By Marilyn Hoole | PROJECT LEADER
GLOBALGIVING REPORT – JUNE 2024
HELP ALLEVIATE MISERY FOR ANIMALS IN CAPE TOWN
Dear TEARS Animal Rescue Supporters on the GlobalGiving Platform
Without funding for companion animal population control and disease management in low-income communities, there will be untold negative consequences for vulnerable pets, and indirectly, for people too. Thanks to our donors, TEARS Animal Rescue is able to provide these life-saving services to the Deep South of the Cape Peninsula, and our outreach project in the impoverished communities of Vrygrond (Capricorn) and surrounding areas bears testimony to our efforts.
In collaboration with AfriPaw Animal Welfare, monthly Pet Clinics are held at Capricorn Primary School and these clinics have become very popular with local residents, who, on the second Saturday of every month, gather in big numbers to have their pets attended to by our veterinarians and animal health technicians. As per our veterinary protocol, every pet owner has to agree to have their pet sterilised, and these pets are collected by our mobile clinic drivers and taken to our clinic, a distance of 18 kilometres away, and then returned to their owners the next day. Spayathons are held weekly, and every Wednesday companion animals from Vrygrond, identified by AfriPaw ambassadors, are fetched by our mobile clinic vans and transported to our TEARS Clinic. In this way, we can sterilise +- 60 Vrygrond animals at a time, alternating between dogs one week and cats the next week, while continuing with our sterilisation efforts in other communities too.
Despite these concerted efforts, working tirelessly with AfriPaw to control the overpopulation of pets in the greater Vrygrond area, we are faced with an overwhelming pet homelessness crisis, with countless stray, starving animals roaming the streets, while many others are surrendered as their owners cannot afford to feed them or care for them properly. As part of our outreach, we do provide pet meals for hungry pets, and deliver well over a thousand meals per month, as part of our Feed Hungry Pets Programme.
The only way we can tackle the devastating reality of pet overpopulation and homelessness is through mass sterilisation and enforcement of the City of Cape Town By-Law, which states that all domestic pets must be sterilised by the age of six months unless a breeding permit is obtained. This is where we are calling on you, our valued donors to stand by us and help us to fight the scourge of over-breeding, which results in misery and ultimately death for thousands of helpless community animals.
Spaying and neutering is more than a medical procedure; it's a compassionate solution to a crisis. Pet overpopulation leads to countless kittens and puppies being born into hardship, and our goal is to break this cycle and make a significant stride toward addressing the heart-breaking issue of pet homelessness.
By sponsoring a sterilisation, you become a direct force for positive change. Your contribution enables us to provide no-cost spay and neuter services to pets in the underserved communities of Vrygrond.
Please consider donating towards our lifesaving work; your generous support plays a vital role in helping us give vulnerable companion animals a second chance at a happier life. Here’s to changing the world, one vulnerable pet and pet owner at a time.
With heartfelt thanks for your generous support and caring.
MARILYN HOOLE
PROJECT LEADER
TEARS ANIMAL RESCUE DIRECTOR AND CO-FOUNDER
09.06.24
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