May 18 Reblogged
“These photos of Ramen Noodle are from an ongoing project of differently abled pets I started in 2010. I began to wonder more about the lives of these animals and their owners. These are people who’ve opted to keep their animals alive, to change diapers, to buy apparatuses, to put in extra time, money, and effort to make their friends comfortable.
“I want to show how interesting these animals can be and share some of their amazing stories of survival and recovery. Some of the animals are rescued from abuse and neglect, some are a family pet that has gotten older, or been in an accident. So far all of my stories have ended in what seems to be a very positive symbiotic relationship between animal and owner, and Ramen Noodle is certainly one of these.
“Ramen Noodle was born with four legs. He was probably a mill puppy, inbred to achieve his tiny size. When he was eight months old, his first owner brought him to the vet, with a broken arm. Unfortunately the owner did not properly care for his injury, she didn’t come back to get the cast checked until nine weeks later. At that point, to no ones surprise, the arm was nearly eaten away by gangrene. By then, Ramen Noodle was listless and refused food. It was a wonder he survived.
“After weeks of intensive care, the owner was given the option of signing him over to the clinic or being reported to animal services. ‘I really don’t think his first owner wanted to hurt him. I think they just didn’t understand all the care that goes into having an injured animal,’ recalls Jaime Salata Van Tassel, who had been his clinic caretaker. She adopted him, have already been won over by Ramen while acting as his lead nurse and caring for him in her home.
“A second injury cost Ramen his other front leg, this time he jumped of a chair and broke the bone. Again, one of the effects of interbreeding dogs for small size is week bone, so his single teacup poodle arm broke so badly it could not be mended. While Jaime was devastated, Ramen surprised everyone and bounced back. Three weeks later, he was learning to walk on two legs.
“Ramen gets around the house on his hind legs. I’ve watched him run at full-speed for toys, and to play with other dogs, he is essentially unrestricted despite his lack of front arms. Like any young, happy dog, he loves attention and food.
“Ramen and Jamie show us that a dog can be just as happy as any other pet after an amputation. Jaime can provide real perspective as the owner of a pet with disabilities.
“‘Once they’re healed and they’re running, they never think twice about what happened to their arm,’ she says. ‘That’s how it was with Ramen Noodle and any amputation I’ve seen. Once the animal gets through the pain and the medication and the understanding that they have to do things a little different, it’s like it never happened.’”
This. This is why it’s important not to support the breeding of so called ‘teacup’ dogs.
There is no such thing as a ‘teacup’ puppy or dog. They are not recognized by the American Kennel Club (AKC) as an actual breed size. The smallest breed size recognized are the toy breeds. ‘Teacup’ dogs are achieved when backyard breeders breed toy dogs together and then pick the runts of the litter and breed those runts together to create tiny, sickly dogs. ‘Teacup’ dogs are nothing but sickly runts with a cute (‘teacup’) name tacked on, sold for ridiculously high prices. They are scams, and only backyard breeders and puppy mills will breed for them. They come with many health problems and do not live very long lives.
The Teacup Puppy Phenomenon - The Sad Truth About “Teacup Dogs”
This is why I say breeding is a selfish act.
Feb 03 Reblogged
Jan 11 Reblogged
Oct 21 Reblogged
Hendrik Raven reacts as a baboon jumps towards him after raiding his car for food, near Cape Point on the outskirts of Cape Town, South Africa. Picture: Schalk van Zuydam/AP
Imagine being robbed by a baboon!
Sep 21 Reblogged
Sep 12 Reblogged
Make a stand against Nestea’s cruel tea!
Nestea continues to test possible health benefits of their tea on animals, even though the Food and Drug Administration doesn’t require any of these methods. In fact, the US and European regulators have publically stated that animal tests aren’t sufficient to prove health claims about food and beverages.
The experimenters for this company inject mice with toxic chemicals to destroy insulin-producing cells that cause for the animals to develop diabetes. They then force feed them tea ingredients before killing them. In other experiments mice were force-fed the product then had their leg muscles cut open and were finally decapitated. That’s not all - mice have been bred to suffer from brain damage and rapid aging and were locked in dark chambers and given painful shocks to their extraordinarily sensitive feet before being killed. This list goes on and will most likely continue without your help.
Say no to Nestea’s CRUELtea by refusing to buy Nestea until its maker ends its deadly tea tests! Drink only cruelty-free tea such as Arizona, Celestial Seasonings, Honest Tea, Lipton, Luzianne Tea, Snapple, Stash Tea, Tazo, Twinings and many more.
Take a few minutes to make a ruckus about this issue:
Click here to tell Nestea you don’t support their methodsReblog this post and spread the word on other social media to put pressure on this rich and successful company to get with the times.
It’s ridiculous that anyone would even think that Nestea could be good for you. Even the green tea drinks have high fructose corn syrup. The diet drinks have aspartame. This is completely pointless cruelty!






