• About
  • Bowdu the Shiba Inu
    • Bowdu’s health journal
  • Bowpi the Basenji
    • Bowpi’s health journal
  • Index of Dog Movies
    • List of Dog Movie Lists
  • On the same page
  • Reviews
  • Contact

The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋

~ a basenji, a shiba, and their human companions

The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋

Tag Archives: stray dogs

Sightings: Fast, cautious stray dogs with missing limbs

24 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by M.C. in Sightings, Taiwan reminiscences

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

animal cruelty, animal law, animal traps, formosan mountain dog, labrador mixes, stray dogs, taiwan dogs, three-legged dogs, tugou, two-legged dogs

Dogs with missing appendages are not an uncommon sight in the mountains of Taiwan…

20131022

… but they’re still faster than you’ll ever be.

20131022

This is what happens when you combine illegal gin traps* with population density and a profusion of abandoned pets and unaltered, free-roaming dogs. The lucky ones get saved by compassionate citizens who vet them and make the effort to find them a suitable home, if temperament allows. In the worst cases, the animal dies in excruciating pain (especially cats and smaller animals, whose whole bodies get caught).

Yet, some dogs manage to pull their mangled limbs out from the leg holds, heal up, and survive to run another day.

20131022

20131022

Inspiration? Tragedy? An abomination? A curse?

20131022

I wish I didn’t have to see them, yet when confronted, I can’t stop looking…

* Gin traps/leghold traps/捕獸夾 were officially declared illegal to manufacture, sell, set out, or import sometime in the last couple years with an amendment to Taiwan’s animal protection laws. However, there was relatively little publicity amongst the general population not already involved in the issue, as far as I can tell. To this day, there is virtually no enforcement of the law, as if the threatened fine of 15,000NT to 75,000NT (about $500 ~ $2500 USD) alone was supposed to deter offenders from doing what they’ve always done…

Sightings: Dogs in Taiwan, week one

16 Friday Aug 2013

Posted by M.C. in Sightings, Taiwan reminiscences

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

beagles, corgis, free ranging dogs, schnauzers, stray dogs, street dogs, taiwan dogs, tugou

It is far too hot still to schlep my fancy camera around, so I must content myself with cell phone, Instagrammed shots of local dogs.

Her hunting days are over...

There are a couple brindle tugou accompanied by old men who are fixtures on this strip of Zhonghua Rd. in Ximending, including a store dog at one of my favorite record stores. I never noticed that this one was quite so, well, swollen. The weather hasn’t been very conducive to exercise.

Face-off! #tugou on the left WINS for cuteness.

Three-month-old tugou puppy faces off with a Mini Schnauzer, a popular breed in Taiwan.

The Owl and the Corgipup

Another popular breed, the Night Owl — I mean, the Corgi, sighted at Cafe Junkies.

This dog will bite

And another popular breed, the Beagle. Asians love their Snoopy dog. Maybe not this particular one though. The sign behind her warns, “[This] Dog will bite.”

Yellow tugouFriend of the yellow tugou

Temples are generally good places for strays to hang out. Nobody wants to provoke the ire of the gods by abusing innocent creatures in their midst. They’re also highly trafficked, dense sites where scavenging yields rich rewards — especially when temple monks supplement the fare with regular handouts.

The yellow dog on the left was accompanied by the Pointer-esque mix on the right. They were hanging out at the large public square by Longshan Temple, as natural a part of the scene as the throngs of chainsmoking old men. They left as a unit and wound down a side alley, tempting me to follow… Maybe next time.

Two black tugou

The two black tugou lingered and hung out like matched companions as well, though only one was collared. The uncollared bitch had a few bald patches on her elbows and her chest, but had a decent amount of weight on her body. No skinny dogs around here…

Flinging feces for the children

15 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by M.C. in Bowdu the shiba inu, Digging in the Libraries, Links, Sightings

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

children before dogs, dog play, dog poop, humping, humping dogs, stray dogs

This is an amusing passage from Alan Beck, The Ecology of Stray Dogs: A Study of Free-Ranging Urban Animals (West Lafayette: NotaBell/Purdue University Press, 2002), a monograph about his field research in Baltimore in the early 1970s:

    I was present at a meeting of “Children Before Dogs,” a group of citizens organized by consumer advocate Fran Lee, when the police had to be called in to end the fighting between pet owners and others in the audience. It was sad to see people yelling, fighting, and at one point even throwing dog feces at each other. Dog feces were blamed for killing both the “Maxie” style skirts and children. (54)

20121127 Teamwork
no, I’m not going to actually post a picture of feces being flung!

Obnoxious poop machines indeed, infringing on human sartorial freedoms! Sadly, the fight for dog-friendly spaces has long been a steady campaign to mitigate the offenses of the few.

