For our CSPE action project we decided to go to the Dublin Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, (DSPCA). We decide to go there as we wanted to learn and see how our actions can jeopardise the life of other things like animals. We found that our trip fell under the concept of stewardship as we need to look after animals even though we do not own them.
Animals have rights, like humans they are a living species and deserve to be treated right. They can't talk and some can't function like humans but they have feelings. One of the main things we learned at the DSPCA is that all animals have feelings and they can be hurt emotionally as well as physically and sometimes to be hurt emotionally can be worse than being hurt physically.
When we arrived at the facility we could see that it was a place of happiness. We were greeted by our tour guide Lisa. She told us about the DSPCA and how it functions. She told us that the facility was founded in 1840 by the Risk Society and was inspired by the book 'Black Beauty'. The book shows that animals can feel pain both physically and emotionally. It takes two and a half million euro each year to run the facility and much of the money is raised by donations.
The DSPCA is run by the five R's - rescue, rehabilitation, rehoming, reuniting and release. People who work at the DSPCA will go out dressed in protective clothing to rescue animals in need of help. The animals would then come back to the rehabilitation centre to be inspected to see if they are sick or have an injury. If the animal is microchipped the owner, if found, would be contacted and told to collect the animal. If no owner is found the animal would be put up for adoption (- adoption fee is €165). Wildlife would be released back into the wild to enjoy the life that they were meant to live. All of these steps are run by the staff of the DSPCA. There are only 34 full time staff working. The others are volunteers.
We were told about a vulgar issue that goes on and is very hard to be stopped - puppy farming. Puppy farming is when female dogs are kept in horrific living conditions such as a small box with no sunlight only holes for air and a bowl of water. Male dogs are brought in and the two dogs are forced to breed even if they don’t want to. The mother dogs would give birth to the puppies and as soon as the next week would be forced to breed again, even though a female dog should only have one litter per year. The process would keep continuing until the inhuman people behind it stop. The puppies would be shipped over to other countries such as England in awful conditions. Many would die and sold at high prices - as much as six hundred pounds.
The police have now brought in something to try stop this - puppy passports. Each dog needs a passport which cost money to travel beyond the border. This has decreased the amount of puppy farming going on but it is still a huge issue in our society today.
During our time at the DSPCA we heard some stories about how animals are mistreated such as Oscar. A call came in from a man who saw some type of animal hardly moving in a field. The DSPCA team got to the field shortly after the call and found some type of animal hardly moving. The animal was so badly hurt that they couldn’t make out what animal it was. The animal was tied to a pole and his collar was so tight that the skin on his neck was broken and the fur had fallen off. The animal was rushed into the rehabilitation centre. The remaining fur was shaved off and he was put on a drip. The vets had no hope as he was so badly hurt they didn’t think he would make it. However he made a full recovery. All his fur grew back and Oscar is a beautiful looking shih tzu who now has a home with his new family and has started the better part of his life, the one he should have always had.
After our time talking to Lisa we went on a tour around the grounds. We saw pigs, dogs, cats, goats and donkeys. We all had an amazing time on our trip and we learned a lot of things, the main one being that all living things have feelings and deserve to be treated equally and to be treated correctly.
(by the 2R Reporting Committee - Alex Goggins, Robyn Malone, Aimee Moore)