Some cool animal control images:
NY Animal Care and Control Center
Image by Gandhu & Sarah
IMG_0747
Image by ctgreybeard
The sharks were a little scary. Note how Bruce has two people controlling him
Home » Posts filed under Control
Some cool animal control images:
NY Animal Care and Control Center
Image by Gandhu & Sarah
IMG_0747
Image by ctgreybeard
The sharks were a little scary. Note how Bruce has two people controlling him
A few nice animal control images I found:
Happy Tails: Mattie Mae
Image by LollypopFarm
We donate newspapers, toys, food, etc. to Lollypop on a regular basis. On one of these drop-off days, my daughter Linds asked if we could look at the dogs. We did. And there, all alone, all furry and puffy was little Llasa-poo Mattie! (We added Mae to the end of her name.) We went home and picked up our other dog Bear (Shih-poo) to see if they would get along. They were great together. We've had Mattie Mae for 3 years now and could not imagine living without her. She totally took over control of the house, and Bear, but he loves it and her. She adds so much fun to the house with her jumping and playing and her crazy little crooked nose. Thank you to Lollypop for giving us the most lovable little bundle of spunk we could ask for, and a great companion to our little Bear!!
-Lisa K.
A few nice animal control images I found:
Caged Construction Vehicles
Image by brownpau
Animal Control was able to trap and contain this feral backhoe before it killed anyone by luring it into a cage with the help of a decoy mini-tractor.
Some cool animal control images:
IMG_5248
Image by joshgray
Rocky is our newest foster, based out of Osawatomie Animal Control. Adopt him today!
another maddie impression
Image by joshgray
Rocky is our newest foster, based out of Osawatomie Animal Control. Adopt him today!
"It's tooooo big"
Image by joshgray
Rocky is our newest foster, based out of Osawatomie Animal Control. Adopt him today!
A few nice animal control images I found:
Cat Cafe Nekomaru
Image by Vaice-A
70mm / Manual (F3.5, 1/25sec) / ±0EV / ISO 200 / WB:Auto / Picture Control:Portrait
Lens:SIGMA 70mm F2.8 EX DG MACRO
Cat Cafe Nekomaru
Image by Vaice-A
70mm / Manual (F3.5, 1/25sec) / +5EV / ISO 200 / WB:Auto / Picture Control:Portrait
Lens:SIGMA 70mm F2.8 EX DG MACRO
Check out these animal control images:
Arrow
Image by Jeremiah Ro
Arrow had SO much energy - she was like an out of control yo-yo at the end of the leash.
Burning Man 2008 107
Image by xamichee
we rode out into deep playa with the animal control folks in the middle of a dust storm to help with their art project located by the fence
Check out these animal control images:
Orange County Humane Society Volunteer with Shelter Dog Roscoe
Image by kathy doucette
Orange County Animal Shelter's Roscoe made an appearance at the Waugh Harley Davidson pet adoption event. His handler Leo can hardly control him! Must be the pit bull in him.
Seriously though, this young male is still looking for his forever home. He is loads of fun and a ball of energy.
Want to meet him? Contact the Orange County Animal Shelter.
Adoption hours, shelter contact and directions: www.petfinder.com/shelters/VA123.html
Photo by Kathy Doucette, 2010.
Animal art auction, 7/28/06
Image by Kate O'
Picture from the Animal Art auction on Thursday 7/28/06 benefitting PACT Belize at Mercy Lounge in Nashville, TN. This was one of the elephant paintings. They're much more controlled in their use of paint than the other animals.
Animal art auction, 7/28/06
Image by Kate O'
Picture from the Animal Art auction on Thursday 7/28/06 benefitting PACT Belize at Mercy Lounge in Nashville, TN. This was one of the elephant paintings. They're much more controlled in their use of paint than the other animals.
Some cool animal control images:
Possible occult activity
Image by 826 PARANORMAL
Bridgeport police investigate apparent Santeria curse
Noelle Frampton, STAFF WRITER
Published: 11:17 p.m., Wednesday, April 21, 2010
BRIDGEPORT -- In the latest of several incidents of apparent occult practice in the city, police are investigating what they believe was a Santeria curse against a Derby man -- in the form of dead, headless roosters and other animal parts.