PRINT: Piebald street dogs of Tokugawa Japan

12 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by M.C. in Digging in the Libraries

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

archery, edo period, fuzoku gaho, japanese art, japanese cats, japanese chin, japanese dogs, ooku, piebald dogs, stray dogs, street dogs, tokugawa japan

As much as piebalds and pintos are reviled in the various Nihon ken breed standards, this coat pattern has been around for quite some time as a visibly marked, figurated (not necessarily figurative) type of dog within Japanese society — that is, a dog of a fixed, expected form. Breed purity mattered naught at the time that the pictures below were sketched in the late 19th century, featuring life during Tokugawa Japan. Rather, the piebald dog appears to be an index of lower class society in Japanese popular imagination.

Click any of the pictures below to enlarge. Unfortunately, I suck at reading brush script, so I couldn’t make out the artists on most of these. If anyone has more information, feel free to drop a comment.

Artist unknown, Fuzoku Gaho no. 62 (10 December 1893), p. 10

This first spread is a pretty good example of how the piebald dog gets categorized alongside other denizens of the streets — including the street walker (夜鷹, upper right-hand corner), the racketeer (ごろつき), blind masseuse (按摩, enjoying a bowl of noodles top and center), and various snack and meal vendors catering to those who live on the go and eat at odd hours. The piebald dog here accompanies a hunch-backed oden seller (おでんや), weary and frail as if crushed by a lifetime spent beneath his yoke. I’d like to think his dog not only accompanies him, but protects him from the dangers that apparently lurk everywhere for a man who earns his living amongst miscreants.

Artist unknown, Fuzoku Gaho no. 2 (10 March 1889), p. 10

This second downcast dog with angular hips and a desperate countenance, on the other hand, appears bereft of human companionship. He lingers outside of a fox shrine during the Inari matsuri, looking forlorn and conspicuously isolated in the foreground against the bubble-headed children and festival hubbub.

Artist unknown, Fuzoku gaho no. 67 (25 February 1894), p. 10

That exact same dog, almost as if cut-and-pasted (or perhaps sketched by the same artist), shows up in several other street scenes of Tokugawa era life. I didn’t include every replication… Similarly scrawny dogs are often inserted into busy street tableaux and placed on the outskirts of temple scenes, as if to balance out the composition, providing another set of eyes to gaze and reflect upon the scene.

Artist unknown, Fuzoku Gaho no. 57 (10 August 1893), p. 24

Even with eyes closed, the dog can provide another perspective and additional “color” to a scene. I’m not entirely sure how to regard this archery hall staffed by some rather suspicious women in loose-fitting clothing, milling about this riverside rest stop. However, the mere presence of the sleepy mutt, curled up at the corner of the building, invites interpretation and signals that this is not what you might think of as an elite kyudo dojo.

UTAGAWA Kuniyoshi 歌川国芳, Fuzoku Gaku no. 69 (10 March 1894), p. 17

But indeed, not every piebald or spotted dog can or should be read the same way. Associated with people in the street, the piebald dog seems more frequently to indicate lower class, unstable, or itinerant figures, as in the case of this monk (or a female nun?) in this two-paneled spread on “The Vicissitudes of Middle-Aged Ladies in the Tokugawa Ooku,” the inner chambers of the Tokugawa shogunate where all the palace ladies and concubines resided. I don’t know if this panel is referring to some specific episode of intrigue. My interpretation of this scene is influenced by stories of corrupt Chinese monks who exploited their access to women’s quarters to curry favors with the ruling elite. Thus, religious monkhood should never be taken as merely a position of transcendent asceticism, but rather, a kind of political power with the potential for both sageliness and hypocrisy. Perhaps the dog also indicates that two-facedness in this context?

At any rate, I’m intrigued by the pairing of the monk’s mutt with the woman’s toy dog, on the right. Or is it a cat? Whether piebald Chin or feline (I’m thinking the latter), he clearly occupies a different symbolic status as he helps disrobe his mistress in this titillating boudoir scene.

