T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3752.1 | It's a horrible thing to see. | HAMPS::PATTISON_M | _m_/���\_m_,I'd rather be working | Wed Jun 27 1990 11:49 | 22 |
|
Re: the accident
That must have been a horrible experience for you. A few weeks ago
I witnessed a cat being hit by a car, again the driver could do
nothing about it. The cat ran straight across a narrow street so
the driver didn't even have the room to swerve he just put his brakes
on, there was a sickenning thud and a about ten yards further up
the road the cat was tossed into the gutter like a rag but immediately
jumped up and ran off. I think the cat was saved because the car
was a souped up Astra and I think the front spoiler 'picked up'
the cat and dropped it a bit further up the road. This time the
driver stopped but the cat had gone by then so he drove off. I went
to the house where the cat had run to and the person there said
the cat belonged to a neighbor who was out at the moment so I told
him what happened & he said he would let his neighbor know so that
they could check the cat out. Unfortunately we could not have a
look at the cat ourselves, I havn't been in that area recently so
have not been able to see how the cat is.
Martyn.
|
3752.2 | is it a law you have to stop???? | SQM::CINDI | | Wed Jun 27 1990 11:58 | 0 |
3752.3 | Not cats | XNOGOV::LISA | | Wed Jun 27 1990 12:27 | 6 |
| You only have to stop if you hit a dog, horse, cow, sheep ....
Have I missed any?
Lisa plus P&R
|
3752.4 | In Mass, you have to stop | FRAGLE::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jun 27 1990 13:06 | 6 |
| I think the law says you *have* to stop if you hit a cat, in Mass.
I read this in one of the cat books I have, but it made an example
of the Mass law because many states do not have it. Anyone else see
this written somewhere?
|
3752.5 | I think you must stop now. | HAMPS::PATTISON_M | _m_/���\_m_,I'd rather be working | Wed Jun 27 1990 13:26 | 6 |
| Re: .2 & .3
I believe that in the U.K. hitting a cat was made a notifiable offence, i.e.
you must stop & notify the police, in the last couple of years.
|
3752.6 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Wed Jun 27 1990 13:29 | 4 |
| Last night, the police officer said that, yes, in Massachusetts
(Hudson, at least...like maybe it's a city/town ordinance) you
MUST stop if you have hit a cat. I believe this is a fairly new
ordinance/law, however.
|
3752.7 | There is a reason other than law to stop. | SCADMN::SHEN | | Wed Jun 27 1990 16:40 | 15 |
| I am so glad to hear that there is such an ordinance. I wonder if
there is one out here in California. If not , there should be.
It bothers me that no one would bother to stop and try to find out who
the cat belonged to or if was still alive. I just adoped my kitty form
an animal rescue foundation and they had a mascot cat that was found in
a ditch. I had a broken leg and an amputated leg; however, he was
well adjusted and was as loving and mobil as any cat I've had. So the
moral of this story is ...if one hits an animal on the road, please
stop and see if there is a chance to save him/her. No one goes out to
purposefully (sp?) hit an animal, but when it happens responsibility
should be taken. But then again people don't stop when they hit
another person either...sick.
ida
|
3752.8 | He was nearly 1 year old | AYOV18::TWASON | | Thu Jun 28 1990 05:15 | 7 |
| Nobody stopped when they hit my little boy, he managed to crawl
to the bottom of our stairs and well ... he died before we got to
him.
Still thinking about him
Tracy
|
3752.9 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Thu Jun 28 1990 09:38 | 13 |
| re: purposely hitting an animal -
Its sad to say, but there are stories in this note file of people
deliberately hitting an animal. I think that most of the time it
IS an accident, but not always.
I have also picked cats up off the street right after they were
hit. Its a VERY unsettling experience.
I am very happy to hear that in Massachusetts you have to stop if
you hit a cat. Too bad you didn't get the license plate, but I'm
sure you were in such a state of shock you just didn't think of it.
