World’s largest livestock carrier docks in Timaru

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Alice Geary16:27, Aug 02 2020

The Ocean Drover, the world’s largest livestock carrier, arrived in port at PrimePort Timaru on Saturday.
BEJON HASWELL/STUFFThe Ocean Drover, the world’s largest livestock carrier, arrived in port at PrimePort Timaru on Saturday.

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The world’s largest livestock carrier, the Ocean Drover, entered Timaru’s port on Saturday night for its first visit in two years.

A Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) spokesperson said the Ocean Drover was in Timaru to collect up to 14,000 cattle bound for China.

Saturday’s arrival marked the third time the boat has docked in Timaru. The vessel was due to depart, carrying a mix of dairy and beef cattle, in a few days’ time once loading was complete, they said.

“The Animal Welfare Export Certificate sets stock numbers for this export at no more than 14,000 cattle, predominantly dairy – friesian and jersey – with some beef – hereford and angus,” they said.

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“No export of live animals can proceed until we have conducted a post-loading review to ensure we are completely satisfied with the conditions on board.”

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MPI introduced strengthened requirements last year stating that exporters were required to provide a report on the condition of the animals at 30 days after their arrival at their destination. There are also added conditions because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Ocean Drover is in Timaru to collect up to 14,000 cattle bound for China.
BEJON HASWELL/STUFFThe Ocean Drover is in Timaru to collect up to 14,000 cattle bound for China.

“In response to Covid-19, MPI introduced two further conditions that exporters must meet for their Animal Welfare Export Certificate applications to be granted,” the spokesperson said.

“The master of the ship [is] to provide a contingency plan for a rejection at the port of arrival or a delay in unloading [and] the exporter satisfies MPI that there is unlikely to be any delay in the unloading of the cattle from the ship or movement of the cattle to a quarantine facility after arrival.”

They said the cattle will be accompanied by 10 stock handlers, of whom two are veterinarians.

The exporters had to provide MPI with a back-up plan in case Covid-19 prevented the vessel from entering its destination port.
BEJON HASWELL/STUFFThe exporters had to provide MPI with a back-up plan in case Covid-19 prevented the vessel from entering its destination port.

Livestock exports have been operating for the past few months and the timing of this shipment has not been affected by Covid-19, they said.

MPI did not know where the cattle were coming from, commenting that often a shipment will have stock from more than one farm and from different regions.

“Live animal exports can help in supporting New Zealand farmers to manage stock numbers.”

The Ocean Drover is 176.7 metres long and 31.1m wide and is capable of transporting 75,000 sheep or 18,000 cattle.

Bird Flu Is a Big Deal. Of Course Trump Wants to Defund the Best Way to Contain It

http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2017/03/avian-flu-spreading-dont-tell-donald-trump

The virus has now hit Georgia, the No. 1 poultry-producing state—and Trump plans to cut surveillance funds.

For the second time in less than three years, avian flu is moving through industrial-scale US chicken facilities. Republicans in power seem too fixated on budget-cutting to notice.

First, President Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Paul Ryan pushed a health care plan that would have slashed funding to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the federal agency that tracks farm flu outbreaks and works with the US Department of Agriculture and local authorities to “minimize any human health risk” they cause.

Given that avian flu is on the march again, one might think it prudent to keep that cash around, devoted to monitoring the 2017 outbreak.

That effort collapsed, but now Trump is taking a more direct whack at flu-tracking funding. A couple of Politico reporters got hold of a budget-cutting proposal the Trump team is circulating in Congress. The document lists $1 billion in suggested cuts to the US Department of Agriculture’s discretionary spending in 2017—which is separate from the “21 percent proposed reduction for USDA that the administration included in its 2018 budget outline released earlier this month,” Politico reports.

Among the cuts being sought for 2017, the Trump team seeks to extract funds from a USDA program funded by Congress in 2015 to address the flu problem that swept through the Midwest that year, triggering the euthanasia of 50 million birds and causing egg prices to spike. Congress had allocated $1 billion for it, of which $80 million is left. Given that avian flu is on the march again, one might think it prudent to keep that cash around, devoted to monitoring the 2017 outbreak. Trump’s budget people have other ideas—they want to take away $50 million of the $80 million left over. Politico quotes the document:

The response to the FY15 [fiscal-year 2015] outbreak is complete, and USDA should still have enough balances to respond to the two recent HPAI [high pathogenic avian influenza] outbreaks in TN [Tennessee] this year.

Of course, this year’s avian flu, albeit a less virulent strain, has broken out of Tennessee, swept into Alabama and Kentucky, and has now alighted in Georgia, the nation’s No. 1 chicken-producing state. It would be interesting to know what Former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue, Trump’s still-pending pick to lead the USDA, thinks of that proposed money-saving measure.

While the CDC insists that the risk that people will come down with the current avian flu strain is “low,” it does work with the Department of Agriculture and state authorities on tracking outbreaks. That’s because health officials have been warningfor decades that massive livestock confinements make an ideal breeding ground for new virus strains, including potentially ones that can jump from bird to human, and then spread among humans. Meanwhile, a different strain of avian flu has swept across Japan, South Korea, and China. It has killed 140 people but has not proved capable of spreading from human to human.