What impresses me from this small sample is that the piebald street dog appears to have just as much claim to Japanese “tradition” as the elite pedigrees of Nihon ken “proper”. It’s a wrench to throw into the standard breed histories, anyway. No matter what the breed standards say or how THE six native Nihon ken would become enshrined as exclusive national treasures in the 20th century, there were always other types of Japanese dogs at the margins of society who manage to slip through the cracks by being difficult to classify.

FILM: God Man Dog [Liulang shen gou ren]

31 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

buddhism, daoism, dog movies, labrador retriever, religion, singing chen, stray dogs, taiwan dogs, taiwan films

Film: God Man Dog [Liulang shen gou ren 流浪神狗人]
Director: Singing Chen [Chen Xinyi 陳芯宜]
Performers: Jack Kao [GAO Jie 高捷], Tarcy Su [SU Huilun], CHANG Han, TU Xiao-han, Jonathan Chang [ZHANG Yangyang]
Breeds featured: Labrador Retrievers, Taiwan mutts
Production information: Ocean Deep (Sanying 三映), 2007 (Taiwan)

GOD is just DOG backwards, as the aphorism goes. To skew this equation a bit, director Singing Chen inserts man — and they certainly do outweigh both dogs and gods in this film.

First, we are introduced to a young career couple with a new baby. Mother is a hand model, and father is an architect. Together, they represent a typical upscale, urban family ensconced in material comfort but completely lacking in emotional resources. They are as warm to each other as they are to the free-roaming dogs camped out at the base of their high rise apartment.

Next, we have an indigenous family living somewhere in the outskirts of Taipei. Father is a recovering alcoholic, and mother does her best to keep him under surveillance of the church. Their teenaged daughter, Savi, is begrudgingly training in Taipei for the boxing career that will be her ticket out of her parents’ economic rut. Savi’s anger at her father’s frailties blinds her to the extent that she is enabling her girlfriend’s vices, as the two embark on a mini crime spree, ripping off would-be pedophilic sexual predators (one could call them “lustful wolves”, se lang 色狼 in Mandarin Chinese).

Yellow Bull is an amputee truck driver who runs shipments up and down the island, collecting, repairing, and “rehoming” abandoned idols from Taiwan’s diverse and syncretic pantheon of local gods (with room for the Virgin Mary). For all his good deeds, including looking out for packs of stray dogs along his route, he cannot purchase a new prosthetic leg with merit alone, so he has to work hard to earn money before his old limb completely wears out.

Finally, there’s Ah Xian (whose name 仙 references Daoist mystics and immortals), a teenage wanderer with a voracious appetite and metabolism to match. He bums around the island winning prizes in eating contests and scheming what he can.

Each character runs their own course, scarcely involved in the others’ affairs, and this makes for confusing narration at times. But the complexity of the cast is a feint. Truth is, their names (and relative lack of star personas) don’t actually matter. Back stories are irrelevant, as well. You’re not supposed to connect with the characters because of where they’ve been, but what they do in the presence of fellow gods, men, and dogs.

By the time we realize the characters’ lives have become entangled, it’s too late to let off the accelerator, causing a huge traffic accident that narrowly misses taking the life of a stray dog. And that’s exactly what happens at the climax of the film. In an instant, lives and fortunes are lost… including a “million dollar” pedigreed black Labrador Retriever, pregnant with an entire litter of champion-bred puppies, who survives the crash and escapes from her owners’ overturned vehicle.

Identities are porous and as fragile as a baby’s breath, too. One can be a collector of antique religious iconography one day, a monotheistic Christian the next — Atayal when conscious and sober, or tossed in with Thai laborers in the overnight drunk tank. Even the expensive purebred Lab becomes indistinguishable from the other street dogs, and within a couple generations, her puppies will be, as well. As the characters’ lives and identities morph, bend, and break, we are repeatedly reminded that sometimes, our futures are beyond our control, no matter what god we beseech for mercy.

Though each character is persistently emptied of identity and agency, the story seems to gesture not towards nihilism, but to some external, transcendent reference. Nevertheless, I can’t reduce this quirky and philosophical film to mere allegory; it’s an ambiguous parable at best. We are shown plenty of the moral vicissitudes of mortal life, and it’s hard to draw any clear message. It’s not that type of lesson, not that manner of film. Of Gods and dogs, both remain distant, obscure, and inexplicable.

