echoskybound
New member
As I'm sure most of you also do, I avoid buying animals from pet stores. Buying them supports their trade, but not buying them means those animals are stuck in a store. I just wanted to vent about it!
At one of my local Petsmarts, there are several beautiful birds in cramped little cages. I can't help but pay them a visit when I stop by the store, especially a young playful little GCC. The poor little guy gets frustrated when he realizes there's a piece of plastic between him and me. He is constantly biting his feet. There's a VERY young baby senegal parrot who cries for attention, and a poor Nanday who looks bored and weary. They have bland bowls of seeds and sparse toys. Sometimes the Nanday and a Jenday would try to preen each other through a tiny opening between their enclosures, but they separated them.
I feel very sad for them and wish I could save them, but I'm not going to buy any of them... I won't support a store that keeps their animals in such sad conditions. But of course, there's always that part of you that can't help but want to save the poor individual from those conditions. When I worked with a dog walking business, we had a client with a beautiful shiba inu that she bought from a pet shop. She knew he came from a puppy mill but she couldn't stand seeing the little puppy shivering in a corner and crying. He lives a happy, long, full life now, at the expense of fueling the puppy mill industry.
What do you do? Save the individual, or save the future individuals? I just wanted to see how you guys deal with this frustration!
At one of my local Petsmarts, there are several beautiful birds in cramped little cages. I can't help but pay them a visit when I stop by the store, especially a young playful little GCC. The poor little guy gets frustrated when he realizes there's a piece of plastic between him and me. He is constantly biting his feet. There's a VERY young baby senegal parrot who cries for attention, and a poor Nanday who looks bored and weary. They have bland bowls of seeds and sparse toys. Sometimes the Nanday and a Jenday would try to preen each other through a tiny opening between their enclosures, but they separated them.
I feel very sad for them and wish I could save them, but I'm not going to buy any of them... I won't support a store that keeps their animals in such sad conditions. But of course, there's always that part of you that can't help but want to save the poor individual from those conditions. When I worked with a dog walking business, we had a client with a beautiful shiba inu that she bought from a pet shop. She knew he came from a puppy mill but she couldn't stand seeing the little puppy shivering in a corner and crying. He lives a happy, long, full life now, at the expense of fueling the puppy mill industry.
What do you do? Save the individual, or save the future individuals? I just wanted to see how you guys deal with this frustration!