profile-by-yu-juc

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Just Another Day By Ariel Chen The city of Palo Alto hires a goat herder to use goats to help control the weeds in the baylands and one day, all 60 goats got out. e employees at Palo Alto Animal Shelter with animal control drove over to the round up the goats. ey couldn’t find the goat herder or contact anyone. 59 of them were up a hill by the old dumps and one little baby goat sat in the middle of the road. A heavy woman with frizzy dark hair called out to it. It ran straight up to her and she cried out, “I want this! I want this goat so bad!” She and her co-workers drove up the hill with the baby goat and somehow surrounded the goats with orange construction fencing. When they finally found the goat herder, he whistled or did a weird goat call and the goats lined up and followed him. Jeanette and her co-workers were leſt in awe. Jeanette Washington and those working at the shelter are absolute- ly normal people you’d find off the street, but they are a part of a great cause. ey are not supreme veg- etarians or hippies who hate hu- mans and yell “save the animals” in front of processing plants. ey are actively helping animals in the real world by taking them in and put- ting them in a good environment. Jeanette has spent the past 15 years working at the shelter. She started as a volunteer as a young adult and now works part time. Before her time at the shelter, she has had multiple pets in her past. It started with a lab puppy who was sadly rehomed due to to family matters and aſterwards, the family adopted a shih tzu pup- py in her early teens. At the age of 13, Jeanette became responsible for a pit bull puppy. “She was a great, great dog. Very family oriented, but she was dog-aggressive, under- socialized, and not housed trained, but a great, great dog. It was my re- sponsibility to take care of the dog. I didn’t really know how to.” Aſter years of volunteering, a part-time job opened up and she applied for the position and she has been working at the shelter and with animal control to this day. “ey sent me to the academy for almost two weeks and the rest was pretty much hands-on train- ing, so it’s uh... you can’t be taught how to catch a dog. It’s trial and

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Page 1: Profile-by-Yu-JuC

Just Another DayBy Ariel Chen

The city of Palo Alto hires a goat herder to use goats to help control the weeds in the baylands and one day, all 60 goats got out. The employees at Palo Alto Animal Shelter with animal control drove over to the round up the goats. They couldn’t find the goat herder or contact anyone. 59 of them were up a hill by the old dumps and one little baby goat sat in the middle of the road. A heavy woman with frizzy dark hair called out to it. It ran straight up to her and she cried out, “I want this! I want this goat so bad!” She and her co-workers drove up the hill with the baby goat and somehow surrounded the goats with orange construction fencing. When they finally found the goat herder, he whistled or did a weird

goat call and the goats lined up and followed him. Jeanette and her co-workers were left in awe. Jeanette Washington and those working at the shelter are absolute-ly normal people you’d find off the street, but they are a part of a great cause. They are not supreme veg-etarians or hippies who hate hu-mans and yell “save the animals” in front of processing plants. They are actively helping animals in the real world by taking them in and put-ting them in a good environment. Jeanette has spent the past 15 years working at the shelter. She started as a volunteer as a young adult and now works part time. Before her time at the shelter, she has had multiple pets in her past. It started with a lab puppy who was sadly rehomed due to

to family matters and afterwards, the family adopted a shih tzu pup-py in her early teens. At the age of 13, Jeanette became responsible for a pit bull puppy. “She was a great, great dog. Very family oriented, but she was dog-aggressive, under-socialized, and not housed trained, but a great, great dog. It was my re-sponsibility to take care of the dog. I didn’t really know how to.” After years of volunteering, a part-time job opened up and she applied for the position and she has been working at the shelter and with animal control to this day. “They sent me to the academy for almost two weeks and the rest was pretty much hands-on train-ing, so it’s uh... you can’t be taught how to catch a dog. It’s trial and

Page 2: Profile-by-Yu-JuC

error. haha” At first, Jeanette had the im-pression that Animal Shelters were jail like places where they house animals just to kill them, but after volunteering and working on res-cues for some many years, Jeanette now knows the name of every sin-gle animal in shelter and loves ev-ery single one of them.There was a little cat was a runt named Geron-imo and when he was about to be adopted, Jeanette freaked out and said her goodbyes to Geronimo. “You be a good boy, Geronimo, you be a good boy. You be a good boy and you’re going to a good home.” Among the animals there are, of course, her favor-ites. Goliath is a pit bull that came to the shelter after he was found tied to a fencepost and nearly died of heatstroke. His previous owner and their friend were tried and are now not allowed to own animals. Over 4 months of “rehab” and bonding, Jeanette and Goliath fell in love and she brought him home. Now she has also has 3 chihuahuas, 3 cats, and a pit bull. The shelter is not an entirely

