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ChinCare: Educating Chinparents
MM promotes positive activism,
not AR extremism, see: Correcting
Misconceptions and Defining
Terms
PART TWO
|
CbC is an advocacy
message of MM. The views and opinions expressed here are that
of MM leadership and
are not necessarily the views
and opinions of others associated with/
assisting in MM projects or ICRN.
|
CbC, PART TWO (this page):
*Pet-Friendly
Resources (organizations; forums and chat rooms; books, magazines,
reference libraries, sites)
*Correcting
Misconceptions (stereotyping, "pelting neutral," sidetracking
fallacies, past knowledge for today's pets)
*The
Chinchilla Fur Industry (news, market report: chinchilla industry
council, news from croatia, hsus on fur farming)
*Killing
Methods (avma recommendation, electrocution, cervical dislocation)
CbC,
PART ONE:
*CbC: intro, 1 (pelter clubs), 2 (facts of pelting today), 3 (homing
ranchies, vivisection) 4 (quality of life, fur farms)
*VIEW THE FACTS! Pelting is NOT necessary OR profitable! Ranchers
agree, let's be FUR FREE!
CbC,
PART THREE:
*Positive Activism In Action (fur-free
sites: take action and research information, lobbying & letter writing)
*Defining (animal rights, activism, extremism, passive resistance,
fur-free, pro-pet, respect vs. tolerance)
*Euthanasia: What It Is and
What It Is Not
*Laws Advancing a Fur-Free Future
*Fur: Not "Natural" or "Eco-Friendly"
PET-FRIENDLY RESOURCES
(organizations;
forums
and chat rooms; books,
magazines, reference libraries, sites)
Pet-friendly resources as we define it
may be pro-pet
or fur-free, in any case they are the preferred source of information
for chinparents because having chinchillas as pets for their entire
lifetime requires pet-friendly resources that are focused on addressing
the particular issues
associated with keeping a chinchilla as a PET. Be
aware that some pet clubs and forums are dominated by people that
regard chinchillas as livestock, not pets, and that negatively impacts
their care advice. See article
for details.
ORGANIZATIONS
Fur-free
chinchilla organizations include: Chin
Knights, Rodela
Chinchilla, and the National
Chinchilla Society (UK, accepts overseas memberships)
All other organizations
in the pet chinchilla community that we are aware of are simply pro-pet,
that is, they do not take a fur-free stand, some even promote
pelter club
schedules and events.
Both pro-pet and fur-free chinchilla organizations, their shows and
events, can provide guidance and support, pet community activities,
learning opportunities, interaction with other chinparents, and access
to informative online reference libraries and magazines.
FORUMS AND CHAT ROOMS
Get personalized answers and advice from
pro-pet forums and chat
rooms. Currently, forums with a fur-free
perspective are based in the UK, where fur farming is illegal. Like
all online forums they welcome members internationally, and we recommend
these because their atmosphere and level of expertise are exceptional:
Chinwags,
Chinchilla World
and Chinchillas
Unlimited.
BOOKS, MAGAZINES, REFERENCE LIBRARIES AND PET CHINCHILLA CARE SITES
Search topsites
lists for pet chinchilla care sites; research books,
magazines and reference libraries
for pet chinchilla care information; browse ChinCare
for insight into pet chinchilla topics such as: nutrition requirements,
adequate housing, grooming, exercise, preventative health measures,
senior chins, chins in the wild, neutering, relating and bonding,
introducing chins, genetics and breeding,
exotics specialist vet
resources and rescue services.
Learn how you can act in the best interests of you chinchilla by reading
ChinCare's Setting
Standards for Responsible Pet Chinchilla Breeding, Ownership and
Neutering page and the Site
Safety and Need to Know Index.

We do not object to information deriving from ranchers
(such as that found in some older books)
WHEN it's appropriate and applicable for pets. It is entirely
reasonable to leave pelting in the past while keeping the knowledge
gained (and paid for with chinchilla lives) for the betterment
of PET chinchillas today.
Britain's National Chinchilla Society
accepts overseas memberships and they publish a bi-monthly
gazette that includes: "informative articles on Chinchilla
keeping, breeding, health and showing from various points of view.
Also included are handy tips, helpful hints and a regular news and
chit-chat column, plus lots of other items that go towards producing
an unsurpassed wealth of knowledge about the Chinchilla."
CORRECTING MISCONCEPTIONS
(fallacies
of AR stereotyping, "pelting
neutral," sidetracking
fallacies, past
knowledge for today's pets)
Also see: Twelve
Arguments Against Animals by NYC Animal Rights
THE FALLACIES OF AR STEREOTYPING (ref-
.doc, about the Logical Fallacies)
People often assign extremist attitudes to anyone who takes action
that benefits animals. This is why positive
activists are misunderstood, maligned, labelled hypocritical and so
forth, even when the labelling doesn't fit.
"If you object to pelting, you must hate ranchers who pelt."
Wrong. You CAN appreciate and associate with people
who don't share your convictions; intelligent, mature people coexist
and respect differences in others every day. We work with ranchers
to end pelting, no hate required, that's a waste of time and energy.
Hate is negative, it saps energy and it takes a LOT of positive energy
for activists to keep going in the face of opposition from some people
who are still ignorant or fearful of positive change.
