Tuesday, November 23, 2010

2 Tortillas per Kilogram of Dog

Benita (our Spanish-Mam Interpreter)
taking a patient's history from some children in San Martin.




You learn some unexpected things when you work in a foreign country. The dogs in Todos Santos aren`t fed dog food and a routine question during our exams, especially if the dog is thin or the owner reports it isn`t eating, is to ask what they are feeding the dog and usually the answer is 'tortillas'.

During our clinics in San Martìn we learned that it takes 2 tortillas per kilogram of dog to keep a dog in good body condition. This was our 1st time working in San Martìn. Our clinic was set up in a disused classroom and we were billeted in local families homes, two of us per house. At one house the woman keeps her dog in the yard - so he doesn´t roam and can´t scavenge. So we know that all he gets to eat is what she feeds him and what she feeds him is tortillas only. She feeds him 30 tortillas per day - which she makes by hand as well as all the tortillas for her family - and he is in good body condition. He weighs 15 kg so now we know that it takes 2 tortillas per kg to feed a dog.
Things they don`t teach you in vet college.


The clinics in San Martìn went well but the people there are less familiar with our project so it took awhile for word to get around about what we were doing. The dogs seemed skinnier than the ones we`ve been seeing in the communities so far and we`re not sure why. We`d love to think that it`s our influence but it`s more likely that they have access in El Centro to the slaughterhouse and meat markets. Maybe it`s a combination.

One little puppy in San Martìn broke our hearts.
She came in with a dog that was getting sterilized and she stayed in our clinic (which was held in one of the classrooms in the local school as classes are out until January) through the afternoon till the other dog woke up from his anesthetic.
She was very small and skinny and ate ravenously when we gave her some of our food.
A little puppy curls up beside her adult housemate as he recovers from sedation for his sterilization procedure.
After the other dog`s procedure she went over to curl up beside him on his blanket and they both slept the afternoon away until the owner came to get them. He carried the bigger dog home and a little boy was supposed to carry the puppy home but we saw them way down the main street with the old man carrying the big dog and the puppy trotting along beside - and the little boy nowhere to be found. About 20 minutes later the little puppy came trotting back in through the gate all by herself and back into the classroom. We had to carry her back and find her house - where they hadn`t realized she was gone.

The kids in San Martìn were great. Because school is out we were an attraction so we had groups of them hanging out with us as we recovered the sedated dogs. They chatted away, asked about all our equipment and were particularly fascinated by our hot water bottles.



Back in El Centro we did two more days of clinics and last Monday we started our spay clinics for the females - which we`ll do all this week.
Hasta luego.
A rainy market day in San Martin.

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