31 Dec 2023

Best of 2023: Paws to reflect on pets, the year's best furry tails

10:55 am on 31 December 2023
An orange fluffy cat lies on their back with their eyes shut and a paw resting on their cheek.

A worker at Wellington's SPCA says the music played by RNZ Concert provides "calming soundscape for rescued animals". Photo: Unsplash

Is your cat trying to tell you something? Quite probably, researchers say, but you might not be paying enough attention to understand what they mean.

A study has found cats use their ears, gaze and paws to point to what they are trying to communicate, Massey University sociolinguist and self-declared cat person Dr Julia de Bres says.

Listen to the interview.

Pampered dogs in high fashion

It is not good to treat dogs as if they're human, a pet expert says. Photo: Karsten Winegeart / Unsplash

The rise of the pampered petriarchy

Do you treat your pet like a person? Then you're setting yourself - and them - up for failure, a pet expert says.

"Believing you are making your dog happy by buying every treat under the sun and having them sleep on your bed is treating them as a human, which they definitely are not," says Matamata-based dog behaviourist and author Selina McIntyre.

Read the full story

A dog licking its nose

Experts say there are ways to cut back on the costs of owning a pet. Photo: James Barker /Unsplash

Keeping a lid on pet expenses

Man's best friend is starting to look a little expensive, but it doesn't have to be that way.

The rising cost of living has hit pet ownership, amongst everything else, and animal shelters report more people giving up their animals because they can't afford to keep them.

But experts say there were ways to minimise the costs of owning pets.

Read the full story.

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Photo: Eleanor Black

Goodbye Scout, you were the best boy

With owning a pet eventually comes grief. Eleanor Black wrote about her experience of grief after the loss of her dog Scout.

But be warned, it's a tear jerker. Here's a snippet.

"I have always been a dog person, but for the past 15 years I have specifically been a Scout person. He was a mini-schnauzer/Jack Russell combo - a chatty, bearded little gentleman who loved swimming, chin scratches, children of all ages and dinner at 5pm sharp.

"When he died a few weeks ago, I felt utterly unmoored. If you don't share your life with a dog this possibly sounds melodramatic and embarrassing; otherwise you understand completely and dread the day your own dog dies."

Read the full piece.

Cats at the SPCA Wellington centre enjoy listening in to RNZ Concert

Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Cats prefer... RNZ Concert

Does your dog roll over when it hears Beethoven? Does your cat purr when it hears Puccini? Then it's in good company.

RNZ Concert's Bryan Crump, presenter of Three to Seven, has discovered some very discerning Concert listeners at Wellington's SPCA shelter.

It's a calming soundscape for rescued animals, many of whom are frightened of humans as well as their fellow animal refugees, says Mt Victoria team leader in charge of felines and small animals Josh Eastwood.

Read the full story.

Fanta the pet possum

Fanta the pet possum. Photo: Gaby Bailey

Pests or pets?

A small number of dedicated possum lovers have invited the marsupials into their homes and their hearts.

But how exactly does one end up with a pet possum? Gaby Bailey's possum Fanta was a surprise arrival.

"Someone ended up picking him up for their dog and realised he was still alive, so handed him over to me and he's been my best buddy ever since.

"A lot of people find them already on their dead mothers on the side of the road, or that have been shot by hunters.

"Most people will get a possum that way and raise it."

Read the full story.

Four brown rats.

Photo: Supplied / A Rats Tail

Perhaps one of the most misunderstood pets is the rat.

Belinda Clarke says while people tend to think they're vicious or disgusting animals, actually, they're really rather sweet. She has over 100 in her home.

"They're essentially like small puppies."

Read the full story.

Billy Barton is allowed to keep a maximum of three neutered ferrets which he uses in his pest control work

Billy Barton is allowed to keep a maximum of three neutered ferrets which he uses in his pest control work Photo: RNZ/Sally Round

Billy Barton quite likes his nickname. "They call me the Ferret Man in town."

He has three ferrets, though they're not so much pets as they are workmates. He takes care of them in exchange for hunting rabbits as part of his pest control team. Ferrets are actually banned as pets in Aotearoa, Barton is allowed them under strict conditions.

Barton hails from Wales which he represented in rabbiting field sports, spending winter weekends at trials with his ferrets and his dogs.

Read the full story.

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