Tuesday, August 2, 2011

High Desert Cruelty Call- March 2000



In trying to keep the few videos I have in order this one is the next one up.
It was one of those late in the day guaranteed overtime calls on a Saturday, my Friday, night that had to be handled "per the Supervisor".
That usually meant that enough complaints had come in that it could have become a major problem publicity wise. So I got the call.
This property was in the El Mirage area of the county and at least with this kind of call, as long as animals didn't have to get picked up, it was just the one call then home.
I now don't recall if I was carrying the camcorder with me that day or if I had asked Stacy to meet me and bring it with her, but the video was taken with the RCA full size VHS camcorder so it wasn't too easy to carry around in the truck.
The call was many animals, too many actually for the area zoning, and they were not being cared for properly. This usually meant dirty or dilapidated pens or corrals, little or no food and or water, and too much poop build up. And in this case it was a combination of most of them!
We arrived and found that nobody was home at the house on the property and as there was no parameter fence-line we easily drove back to the area of some pens and walked around from there.
While we were there checking out the place a neighbor driving by noticed the animal control trucks and stopped to see what was going on. Nosy or not he was were we got most of the information about the place than we had surmised from checking the property out.

First thing we found was all the pens had no water or the level was so far down the animals couldn't reach it. Even though this was in March in the high desert, animals always needed constant access to clean water. Animals such as the numerous pigs and chickens don't do well with no water around.
We couldn't find a way to get the water system working to get water flowing to the area of the pens. The neighbor when he got there, said that the pump to get it out that far was broken. So we started to haul out five gallon buckets of water using empty containers we found.
As the video shows the pigs went crazy for the water they were so thirsty and I recall refilling their water container several times before there was any water left standing in their pen.

And it was the same story with almost all the animals so it appeared to us that the animals had been without water for a day at least. After we got everything watered then it was go back and take a closer look at the true conditions of the animals.
As the video shows, several horses and a group of the cattle and goats were in pretty bad condition. Most people didn't know, or care, that the sandy desert soil, especially if the animal didn't have much area to walk in or exercise in causes their hooves to grow without any wearing down that would happen in the wild or in other areas of the county. A horse should have hooves checked and trimmed every eight weeks and cattle and goats too if needed. So as you can see in the video, horses with hooves too long and the cattle with their hooves so long it would be close to permanently injuring their feet in several pens.
Then it was all the illegal animals on this property, the fighting roosters, all illegal. You were only allowed to keep up to 5 roosters out there, but roosters kept in the cages that all those were housed were generally only kept for fighting purposes. The number of large livestock, all illegal except for the 9 large animals that would have been allowed to be kept for the size of the property. And ordering a vet and farrier check on all of them? VERY expensive, but that's what the Notice of Violation left on their door at the house said.
An N.O.V. gave a finite amount of time, usually starting at 30 days for something like this, to get going on working on correcting the violations listed on the form.
All told I'm thinking it was about two hours for both myself and Stacy to water and check all the animals at this place. The next workday, Wednesday for me, I turned in the original video to the main office for the "Investigator" to review and check into.
I remember making one check back a few weeks later to see what if anything had been done. Not much except the water was working again to the pens. I got the usual excuses about taking time finding a Vet they afford to come out and on and on. Then the Investigator and Code Enforcement had the ball, I no longer remember if they dropped it or not!
Main thing for me was in July, just a few months later, I got bitten in the head by the Rottweiler on a call in Fontana, got office duty for a few weeks and then got hired on as the new Wednesday to Saturday Shift Supervisor.

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About Me

We both 'retired' from working for San Bernardino County, the largest county in the U.S. in March 2006. Almost 25 years for me and almost 20 for Stacy. We now live in the panhandle of Northern Idaho and are still in law enforcement, just not Animal Control anymore. We'd NEVER move back to Southern California. Too crowded and too expensive. For us the rural lifestyle is best! We love the actual seasons that Idaho has. We also like that we're only 35 miles from Canada for trips!