Wednesday
Nov022022

Foot in Mouth Disease

Submitted by Hannah Burger, Western University

Monday
Oct312022

Creative Corner: Never Just a Dog

By Olivia Obringer, Michigan State University
Never just a dog

don’t worry so much
it’s just a dog
don’t spend all that money
it’s just a dog
it doesn’t need medicine
or expensive kibble
remember
it’s just a dog
But I never saw just a dog
Every day, I would hear your nails click clack on the hardwood floors as you turned the
corner
You appeared, and I saw your happy wagging tail
I could always count on you being happy to see me
happy I existed
I saw your soft blonde fur, a little wavy after you would wade in the muddy water, a lot all
over my floors
I saw your floppy ears
Did you know there’s violets named after them?
someone else must have loved the shape as much as I do
I saw your pink nose
the perfect nose to tap with my index finger
I saw your smiley Labrador face, so wide your molars showed
and lastly,
I saw your chocolate eyes, bright and lively, the white spot twinkling like the north star on
the blackest of nights
you were
-and still are-
a glimpse of my childhood
a confidant
a pillow to cry on
the best listener
my forever friend
and certainly not,
just a dog

-Moscow Mules Poetry by Olivia Obringer
Friday
Oct282022

Cutest Pet

Submitted by Georgia Giannaras, University of Pennsylvania

"Patriotic Pup"

Wednesday
Oct262022

Photography

Submitted by Nazleen Mohseni, Western University

"Japanese Bonzai Tree Garden Museum, Shot on Disposable"

Monday
Oct242022

SAVMA PHCOC: Serving Island Dogs

By: Kelle Keyles
I am a student at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine currently doing my clinical
year at The Ohio State University. I have brought my love of the island animals and knowledge
of St. Kitts and Nevis’s severe lack of resources back stateside with me; I want to continue to
help support the animals of the island through many different facets. The first way is by sending
mostly donated supplies to St. Kitts and Nevis, having it be picked up by students or locals and
distributed to the local veterinary clinic. During my time on the island, which was almost 2 years
consecutively due to travel restrictions during COVID, I learned how the local clinic and
veterinary staff provide care to the local population. The entire clinic is run by one local woman
who is the technician and one veterinarian, with the addition of local volunteers from time to
time. It was a privilege to see first hand how they used minimal resources to cater to the local
animals in need.
My wife lived on the island with me and was hired by the first and only physical animal shelter
on the island. She worked as the foster and adoption coordinator and kennel attendant for about a
year which allowed us to take in some animals from the local clinic that were abandoned or
surrendered there. Once at the shelter we were able to get them into foster and adoptive homes.
The local animal population on St. Kitts and Nevis are severely underserved, often resulting in
owners having to surrender their pets. The stray population on the island is also very high and the
limited resources makes it difficult to control the population and get them proper medical care.
Veterinary care for small animals is already limited on the island as most of the local
veterinarians work with the agriculture department with the livestock and large animal
concerns.Since leaving the island for my clinical year at The Ohio State, I have been
brainstorming ways to continue to support the animals of St. Kitts and Nevis and help provide
them with veterinary essentials such as dog food, cat traps for spay/neutering feral cats, and
donated medications. In conjunction with sending down resources to the local veterinary clinic
on island, Ponds Veterinary Clinic, we have also been flying out puppies rescued from the streets
or abandoned at the local clinic We have partnered with a local vet student run rescue in Ohio, as
well as a Ross Alumni who works for a rescue in Pennsylvania . These are the two primary
locations our island dogs go when they come to the states. We have imported a total of 14 dogs
so far to the United States and we continue to keep contacts and options open for transporting
more dogs in the future.
I am able to continue to supply resources to the local clinic and continue to fly dogs off island
with the collaboration of Ross University Veterinary students on island. They help by
volunteering at the local clinic, picking up packages and pallets sent down, as well as fostering
and being flight buddies for dogs being flown off island. Students have been fundamental in our
ability to provide more assistance to the island while living in America. Students coordinate with
us to rescue and provide them with health care and a foster home, as well as prepare them for a
flight to one of the rescues we partner with. Students have been willing to help pick up shipments
from customs and distribute them to the local clinic and local community members in need. We
hope that with each experience they have learned that there are ways to continue to help the
island even from America that they will be inspired to do the same when they leave. St Kitts and
Nevis is a beautiful country, with some of the greatest people and they deserve to be able to
provide their animals with the best medical care. The stray animals living on the street deserve
loving homes and access to adequate medical care too. We are proud to still remain a part of the
community of students and locals that help the animals on the island and will always work
towards growing and changing for the better for them. We have since started a non-profit to
continue our support of animals and locals on the island, called Penelopes Rescue Mission.