Dogs may end up sleeping on cold, hard cement floors; cats may end up
confined in wire cages.
Not exact matches
More than 26,000 mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and arachnids were saved after PETA revealed horrific abuse at the major pet - trade supplier U.S. Global Exotics, Inc., including animals
confined to severely crowded and filthy soda bottles, milk jugs, litter pans, cattle - feeding troughs, and barren
wire cages as well as employees putting hundreds of sick, injured, and dying animals
in a freezer to die slowly and painfully.
Breeding dogs
in such facilities are typically
confined to tiny, crowded
wire cages and provided with the bare minimum of care required to keep them alive.
It's unfortunate but true that large - scale commercial breeders and brokers typically
confine dogs for their entire lives
in tiny, stacked,
wire - floored
cages, waste falling on them from above, their paws injured by the
wire threads, and the female dogs bred continuously to exhaustion.»
They generally do not have protection from the elements and are
confined 24 hours a day
in metal
wire cages.
Dogs at puppy mills typically receive little to no medical care; live
in squalid conditions with no exercise, socialization or human interaction; and are
confined inside cramped
wire - floored
cages for life.
During her years as a breeding dog, Lily (as Theresa named her) had spent all of her days
confined to a small, cold
wire cage in a dark, foul - smelling barn.
In these situations the cats are almost viewing each other as strangers, but we have been able to help with reintroductions — sometimes by
confining one cat to a «kitten pen» (a
wire mesh cat
cage that has space for a bed, litter tray and food bowls) for a few days so that the cats can see each other and get used to each other but not actually get at each other.
Breeding dogs
in puppy mills have no real quality of life, and are often
confined to small
wire cages for most of their lives with little or no socialization, exercise or veterinary care.
These poor dogs were
confined in cramped, barren
wire cages with little food and water and no protection from the elements.
- Use multi-species stocking (i.e., sheep and cattle together)- Protect livestock
in predator proof enclosures, especially at night - Utilize guard dogs, donkeys, or llamas -
Confine ewes & cows during lambing / calving & at night - Provide rabbit
wire covered enclosures with fencing buried below ground; rabbit
cages are not recommended as they may be attacked through the
cage or die of shock as they frantically seek cover.
More than 170 dogs and puppies were intensively
confined in cramped, filthy, barren
wire cages positioned over months of accumulated waste.
During her years as a breeding dog, Lily spent all of her days
confined to a small, cold
wire cage in a dark, foul - smelling barn.
Jessie L. Smith, special deputy secretary, Dog Law Enforcement, said, «Under current law, a kennel owner can choose to
confine dogs
in small, stacked,
wire - floored
cages with no heat, no opportunity for exercise, and no routine medical care.
 While alive and forced to reproduce, the breeding female and her puppies are
confined to a
wire cage barely large enough to turn around
in, sometimes exposed to the elements, twenty - four hours a day, seven days a week and three hundred sixty - five days a year.
The dogs can be
confined for years at a time, reduced to lives of constant breeding
in dirty, stacked,
wire - bottomed
cages that are required to be only six inches larger than the dog on all sides, and with few, if any, opportunities to play, be walked, or receive basic grooming or veterinary care.