“no-kill” shelter, but they only put down the animals if they’re suffer-ing mentally or physically. Some animals don’t like the shelter life and they become depressed, stop eating, or become aggressive and it’s only a last resort to have them euthanized. When the shelter opens, strays and pets that can’t be kept are dropped off. Cats, dogs, and some rodents like rabbits and guinea pigs stay at the shelter un-til they are adopted. Sadly, some pets stick around a lot longer than others like Mrs. Murphy, an old cat who finally got adopted recently by

by a nice old lady. Mrs. Murphy was a slightly overweight tortoise-shell who was beloved byevery-one. She was already in her double digits and people tend to want to adopt kittens and puppies rather than the old timers. In her spare time, Jeannette wanders around the cages and plays with the cats, pets the dogs, and checks up on the little guys in isolation who are place there because they are sick or were recently picked up and can be a little violent with humans or oth-er animals. Some of these guys are pack-ages from people who try to drop off animals without being no-ticed. In the article, Shelter facili-ties packed; people dumping pets, Happy Tail’s Shelter in Illinois ex-periences overcrowding, “Recent-ly, one man stopped by and said he wanted to leave his cat. When he was told the shelter was full, he said that he would leave it outside anyway. And he did. ‘That really angers me, when people get to that point,’ Newman-Smith said. ‘We have more pets than responsible

Page 3: Profile-by-Yu-JuC

owners. Not to be rude, but that’s what’s going on.’” There’s a pond next to the shelter and a wildlife preserve and people have tried to leave domestic animals by the duck pond thinking that they would be fine living as wild animals. They’re usually found by the shelter and the facility currently has two wild hens and a pigeon. Jeanette said that some people have tried using do-mestic pigeons as homing pigeons. “Just like people like cats, there are some people that like cockatiels, hens, roosters, hamsters, rabbits. People do homing pigeons.”She’s also concerned about the “chihuahua phenomenon,” as she calls it. It’s a fact that the shelter has a huge number of chihuahuas because they make cute puppies and people keep letting their dogs

have litters even though people don’t like them anymore after they grow up, which leads to be-havior issues like biting, barking, and chewing things. Pit bulls also have this same problem. “If people just spay and neuter their animals, then shelters would not be overrun with, right now, chihuahuas and pit bulls.” “We’re always looking for vol-unteers. It’s only two hours of your time, but it makes all the differ-ence. We could always use people to walk dogs, do desk work, and help out with the animals. Granted we do have our time to give affec-tion to the animals, but it does get pretty busy here, so we are always seeking volunteers.” The shelter, in general, takes care of the animals and preps them

for adoption which includes neu-tering. They are also involved in a foster program where people take in injured or underaged animals for a while and then send them back to the shelter so they can be adopted. Jeanette was fostering a 3-legged pit bull until it can recu-perate, but in the end she adopt-ed him. He was found dumped in front of the shelter and his bones were broken and they had to am-putate his leg. He fitted right in with her chihuahuas and cats and is now a permanent member of the family as “Atticus” named after At-ticus Finch. “He’s a great dog, and it doesn’t even phase him that his back leg is gone.” In the article, “Student resi-dence going to the dogs (and cats),” 8 university students take care of

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Daisy, an American Eskimo dog; Dahlia, a turquoise cat; and Chi-Chi, a rabbit, who roam free throughout the Mount Allison University’s Animal House. The old university building was trans-formed into a foster home for an-imals who are awaiting adoption. The students live and take care of the pets and are responsible for finding them homes. On the east coast, Melvin Miller started a program that temporarily fos-ters pets with military owners who have been deployed and have to leave their pets in shelters or with friends who might not be willing to care for dogs and cats for over a year. Right now, the concerns of Jea-nette are to prep for the coming winter and the shelter is looking for blanket donations and toys for the animals so they stay nice and warm until spring. Jeanette plans to continue her work at the shelter and see all the animals get adopt-ed to responsible pet owners. Until then, she’ll keep picking up strays, she’ll keep talking to the animals, and she’ll keep laughing as she wanders through the shelter. ““The only experience I had were my own pets and volunteer-ing here”