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ChinCare: Educating Chinparents
THE YEAR IN REVIEW: 2006,
2007

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2007 In Review
2007 was another very busy year for Matilde's Mission. Besides what
is listed in our Accomplishments,
we posted our charity on goodsearch.com,
contributed an article to Animal
Friends Croatia, and members of our board of directors sponsored
rescue chinchillas in New Zealand and England.
MM continued saving ranchies from being pelted, see
the 2007 Pet Homes For Ranchies Project for details and photos, and
we launched the entire International Chinchilla Rescue and Rehoming
Network (ICRN)
program to assist pet chinchilla rescues and the chins they serve.
The ICRN Project Leader
created an online animal handling course for animal disaster rescue
volunteers that will be used by ACT,
"Animal Crisis Team (ACT) is a not for profit (501(c)(3)
organization dedicated to providing first responder emergency services
to the companion animals in areas stricken by natural disasters. ACT
is committed to providing effective and organized immediate assistance
and care to animals in disaster areas within hours of the initial
disaster."
Our advising DVM, C. Glikis-Scott of the Birmingham
Veterinary Clinic in MI, offered verbal and email consultation
on several urgent and unusual cases that were sent her way, including
one of our biggest rescue projects of the year that involved giving
assistance to a herd of maloccluding chins; that story is told in
detail here.

2006 In Review
In 2006 we completed major updates and additions to the MM website,
continued our work with ranchies (see 2006 Pet
Homes For Ranchies Project for details/ photos!) and made
a landmark update to our History and Mission Statement:
"In July of 2006, MM initiated projects to include benefitting
pet chinchillas in need of rescue/ rehoming, as indicated by our accomplishments.
The International Chinchilla Rescue Network (ICRN)
program will be launched in January, 2007, and will include: helping
the public with pet chinchilla rescue/ rehoming contact
referrals, ICRN Program Grants,
educational and informative material (Tools
and Resources, Tips)
and the annual ICRN Applause
Award.
"The ICRN program is a continuation and expansion of the work
of IPCR
(International Placement
Coordinators for Chinchilla Rescue and Re-Homing), which
ran from 2003 until MM's ICRN
Program assumed responsibilities in 2006. IPCR had networked extensively
within the international chinchilla rescue community, assisting in
scores of cases (in Europe and nearly all 50 U.S. states) that
involved everything from routine rehomings to emergency rescue assistance."
Since 2004 there has been an alarming increase in the number of
cases of pet chinchilla neglect, abuse and homelessness. The scope
of the situation and proposed solutions are covered in ChinCare’s
“Let’s Home Those In Need
Before We Breed” and “The
Rescue Report.” In just one month, July 2006, IPCR counted 109 chinchillas
in need of rescue/ rehoming and those were just the cases brought
to their attention through their network, just one facet of the greater
chinchilla rescue crisis, as exemplified by one NJ rescue that took
in and placed 180 chinchillas for the year.

In 2006 Matilde’s Mission began its rescue outreach by helping
several chinchilla rescues across the U.S. We donated supplies,
assisted with veterinary care and neutering expenses, transported
chinchilla rescue overflow between states in the midwest so that overwhelmed
rescues could be relieved and chins could have better adoption opportunities
(photo of a pair of rescues
lounging and watching TV at the MM webmaster's during transportation
layover, carriers
set up prior to travel). Also see Accomplishments.
We networked among the public and the international chinchilla rescue
community, advising and coordinating placement for cases of homelessness,
hoarding, neglect and abuse. We campaigned for awareness and support
for the U.S. chinchilla rescue crisis on a popular pet chinchilla
forum and composed a document that was taken under advisement by one
New England state as a guide to pet chinchilla needs; this will hopefully
be used to institute better caretaking law. The entire MM BOD,
except our advising DVM, were personally involved with taking in several
chinchillas in need of rescue/ rehoming, some will remain with us
as permanent residents.
One example of MM's rescue outreach in 2006 involved a neglect
case with 20 senior chinchillas.
The result of a pet owner's careless backyard breeding, it began with
two young sisters who each had a pet chin (no pedigrees, these
chins should have been regarded as NFB)
that they allowed to breed indiscriminately until years later one
of the sisters had over thirty chinchillas in her basement at the
time she met her future husband. A few years later the couple wanted
to start a family and so they rehomed all the young chins on their
own, “through newspaper advertisements” before contacting chinchilla
rescue for help rehoming the remaining chins that averaged about eight
years old or more; this is senior status
in the chinchilla lifespan.
We were notified of this situation just before one of our interstate
trips to relocate MI chinchilla rescue overflow and so the first of
two visits was to pick up three bonded female seniors on our way out
of state. When we arrived and viewed the seniors' accomodations, we
were relieved to see that the cages were clean and they had food and
water. But that was all. Anyone with even the most elementary understanding
of chinchilla care
knows that chins require more: hiding places, ledges or shelves, chew
toys, hay, dust, exercise and some entertainment or distraction to
alleviate the tedium and stress of confinement. There were small,
full bags of both hay and dust in the chinchilla room but there was
no trace of either in or around the cages and the chins’ fur was glaringly
dirty, greasy and gross; even if those small bags were opened and
used there wouldn't have been enough hay or dust to accommodate twenty
chins.