Stuffed with some kind of root and sewn up, the two beheaded roosters were found last week, hanging by their feet about 10 feet up from a tree near the intersection of Housatonic Avenue and Grand Street, according to police and paranormal investigators.
At the base of the tree was a bag containing a black knit cap and a box cutter, and nearby there were three coconut halves in a semi-circle, an apparent sheep's jawbone and a snakeskin, said Nicole Hall, a paranormal investigator with CT Soul Seekers Paranormal Investigations.
Animal control was notified on Wednesday, and a patrol officer was later called to the scene.
The matter is still under investigation and no charges have been filed, said Sgt. James Myers, who is also a paranormal investigator.
Preliminarily, it appears the curse was linked to a dispute between a man who works near the spot where the roosters were found and his ex-girlfriend, according to Hall, who visited the scene and talked to the man's wife.
The disputing pair was due to appear in court soon because the man recently discovered that the teenage son he'd been supporting all of his life wasn't his and is suing for back child support, Hall said.
The ex-girlfriend apparently set up the curse with offerings to a Santerian god and symbols related to money, as well as negative wishes toward the man. She called to inform him of it early last week, Hall said.
Reached at home Wednesday evening, the man, whose name was withheld to protect his privacy, declined comment.
In the past year, the city has seen an upswing in incidents involving occult activity, Myers said, noting numerous times he's gone to city homes and noticed symbolism related to Voodoo and Santeria, a Caribbean religion that combines elements of West African Yoruba and Roman Catholicism.
Last June, officers found a human skull, a beheaded chicken, chickens' blood and other animal parts in a Madison Avenue basement during a drug raid. The next month, there were two human skulls in a circular blanket of loose dirt and bloody papers with names on them at Mountain Grove Cemetery. And just days later, the body of a 2-year-old girl stolen from her Stamford grave showed up in a New Jersey river with chicken bones nearby.
Police believed all three incidents may have involved Santeria or similar religious rituals, but weren't connected.
A police report indicates that the ex-girlfriend, who lives in Bridgeport, may also have been involved in the Mountain Grove ritual.
Myers declined to comment on whether there is a criminal element to the apparent curse, saying that such cases, in general, can be tricky because people have a legal right to freely practice the religion of their choice.
"You have that fine line," he said. "When does it become animal cruelty? When does it become harassment? You have to really, really watch that line. People have Constitutional rights for a purpose."
Due to the apparent increase in occult activity in Bridgeport, Myers is advocating for city police training in occult identification so officers "know what they're actually looking at when they go out into the field."
Hall said the man's wife told her she'd found other evidence of possible curses around their home and "in the past few months or so, they've had nothing but bad luck."
She said the couple has renewed their attendance at a Catholic church and asked that their house be blessed by a priest.
"That's the best thing they can do," she said, adding that she believes people can protect themselves against spiritual curses through their own beliefs.
Marci Fernino, a sensitive with CT Soul Seekers, said the man "doesn't want to put any belief in" the curse, and went as far as to assert that "Somebody can't curse you if you don't believe in it and your faith is strong enough and you don't let that happen."
There is an element of mind-over-matter in such cases, Myers said, but "it really doesn't matter if the person believes or doesn't believe."
Some people don't believe in paranormal or occult activity, he said, but their opinions don't determine whether it is real: "There are things beyond us that we can't explain; it doesn't mean they're not there."
Even so, he said the curse was directed toward a specific goal and should not cause alarm to the general public.
Possible occult activity
Image by 826 PARANORMAL
Bridgeport police investigate apparent Santeria curse
Noelle Frampton, STAFF WRITER
Published: 11:17 p.m., Wednesday, April 21, 2010
BRIDGEPORT -- In the latest of several incidents of apparent occult practice in the city, police are investigating what they believe was a Santeria curse against a Derby man -- in the form of dead, headless roosters and other animal parts.
Stuffed with some kind of root and sewn up, the two beheaded roosters were found last week, hanging by their feet about 10 feet up from a tree near the intersection of Housatonic Avenue and Grand Street, according to police and paranormal investigators.