I suppose I was most drawn to Yellow Bull’s character (played by veteran actor Jack Kao) since he was the kindest and most fleshed out character, fully occupying his central position by communing with both dogs and gods — all living entities to his mind who literally cry out for help when abandoned or lost. Yet, he treats both gods and dogs with the same casual respect, without claiming ownership. He feeds the strays that have come to anticipate him, but they don’t enter his home. In such a way, the dogs maintain their status as borderline beings, just at the threshold of domesticity. Symptomatic of how none of the characters owns up to their responsibilities to their family members, no significant character actually owns a dog in this film.

It’s a reminder that there is another realm of animal belonging. In contrast to how I typically think of dogs as residing within domestic life, the story preserves the status of dogs as animals that are, after all, separate from man, but lurking somewhere at the edges of human wonder and imagination — like the gods.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The House of Two Bows keeps a running index of movies blurbed on the site, annotated by breed. If you’re interested in writing a guest blog for a dog film, contact for details.

FILM: Walking with the dog [Inu to arukeba] (2004)

27 Friday May 2011

Posted by M.C. in Film

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

dog movies, international therapy dog association, japanese dogs, japanese film, rescue, shiba inu mixes, stray dogs, therapy dogs, toru oki

Two fellows ditched by their ladies

Film: Walking with the Dog [Inu to arukeba 犬とあるけば]
Director: SHINOZAKI Makoto 篠崎誠
Performers: TANAKA Naoki 田中直樹, RYO りょう, FUJITA Yoko 藤田よこ, AOKI Tomio 青木富夫, Peace (shiba mix), Chirori (therapy mutt)
Production Information: 2004 (Japan)
Breeds featured: Shiba mix, Siberian Husky, mutts

Yasuyuki is an earnest but naive young man who gets dumped by his girlfriend the same day he picks up an abandoned Shiba mix, whom he names Tamura. He is immediately drawn to the smart little mutt, perhaps because they share a similar plight of being left behind by someone they loved. Though Yasuyuki is unemployed and barely able to fend for himself, he is inspired to help the dog. He jumps on an opportunity to enroll Tamura as a therapy dog with an organization that he heard about on the news. The training director is touched by Yasuyuki’s selflessness and gives them a place to stay and work, allowing both human and dog (and audience) the opportunity to learn about animal therapy work.

Meanwhile, Yasuyuki’s ex-girlfriend, Miwa, has returned home to take care of her granny and depressed younger sister while her mother is in hospice care. She has enough stress in her life without Yasuyuki’s attempts to get back together with her, so when he offers her Tamura’s assistance, she is skeptical at first. However, the good-natured little dog shows that he knows how to work the miracles she once expected of her boyfriend. Miwa and her family eventually come to understand the value of canine companionship, particularly the way that dogs can help enrich human relationships.

Hot on the heels of the Japanese blockbuster Quill, the story of a seeing eye Labrador (yes, it’s on my to-do list, when I finally feel emotionally steeled for it), this quiet little film barely raised any notice. While Walking with the Dog does unfortunately suffer from some problems with pacing and poor character development, I think it’s deserving of a closer look. If nothing else, it’s a tantalizing and honest contribution from Japanese animal advocates who are attempting to manifest a vision of humanitarian care akin to what they imagine is available in developed countries like the United States.

getting a feel for leash pops


Indeed, one of the sharpest angles about this film is the way that the American animal welfare system is unabashedly praised as a model for emulation. One scene where Yasuyuki’s friends are debating what to do about Tamura unfolds as follows:

Woman: I heard that when America had this problem of abandoned dogs… they set up a system specially for training these kinds of dogs.
Yasuyuki: Japan doesn’t have this kind of system?
Woman: Well, I don’t really know anything about that.
Yasuyuki: Where have I heard about this before…?

And that’s when he looks up at the television to see a news story on therapy dog star Chirori, wearing an American flag bandanna, and her trainer.

Toru Oki and Chirori, therapy dog star


This actually parallels the musical career of “Mr. Yellow Blues” man Toru OKI 大木トオル, who not only acts the role of the training director, but who is also a real-life spokesperson for the International Therapy Dog Association in Japan. Reflecting his performance practices (he was known for making a convincing show of Chicago blues sung entirely in English), Oki-sensei tells his therapy dog assistants to give commands in English, as the consonants of the Japanese language are too soft and muddled for proper instruction.

from the streets to the lap of luxury


therapy dog classes becoming more and more popular


The welcome mat at Oki’s training center is similarly bedecked in stars and stripes, and later in the film, when therapy dog work appears to be gaining popularity, new trainees are initiated under a banner that reads “Proud to Be An American.” So these overt gestures of American favoritism are hard to miss, but the appeals have less to do with toadying to the West than embracing an ideal of universal humanitarianism.