"If you oppose pelting, then you must think that all pet owners
are above reproach."
For several years now the webmasters
have been personally involved with pet chinchilla rescue and rehoming,
addressing the physical and psychological rehabilitation of those
that have been unwanted, neglected, abandoned or abused. So no, we
do not give carte blanche approval to the pet community or anyone,
for that matter. It is useful to bear in mind that not all
pet owners, breeders and pet shops are abusive, while all pelters
do kill; this explains why the usual focus for reform points
in their direction, it's not scapegoating. Blame, like hate, is a
waste. We need to utilize CbC
and be forward-thinking and positive in our motivations and actions,
that's the best way to help chinchillas live and thrive in captivity.
"Anyone who opposes pelting must necessarily: become vegan
or judge others who wear leather, hunt, fish or eat meat; support
all "bleeding heart" liberal views and opinions; become
anti-social, intolerant or violent; burn barns with live animals in
them or turn captive animals out into the wild; say "better dead
than bred"; blindly believe that all pet owners are above reproach;
vote "straight-ticket" in support of ALL animal rights issues..."
GAG. This absurd stereotype is SO stale (circa 1980's!),
so transparently manipulative of others' most idiotic, irrational
fears, and obviously meant to deter people from taking fur-free
action. These characteristics are applied by utilitarian
("animals are only as good as their usefulness to man")
extremists who readily resort to unfounded lies to scare people
into supporting their opinions. It's simply amazing that there are
still folks who fall for this ruse and consequently conclude that
anyone who doesn't want their pets victimized by the fur industry
fits this malevolent stereotype. If you don't personally identify
with or espouse a stereotype, then it's the people who judge you that
are mistaken; choose how you want to help animals and ignore the losers
who try to discourage you!
"PELTING NEUTRAL"
To be pro-pet with regards to chinchillas
is to support the health and happiness of the live animal as a pet.
To be pro-pelt is to support their death for the manufacture of luxury
items. "Dead" is an absolute state, it is mutually exclusive with
"alive." A chinchilla ultimately gets one fate or the other, this
is one situation where people must protect them as valued pets or
they will die, unnecessarily.
Even people who cop-out with, "I don't want to get involved," "I don't
care" or, "I'm pelting-neutral" are STILL choosing, they ARE taking
a side. Like it or not, their passivity, apathy or cowardice is silent
support for the status quo, which in this case allows pelting to continue.
We, and the pet community at large, have witnessed that whenever the
"pelting neutral" policy has been enacted on forums it's
served as a wild card for pro-pelting advocates in the pet community,
i.e., some pelter club
members who are moderators or administrators, even forum owners. They
"enforce policy" when it's in their particular interests
to silence or discredit anyone who speaks up on behalf of the chinchillas
by: making speeches in defense of pelting, contributing to threads
that bash fur-free
advocates (and then locking the thread or banning the person being
bashed so they can't reply in their own defense) and allowing
items made from chinchilla fur to be advertised or raffled off from
their forum. Neutral?!? Don't think so.
SIDETRACKING FALLACIES (ref-
.doc, about the Logical Fallacies)
Why, "sidetracking fallacies"? Because these are the
typical diversionary quips of an illogical nature that people evoke
out of ignorance or fear of facts: pelting today
is completely unnecessary, it inflicts a premature and painful death
on animals that should be protected as pets.
The pelter is "nice"...
We have met with ranchers from both ECBC
and MCBA and adopted chinchillas and bought supplies from them.
We'd be lying if we said that they were demons in overalls. That's
an AR extremist tactic that distorts the truth, which is that the
overwhelming majority of ranchers got into fur farming as a money-making
venture at a time when there was no substantial ethical objection
to it in our society; in other words, they didn't get into ranching
to pursue a recreational love of killing. Extremists would say that
sounds like an excuse for pelting but it's not, it's just frank talk
about ranchers.
Pelting is not good or bad, justifiable or unjustifiable depending
on whether the pelter is nice or not. Pelting is, quite simply,
unnecessary
killing and as such it is not excusable on any grounds. Opposing
pelting is NOT inextricably linked to hating ranchers, extremists
made up that connection because their real focus is on hating and
bullying people, not on working with them to find solutions
that would save chinchillas from pelting. If only extremists hated
pelting as much as they do people, perhaps they'd accomplish something
more than making lots of empty, angry noise.
We have heard from several pet
breeders, members of pelter clubs,
who were so ingratiatingly grateful that a rancher went out of his
way to advise or help them that they concluded right then and there
that pelting is ok. Those people aren't doing ranchers any favors
by defending pelting now that it is no longer profitable to ranchers,
but is seems, unfortunately, that some cowards will use anything to
justify or defend what they haven't the courage to challenge and change.
Isn't fur farming the same thing as hunting animals for their
fur?
Fur "farming" or chinchilla "ranching" today
is an entirely separate matter from what went on in early history.
When native South American tribes hunted the chinchilla before the
arrival of the Spaniards (whose ruthless hunting in the pursuit
of making vanity items for the European market nearly led to the chinchilla's
extinction),
they only hunted to the extent needed to provide themselves with
food and warmth. The chinchillas they hunted had the advantage of
living free in their natural environment and were potentially able
to escape, to run and hide from man, who was effectively just another
predator in the wild.