Nancy DC
|
3752.10 | Found...one irresponsible pet owner | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Thu Jun 28 1990 12:08 | 10 |
| Last night I was told that the owner of the cat had been found and
informed of the unfortunate incident. I hope that if they get another
animal, they'll be a little more thoughtful about when and where
they let their animal roam. Not that the accident was entirely their
fault, but they contributed to the circumstances surrounding the
incident that occured. If you're in an area where the animals are
able to roam free without the possibility of them getting killed,
then by all means let them do so....Central Street in Hudson, Mass.
is NOT such an area. Just my opinion, but I love animals too much
to ever want to see any creature of God injured...even man.
|
3752.11 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Jun 28 1990 14:48 | 4 |
| Re: .8
Tracy, I'm really sorry about your loss.
|
3752.12 | | AYOV18::TWASON | | Fri Jun 29 1990 06:46 | 20 |
| You know, the strange thing about Max getting hit by a car is the
fact that he was terrified of them and usually ran straight out
the back door. So, we (my husband especially - is still distraught)
find it really difficult to believe that Max went near the road of
his own accord. He was a beautifully big, fat, white fluffy boy
extremely mischievious, but that's another few stories.....
RE: .10
I know that alot of people love to keep their cats inside but our
cats have always been outdoor during the day and indoor at night.
So, please do not blame the owner of the cat because I know from
experience the mental torture John (my husband) went and still does
go through every time he thinks of Max. He will always blame himself
as he was the one who let him out.
Tracy
|
3752.13 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Fri Jun 29 1990 09:14 | 5 |
| "He will always blame himself as he was the one who let him out."
I know this feeling well.
Nancy DC
|
3752.14 | | WMOIS::H_TAYLOR | Cats can't compete with CATillacs. | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:56 | 11 |
| I feel so sorry for this baby. I am a STRONG believer in keeping
kitties indoors.
This note just goes to prove how true my personal name is. It's taken
from something that a CFF judge said at one time. "Cats weren't made
to compete with Buicks."
Tracey, so sorry to hear about your loss.
Holly
|
3752.15 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:21 | 3 |
| Max may have been chasing something interesting that took him
to the road.
|
3752.16 | Another victim | JUMBLY::PRICE_BUDGEN | | Tue Jul 03 1990 07:55 | 41 |
| I'm glad this topic didn't come up a couple of weeks earlier.
I was on my way to work early in June and I was coming to a lovely
house in the country which I always admire. The road drops down a hill
towards it and there, lying on the white line in the middle of the road
was a grey tabbycat. It is a very dangerous road and I could not
immediately stop but found a safe place to turn about a quarter of a
mile on. I stopped in a very dangeraous place with a lorry, bus and
several cars thundering up behind me. I wound down my window and
frantically signalled that the cat was on the ground while making sure
my hazard lights were flashing too. Thankfully all the vehicles made
sure that the cat went between their wheels.
In a lull in the traffic I jumped out scooped up the cat and placed her
on the grass verge. She was still warm. I ran backto the car and backed
it to a safe place and then went back to the cat. Her death had been
instant I could see, as it was a head injury. I was shaking all over
and my hands were covered with blood. I stroked her - her tail was still
supple and it was then that I noticed the movement in her tummy area.
She was in kitten and the babies were still alive and possibly
stressed. I raced to the house, was told it was not their cat but they
came along to see what they could do. By the time we got there all the
movement had ceased, even though I tried the stroking again. It was 45
minutes to the nearest vet and we could do nothing.
By this time I was in a state of shock and the people in the house took
me back for a hot drink while one of them went down the valley a little
to find the owner of the cat.
It is not just the death of the cat that worried me - although the fact
that she had babies made it a lot worse - it was the fact that life of
any sort seems to mean less and less to people these days. They want to
get where they want to get, go where they want to go - who cares about
the death of an animal, giving it some dignity by moving it away from
further dismemberment on the road, looking to see if it *is* dead at
least. And it's not only cats but foxes and badgers and baby
deer...........
I go past the spot every working day and realise that a little piece of
my soul lies on the grass verge where I left her. The people in the
house buried her in the field behind the hedge.
|
3752.17 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Tue Jul 03 1990 08:14 | 7 |
| re-.16
A very moving story, indeed. Thank you very much as I empathize
with every emotion you mentioned in that story. May I just ask,
where did this take place?
Kevin
|
3752.18 | In the Thames Valley | IOSG::PRICE_BUDGEN | | Fri Jul 06 1990 09:09 | 7 |
| re.16 and .17
This took place in the Thames Valley near Reading,England between two
villages on narrow but horrendously fast road - a rural road which has
become a commuters' racing track.
Avril
|
3752.19 | | CSCOA5::MCFARLAND_D | bo knows windows 3.0...? | Mon Jul 09 1990 18:07 | 6 |
| tracy...
so sorry to hear about max...
diane, stanley & stella
|