Chirori, therapy dog superstar


mobbed by a million elementary school kids


Ultimately, what is most touching and most captivating about this film are the unrehearsed encounters, the moments when these real life therapy dogs are working their magic at nursing homes and elementary schools. I admit that my eyes were more often on the dogs than the humans in such scenes, and there were times when I cringed when witnessing the mobs that these poor dogs must suffer in the name of teaching about empathy and compassion. But it’s all the more to their credit and their training that they never act out even in times of visible confusion and stress. The stub-legged mutt in particular, Chirori, is placid through it all, a true exemplar of what the calming presence of a dog can do.

The nursing home scenes are also notable for featuring veteran actor AOKI Tomio (below), whose film career spanned 1929 (!) to 2004, this being his final film.
For fans of Japanese pop culture, two other prominent names make cameo appearances. KATAGARI Jin 片桐仁 of the comedy duo Rahmens ラーメンズ and YOSHIMURA Yumi of JPop duo Puffy Amiyumi appear as Yasuyuki’s quirky husband-in-law and pregnant sister.

cameo appearances by Katagiri Jin of Rahmens and Yumi of Puffy


Finally, Ryo, the actress who plays Yasuyuki’s girlfriend, is supposedly a pretty big deal from J-drama. However, I found her appearances to be tedious and unevocative, as befits her character, the emotionally frigid “strong woman” who is far too stoic for her own good. I have to admit that I sped through most of her scenes at double pace (thanks to the wonders of home DVD technology), including her climatic meltdown about three-quarters through the film which otherwise would have taken 8 whole minutes. That’s like a decade in filmic time. But apparently even that wasn’t compelling enough for me to get any screenshots of her, so you’ll just have to do without.

therapy dogs in training


Indeed, the stars of the show, as acknowledged in the film’s full title (Inu to arukeba: Chirori & Tamura) are the dogs, or more specifically, the mutts. And this is why it’s such a huge pity that Walking with the Dog was not a bigger hit in the same Asian regions that embraced Quill (Hong Kong, Taiwan, and of course Japan). Perhaps the abandonment scene that opens the film hit too close to home. I can’t speak of other countries, but I know that releasing unwanted dogs in open areas, instead of trying to properly rehome them, was and still remains common practice in Taiwan [cf. Hsu, et. al, “Dog Keeping in Taiwan: Its Contribution to the Problem of Free-Roaming Dogs,” Journal of Applied Animal Welfare 6.1 (2003): 1-23]. Perhaps audiences were revolted by the scene inside a Japanese animal shelter, which seemed relatively brief and sanitized to me, but may have presented too intrusive a dose of “reality” for audiences expecting more escapist fare.

Searching the shelters for his lost dog


Or perhaps the idea of a rescue mutt stripped of breed history or any back story with accompanying footage of puppy cuteness is just that radical, and has yet to catch on with mainstream audiences. To be fair, there are several moments that stretch the limits of credibility — for example, Yasuyuki’s complete willingness to claim responsibility for Tamura, even in the face of legal repercussions, and Oki-sensei’s quick decision to take them under his wing despite knowing so little about either of them. So it’s not like the audiences that “rejected” this film are discounting the gravity of the situation, since the story only has a tenuous basis in reality. But the most real characters here are the registered therapy dogs, all of them rescued. For me, the second chance given to every single one of those dogs on screen overshadows the general faults of this film, allowing me to be gentle on its shortcomings, and appraise it instead for its potential to inspire something greater.

Whatever the reasons for the commercial failure of this title, I am grateful to the filmmakers for bringing this story to screen, and would hate to see it fade into obscurity. At the time of this writing, maybe only the expensive Japanese version has English subtitles (it’s not clear to me according to the listing on Yesasia.com, but older titles on that site often suddenly go AWOL once you try to buy them). I watched a Taiwanese edition entitled 男人與流浪狗 (literally A Man and a Stray Dog) with original Japanese dialogue and Chinese subtitles.