By contrast, fur "farming" imposes an entirely artificial,
freedomless environment on an animal that has no opportunity to lead
the life that nature intended. A chinchilla on a pelting ranch cannot
make even the simplest choices about his own existence or fate, has
no herd companionship or opportunity to run free, and those regarded
as at-risk
are completely powerless victims with no hope of escaping their dismal
end.

The "God-given right
to dominion over the animals"...
Sure the Bible says God gave
animals to man, in Genesis
9, 1-2. But where does it say, "Be careless and abusive,
exploit them to your heart's content in frivolous, cruel and irresponsible
ways!" It doesn't, and anyone who would pervert the Bible as
an excuse for needless
killing is a menace to all life on Earth.
We believe that when animals are used by man for food and clothing
(furs are not
essential to modern man), that those animals deserve the best
treatment, which entails living conditions that approximate the benefits
they would have had in the wild: the right diet, plenty of exercise,
companionship and freedom. Their death should be quick and painless.
We believe this approach complies with the intent of Genesis 9.
The circumstances
surrounding pelting violate those principles point-by-point: chinchillas
on pelting ranches suffer from severe confinement, lack of exercise,
affection and herd companionship, that violates their basic needs.
Pelting itself is completely non-essential
to man. The two primary killing methods
used by pelting ranches are inhumane and painful, see
for yourself, and they don't comply with AVMA recommendations.
Don't forget that the Bible also says: "The just man takes care
of his beast, but the heart of the wicked is merciless." (Proverbs
12:10) And we believe this precept applies to non-human creatures
as well: “Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto
one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”
(Matthew
25:40)
Ranchers are just "old-school farmers," they "can't
change," "don't know how,"
or "aren't able" to make the switch from dealing in pets
rather than pelts...
Well, let's say these "old"
pelting ranchers are in their fifties. That would still mean that
they were born after the pioneer days, after the industrial
revolution and after the shift in America from a primarily
rural to a primarily urban society. Growing up post-WWII, they had
access to an unprecedented abundance of economic prosperity, burgeoning
technological advancements and educational opportunities, in those
days university financial aid grants (as opposed to loans)
were far easier to come by and well-paying white collar jobs could
be still be had even without a college degree.
Providing pelts for the chinchilla fur industry was a choice, not
an economic necessity and the excuse that ranchers can't adapt is
ignorant of the fact that they already HAVE; as one large-scale rancher
put it, "I don't know of anybody who is just a pelting ranch, not
one rancher I know can exist just on pelts." (ref-
chins-n-quills.com, a chinchilla forum) There you go, now it's
up to those of us who care in the pet community to work with
ranchers for a fur-free future.

We "owe" the
fur trade or MF Chapman for the pleasure of having chinchillas as
pets today.
The MF Chapman story put out by the fur industry is a
hoax.
The fur industry may have introduced chinchillas throughout the world,
but that does not entitle them to dictate the future of chinchillas
or to dominate and control the pet community. Chinchillas should not
continue to be killed for the manufacture of luxury items now that
they have become accepted and valued as pets, and especially now that
ranchers in the U.S. no
longer profit from that needless killing. It's time to move forward,
Britain already has and the U.S. passed PL106-476
in 2000, which demonstrates that Americans do not want
their PETS exploited by the fur industry, that and CbC
are a positive step in the right direction.
The facilities are "spotless"...
Cleanliness is definitely preferable to filth and squalor, but
no matter how clean the environment (preventing a disease epidemic
and subsequent loss of investment is what drives the level of cleanliness,
it's not for the sake of the animals' enjoyment), the pelters
still kill and the chinchillas still die. A condemned man wouldn't
turn down a full pardon for a posh suite on death row, we need to
protect chinchillas
from pelting entirely, not make irrelevant excuses for it.
The chinchillas are "euthanized"...
Electrocution and cervical dislocation
are the primary killing methods
used by ranchers, in opposition to AVMA recommendations.
Those killing methods are not "euthansia" because euthanasia
is mercy-killing for terminally sick and suffering animals, but chinchillas
are pelted when their coats come into "prime," they are
YOUNG, HEALTHY, they want to LIVE. This
is pelting, and despite the investigation source what's there is not
propaganda, it's real, so decide for yourself if this looks like "euthanasia"!
PAST KNOWLEDGE FOR TODAY'S PETS
MM acknowledges
that ranchers have made contributions in the areas of chinchilla breeding
and basic care. Discarding pelting does not need to involve disassociating
ourselves from the knowledge accumulated by the fur industry and its
associates over the years when they exploited chinchillas for commercial
gain; that information has been paid for with chinchilla lives and
they're entitled to benefit from it today, as pets! Britain
has made the break already, pelting is illegal there and the pet chinchilla
community thrives because they kept the good (research, information,
etc.) and left the bad (pelting) behind. So can we.