Less than half the cages had the only chew toy accessible to these
chins: what had once been bright gray pumice blocks of about two inches
square were now small, brownish stones. The basement room where these
chins were kept was cool and that was good but inside those gray,
unfinished cement walls there was absolutely nothing happening; no
TV, no radio, nothing at all in their cage or external environment
to play with, see, hear or do. They simply sat day after day, staring
and huddled together. Sensory deprivation to creatures of such an
interactive nature and high intelligence
is utterly devastating, the degree of stress that years of paralyzing
boredom and inactivity produced was evident in the fur-biting to be
found on nearly every one of these seniors. We made recommendations
on this first visit that included suggesting TV or radio but a few
months later on our second visit conditions were identical.
We learned that the chins hadn’t had out-of-cage exercise time since
the owners had moved into the house three years before. Presumably
these chins had been given better care before that, to have made it
into old age, but at this point they were clearly temperamentally
fragile, bunched together anxiously in their cage corners with nothing
to relieve the pressure of wire mesh on their little feet. The cages
were all small, very rusted, mostly single-level and some weren’t
cages at all, they were actually carriers. One carrier with a hard
plastic bottom had a huge three-inch chunk gnawed out of the corner
that had been duct-taped over. There were no wheels except one that
was undersize and unsafe,
we were told that the others had been removed after a chin broke his
leg on it and required amputation. The chinchilla room door was kept
shut to keep out the couple’s two high-strung dogs, which occassionally
“got in and terrorized” the chins; the owners attributed the chronic
fur-biting to this although that would have been secondary to the
more immediate stress of unrelenting boredom and inactivity.
On this first visit we pointed out an obvious maloccluder; the chin
was emaciated, drooling heavily and clinging to her cagemate for comfort
and warmth. When we emphasized the urgency of getting this chin in
to be examined by a vet, the owner didn't seem particulary concerned
about the chin’s pain and distress and in fact seemed oblivious to
the seriousness of the situation, she then flippantly remarked that
if she took the chin in she'd just have her put down. Thankfully,
by our second visit this poor chin had been put out of her misery
but who knows how long she’d have lingered in that condition if we
hadn't arrived and insisted she receive immediate vet care.
The real kicker of the first senior pickup was yet to come, because
despite being specifically told that these senior chins were being
kept separate by gender, one of the three bonded females later gave
birth at the rescue; apparently she'd been put with the other two
females for the outgoing trip but had previously been with a male.
This female and one of her two kits died in the birthing process,
the chinchilla rescue worker who was caring for them picked up the
vet bills for the surviving kit who eventually had to be euthanized
as a result of an undeveloped intestinal tract. Allowing senior animals
to become pregnant goes beyond mere ethical irresponsibility, it’s
downright sadistic when one considers the risks imposed on the mother's
frail body. It was only out of concern for the remaining chins that
we maintained contact with the owners and made plans to remove more,
as many as we could get out of there.

Of the twenty seniors we had seen on our first visit, one had been
euthanized for malocclusion, three had been removed and by the time
of our second and last visit, three months after the first, we were
able to remove only eleven more because the wife refused to part with
the last five despite urging and reassuring on our part that they
would be given good homes.
The entire time that we worked to remove these neglected chinchillas
the owners' attitudes were haughty and antagonistic; while the husband
clearly saw the need to rehome them in anticipation of starting a
family, the wife regarded us with seething animosity. Both demonstrated
the attitude that their pets were regarded as objects or possessions
and at one point the wife attempted to harrass the chinchilla rescue
worker who took in the seniors from the first visit. This reflects
the hoarder
mentality, which occurs with people who accumulate more animals than
they can adequately care for and who then become obsessive, possessive
and adversarial at the prospect of "losing" them. This fact
of rescue/ rehoming work in general underscores the necessity for
using a surrender form
before accepting relinquished pets.
The MM webmasters don't negotiate with hoarders unless they’re willing
to relinquish all their chinchillas or at least agree to keep only
same-sex chins. In this case we thought we were doing the latter,
it was only after we’d loaded the eleven into our car that we discovered
that one of the remaining five that was being called “Louie” was actually
a female. At that point we didn't have the heart to strike an ultimatum
and bargain with the lives of the eleven who'd been removed from their
pergatory; hopefully since the couple is expecting their first child
they’ll have a reason to start exercising common decency and will
refrain from allowing their remaining senior chinchillas to breed.

We documented the second visit with pictures, these photos (in
bold and hyperlinked) show the chins' wretched, fur-chewed condition
despite the dust we put in their carriers to offer some immediate
relief during the ride back to the MM webmaster's: photo
1, photo
2, photo
3, photo
4, photo
5, photo
6. Notice the many frightened faces at this point; one female
was an anti-social biter and the former cagemate of the drooling maloccluder
had huge mats
covering her back that the owners had tried to cut out but which still
remained.
We ended up giving wet
bath to all but a few of these chins and the water ran dark and gritty
as they were soaped and rinsed. Here are photos from one bathing beauty
session: photo
1, photo
2, photo
3. There was caked filth on the ears (photo
1, photo
2) of most of them that had to be cleaned and we clipped
more mats off the maloccluder’s former cagemate. One chin actually
changed color after her bath, she went from yellow to white (see
photo above).
The eleven seniors recuperated with the MM webmasters for a few days
before being transported to another chinchilla rescue, their final
destination. We provided all the hay, dustbath, chew toys and TV
they could want during their stay with us: photo
1, photo
2, photo
3 and watching
movies on the laptop. We did behavioral
rehabilitation work with all of them, most were just timid and scared
but even the anti-social biter made great progress with only a few
days of loving care. One little beige boy especially needed cuddling,
we spent a long time holding and kissing him because he cried for
long periods at night. He was tiny, scrawny and severely fur-chewed
along his sides and back, it was just heartbreaking.

A happy ending: photo
1, photo
2, photo
3, photo
4, photo
5. Those photos were taken after all eleven were settled in
at the chinchilla rescue that gave them truly wonderful care and lots
of attention before they were placed into forever homes that had been
screened for responsible ownership and charged the necessary
adoption fee. Today, the thirteen seniors that we were able to save
are all experiencing a brand new life, a life worth living thanks
to the kindness of people in the chinchilla rescue community and MM's
donators who show
they care!
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