Once you feed a stray, he'll never leave you alone

If you have any interest in Japanese society, therapy animals, or the way that dogs’ lives are narrated alongside everyday human drama, I’d say this is worth keeping an eye out for.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

TUAPA – Taiwan Animal Rescue

01 Wednesday Dec 2010

Posted by M.C. in Links, Taiwan reminiscences

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

formosan mountain dog, rescue, stray dogs, taichung, taiwan, taiwan dogs, tuapa, tugou

PREFACE: I get a lot of hits on this post and queries from people who want to get in touch with TUAPA. That’s great! I’m not currently located near the TUAPA shelters though, nor am I an official member of TUAPA operations. If you are interested in Taiwan dog adoptions in general, please check out this post. You will also fare better directing inquiries to the organizations; links are embedded throughout my articles.

Taichung Universal Animal Protection Association (TUAPA) is a rescue organization located in Taichung, central Taiwan. Established in 1994, they are a recognized non-profit, currently headed by eight staff members, one vet, and scores of volunteers. They have their own facilities to house approximately 1000 dogs and some cats.

That’s a lot of dogs and cats all together in one place. Aside from a few high profile organizations, I don’t think most rescues in the United States dare to assume responsibility for so many animals at once. And with a greater number of rescue organizations spread across the US, luckily most don’t have to.

Unfortunately in Taiwan, the number of rescue organizations relative to the number of stray, abandoned, and needy dogs is totally insufficient. So Taiwanese animal rescue organizations face certain challenges that are a bit different from what you would find in the United States.

Here are a couple videos that offer a sense of what TUAPA’s facilities are like. The text and some dialogue is in Chinese, but the main volunteer featured in these two clips is a Scottish expatriate who has dedicated much of her time to the care of these animals (she speaks in English in the video). Just letting the dogs out for a run takes quite a bit of work!

This one has English subtitles:

I first heard about TUAPA from a neighboring rescue organization, Taichung PAWS founded by an alliance of Taiwanese and expatriate volunteers. This group also works with the Taipei-based Animals Taiwan, with whom I got my first experience volunteering for a rescue. More on that some other time.

When the Doggy Daddy and I moved back to the United States and were looking at adopting a rescue Shiba before we got Bowpi, I learned that my local Shiba rescue often helps TUAPA rehome Shiba Inu from Taiwan. Because of our proximity to the Pacific region and because the popularity of certain breeds in Taiwan means that many inevitably end up in rescue on that side of the ocean as well, TUAPA has made connections with rescues here.

They can compete with all the other purebreds and mutts needing homes in Taiwan, or they can be brought to California (and elsewhere) for a better, almost certain chance at adoption.

One version of anti-rescue vitriol that I often see copied and posted to places like Craigslist charges that American rescue groups import dogs, specifically puppies, from places like Taiwan because rescues need a constant supply of cute, adoptable puppies to boost their image and keep funding their operations. The allegation is that this is a gross mismanagement of resources, and further proof that animal rescue operates on shady, irresponsible economic models.

Frankly, that’s a lot of misinformed, malicious crap.

It’s true that Taiwanese animal rescues frequently reach out to international animal welfare groups for assistance. This is partly an extension of the demographics of animal rescue in Taiwan; a lot of expatriates take part, and so they naturally get the word out to those in their home countries. And many international rescues, motivated by the gravity of the situation in Taiwan, willingly assist purebred and mixed breed dogs alike. The fact of the matter is that there are not enough suitable homes on this island of 23 million people for anywhere from 170,000 (official statistics) to 300,000 (best estimates) stray dogs.

One might respond that there’s a shortage of suitable homes for the vast number of homeless dogs and cats the world over, including, most likely, right in your own town. Sadly, this is true and will be true for longer than I can imagine. And so to that, I say YES, by all means, consider adopting locally first. Absolutely.

But if you hear of a needy dog who comes from elsewhere, like Taiwan, and if their story moves you enough to reach out and commit to adopting that particular dog from faraway — and the rescue is willing to help the dog find its way to you — there is no shame in long-distance dog adoption. When it comes to animal rescues and dogs in particular, it’s so often about the heart, about squishy things like emotions and empathy and compassion, and there’s no need to cheapen those very real motivations with talk of rationality, efficiency, or “judicious appropriation of resources” when that immediate impulse to do good is already beyond value.

