Location Found:
Dove CT BAYVIEW HEIGHTS
Description of Animal:
female Cattle dog X, tan and white
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309960
309959.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 01:43 pm
Location Found:
Dove CT BAYVIEW HEIGHTS
Description of Animal:
desexed male Poodle X, Black
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309959
309962.jpg Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 01:52 pm
Location Found:
Sophie CL BRINSMEAD
Description of Animal:
Cat, Choc Point, Male, Red Collar
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309962
309965.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 03:45 pm
Location Found:
Poolwood RD KEWARRA BEACH
Description of Animal:
Staffy, Female, Brindle
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309965
309955.jpg Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 11:30 am
Location Found:
Perkins ST MANOORA
Description of Animal:
Boxer Cross, Tan, Female
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309955
309956.JPG Date Impounded: Time Impounded:
7/04/2011 12:47 pm
Location Found:
Alfred ST MANUNDA
Description of Animal:
female Siamese Cat, Choc point
Contact: 4044 3044 and quote CCC ID No. 309956

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Cairns Vet offers discount microchipping through April

Cairns Vet Clinic, Aeroglen Vet Surgery and Gordonvale Vet Surgery are offering discount microchipping with either vaccination or desexing throughout April. Microchipping is really important to protect your pet against loss: this has been highlighted during the recent Queensland Floods where hundreds of pets were lost.

Cairns Vet: "Tag and chip your pet to help them find their way home."

Cairns Vet Clinic also recommends having a collar as well as a microchip.

As a consolation to people who don't need their pet vaccinated or desexed this month but still want to microchip them, we are giving away free ID charms with microchipping (instead of the disount). Check these out at Cairns Vet Clinic website promo page.

Or a free bling pet charm to everyone who is microchipping their pet at Cairns Vet!

Cairns dog micochippingCairns vet microchipping promoCairns Cat microchipping

Save over 40% on microchipping OR get a free charm with this special offer at Cairns Vet Clinic and branches throughout April.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Cairns Cats Dinner for Snakes

Cairns Snake catcher David Walton has reported a surge in snake attacks on Cairns cats.  Snakes are common in the rainforest around Cairns.  If your property is close to bushland, parks, creeks or farms snakes are likely moving nearby at night.  Snakes will find your property more attractive if there is plenty of shelter from plants and long grass, and particularly if there is food in the form of rats, wildlife or birds including poultry and cage birds.  Spilt feed from pets like birds, poultry and horses also encourages rats and thus snakes.
Minimise the snake risk around your house by keeping an area with short grass or paving around the house (if trees hang over your deck, window or roof snakes will feel welcome) and keep you cat inside, at least at night: both cats and snakes are nocturnal so its common they meet at night.
Many of the Cairns pets which go missing (often presumed stolen)are taken by snakes, or suffer tick paralysis or car accidents.  Indoor cats miss most of this excitement and thus often live longer.  Read more below or read the original article at the Cairns Post
Also check out this amazing video of a huge snake which recently ate a pet cat!
 
 

Cat-killing pythons on the rise in Cairns

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

© The Cairns Post

 

LOCK up your moggies - cat appears to be the flavour of the month for the Far North's pythons.

About nine felines have been consumed in backyards across Cairns in the past five weeks.

The culprits are scrub pythons, hungry for prey that has been flushed out of the city’s rainforests and bushy areas because of heavy rainfall.

Cairns Snake Removals operator David Walton said he had never seen as many attacks as there had been this month.

Most of the snakes that have consumed cats are more than 3m long.

Mr Walton said as snakes were nocturnal hunters, owners should keep their pets indoors at night.

Dr Dallas McMillan from the Cairns Veterinary Clinic advised owners to make their yards as unattractive to snakes as possible.

Hunger pangs: This scrub python had to go without yesterday when professional snake catcher David Walton stepped in to save a cat as a potential meal. Picture: TOM LEE


Cairns Cats which at risk of Feline AIDS virus (FIV)

Feline AIDS virus (FIV) in cats
Feline Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV), the cause of Feline AIDS is a significant problem in outdoor cats worldwide.  The deadly virus has many similarities to HIV, the cause of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in people, but there is no risk that humans will catch feline AIDS.  FIV is spread a little more easily than HIV: cats are often infected by bites, grooming as well as sexual activity as FIV is present in significant amounts in saliva, unlike HIV.
 
Infection prevalence of FIV in Cairns Cats
FIV is surprisingly common in outdoor cats: while it only affects 2-3% of domestic cats worldwide, when tests are done on at-risk cats the incidence of infection can be 15-25%.  I estimate the prevalence of FeLV infection in all outdoor Cairns cats to be around 10%, but no formal survey has been done.  Vets tend to only test when they already suspect infection in at risk cats.  The at risk cats include:
  • outdoor cats
  • Stray cats
  • cats with bite wounds
  • cats exposed to infected animals
  • Sick cats
Preventing FIV infection in cats
The good news about Feline AIDS Virus is that it is largely preventable by keeping your cat inside where it can't be exposed to infected cats: and if your cat does go outside there is an excellent vaccine available from your vet. 
Because this virus requires close contact, only outdoor cats (or partly outdoors: eg only out during the daytime, or "never leaves the yard"... Remember other cats will roam into your yard and attack your cat!  Its amazing how many cats show up at vet clinics with abscesses from cat fights and are described as indoor cats!) or those in contact with other cats need vaccination.
 
