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 Animals

this is a board that talks about issues concerning animals...your own pets as well as animal rights,alerts,bills before congress that need our attention.This is a family board but as abuse cases may be posted it may not always be for the sensitive readers.Please be kind to each other,thanks!


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14. January 2008, 02:07:53
srnity 
Subject: And Another Good Reason (I guess).....
http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/rids/20080111/i/r2591184732.jpg?x=400&y=266&sig=vvBl9cASczNwm2tRDWQtqQ--

A handout picture shows a polar bear cub born by polar bear Vera at the zoo in Nuremberg January 11, 2008. The zoo in southern Germany, under fire for letting a mother polar bear eat its five-week old cub, has bowed to media and public pressure and decided to hand rear its last surviving baby.

14. January 2008, 02:32:46
anastasia 
Subject: Re: And Another Good Reason (I guess).....
srnity: Don't animals usually eat there young only when they know there is a problem with it? Survivol of the fittest??

14. January 2008, 10:41:40
Ewe 
Subject: Re: And Another Good Reason (I guess).....
anastasia: or maybe she didnt want her young to suffer the life of incarceration she has had to indure!? 

14. January 2008, 15:26:18
anastasia 
Subject: Re: And Another Good Reason (I guess).....
Ewe: OH! GOOD ONE Ewe!!

14. January 2008, 15:42:51
Ewe 
Subject: Re: And Another Good Reason (I guess).....
anastasia: I was just imagining if I was that polar bear! She probably has mental problems anyway with being in a zoo. When I visited Sea World in Florida (not my choice cos I dont pay to see animals in zoos) the polar bears looked extremely traumatised! Pacing back & forth manically, loads of people staring at them, no privacy, kids banging on the glass etc etc etc....enough to send anyone mad!!

14. January 2008, 17:13:55
srnity 
Subject: Re:Don't animals usually eat there young only when they know there is a problem with it?
anastasia: Some years ago, a neighbor/friend brought me a "domestic" rabbit that she found in the park, it was the dead of winter, and I took her in. She pretty much had free range of the house and the yard (knew what the litterbox was for, and for some odd reason, female bunnies know better - my experience anyway) plus I had a really old big doggie that loved bunnies, so he protected her. Turned out she was pregnant, and even tho she made a "nest" in a box behind the TV with towels, etc., when they were born, she ignored them, and we watched them pass on one by one, hoping that she'd come around and care for her babies, but she didn't. I still wish I had not taken her in, maybe they would've lived if left outdoors where I guess she wanted to be...never again...maybe sometimes humans get involved when they just shouldn't, true?

14. January 2008, 18:53:41
anastasia 
Subject: Re:Don't animals usually eat there young only when they know there is a problem with it?

srnity: Well,I think it was a wonderful thing you did,taking in the bunny,how cool that your doggy loved it...I think D would try to kill it  


 I think to some point humans probably DO intervene on stuff like that to much..I don't think we do it with any other intentions but to help tho.BUT..if you think about it...you never see a disfigured animal out in the wild,you don't see ANY "handicapped" animal out in the wild because in nature...that kind of creature COULD NOT exsist.So,I suppose it is better if the mother "takes care" of that part of the life cycle.For whatever reason, that Mama Bunny knew that the offspring would be better the way she handled it.Some things maybe we just aren't meant to understand.Nature takes care of it own...it has a wonderful balance of life and death.


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