One note on the economics of international dog adoption, concerning airfare. Like many other modern, international hubs, there is a lot of air traffic coming in and out of Taiwan. This is particularly true amongst the business, student, and expatriate populations who call the island home. These are the types of people that Taiwanese rescues rely on to help export their dogs, as it’s much easier and more cost efficient to send along a dog as extra cargo when there are already human passengers to sponsor the flight. It’s rare that single adoptive dogs are directly shipped as international cargo, as that would be a significant expenditure and a bigger burden on operation costs. But if several dogs can hitch a ride with someone who would already be taking the flight anyway, the extra baggage literally amounts to the weight of the crated dogs, as the rescue group will arrange everything before and after the flight, including the overage charges (some airlines even offer discounts for rescue groups), pick-up, and drop-off.

This was meant to be a short post. Woops. Anyway, there will be more.

Follow us on Facebook

Follow us on Facebook

My say (recent posts)

  • Bowdu 寶肚, the Precious Tummy 25 August 2020
  • Bowpi 寶媲, the Precious Companion 2 August 2020
  • Roll of 28, Day 28: Yesterday’s clouds were dramatic — today is ok 1 March 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 27: She wore red shoes 27 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 26: First dibs 26 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 25: My first fish taco 25 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 24: MGMT 24 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 23: Illuminated perspective 23 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 22: Desirous duo 22 February 2015
  • Roll of 28, Day 21: The View from the DJ corner 21 February 2015

Your say

  • M.C. on Cone of Pride! and Triumph! Version 2.0
  • opulentresplendence on Cone of Pride! and Triumph! Version 2.0
  • M.C. on Bowdu 寶肚, the Precious Tummy
  • Ulatking on Bowdu 寶肚, the Precious Tummy
  • M.C. on Bowdu 寶肚, the Precious Tummy

Day by day

March 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Aug    

Where we’ve been

What we talk about when we talk about dogs

  • Bowdu the shiba inu (432)
  • Bowpi the basenji (427)
  • Digging in the Libraries (49)
  • Film (81)
  • Finances (54)
  • Food, drugs & other ingestibles (120)
  • Health (79)
  • Human escapades (91)
  • Links (69)
  • Observations & opinions (38)
  • Polls (1)
  • Reviews (31)
  • Sightings (183)
  • Signs of the Beast Bay (17)
  • Sound and music (19)
  • Stuff you can buy (29)
  • Taiwan reminiscences (43)
  • Trinkets, toys, and memorabilia (13)
  • Videos (29)

★ Basenji Peeps

  • 2 becomes 1
  • Basenji blogs on Blog Mura
  • Basenji Forums
  • Basenji Shaun
  • Basenji Troublemakers
  • Basenji University
  • BRAT – Basenji Rescue and Transport
  • BRAT Blog
  • Crazy Basenji
  • Curly-tailed Brigade
  • Follow the Piper
  • Hero, Yosal, Iivari & Aapo
  • Johnny Pez
  • Junk Thief
  • Performance Puppy
  • Sneak a Peek
  • Super Eggplant
  • Super Senjis
  • Suzuki and strawberries you are Basenji
  • Whiskered Paintings

★ Shiba Links

  • 3 Shiba Super Heroes
  • A Winnie Day
  • Adventures of Conker
  • Adventures of Olli
  • Demon Dog
  • Dog Newbie
  • Eat Play Love
  • F'Yeah Shiba Inu
  • From the House of the Fox Dogs
  • Hibiki Tree
  • Hinoki the Shiba
  • I Am Shiba
  • I'm Ichigo
  • I.Am.Kaiju
  • Jenna and Snickers
  • Jonathan Fleming
  • Kenzo the Shiba
  • Kyota the Shiba
  • Life as an Art Form
  • Life With Kai
  • Loki the Shiba
  • Mac the Shiba Inu
  • Maggie the Mini Shiba
  • Maru in Michigan
  • Masakado Shiba Inu
  • Misadventures of a Shiba Inu
  • Misanthropic Shiba
  • Mulder – My life as a dog
  • My Shiba is a Diva
  • Obey Zim!
  • Oh Henley!
  • Our Shibal Inu
  • Saya's Adventure
  • Shiba Inu blogs on Blog Mura
  • Shiba Inu Forum
  • Shiba Inu Hawaii
  • Shiba Shake
  • Shio the Shiba
  • Sophelia's Adventures in Japan
  • Taro the Shiba
  • Volunteers 4 Paws (formerly Inu Baka)
  • Yuki the Shiba Inu