Man ‘sorry’ after snowmobile driven into dogs at Iditarod race

Mushers in 2 teams struck during Alaskan contest; 1 dog killed and 3 others
injured

The Associated Press Posted: Mar 13, 2016 9:13 AM ET Last Updated: Mar 13,
2016 9:13 AM ET

Arnold Demoski faces several charges on allegations he drove his snowmobile
into two Iditarod trail sled dog race teams on Saturday near Nulato, Alaska.

< http://i.cbc.ca/1.3489383.1457873968%21/cpImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/der
ivatives/16x9_620/iditarod.jpg>

Arnold Demoski faces several charges on allegations he drove his snowmobile
into two Iditarod trail sled dog race teams on Saturday near Nulato, Alaska.
(Kyle Hopkins/KTUU.com via AP)

A man accused of intentionally driving a snowmobile into teams of two
mushers near the front of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race has apologized
for the incident in a Yukon River village of Alaska, but says he doesn’t
recall what happened.

Arnold Demoski, 26, of Nulato, was arrested Saturday on suspicion of
assault, reckless endangerment, reckless driving and six counts of criminal
mischief.

Demoski spoke to KTUU-TV, saying he was returning home from a night of
drinking when he struck Aliy Zirkle and Jeff King’s teams early Saturday
morning.

USA-IDITAROD/
< http://i.cbc.ca/1.3484255.1457828617%21/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/d
erivatives/original_300/usa-iditarod.jpg>

A dog team leaves the start chute of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in
Willow, Alaska on March 6. (Reuters)

The crashes killed one of King’s dogs and injured at least two others. One
of Zirkle’s dogs also was injured. Iditarod officials at first reported King
had been injured. But the four-time champion said later the snowmobile had
missed both him and his sled.

Demoski said when he woke up Saturday morning and heard what had happened to
the mushers, he checked his snowmobile and realized he had done it. The
snowmobile was missing a part and had rust-colored stains, he said.

Demoski said he doesn’t remember the collisions, which the Iditarod
described as apparently intentional attacks.

“I just want to say I’m sorry,” he said.

Zirkle, 46, who finished second three times from 2012 to 2014, was mushing
from Kokukuk to Nulato, a run of less than 32 kilometres on the Yukon River,
when she was hit, race marshal Mark Nordman said Saturday.

The snowmobile hit the side of Zirkle’s sled about eight kilometres outside
of Koyukuk, turned around multiple times and came back at her before driving
off, Alaska State Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said by email.

The snowmobile reappeared 19 kilometres outside of Nulato. The driver revved
up and was pointed at Zirkle before leaving, Peters said.

Demoski told KTUU that he did not return to harass Zirkle. He said he wanted
to check to make sure she was OK.

‘Someone tried to kill me’

One dog on Zirkle’s team was bruised. Officials described the injury as
non-life-threatening.

Zirkle reached Nulato and told a race official the incident had left her
shaken.

“I’m really bad. Someone tried to kill me with a snowmachine,” she said on a
video posted to the Iditarod Insider webpage. Snowmachine is what Alaskans
call snowmobiles.

King, a four-time Iditarod champion, was behind Zirkle and fared worse. When
King reached the vicinity 12 miles outside of Nulato, his team was struck
from behind by the snowmobile.

Snowmobile struck dogs at high speed

Nash, a 3-year-old male, was killed. Crosby, another 3-year-old male, and
Banjo, a 2-year-old male, received injuries and are expected to survive.
King told the Iditarod Insider the snowmobile narrowly missed him and his
sled, but hit his dogs at high speed.

“One of my dogs was killed pretty much on the spot, and a couple others I
gave first aid to the best I could and loaded them into my sled,” he told
the Iditarod camera crew. “I kind of felt like a triage ambulance.”

It did not appear to be an accident, he said. “It seemed like an act of
bravado,” King said.

Rural Alaska communities have many wonderful people, he said, but they also
have serious social problems.

“It is beyond comprehension to me that this was not related to substance
abuse,” King said, adding that “no one in their right mind would do what
this person did.”

Salma Hayek’s Dog Found Shot Dead On Her Ranch

Salma Hayek seeks justice for her dog Mozart shot dead on Washington state ranch

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
 
Heartbroken Salma Hayek wants justice for her fatally shot dog.
NY Daily News
 Heartbroken Salma Hayek wants justice for her fatally shot dog.

The notorious animal lover’s prized pooch Mozart was found dead on her Washington state ranch last week, she revealed in a gutwrenching Instagram post Friday.

DETROIT MAN AWARDED $100K SETTLEMENT AFTER COP KILLED DOG

“I haven’t posted for a week as I been mourning the death of my dog, Mozart who I personally delivered out of his mother’s womb. He was found dead in my ranch last Friday with a shot close to his heart,” she wrote.

“I am hoping that the Washington State authorities do justice to this wonderful dog whom in 9 years never bit or attacked anyone.”

The Austrian virtuoso’s namesake “loved his territory and never strayed away,” Hayek eulogized.

PUPPY SHOT 18 TIMES WITH BB GUN GETS ADOPTED

“He was the most loving and loyal companion. He didn’t deserve a slow and painful death.”

The 49-year-old “Frida” star won’t be the only one feeling Mozart’s absence, as Hayek previously revealed a laundry list of animals that inhabit her ranch.

Mozart "loved his territory and never strayed away," Hayek wrote.Salma Hayek/Instagram

Mozart “loved his territory and never strayed away,” Hayek wrote.