22

Aug

Save Money By Saying No to Captive Animals

Yes, the credit crunch stories are starting to wear thin now (except for this ace one, of course), but when they involve any PETA-friendly tips my ears prick up and suddenly I want to accept these strangers’ kind advice.

A baby deer

There’s one good thing about families with children not having as much money to dabble with these days (I know, bear with me), especially during the school holidays, it’s how they look for cheaper alternatives to summer staples like the zoo, aquaria and animal circuses. So when the Independent suggested camping trips to see the UK’s amazing wildlife – without all the bar biting, head bobbing and general misery in captivity – naturally I just had to share it with you.

We may all moan about British weather but you’ve gotta admit we’ve got some pretty gorgeous landscapes and countryside, just waiting for us to delve into and appreciate for what it really is. Teaming with animals like badgers, wild horses, deer, rare birds and even dolphins and seals on the coast, there’s never been a better time to say a firm ‘No’ to animals in captivity. Seeing animals in their natural habitat provides much more of an education for inquisitive children, than seeing them crammed into a cage or alone without family and no environmental stimulation.

Remember, however, to leave the cute critters alone, and watch from a safe distance – for both of your sakes!

Image: © 2008 Jupiterimages Corporation


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posted by Ping pong on August 27th, 2008 at 9:19 am

Zoos are evil. And circuses too. What do other people think of safaris though? Like when they’re natural and not chaining up the animals?

posted by Pilar Sanllehí on August 29th, 2008 at 6:48 pm

Excellent idea!!! I belong to a NGO Amazon Shelter for Animal and Environmental Protection and we have a Center for Rehabilitation and Conservation for Wild Animals in Puerto MAldonado, Madre de Dios, in the peruvian rainforest. But I am also a volounteer in a zoo of the National Police were we receive wild animals from illegal traffic of species. So I know very well all the problems wild species suffer in captivity. I am going to propose this type of visits you do to your wild areas to do the same here at the city of Lima. We always think about ecoturism in the rainforest but never in the cities. I think is a very good alternative to avoid the families visit zoos and circuses with animals (we are working on a law that prohibits the use of any animal in circuses).
Thanks for the idea!!

Pilar Sanllehí
Amazon Shelter Director- Lima, Perú

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