At the base of the tree was a bag containing a black knit cap and a box cutter, and nearby there were three coconut halves in a semi-circle, an apparent sheep's jawbone and a snakeskin, said Nicole Hall, a paranormal investigator with CT Soul Seekers Paranormal Investigations.
Animal control was notified on Wednesday, and a patrol officer was later called to the scene.
The matter is still under investigation and no charges have been filed, said Sgt. James Myers, who is also a paranormal investigator.
Preliminarily, it appears the curse was linked to a dispute between a man who works near the spot where the roosters were found and his ex-girlfriend, according to Hall, who visited the scene and talked to the man's wife.
The disputing pair was due to appear in court soon because the man recently discovered that the teenage son he'd been supporting all of his life wasn't his and is suing for back child support, Hall said.
The ex-girlfriend apparently set up the curse with offerings to a Santerian god and symbols related to money, as well as negative wishes toward the man. She called to inform him of it early last week, Hall said.
Reached at home Wednesday evening, the man, whose name was withheld to protect his privacy, declined comment.
In the past year, the city has seen an upswing in incidents involving occult activity, Myers said, noting numerous times he's gone to city homes and noticed symbolism related to Voodoo and Santeria, a Caribbean religion that combines elements of West African Yoruba and Roman Catholicism.
Last June, officers found a human skull, a beheaded chicken, chickens' blood and other animal parts in a Madison Avenue basement during a drug raid. The next month, there were two human skulls in a circular blanket of loose dirt and bloody papers with names on them at Mountain Grove Cemetery. And just days later, the body of a 2-year-old girl stolen from her Stamford grave showed up in a New Jersey river with chicken bones nearby.
Police believed all three incidents may have involved Santeria or similar religious rituals, but weren't connected.
A police report indicates that the ex-girlfriend, who lives in Bridgeport, may also have been involved in the Mountain Grove ritual.
Myers declined to comment on whether there is a criminal element to the apparent curse, saying that such cases, in general, can be tricky because people have a legal right to freely practice the religion of their choice.
"You have that fine line," he said. "When does it become animal cruelty? When does it become harassment? You have to really, really watch that line. People have Constitutional rights for a purpose."
Due to the apparent increase in occult activity in Bridgeport, Myers is advocating for city police training in occult identification so officers "know what they're actually looking at when they go out into the field."
Hall said the man's wife told her she'd found other evidence of possible curses around their home and "in the past few months or so, they've had nothing but bad luck."
She said the couple has renewed their attendance at a Catholic church and asked that their house be blessed by a priest.
"That's the best thing they can do," she said, adding that she believes people can protect themselves against spiritual curses through their own beliefs.
Marci Fernino, a sensitive with CT Soul Seekers, said the man "doesn't want to put any belief in" the curse, and went as far as to assert that "Somebody can't curse you if you don't believe in it and your faith is strong enough and you don't let that happen."
There is an element of mind-over-matter in such cases, Myers said, but "it really doesn't matter if the person believes or doesn't believe."
Some people don't believe in paranormal or occult activity, he said, but their opinions don't determine whether it is real: "There are things beyond us that we can't explain; it doesn't mean they're not there."
Even so, he said the curse was directed toward a specific goal and should not cause alarm to the general public.
Possible occult activity
Image by 826 PARANORMAL
Bridgeport police investigate apparent Santeria curse
Noelle Frampton, STAFF WRITER
Published: 11:17 p.m., Wednesday, April 21, 2010
BRIDGEPORT -- In the latest of several incidents of apparent occult practice in the city, police are investigating what they believe was a Santeria curse against a Derby man -- in the form of dead, headless roosters and other animal parts.
Stuffed with some kind of root and sewn up, the two beheaded roosters were found last week, hanging by their feet about 10 feet up from a tree near the intersection of Housatonic Avenue and Grand Street, according to police and paranormal investigators.
At the base of the tree was a bag containing a black knit cap and a box cutter, and nearby there were three coconut halves in a semi-circle, an apparent sheep's jawbone and a snakeskin, said Nicole Hall, a paranormal investigator with CT Soul Seekers Paranormal Investigations.
Animal control was notified on Wednesday, and a patrol officer was later called to the scene.
The matter is still under investigation and no charges have been filed, said Sgt. James Myers, who is also a paranormal investigator.