Rescue

  • Americas Basenji Rescue
  • Animals Taiwan
  • BACS Dog Volunteer Blog
  • Basenji Club of SE Wisconsin
  • BRAT – Basenji Rescue and Transport
  • Camp Basenji Rescue
  • Colorado Basenji Rescue
  • MASR – Mid Atlantic Shiba Rescue
  • Medfly Basenji Rescue of Southern California
  • MSIR – Midwest Shiba Inu Rescue
  • Muttville
  • National Shiba Inu Rescue
  • Northern California Shiba Inu Rescue
  • Northern Nevada Shiba Rescue
  • Northwest Shibas4Life
  • NYC Shiba Rescue
  • Safe Harbor
  • Saving Shibas, Inc.
  • Shiba Inu Rescue of Florida
  • Shiba Inu Rescue of Texas
  • Shiba Scout Rescue
  • SIRA – Shiba Inu Rescue Association
  • Tri-State Shiba Inu Rescue
  • TUAPA – Taichung Universal Animal Protection Association
  • Walkin' the Bark

We're not just Shibasenji-centric (it's just what we're used to)

  • Animal Emotions
  • Animals Being Dicks
  • Anything for a Cookie
  • Ask Dr. Yin
  • Bark Blog
  • Brad Anderson
  • Canine Corner
  • Cats and Squirrels
  • Cats on Film
  • Companion Animal Psychology Blog
  • Countersurfer
  • Cute Overload
  • Daily Coyote
  • Desert Wind Hounds
  • Do You Believe in Dog?
  • Dobermann Daze
  • Doctor Barkman Speaks
  • Dog Art Today
  • Dog Food Advisor
  • Dog Milk
  • Dog Snobs
  • Dog Spies
  • Dog Star Daily
  • Dog's Best Friend
  • Doggerel
  • Dogs Make Everything Better
  • Dogs of San Francisco
  • Dogster: For the Love of Dog
  • Forumosa Pet Forum
  • Gardens for Goldens
  • Girl with the Gae
  • Happy Bark Days
  • Hound from Africa
  • Hound in Hanoi
  • KC Dog Blog
  • Life By Pets
  • Modern Mechanix – Animals
  • Mongrels of the World
  • Musings of a Biologist and Dog Lover
  • My Imperfect Dog
  • My Rotten Dogs
  • Nihon Ken
  • Other End of the Leash
  • Pedigree Dogs Exposed
  • Pet Museum
  • Poodle (and Dog) Blog
  • Prick-Eared
  • Querencia
  • Raised By Wolves
  • Rubicon Days
  • Ruffly Speaking
  • Science of Dogs
  • Shutterhounds
  • Sniffing the Past
  • Tinkerwolf
  • Ulatulat
  • VIN News
  • We Live in a Flat
  • Wolf Dog Blog
  • YesBiscuit!

african dogs aggression akita allergies art basenji basenji mixes basenji rescue and transport breeders budgeting canine body language canine dental canine hypothyroidism canine play chinese dogs collies comfortis cone of pride and triumph cone of shame corgis dehydrated dog food dog food dog movies dog parks dog play dog songs dog toys dog treats drugs finances foot licking formosan mountain dog german shepherds giveaways grooming hair loss health tests hemopet honest kitchen jack russell terrier japanese art japanese dogs japanese film labrador retrievers meetups off leash orthopedic foundation for animals pet finances pet store a pit bulls primal raw puppies quirks raw diet raw fish raw turkey rescue roll of 28 shiba inu shiba mixes sighthounds skin care sleep soloxine sponsored reviews stray dogs supplements taipei taiwan taiwan dogs terriers thyroids training tugou vet

Freshly sniffed (featured links, regularly rotated)

SPARCS 2014 topics

Fox colors

Why are some breeds of dogs more popular than others?

Owner Profile: The Rare Breed Braggart

10 great books on dogs

Bureau of Labor Statistics: Spending on Pets

Links to articles on village dogs

Badges

DogTime Blog Network Badge Dog Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory Photobucket

Pets Blogs
Pets
Dog Topsite

We've greeted...

  • 552,574 guests

Honors

Online Colleges Top Blogs

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 171 other subscribers

Get in touch

scroll up to drop us a line via the comment form!

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋
    • Join 171 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The House of Two Bows 雙寶之屋
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...