Taipei Dogs Pampered, Some Experts Say Pampering Isn’t Good for Dogs

Thanks to the Taipei Times for this article. Feature: Pampering pets common but bad, say critics By Angelica Oung STAFF REPORTER Sunday, Jul 22, 2007...

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Thanks to the Taipei Times for this article.

Feature: Pampering pets common but bad, say critics

By Angelica Oung
STAFF REPORTER
Sunday, Jul 22, 2007

While some pet owners say that they love their pets like children and treat them accordingly, animal rights activists criticize too much pet-pampering as wasteful and even detrimental to relationships between pets and humans.

Tsai Ming-chih and his wife were inspired by a trip to Japan with their fox terrier and Daschund to start a travel agency that specializes in taking owners and dogs on holidays together.

“My wife and I never got to leave the country at the same time after we got married because we didn’t want to leave our dogs behind in a kennel,” he said. “In the end, we decided to take our dogs along with us to Japan instead.”

Although the five-day, four-night trip did not come cheap at NT$60,000 per person plus NT$15,000 per dog, not including the dog’s transportation fees at NT$250 per kilogram. Tsai says that his customers are willing to pay for the experience.

“It’s not just a holiday where you get to take your dog along,” he said. “The whole trip is focused on the dog, and they have more fun than their owners.”

Dogs are considered honored guests at specialized pet hotels and other businesses in Japan, according to Tsai.

“The dogs have their own swimming pools and their meals are as carefully prepared as their owners’,” said Tsai. “During the day we might take the dogs to theme parks catering specifically to dogs.”

There’s nothing his customers won’t do for their “canine children,” Tsai said. He cited two women who went on his tours with their four daschunds.

“They are both quite busy with their careers during the week, so they have a Filipina maid just to take care of the dogs and prepare their meals,” said Tsai.

“I’ve never had a customer with kids,” said Tsai. “We find them quite like-minded with us in this respect — their dogs are treated like their children.”

At this weekend’s Aqua and Pet Show, owners of rabbits, cats, pigs, flying squirrels as well as many different varieties of dogs brought their pets along to the third hall of the Taipei World Trade Center.

Many of the smaller pets were carried in bags or pushed around in pet strollers.

“It’s a practical choice when the ground is muddy or my yorkshire terrier is tired,” said one prospective buyer.

According to Amos Lin (), the general manager of Ibiyaya, a company that sells pet strollers, business has been good despite stagnant wages and a generally depressed retail climate in this country.

The best-selling stroller was available at the show for NT$3,990, said Lin.

However, Sean McCormack, the founder of Animals Taiwan, a stray rescue organization, groaned at the idea of dogs being treated as substitute children or being pushed around in strollers.

“The more you treat a dog like a person, the more behavioral problems you’re going to get,” he said.

“I think it’s great that dogs are increasingly considered a part of the family in Taiwan, but they still need to be treated as dogs, not toys and not children,” McCormack said, “The dogs we have the most problems with [at Animals Taiwan] are always the little dogs who might have been carried around in a handbag all their lives.”

“The happiest dogs are the ones who are walked every day and allowed to interact with their environment — not kept at home or pushed around in a pet buggy,” he said.

Follow this link to read the rest of the article.

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