THE CHINCHILLA FUR INDUSTRY
(news,
market
report: chinchilla industry council, chinchilla
ranching news from croatia, humane
society on fur farming)
Also see: "Laws
Advancing A Fur-Free Future" and information on the unprofitability
of pelting in the U.S. today
NEWS (FUR IS NOT "ON ITS WAY
OUT")
Hundreds of thousands of
chinchillas are slaughtered on fur farms every year in the U.S., Europe,
Canada, and South America, see photo taken in Argentina
in 2006. It takes approximately 100 chinchilla skins to make
a medium-length jacket and twice that to make a full-length coat.
Fur, including chinchilla fur, will not simply
"fade away" from the catwalks of the world of its own accord,
as the following paragraphs of educational material prove.
The fur industry is wise to how to handle the issues that animal rights
advocates have brought to the attention of the public, the ecological
concerns and the treatment
of fur-farmed animals. From their public relations research they've
discovered that all they need to do is appear willing to discuss these
issues and that puts them in a trustworthy light until they can discredit
or gloss over things with a little biased propaganda that lures the
public into a happy stupor.
For example:
"The fur industry has conducted extensive research on public
attitudes toward the use of fur. This research indicates that most
fur users have relatively high comfort levels with the farm-raised
product when information is provided about humane care methods."
(ref-
J. E. Oldfield, Professor Emeritus Department of Animal Sciences,
Oregon State University)
Note by MM: this article reflects some ommissions and manipulation
of facts in favor of the fur industry.
What people hear from the fur industry about
ecological concerns and the treatment of fur-farmed animals is precisely
what the fur industry wants them to believe. However,
the fact remains that fur
is non-essential to humans and the fur industry is promoting senseless
killing for sheer vanity, those behind this scheme are not above employing
deception to conceal the truth and protect their investment.
While MM's focus is
on saving U.S. ranch chinchillas from an unnecessary demise, we encourage
others to join us in having a say about the slaughter of chinchillas
and other fur-bearing animals worldwide, who are also being victimized.
To make a positive difference, see: Positive
Activism in Action.
 |
Chinimation's
Chin-ber of Horrors: photos of real chinchilla fur products
A.A.C.CH
(.doc): About the Argentinian chinchilla fur trade
Mercy For Animals:
Fur Farms
Resurgence of fur fashion discussed in: Looking
Glass Article -and- "The One That (Almost) Got Away... Why
the Fur Trade is Coming Back and What We Can Do About It" (.doc)
IFTF, Fur
Style and Peter
Palms: current trends demonstrate that chinchillas are still actively
exploited for their fur
"Demand for chinchilla pelts has increased since 1994, when fashion
began to dictate chinchilla trims, often dyed different colors, on
cashmere coats, according to Nat Berkowitz of Miller & Berkowitz Ltd.,
the largest maker of chinchilla garments in the United States. Pelt
prices have climbed over 100% since then as a result. The number of
chinchilla pelts available internationally is loosely equivalent to
the number of sable pelts, but chinchilla pelts are smaller. A coat
requires about 130 skins. Pelt prices range from an average of $85
for a standard type skin (including dressing and brightener added)
but go 30% higher for the more prestigious Black Velvet label."
(ref- furs.com,
"Sable Streak: Redefining Luxury Furs for the 90's" by Lisa Marcinek)
Note by MM: Since the mid 1990's, high production
costs and a market demand for cheaper pelts for fur trim have made
pelting unprofitable in the U.S. That trend continues in this country
while underdeveloped countries continue to pelt at a profit, see article.
"In Brazil, the breeding of chinchillas has demonstrated improved
quality and achieved a strong market position. The State of Rio Grande
do Sul, in southern Brazil, has 200 commercial breeders." (ref-
2005 article, "Protozoan parasites in captive chinchillas (Chinchilla
lanigera) raised in the State of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil" by
Ana Claudia Fagundes Gurgel, Amanda Dos Santos Sartori, Flavio Antonio
Pacheco De Araujo in Scientific Electronic Library Online, Chile)
Chinchilla (Chinchilla lanigera) Originated in South America
but now totally protected in the wild. It is farmed in North and South
America and Europe. Very soft and silky and mainly grey, some black,
white or beige-white natural colours. Used mainly for small articles
and trimming but also for full-length garments.
(ref-
British Fur Trade Association website, 2007)
"For this year the 2006 all analysts on the subject present/display
to Argentina like one of the greater world-wide producers of skins
of chinchillas with a production near the 90,000 skins per year. Along
with Argentina and Brazil (of a fast growth also) are in the
head of the world-wide production countries of Eastern Europe like
the Croatia, Czech Republic, Poland and Hungary. In no of these cases
(either in Brazil) the quality is obtained that we have in
Argentina. Nevertheless if there is a quality top in countries like
USA., Canada, Finland etc. etc."
(ref-
.doc online translation, A.A.C.CH)

"If we eschew dog and cat fur, but buy mink,
chinchilla, or other types of fur, wouldn't we essentially be saying,
'It is wrong to slaughter dogs and cats since we are familiar with
them. We have opened our hearts to them. Yet it is right to slaughter
minks and chinchillas since we are not familiar with them. We have
not opened our hearts to them.' ...Croatia has one of the best run
animal welfare groups in Eastern Europe, but the country is also the
world's largest exporter of Chinchilla fur." (ref- Looking Glass:
Think
About Fur, The
Campaigners)
"The world production of fox skins is over 4.5 million skins,
with Finland as the largest producer, followed by China, Norway, Russia
and Poland. Denmark produces around 20,000 fox skins and almost 30,000
chinchilla skins."
