
6 minute read
PET TALK
The Hobart Observer proudly supports Ten Lives
Ten Lives
12 Selfs Point Road, New Town Open Mon - Sat 10.00 - 4.00 Sun 12.00 - 2.30 6278 2111 tenlives.com.au
FOSTER
Open your heart and your home
How can I help?
Foster caring can be one of the most rewarding and uplifting aspects of volunteering. Our foster care program is an essential part of our work looking after our kitties. You don’t have to foster all the time, fostering even for a short time - a week or two - helps with our vital work.
Fostering is a truly wonderful experience which is extremely rewarding for you and lifesaving for the cats or kittens you care for.
Some of the reasons our kitties need foster care before they can be adopted are: • Shy or timid • Too young • Illness
The Ten Lives Cat Centre provides full support and everything you need to care for a cat or kitten in your home. We provide: • food & bowls • kitty litter & trays • toys, blankets & beds • 24 hour support • medicines and vet care
You provide: • a loving environment • care for our cats and kittens
You can find out more about the Ten Lives foster care program and other ways you can help at tenlives.com.au Every cat has a story. Are you part of it? #FOSTER

TEN Lives Cat centre is preparing for a busy Summer and is calling on new foster carers and volunteers to help support them.
Ten Lives manager Noel Hunt said the centre was expecting a huge kitten season, which began this month.
“Based on our intake numbers over this Winter, we are anticipating a bumper kitten season,” he said.
“The fact we are seeing pregnant cats and kittens now makes us believe we are faced with a real tsunami of cats to come.
“We need 150 new volunteers and around 200 new foster carers to be trained up and ready to go.”
Mr Hunt said the centre was also gearing up to build an intensive care unit for the kittens who come into their care.
“Being able to get cats and kittens out of the shelter quickly and into foster care will really help,” he said.
“If we have too many cats and kittens here when the building starts, the load and stress will be huge.”
As part of the project, Ten Lives needs to upgrade its current laundry including the purchase of an industrial grade washing machine and is on a fundraising drive to raise $150,000.
This investment will make the centre’s operations run more smoothly, as they need to regularly wash and dry thousands of blankets and other cat bedding.
Labor Member for Clark Ella Haddad is a proud supporter of the Ten Lives Cat Centre and said funds would go a long way in helping many cats and kittens.
“Ten Lives take their role as leaders in responsible cat ownership very seriously, educating the community about keeping cats safe indoors, as well as making sure all cats and kittens adopted from the centre are desexed and vaccinated,” she said.
“By supporting Ten Lives Cat Centre with a small donation, your contribution will go a long way to helping the work of the centre in their work rehoming cats and kittens long into the future.”
To support the Ten Lives Cat Centre and donate towards their building project, visit https://www. givenow.com.au/tenlives.

From left, Labor Member for Clark Ella Haddad and Ten Lives manager Noel Hunt.
Another good week in dogland
The Dog Grumbler
I’VE been writing this column for five or six years now.
Having a monthly deadline has been good for me I feel, but it gets harder each month to find things to write about.
About the bottom of each calendar page, I start losing sleep.
This month I have enjoyed several special moments and though they may not excite you, they did me, and in desperation for a topic I will share them with you.
I was walking through some bushland with Pippa the Schnoodle.
She lagged behind to inhale something special as a wallaby hopped across our path about two metres ahead.
Pippa saw and heard nothing.
She caught up and passed me a few steps later and as she crossed the path of the wallaby, a lightning change came over her.
In less than a second she was bounding through the bush in the direction the wallaby had taken.
I called her and was pleased to see her return instantly — well, almost instantly.
Here was an illustration of the power of smell.
There were lots of critters in the woods – their scat was everywhere and Pippa had been
ENFIELD KENNELS & CATTERY
DOG & CAT RESORT
Only 15 minutes from the airport!
We look after your prized dogs and cats, and give them a holiday whilst you are on holiday! 0459 998 009
inspecting it throughout the walk, but this scent was only a couple of seconds old, so Pippa knew its owner was still close by.
The wallaby had hit the ground twice as it crossed the path, but Pippa knew instantly in which direction it had travelled.
Think about that.
Two, maybe three little scent cones rising from the ground where the wallaby had bounded through just seconds before, but Pippa could detect the relative decay in the scent between those points – and thus the direction of travel.
She knew in less than a second that a wallaby had come through here
SCOTT HUNT The Black & White Dog Book Provides one on one solutions for behaviour problems. All breeds, all ages. No dogs too hard. 0439 444 776
seconds before.
She knew it was not far ahead and which way it was headed.
How cool is that?
The second pleasant experience was on a visit to Bellerive beach the other day.
I had with me my toy poodle as well as three of her friends – a Spoodle, a Labradoodle and a Groodle.
As we reached the beach, we came upon a dog waiting for her owner to finish a phone call.
The dog was a little apprehensive, but I crouched down and waited as my group approached politely and they exchanged protocols.
Poppy the Labradoodle is very energetic and runs flat out wherever we go.
She and the stranger hit it off instantly.
Although they had very divergent backgrounds breed-wise, they were of similar size and shape and within a few moments they were taking turns chasing each other in circles.
The others had things to sniff but one by one they were drawn into the game and eventually all five were running madly as I and the lady with the phone watched and laughed.
If we hadn’t things to do elsewhere, I think they would have played until they collapsed from exhaustion.
I have seen a Chihuahua and a Great Dane play together.
With that kind of size difference, chasing is a bit futile but if the Great Dane rolls on its back they can play fight quite convincingly.
Some dogs never get to do this because their owners are afraid to let them off lead.
Some dogs never learn that it’s good to be a dog, never learn universal protocols by which dogs become friends.
Those dogs miss out, but not — by my reckoning — as much as their owners.
Watching dogs at liberty to interact with their own kind, seeing how easily they can make friends and how readily and enthusiastically they celebrate just being dogs is an uplifting thing.
I’m still charged by the experience.