Why You Should Spay or Neuter Your Pet

On Wednesday, July 31, 44 animals were surrendered to the Aiken County Animal Shelter between 12:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m., the shelter’s posted intake hours. Forty-four animals in four hours on one day! Do the math, that’s an average of 11 animals per hour for four hours!

Shocking. Distressing. Heartbreaking!

The vast majority of these animals did nothing wrong. They were victims of owners who brought them into this world and then washed their hands of them, leaving the rest of us to pay for their neglect.

It’s been a horrible summer for animal intake at the shelter. The number of animals coming into the shelter May through July (that is, 1,618) was double the amount of intake for January through March (827).

Discouraging. Mind-blowing. Sad.

The only way to reduce the shockingly high number of homeless and abandoned animals is for every Aiken County pet owner to spay and neuter their pets. Fixing your pet is good for them, for you, and for the community. Here’s why:

Spaying and neutering is affordable through the Aiken County voucher program. Fixing animals prevents huge litters of unwanted puppies like this one.

Your pet will live longer. Spayed and neutered animals have significantly less health problems than their unfixed counterparts. By the way, it is not true that pets get fat and lazy as a result of spaying and neutering—only a bad diet and lack of exercise will do that.

Spayed and neutered animals are less likely to roam. That means they are less likely to catch diseases from other animals, get lost, fight with other dogs, or get hit by a car (85% of dogs hit by cars are unaltered).

No more dogs in messy heat. Spaying your female before she is 6 months old means you can avoid the messy, noisy heat cycles that typically occur twice a year. It also means you can avoid the messy, noisy, smelly crowd of male dogs or cats hanging out in your yard while your pet is in heat.

Fixed animals are less aggressive. Neutering your dog decreases potentially aggressive behavior to other animals and people. Particularly children, who are by far the most frequent victims of dog bites.

Your cat or dog will be a better pet. Fixing your pet eliminates unpleasant spraying and marking in your yard, on your rug, on your furniture.

Fixing your dog will not make him less protective. Dogs are naturally protective by nature, particularly if you love and feed them.

The number of animals coming into the shelter May through July (1,618) was double the amount of intake for January through March (827).

Fixing your pet is cheaper for the community as a whole. Public shelters are funded by taxpayer dollars. If everyone fixes their pets, the number of homeless and abandoned animals at the shelter will be dramatically reduced, as will the amount of public funds needed to care for those animals.

Moreover, the cost to spay or neuter your pet has never been more affordable. Aiken County has a voucher program, supplemented by FOTAS, to provide low-cost spay/neuter services to residents who need financial assistance. The vouchers are distributed at the County Shelter at 333 Wire Road. Make arrangements to spay or neuter your animal today. Convince your neighbors, friends and family to spay and neuter their pets, too.

There are so many loving, deserving animals in the Shelter that need a home – why bring more animals into a world where their safety and care is so uncertain?

Their lives are in our hands.

— By Joanna D. Samson, Vice-President, FOTAS

 

By the Numbers
In just the first week of August, the Aiken County Shelter received 130 strays and surrendered pets.

 

Pets of the Week

DUNCAN: Boxer mix, male, 4-1/2 years old, brindle & white, 61 pounds – $35

 

FRANKIE: Domestic Shorthair, male, 2 months old, black & white, 2 pounds – $10