(ref- Kopenhagen
Fur)
"Chinchilla farming has become more popular recently. Estonians
have bred chinchillas for over ten years. In April 1994, the first
non-profit organisation, the Estonian Chinchilla Breeders’ Union was
established. The latter has split into the Chinchilla Breeders’ Society
of Southern Estonia and the Estonian Chinchilla Association. At present
[2003], there are 120 chinchilla breeders keeping 3,500 animals in
Estonia." (ref- .pdf)
"In December 2001, the European
Scientific Committee on Animal Health and Animal Wefare published
a report (.pdf)
on the welfare of animals kept for fur production. This report
examines the conditions under which mink, ferrets, foxes, racoon dogs,
coypus and chinchillas are kept. The European Scientific Committee's
findings support the argument that these species are unsuitable for
life in captivity. Moreover, it is also highly critical of current
animal husbandry systems used within the fur farming industry. The
report states that they cause 'serious problems for all species of
animals reared for fur.' It identified major shortcomings with respect
to cages, management methods, the training of farmers and people responsible
for breeding programmes, handling practices and the use of objects
to stimulate normal behaviour.
"The major reason for concern about the farming of fur-bearing
animals is the question of whether the species involved can be kept
in conditions, which are compatible with their behavioural and physical
needs. Apparently this is not the case. The report concludes that
'the animals species used for fur production cannot generally be considered
as domesticated, as opposed to other farm animals.' The animals concerned
do not come from species that have been long domesticated, and these
farmed species largely retain the characteristics of wild animals."
(ref-
Bont voor Dieren.nl)

From just ONE fur broker's website...
"Canchilla Associates
Limited is a corporation focused on the brokerage of chinchilla fur
skins worldwide. We are committed to providing a place where the chinchilla
rancer can sell their product at a fair market value. We deliver also
to the International Fur and fashion trade a commitment to be the
world's best for service and quality of matched, brightened chinchilla
fur skins.
"Canchilla Associates Limited is one of the world'd oldest and
largest chinchilla fur brokerage corporations. The management team
with over 100 years combined experience, has and excellent reputation
with both the chinchilla rancher and furriers all over the world,
leader this corporation to handle between 70,000 - 100,00 fur skins
per year.
"Canchilla Associates Limited at present has developed relationships
and markets in more than 25 countires around the world. Although we
are enjoying a good share of the market we are always looking for
new markets and new ranchers in order to meet the demands of the international
chinchilla industry. Countries include: · United States of America
· Canada · China · Japan · Korea · Germany · Italy · France · Great
Britain · Spain · Portugal · Greece · Czech Republic · Poland · Hungary
· Slovakia · Argentina · Brazil · Chile · Mexico " (ref-
Canchilla Associates Limited)

MARKET REPORT FROM THE CHINCHILLA INDUSTRY COUNCIL
(ref-
article written for 2006 by past CIC chairman and Canchilla
executive, "Market Report from W.G. Poley")
Note by MM: This article is reproduced
here to help demonstrate the unprofitability of pelting in the U.S.
today. Grammatical errors
were left intact.
I have just been reading our market reports for 1999 and 2000, and
it started me thinking about the many changes in the Fur Trade since
my first visit to Europe and the Frankfurt Fur Fair in 1969. At that
time Frankfurt Fur Fair was very very large and the preeminent Fur
Fair in the World. Today, Frankfurt is only a shadow of its former
glory. Currently, Hong Kong is the largest Fur Fair in the World followed
by Beijing China, Milan Italy and Montreal Canada.
---How has this effected the Chinchilla Industry?---
In the 1960's, 1970's and 1980's most chinchilla skins were used to
manufacture full length garments, jackets and stoles. In 2006 most
chinchilla skins are used in the trim and accessory trade. Jackets
and stoles are a smaller percentage of the manufacturing industry
with full length garments an even smaller percentage.
In previous years, Germany, USA and Italy were the dominate buyers
in the Fur Trade. Today the dominate buyers for chinchilla skins being
Hong Kong/China, USA, Europe and Canada.
When we started buying chinchilla our largest supply of skins came
from USA and Canada. In 2005 our largest supply came from South America
and Eastern Europe and a very small percent coming from USA and Canada.
The best selling skins will be the skins Brent [Broker, Treasurer
from Canada Canchilla, a fur
brokerage organization] buys for lower than $30.00us. These skins
are best suited for the trim and accessory trade. The higher priced
skins will continue to sell well but just not as strong as the lower
priced skins.
There is good news for the Chinchilla Rancher. We have returned to
paying cash for the skins and will continue with cash buying as long
as the market is strong.
A change which is worth noting as I bring this report to a close.
In 2005, Canchilla had its very best year ever selling over 100,000
chinchilla skins. The approximate sales of our skins: 50% to Hong
Kong/China and Japan, 20% to the USA, 20% to Canada and 10% to Europe.
Presently, our current market is very strong and 2006 looks like a
very strong year.