Preliminarily, it appears the curse was linked to a dispute between a man who works near the spot where the roosters were found and his ex-girlfriend, according to Hall, who visited the scene and talked to the man's wife.
The disputing pair was due to appear in court soon because the man recently discovered that the teenage son he'd been supporting all of his life wasn't his and is suing for back child support, Hall said.
The ex-girlfriend apparently set up the curse with offerings to a Santerian god and symbols related to money, as well as negative wishes toward the man. She called to inform him of it early last week, Hall said.
Reached at home Wednesday evening, the man, whose name was withheld to protect his privacy, declined comment.
In the past year, the city has seen an upswing in incidents involving occult activity, Myers said, noting numerous times he's gone to city homes and noticed symbolism related to Voodoo and Santeria, a Caribbean religion that combines elements of West African Yoruba and Roman Catholicism.
Last June, officers found a human skull, a beheaded chicken, chickens' blood and other animal parts in a Madison Avenue basement during a drug raid. The next month, there were two human skulls in a circular blanket of loose dirt and bloody papers with names on them at Mountain Grove Cemetery. And just days later, the body of a 2-year-old girl stolen from her Stamford grave showed up in a New Jersey river with chicken bones nearby.
Police believed all three incidents may have involved Santeria or similar religious rituals, but weren't connected.
A police report indicates that the ex-girlfriend, who lives in Bridgeport, may also have been involved in the Mountain Grove ritual.
Myers declined to comment on whether there is a criminal element to the apparent curse, saying that such cases, in general, can be tricky because people have a legal right to freely practice the religion of their choice.
"You have that fine line," he said. "When does it become animal cruelty? When does it become harassment? You have to really, really watch that line. People have Constitutional rights for a purpose."
Due to the apparent increase in occult activity in Bridgeport, Myers is advocating for city police training in occult identification so officers "know what they're actually looking at when they go out into the field."
Hall said the man's wife told her she'd found other evidence of possible curses around their home and "in the past few months or so, they've had nothing but bad luck."
She said the couple has renewed their attendance at a Catholic church and asked that their house be blessed by a priest.
"That's the best thing they can do," she said, adding that she believes people can protect themselves against spiritual curses through their own beliefs.
Marci Fernino, a sensitive with CT Soul Seekers, said the man "doesn't want to put any belief in" the curse, and went as far as to assert that "Somebody can't curse you if you don't believe in it and your faith is strong enough and you don't let that happen."
There is an element of mind-over-matter in such cases, Myers said, but "it really doesn't matter if the person believes or doesn't believe."
Some people don't believe in paranormal or occult activity, he said, but their opinions don't determine whether it is real: "There are things beyond us that we can't explain; it doesn't mean they're not there."
Even so, he said the curse was directed toward a specific goal and should not cause alarm to the general public.
A few nice animal control images I found:
TN HVAC Chico rodentsPigeons
Image by tracywoolery
Rodent-proofing features NEW GREEN technology in a bio-repellent.
• NO traps, NO baits, NO poisons
• Non-toxic contact irritant, not harmful to animals or people
• Changes rodent behavior, causing them to stress out and more readily controllable
• Triggers rodent flight response, making them avoid the area and leave the structue
• Bio-repellent is spread by rodents carrying it into their dens and nests
• Incidental contact cleans up with soap and water, which rodents cannot do
• Can be used around food, food storage, and appliances
• Can be used in extreme temperatures from 0º - 500º
• Food-grade ingredients include food-safe active ingredient
• Does not melt or freeze
• Works on raccoons, skunks, and PIGEONS too!
Ask us about service for
• raccoons, skunks, mice, and other animals
• spiders, ants, flies, fleas, cockroaches, and other pests
• bees, wasps, hornets, yellow jackets, and other stinging insects
• termites, beetles, and other wood-destroying organisms
530-879-9111 serving Butte County
530-673-9111 serving Yuba/Sutter County
Independently Owned and Operated
www.trulynolen.com
Find us on Facebook, "Truly Nolen Chico"
keeping watch over the little one
Image by angela7dreams
at Masai Mara park, Kenya, Africa
File name :DSCN1135.JPG
File size :804.0KB(823277Bytes)
Date taken :2005/10/04 09:26:11
Image size :2592 x 1944
Resolution :300 x 300 dpi
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Protection attribute :Off
Hide Attribute :Off
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A few nice animal control images I found:
F.F.L.O.A donated food to the SPCA
Image by Friends for the love of Animals
Many of us have SPCA or pound dogs and cats and we agreed it was time to put something back in for the fun and enjoyment we’ve had from our animals. Donating pet food to animal shelters is a good way to help them with caring for homeless animals in your area.