Cairns cat vaccination guidelines.
If your cat is indoors but boards at a cattery, it won't need FIV vaccine, just the normal F3 or F4 cat vaccine for the highly contagious Cat Flu and Feline enteritis infections.  All cats should be vaccinated for these diseases as they are easily spread and cannot be easily treated.
There is a similar infection called Feline Leukemia virus (FeLV): both these diseases are caused my retroviruses and there is no cure.  The risk factors for both are similar.  FeLV is a greater risk to kittens and causes a high fatality rate within a couple of years of infection.  FIV is a danger to cats of all ages but infected cats can live for many years with good veterinary care.
As infected cats can spread disease and are prone to serious infections from things like cat fights they must be kept indoors.  Special attention to dental hygeine and general health are important.
Feline Leukemia virus (FeLV)
FIV and FeLV can be heartbreaking infections: I've treated many older cats which struggled with health issues caused by poor immunity with FIV, cats which have died of Leukemia from FeLV infection, and even had to recommend whole litters of kittens be put down because they had FeLV and would die young and possibly spread the disease.  Some owners have even adopted a cat with Feline AIDS or Leukemia only for it to infect their other cat!
 
Vaccinating for FIV and FeLV takes 3 initial visits 2 weeks apart, then annual boosters.  The vaccines are generally safe and well tolerated.

Both FIV and FeLV are serious threats to outdoor cats.  If you haven't vaccinated your cat you should have them tested and vaccinated.  Contact your vet with any questions.
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Cairns' dangerous animals: are they really that bad?

The Cairns Post ran an interesting article about the actual impact of dangerous animals in Cairns like sharks, crocodiles and stingers on human fatalities, pointing out that deaths are rare and you have more to be worried about from skin cancer and car accidents.  Stingers were identified as a real threat which has significant annual impact.
Similarly with pets, pet owners are often worried about some fairly rare events:

Common fears of Cairns pet owners.

Some of the common concerns we get in Cairns are:
Snake Bites
Spider Bites
Malicious poisoning
Theft of dogs

Common causes of Cairns pet losses and deaths
While all these are possibilities, they are surprisingly rare in Cairns (and many suspected cases are never confirmed).  Of course, you should take sensible precautions against these types of events, but for every 10 pets I've heard about which were "baited", 9 of them had hookworm or parvovirus, and likewise when people report their pet was stolen many of them have run away, and either got lost or found a new home.  Many of these would find their way home if they were microchipped.
Likewise, tick paralysis causes dozens of pet deaths in Cairns every year.  We are in a quiet time for ticks at the moment, but if we get a stretch of dry weather we can expect to see a peak in the number of paralysed pets, so be prepared.
So preventable causes of pet loss are more significant than the some of the more common concerns Cairns Pet owners have.
Wandering due to inadequate fencing, pets not being desexed, with the result pets are lost or hit by a car, or get tick paralysis are a major issue.  Many lost pets are found but cannot get back to their owner because they are not microchipped.
Make sure you cover the common problems first to keep your pet safe.

Dallas McMillan
Cairns Veterinary Clinic 
Read Cairns Vet pet advice and Pet news on the web.

Operators worried new shark movie might hurt Far North tourism

Daniel Bateman

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

© The Cairns Post

 

<strong>Killer of the deep:</strong> Shark attacks have caused 82 fatalities in Qld since 1847.

Killer of the deep: Shark attacks have caused 82 fatalities in Qld since 1847.

IT'S the stuff of nightmares: being stranded at sea after your boat has sunk and watching friends mauled and killed by a ravenous shark in front of your eyes.

This was the very real fate that befell two thirds of the crew onboard the New Venture, a trawler that sank 5km west of Broadhurst Reef, off the coast of Townsville, 27 years ago. There was only one survivor, skipper Ray Boundy, who was rescued on the swim to shore.

The tale seems tailor-made for a horror movie, so it should come as no surprise to find the sinking of the trawler was actually the inspiration behind The Reef, an Australian-made movie which opened in Cairns cinemas last Thursday.

Tourism operators are understandably worried about the effect the horror film, which bears the tagline “pray that you drown first”, will have on the Far North’s tourism industry. Director Andrew Traucki has assured there were far more dangerous things out there to worry about, such as cyclones.

It may be a difficult point to argue, following an attack on a female wakeboarder north of Newcastle last Wednesday, further adding fuel to the killer shark image.

But, realistically, just how dangerous are sharks in comparison to some of the other killers known to frequent our waters?

Read the full article at Cairns Local news, the Cairns Post

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Cairns Vet Puppy Preschool classes: enquire now

Cairns Vet Clinic and Gordonvale Vet surgery both run puppy preschool classes to help you train and socialise your pup.  These are a great way to
teach your pup some life skills and learn to deal with new situations.  In particular, it teaches young dogs that the vet clinic is a fun place to go, which means subsequent visits will be less stressful for both of you.

Read Cairns Vet pet advice and Pet news on the web.
 

Cairns Vet house calls: did you know we did this?

Cairns Veterinary Clinic house call services

We recently did a client survey and one of the frequent requests we got was to do house calls: this surprised us as we already do house calls!
House calls are great if your pet doesn't travel well, or you can't drive, or you have a whole litter of puppies.  Many clients particularly appreciate a house call when the time comes to put their faithful friend to sleep.
There are times a house call might not be suitable, such as when your pet is very unwell and needs hospitalisation, xrays or special equipment to treat.  We can usually advise you of this over the phone and make you an appointment.
Read more about Cairns Vet house calls

Please phone us if you have any questions about house calls on 4032 9999

Read Cairns Vet pet advice and Pet news on the web.