CHINCHILLA RANCHING NEWS FROM CROATIA (ref-
Animal Friends Croatia)
Note by MM: Some conditions present on European
ranches (chinchilla ranching began
in the U.S. and other countries have modeled our example), can be
identical to those in the U.S. due to the absence
of regulation on U.S. ranches.
Breeding animals for fur
in Croatia
Chinchilla d.o.o. is the only fur manufacturer in Croatia and years
ago it held 50% of the chinchilla fur world production, but production
is in decrease for the last few years, which Mr. Robert Tkalcec, the
firm owner, personally confessed, the argument of the Chamber of Commerce
that there is a significant number of subcontractors, almost 300 families,
among whom are a lot of demilitarised Croatian soldiers, who gain
their primary or additional earnings in that way, doesn't go in favour
of allowing fur-bearing animals in Croatia. According to information
we received from veterinary inspectors and subcontractors, Robert
Tkalcec is the only one who profits from such manufacturing, while
subcontractors have complained on number of occasions that they have
invested a lot, and but have gained a little, and that the buy-out
itself has not been conducted in a fully legal manner.
Chinchilla breeders don't have registered companies, and they keep
animals in basements, attics, garages, byres, so even veterinarians
admit that it is impossible to conduct breeding surveillance. Even
if there was a book of regulations it is impossible to supervise breeding
conditions because the number of veterinarian inspectors is too small
and the black market is rather big.
Chinchilla breeding isn't a significant industry in Croatia on which
depends the existence of numerous families, nor it can be put on the
same level as cattle breeding or some other industry, as the Bureau
of Agriculture wants to suggest. One company and few hundred people's
earnings (for lot of them it's just an extra profit) cannot
be an argument for that kind of manufacture preservation in Croatia,
the state with a few million people – considering the total number
of people in Croatia, we are talking about very
small percentage of population, whose existence does not depend on
chinchilla fur production. Five-year transition time (which
is quite a lot of time), which we proposed for the Draft Proposal
of Animal Protection Law, allows adjustment to everyone involved in
chinchilla breeding to some other kind of production.
Welfare and protection of animals bred for fur
In 2001, Scientific Committee on Animal Health and Animal Welfare
(SCAHAW), upon EU Commission request, issued a statement about
breeding of animals for fur production in EU. Although the statement
is discussing welfare of all animals bred for fur in Europe, it is
emphasized that the biggest problems are perceived exactly in the
chinchilla farm raising, though that kind of breeding includes only
a small part of fur industry. The statement contains scientific evaluation
of animal welfare, scientifically established recommendations towards
animal welfare improvement and emphasizes an absence of scientific
works relating to protection of chinchilla in breeding.
It is concluded that in chinchilla farm raising for fur production
very little attention is given to their welfare. Biggest disadvantages
in keeping animals are cramped cages and impossibility of a normal
animal behavior, as well as breeding pots insufficiency, restricted
access to sand bath, big plastic collars on females necks, and insufficient
space in cages makes jumping impossible. That
kind of keeping and breeding conditions results in abnormal stereotype
behavior, fear, reproduction disorders, and offspring mortality.
Considering chinchillas are wild animals that jump when upset and
during movement, inadequate cage height can cause injuries because
animals hit their heads onto the top of the cage. Keeping conditions
itself causes abnormal behavior like endless repetition of same movements
and motions in the cage, food-taking refusal, self-inflicted injuries,
infliction of injuries to each other (fur biting, ears injured
or snapped off, eyes poked out, tails snapped off) which are a
result of boredom, stress, cage congestion, absence of food enrichment
elements, inadequate feeding and noise (Haferbeck 1982; Kersten
1996; Schuurman 1996).
There are only a few studies about frequency of diseases with farm-bred
chinchillas. Christensen (1989), based on research conducted
between 1983 and 1987 says that offspring mortality is 24%. In second
research babies' mortality from pneumonia is around 47%, from starvation
16% and from listerosis disease is 1%. In other 26% death is caused
by various infections. The most common cause of death for chinchillas
is gastrointestinal diseases. Gastroenteritis is the cause of high
mortality, and it is a result of stress, low hygiene, vitamin insufficiency,
rotten food, unclean water or food poisoned with chemicals, which
results in loss of appetite, total apathy and sudden death. Flatulency
caused by feeding changes and absence of certain kind of bacteria
result in anxiety in animal that lies in the cage with its legs outstretched,
obviously suffering in pain. Listeriosis is common infection caused
by bacteria that attacks nervous system resulting in convulsions,
blindness and rectum prolapse. Symptoms are apathy, loss of appetite,
animal is suffering from spasms and makes a whining sounds. Haemorrhagic
septicaemia is an infectious disease with symptoms like pneumonia,
coughing, diarrhoea and apathy in animal. The disease develops due
to environmental change, congestion and stress.
Other diseases are: infective skin diseases; abnormal teeth growth
due to inadequate feeding; mastitis, which as a result has a partial
or total lack of milk production, and because of what mother sometimes
kills its baby; metritis – acute womb infection developed during littering
and similar.
Chinchilla d.o.o. used to kill chinchillas by neck breaking, and now
they claim that they are suffocating animals with gas. During the
killing by gas, suffocation and muscle spasms occur, and animals make
painful sounds. Other methods of putting chinchillas to death are
5 ml injection of 40 percent chloral hydrate solution into the abdominal
cavity or by electrocution.
