Who Will Feed in Lockdown The Stray Dog | Puppy | Cat | Animals? BholaShola. Harwinder Singh Grewal
Like 4 Dislike 0 Published on 28 Mar 2020
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Pet Care is a pet awareness initiative by Harwinder Grewal. Who is a director of Bhola Shola Pet Services and Farm Private Limited. In his videos, you can get deep knowledge about pets in the Hindi Language. He also tells most of the hidden aspects of Dog Business and Pets Business.
Coronavirus: ‘Who will feed the stray animals?’ Community carers worry about curbs on movement
With lockdowns being imposed across parts of India, Good Samaritans who feed free-roaming animals face an unusual challenge.
On Sunday, as India began to go into a lockdown to battle the coronavirus pandemic, Good Samaritans around the country who make feeding stray animals part of their routines set their alarm clocks a little earlier than usual.
Free-roaming dogs and cats had to be fed before 7 am, when the “janata curfew” to arrest the spread of Covid-19 came into effect. The animals were fed again after 9 pm, when the government-ordered exercise to encourage self-isolation ended.
But not all the animals turned up before the appointed hour. For instance, Aditya Natrajan, who feeds 30-odd dogs and cats at the Worli promenade in Mumbai every day, did not manage to get all of them at one go. Some of the animals usually hunker down in the rocks that abut the promenade wall and don’t emerge until the others have moved away.
With increasing restrictions on the movement of people across India (and a curfew in Maharashtra), these animals are in danger of being cut off from their main source of food.
In Vadodara, Hansa Roy, who feeds close to 250 dogs between 7.45 am and late afternoon over a 50-kilometre radius, left earlier than usual – at 5am. She kept piles of dry food for the dogs that didn’t show up. “I fed as many as I could, and I will keep feeding them, whatever the circumstances,” said Roy, a former geologist with the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation.
Will this activity be counted as an essential service, on par with allowing grocery stores and chemists to stay open? Community carers hope so. “It’s a solo activity, so there shouldn’t be a problem,” said Natrajan, a game developer and who runs the Instagram account Gully Bois. “We take precautions in any case – I wear a mask and gloves, for instance. If you feed animals regularly, they wait for you.”
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