Please help us break the cycle of unwanted pets! Please spay and neuter your animals. Spaying and neutering is the most important thing you can do to help control pet overpopulation
Natural History
Image by wbeem
Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
I wandered in here off the National Mall one day and thought two things:
Boy, this place is great!
Boy, did I ever pick the wrong day to come here.
Leave it to me to visit a popular museum on President’s Day Weekend. This place was packed with people. Tired people. Some of them cranky people, too. I guess that’s what happens when you shove a bunch of people in close proximity to each other. I actually prefer to avoid tourist destinations on major holidays. That’s one of the reasons that I picked February. I even avoided Valentine’s Day. Plumb forgot about President’s Day, which was something of a major error on my part. So much for this being a slow time in Washington, D.C.
Adding to the mass frustration was the fact that this museum seems to know absolutely nothing about crowd control. People are like water. They seek the path of least resistance. When they get to an end without another path or escape, they pool together. That’s what happened here. I followed a walkway of exhibits until I ran into a crowd of resistance. Turns out there was no way out, except the way that we came inside. Maybe the Smithsonian folks need to visit Walt Disney World to learn how it’s done.
Crowd control aside, it’s an astounding place to visit to see dead animals that I never knew existed. Someone remind me to go back when it’s not as crowded.
Please visit the blog at williambeem.com
Some cool animal control images:
Dead raccoon removed from between houses
Image by MarkPritchard
Cris called me at work about 3:30. "There's a raccoon stuck between our house and the one next door," she said. "I've called Animal Control."
When I got home about 5:30 there were two amiable Animal Control officers. They couldn't remove the critter, which had fallen into a six-inch-wide gap between the houses. (This is San Francisco.) They called the fire department, which sent a hook-and-ladder truck and six firefighters, all of whom would rather have been watching the beginning of Game 1 of the World Series, which was taking place about three miles north.
They couldn't get it out either.
The animal control guys called for a vet, who came with, yes, a tranquilizer dart. But even when the critter was tranquilized, it was wedged in so tightly about 8 feet above the ground that they couldn't get it out using poles, ropes, hooks, etc.
Finally they brought in an electric saw and cut holes in the wall of our basement, and after more than two hours of trying, the raccoon was removed. The vet was the one who finally got it out of there. She pronounced it DOA. It had probably suffocated.
Never a dull moment around here.
No, you're not seeing things
Image by grid.epsilon
A couple of days ago, I received an email with the above subject line, and the following description:
"Yes, there is a turkey outside the building.
Yes, Animal Control has been called. However, Louisville Animal Control doesn’t mess with anything other than ‘standard’ pets. So, unless it’s attacking us, they won’t do anything.
So, since the police know about the turkey, my hope is that someone will call looking for their lost turkey, and the police will point them our way, or the poor bird will accidently find it’s way home.
The turkey, while being a domesticated breed, isn’t too keen on getting close to people. Even people with food. So leave it alone if possible.
The bird looks clean and healthy, so there shouldn’t be any problems on that end.
I guess that’s it. Time to return to your less surreal work day, already in progress."
As you can see, it wasn't a joke.
A few nice animal control images I found:
Blue Sea Slug - Glaucus atlanticus and Glaucus marginatus (the small one)
Image by Doug Beckers
Blue Sea Slugs washed up onto MacMasters Beach. For more info checkout dougbeckers.com/bluebottle-control
Blue Sea Slug - Glaucus atlanticus and Glaucus marginatus (the smaller one)
Image by Doug Beckers
Blue Sea Slugs washed up onto MacMasters Beach. For more info checkout dougbeckers.com/bluebottle-control
A few nice animal control images I found:
Marmot
Image by For Inspiration Only
Radio controlled
2025 All Rights Reserved wallpaper hd evening.