Considering the number of diseases which can develop with chinchillas
due to breeding conditions itself and considering the cruel killing
methods, it is clear that it's impossible to conduct breeding control,
evaluation on whether the breeders are giving the medicine to animals
or in which way they are killed. Therefore, the only way for chinchilla
protection is prohibition their breeding for fur production.
THE HUMANE SOCIETY
OF THE U.S. TALKS ABOUT FUR FARMING
"While
most people assume that there are laws that mandate the humane treatment
of animals on fur farms, there are no federal laws regulating the
keeping or killing of cage-raised fur-bearing animals in the United
States. And though California has housing requirements for
mink and fox that make fur farming cost-prohibitive, no states have
bans on fur farming. However, a number of European nations have enacted
legislation to ban or severely restrict fur farming."
(ref- hsus.org)
"Using animals for
fashion cheapens life—including our own. Synthetic fabrics, both warmer
and lighter than fur, have eliminated the need to kill animals for
their fur. Yet each year more than 40 million animals are killed for
their fur: minks, foxes, bobcats, beavers, raccoons, sables, lynx,
chinchillas—the list goes on and on. Each piece of fur trim represents
an animal who suffered and died; a full coat represents many animals.
There is no reason to kill animals for fashion, and many reasons not
to.
"Supporters portray fur "farms" or "ranches" as humane environments,
but in fact, these facilities are little more than a series of small
wire cages in an open shed. Animals suffer extreme confinement and
poor housing conditions. Many of them exhibit behavioral disorders
such as constant pacing, self-mutilation, and infanticide. Many suffer
physical abnormalities as a result of inbreeding. They suffer as they
die, too: neck breaking, gassing, and anal electrocution are the most
common methods of killing animals raised for fur." (ref-
hsus.org)

KILLING METHODS
(avma
recommendation, electrocution,
cervical
dislocation)
Naturally, chinchillas are all "euthanized" before pelting,
so no need to object, right? Hardly. See
for yourself and despite the investigation source that video is indeed
real. Euthanasia is, by definition,
a painless, humane death for the purpose of sparing an ailing animal
or person from interminable suffering. The term euthanasia, therefore,
can never apply to taking the life of an animal that is young, robust
and full of life, like the chinchillas on fur farms that die by the
two primary killing methods used in the U.S.: electrocution
or cervical
dislocation. You'll never see those methods used at your vet's
office because no vet wants to be sued for "euthanizing"
like that. Think about it without the suspension of disbelief we're
taught to use for those sordid things that happen out of sight, somewhere
else... to chinchillas we'll never meet.
There are some pet breeders who are pelter
club members and are typically misinformed or in complete denial
about the conditions of life and death on fur
farms because they assume their "inside connection"
with ranchers
affords them the naked truth about everything, as if ranchers would
incriminate themselves by revealing anything potentially questionable
or unsavory about their business to people who value their livestock
as pets and might possibly bring PETA
down on them tomorrow. We know about this subject after years of researching
the issue thoroughly from both sides (communication with both ranchers
and AR extremists, following headlines, researching online, and by
reading our large reference library
which contains many rancher-authored books,
.doc);
we know where the extremists
are distorting or exaggerating and where the pelters are lying regardless
of whether others are able to handle the truth or not.
The bottom line is not actually whether
or not killing methods are humane, although that certainly helps.
The bottom line is that pelting is unnecessary
and it's up to caring people in the pet chinchilla community to do
something to ensure that no chinchilla dies a senseless, preventable
death.
THE
AVMA (American Veterinary Medical
Association) RECOMMENDATION
The two primary killing methods
used on chinchilla pelting ranches in the U.S. are electrocution and
neck-breaking (ref-
.pdf, HSUS).
These methods stand in contrast to what is advised by the American
Veterinary Medical Association in the Guidelines on Euthanasia for
June, 2007:
Recommendations made for "Mink, fox and other mammals produced
for fur" are: "Barbiturates, inhalant anesthetics, CO2, CO, potassium
chloride in conjunction with general anesthesia." Euthanasia recommendations
for chinchillas in particular indicate just one method, carbon monoxide:
"Carbon monoxide has been used to euthanize mink and chinchillas.
These animals collapsed in 1 minute, breathing ceased in 2 minutes,
and the heart stopped beating in 5 to 7 minutes." (ref-
.pdf, AVMA 2007 report)
"Sodium pentobarbital, the drug preferred for euthanasia
of companion animals, is a legally controlled substance and must be
administered by a veterinarian or other licensed professional. Due
to the resulting high costs associated with its use, it is rarely
used in the killing of animals raised commercially for fur."
(ref-
.pdf, HSUS)
ELECTROCUTION
Also see: Historic
Bills to Stop Electrocution of Fur Farm Animals Gain Support
Genital electrocution, deemed “unacceptable” by the American Veterinary
Medical Association (AVMA) 1993
Panel on Euthanasia, is a fur factory farm killing method that causes
animals the pain of cardiac arrest while they are fully conscious.
