What To Do In Case You Loose Your Pet


According to the most recent Synovate pet survey (Sept. 2005), conducted in nine markets across the globe, the UK and the US were shown to be the two absolute leaders in pet ownership. But the world-wide annual statistics on missing pets are shocking. Over 10 million pets go missing every year and millions never make it back home. This short rescue guide was compiled in order to minimize the chances of you ever having to file a missing pet report and to provide to all US pet-lovers a comprehensive list of the things one should know and do before and after his/her independent companion decides to migrate and explore the unknown. Just read carefully the tips that follow keeping in mind that you should not get discouraged or panic if your pet disappears. By following our advice and keeping yourself organized and prepared at all times, the chances are that you will be reunited with your lost friend again soon.

Plan ahead: Create an emergency action list and keep it handy in house or car. Check frequently your pet’s neck to ensure that the collar is in place and that its rabies tag and pet license tag are there; apart from pet’s ID your current phone number should appear. If your pet carries a microchip or a tattoo have that number with you all the time (in your wallet). Make sure you have recent reliable photos of your pet. Create a pet file on your PC with pet web directories and have all the local pet authorities’ telephone numbers also in print. Keep an updated map of your area with your emergency pet kit. Frequently check your locks, doors, windows and fence for possible escape passages. Do not trust strangers and never leave your pet unattended outside stores or inside vehicles. Register your pet to the available services of your area; you will save precious time if your pet becomes lost.

Your pet is missing: Check everywhere you can and do it quickly! Ask friends, neighbors and local pet authorities to assist you in your search. Create and distribute flyers including your pet’s pictures and your phone number and never state the exact amount if you decide to offer a reward or your real name and house address. Scan your neighborhood and give a copy of the missing pet’s flyer to everyone you meet, asking them to call you in case they see or hear anything. Have a real live person or if that is impossible a telephone recording machine answering the phone. Check all the clinics of your area frequently and visit the local shelters in person everyday. Befriend the employees and request their assistance. Inform the local veterinarian offices and the police. Provide all the details they need, but leave a few of your pet’s characteristics out. These will later help you identify whether the person claiming to have found your pet has actually your companion in his/her possession. Never visit by yourself someone that called and reported to have your pet. Take a friend with you or arrange to meet in a public place or the police department. Contact the local media and create a publicity fuss. Publicize your pet’s disappearance via the internet and local newspapers. Check the ‘found pet’ section of your local newspapers daily. Most importantly, do not give up hope. Keep looking and good luck!


Your pet is back: Once reunited with your pet, of extreme importance is for you to discover what circumstances allowed it to escape and perform any necessary changes to prevent a similar incident from happening again. Do not forget to call your neighbors, friends, local veterinarian clinics and shelters, to inform them that your pet is back. Of course, always remember to keep a collar and a current identification tag on your pet at all times, even when they are in your house. Your pet’s ID is actually its ticket home.

Kadence Buchanan
http://www.articlesbase.com/automotive-articles/what-to-do-in-case-you-loose-your-pet-59086.html

  1. #1 by guy on April 18, 2010 - 11:40 am

    can you get out of paying for a lawyer who over charges you too much and looses your case?
    my son got a DUI the lawyer said it would be around 5,000 we gave him 3500 up front he sent us a bill for 6,500 more and we lost the case. what can we do?

  2. #2 by Monster Brain on April 18, 2010 - 4:42 pm

    Exactly: We need national lawyer reform. It is time for lawyers wages to be restricted so the average man can afford one instead of just the wealthy. Ahmen brother. I have been saying the same thing for years.
    National Law Day everyone gets a lawyer paid for by the US Govt which is a real right unlike Health Care.
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  3. #3 by silky1 on April 18, 2010 - 4:44 pm

    You can report him to the Bar Association. When you enter into an agreement with an attorney the policy is to know what the fees will be upfront and signed off on. There is never a guarantee that a case will be one especially with DUI’s . This should have been explained to the clients before the case was taken by the attorney.
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  4. #4 by whitefangz1 on April 18, 2010 - 4:46 pm

    Sorry, but the fact that you lost the case does not excuse you from paying for your legal services. When a lawyer gives an estimate, it is an approximation and subject to change. Check the contract you signed with the lawyer and I’m sure you’ll find various mentions regarding billable hours, extra costs, etc. Unless you can show that he deliberately mislead you regarding the costs and that losing the case was the result of malpractice on his part, you must pay up.
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  5. #5 by jimbo on April 18, 2010 - 4:48 pm

    My new years resolution is to tell the truth when I answer questions. I am not looking for brownie points, I just want to tell the truth and you are the first. Frankly, you make me laugh. Why bother with a lawyer when the person concerned was obviously guilty. How did you expect to get off when the offender was caught with his hand in the cookie jar. As I have said on this site many times, guilty people rarely, if ever get off, that is all movie stuff. OK so the fee sounds a bit more than my office would have charged you but if that is what you contracted for, that is what you will have to pay. But because it is Christmas, I will let you into a little secret, it will be very hard if not impossible for the lawyer to get the extra. That is why we get it all up front.In a case like this, all your attorney can do is try to get the judge to go light on the sentence.
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  6. #6 by Ryan on April 18, 2010 - 4:50 pm

    You don’t pay your lawyer to win, you pay him for his time and efforts.

    If you feel terribly aggrieved, or you think he cheated you somehow, file a fee complaint with the state bar association.
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