"A clamp was attached to the animal's ear and another to her
labia and a switch was flipped, sending a jolt of electricity through
her skin down the length of her body. This electrical current causes
unbearable muscle pain - akin to the intense pain of a heart attack
- to the fully conscious animal, yet at the same time works as a paralysing
agent, preventing the victim from screaming or fighting." (ref-
animalwatch.org, now defunct)
"In 1994, Indiana became the first state to file criminal charges
against a fur factory farm after PETA investigators documented genital
electrocution at V-R Chinchillas. The chinchilla fur industry considers
electrocution and neck-breaking 'acceptable." (ref-
peta.org media center)
"Use of a nose-to-tail or nose-to-foot method alone may kill the animal
by inducing cardiac fibrillation [heart attack, while fully conscious],
but the animal may be conscious for a period of time before death.
Therefore, these techniques are unacceptable." -AND- "Electrocution
induces death by cardiac fibrillation, which causes cerebral hypoxia.
However, animals do not lose consciousness for 10 to 30 seconds or
more after onset of cariac fibrillation. It is imperative that animals
be unconscious before being electrocuted... Techniques that apply
electric current from head to tail, head to fot or head to moistened
metal plates on which the animal is standing are unacceptable."
(ref-
.pdf, AVMA 2000 report)
"Lynxes, coyotes, foxes
and chinchillas are often killed by anal electrocution, forced to
bite down on metal bits while electric rods are inserted into their
anuses." (ref-
friendsofanimals.org)
"Standard killing methods in fur factories are gassing and neck-breaking
for mink, anal electrocution and poison injection for foxes, and neck-breaking
and genital electrocution for chinchillas." (ref-
www.fundforanimals.org)
"The chinchilla industry proudly admits that most chinchillas
are killed by neck breaking or electrocution. Many chinchilla farmers
hook one metal clamp to the ear, and another to her genitalia to implement
the electrocution of this poor creature. The chinchilla is small,
and it takes as many as 100 of them to die in order to make a single
full-length fur coat. The fur trade calls this 'humane." (ref-
mercyforanimals.org)
"In 1994, films of genital electrocution taken on chinchilla
farms resulted in a Sonoma Valley, California, farm being charged
with cruelty to animals. Prosecutors documented that, according to
veterinarians, the animals suffer during this process, in which the
chinchilla is held upside down by the tail and electrodes are placed
in the ear and in the anal canal or penis; a switch is then pulled
to electrocute." (ref-
.pdf, Endangered Species Handbook)
"Electrocution: The animals are either electrocuted, gassed or
have their necks broken. Although this last method is banned in the
European Union, in Croatia there are no laws or regulations governing
chinchilla farming. Even if there were, there would not be enough
officials to enforce them. Our investigator used a hidden camera to
film a chinchilla's last moments.
"Slow death: Our investigator informed us that, 'The farmer attached
metal clips to one of the animal's legs and its mouth, which he then
connected to a transformer. The chinchilla screamed when the electrodes
were attached. It went silent as soon as the current was turned on
but it was still moving after a good minute and a half. The farmer
checked a couple of times to make sure the animal was dead, which
was not until two minutes after it was electrocuted. Once the animal
was dead, the farmer removed the clips and began cutting it up after
shaking it a final time to make sure it really was dead.' It takes
120 chinchillas to make a single fur coat." (ref-
Once Voice for the Animals)

CERVICAL DISLOCATION, OR, NECK-BREAKING
ECBC
recommends neck-breaking. It takes a few minutes for the chinchilla
to die by that method, in the meantime the body flops around spastically
until agonized breathing onsets, then death, it's not a pretty, peaceful
way to go as demonstrated here.
Naturally, pelting supporters claim that the chinchilla feels no pain
by this method, but in our online research and from having watched
a chinchilla get their neck snapped by a wheel with spokes, we just
don't think so. Vets don't euthanize by neck-breaking, pelters shouldn't
kill by it.
"Data suggest that electrical activity in the brain persists
for 13 seconds following cervical dislocation, and unlike decapitation,
rapid exsanguination does not contribute to loss of consciousness."
(ref- .pdf, AVMA 2007
report)
"Neck-snapping is another method farmers favor, particularly
for small animals like chinchillas. The farmer wraps his fingers around
the neck of the chinchilla, grasps the animal's lower body with his
other hand and jerks the animal's vertebra out of the socket, breaking
its neck. Neck-snapping takes just a second, but for about five minutes
afterwards, the animal jerks and twitches. It might take two minutes
for an animal to become brain-dead from cervical dislocation - in
the meantime, she or he kicks and struggles." (ref-
animalwatch.org, now defunct)
"Since physical methods of euthanasia (such as cervical dislocation)
require the most skill to perform and are most likely to be affected
by human error, the AVMA Panel recommends that such methods are used
only when alternative methods are not appropriate. Methods deviating
from these recommendations must be 'justified for scientific reasons
in writing by the investigator.' The use of cervical dislocation in
rodents is only recommended for mice and small rats, and whenever
possible the use of sedation or light anesthesia prior to euthanasia
is recommended." (ref-
Stanford Lab Animals guidelines)
"Cervical dislocation should be performed on sedated or unconscious
rodents. [pelting ranches don't invest the time and expense to sedate]
Disadvantages: When performed incorrectly it may induce or prolong
animal suffering."
(ref-
Pennsylvania State University Animal Research Program)
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