Friday, January 06, 2006

The Brave-Stupid-Instinct Triangle

Events happened Xmas Eve, 2003

Last fall (2003), I vasectomized a lion named Chaucer. Chaucer had just lost his brother, his sole companion of over a decade, and was as lonely as the lioness across the hall from him. With no risk of cubs, we paired them up, and they got along quite well, after a fashion. Unfortunately, Chaucer took great exception to having his new girlfriend being looked at by their neighbor, Goliath the tiger. Chaucer decided against a leaflet campaign and went straight into combat, tearing down what had until then been a perfectly serviceable barrier between their cages.

If I could choose any half-ton predator to meet in a dark alley, it would be Goliath. He's a thousand pounds of very amiable fuzz; wouldn't harm a fly. It's tragic that Chaucer had to pick on the sweetest cat in the sanctuary. I won't detail the fight. Suffice to say they were quickly separated, but Goliath's face was full of holes. Big ones. We put him on antibiotics and only a month later, he was totally healed, save for one nasty spigot of pus on his left jawline. I was asked to take a look. In the cage. Without anesthesia. Goliath would be awake, too.

The singular attitude I purposely invite as my "instinct canvas" for dealing with big cats is that my life is in jeopardy every single second. No matter how friendly, no matter that we meet each other with a greeting chuff or a mutual shoving of shoulders, these top predators react to annoyance with alarming speed and stupefying might. Every assessment, every approach, every detail about their cage security is life and death for me and all the cats there. The mantra at the sanctuary is, "If anyone gets hurt, we bury them all." Which reminds me of the second thing that goes through my mind when going into their cage: "I don't have to be faster than the tiger, I just have to be faster than you."

Let me slip into present tense to give you a better sense of what it was like in the cage:

Even knowing that Goliath is the only animal we trust enough to enter his cage, he is hurt--and that means all bets are off. As usual, Goliath gives me a greeting puff, and shoves his head into my hand. It's a head the size of a quarter barrel, his nose is as big as my palm. Examining the open sore is difficult, because he's trying to play. He's sniffing the flashlight, he's sniffing my shoes. Imagine trying to dress a half-ton two-year old. Eventually we manage to distract him with petting from his "mom,"--the owner of the sanctuary--and I'm able to look at the wound. It's a two-inch pink hole, the hair around it is slick and matted with pus, and the smell is rank. (I promise, you have no idea what it takes to make a veterinarian think a smell is even "bad", let alone rank.)

So I brace myself to take flight and risk touching the fur near the wound, intellectually knowing there is no way I could react fast enough if Goliath gets angry. I'm kneeling on the ground in front of him, and even though Goliath is relaxing on the floor his four-inch canine teeth are only a foot away from my eggshell-thin skull.

No reaction to the touch. Whew.

I move the hair out of the way. No reaction.

Now I can see something sticking out of the wound edge. It's a round ball, dime-sized and dark yellow, like the fat on a leftover steak that's been in the fridge too long. I figure it's just that--connective tissue or fat that was torn loose in the fight, and is now simply doing what dead flesh does. (Eat your heart out, James Harriot.) My medicine-man desire is to touch it, explore it a brief, fleeting moment for texture and firmness, hoping it helps me guess what the heck it has to do with this oozing hole. I touch it, and it surprises me by being rock hard. Petrified hard. The next 5 seconds are a seizure of images and primal urges.

I recall three distinct and simultaneous surging "voices" in my mind. Let's call them Doc, Captain Safety, and Monkey Brain.

T plus 0 seconds:

Doc discovers the thing is petrified. "Fascinating. That should not be there nor feel that way."
Captain Safety says, "How can that not hurt? Where's the door? Let's find the door."
I say out loud, "What the heck is that?"

T plus 1 seconds: My thumb and forefinger seize upon the thing almost as a reflex.

Doc: "I wonder if that thing is loose. Let's find out."
Captain Safety: "What... what am I doing? Why am I grabbing this so hard?"
Monkey Brain: (Nervously pacing back and forth up until this point, stops pacing and stares intently at my fingers) "Uuueh?"

T plus 2 seconds
: Goliath's "mom" asks me, "What is it? What did you find?" All I can eek out is a puzzled, "It's...."

Doc: "Hmm, it seems unattached. Let's rotate it back and forth to see just how loose. I wonder if there is any feeling in this area."
Captain Safety: "Wait. What? Teeth. Death. Dismemberment. This can wait. Knock him out, and then do this."
Monkey Brain
: (Eyes widen, pupils dilate.) "Hoooh!?"

T plus 2.5 seconds: My fingers gently rock the hard ball back and forth. I feel the unique sensation of bone grinding against bone.

Doc: "Huh. It's grating on something. I can't let go now. That has to come out. Pull on it."
Captain Safety: "Sour idea. Bad plan. Flashing teeth, roar, death. Stop, STOP."
Monkey Brain: (Fear grimace, and a low keening.) "Hoooooooooo..."

T plus 3 seconds: I begin to pull.

Doc: "Neat, it's coming out. Gosh it feels big. I wonder what this thing is? This is why the wound won't heal! Gosh, I am going to solve this. I rock."
Captain Safety: "Is pulling this out worth dying for?"
Doc: .... .... "Yes."
Monkey Brain: "Hoo, hooh, HOOOH, HAAAH, HOOOOOH ! !"

T plus 3.5 seconds: I feel a sliding, sucking, and gentle grinding. The thing keeps coming and coming.

Doc: "Wow. Freaky. Huh, interesting that Goliath isn't reacting to this at all."
Captain Safety: "Stupid. Stuuu-piiiid."
Monkey Brain: (In shock, lying down awaiting the oblivion of death, hoping it doesn't hurt too much.)

T plus 4 seconds: "Pop." Out plucks this enormous piece of bone. Two huge plunks of saliva drip from Goliath's mouth, and he glances at me. Two enormous golden-green eyes focus on me from two feet away. I feel the breath exhaled from his nose on the back of my hand.

Doc: "Huh. Interesting. Bone. Jaw? Zygomatic arch?"
Captain Safety: "Gah... gah... mub... NAH."
Monkey Brain: (feels his adrenal glands screaming like dry ice squeezed in a pair of pliers.)

T plus 5 seconds: Goliath turns and shoves back into the noogies his mom has been giving him the whole time.

Doc: "I am a healer. I have helped my friend. He will get better now. That was worth 8 years of college."
Captain Safety: "I am a fucking moron. That was the stupidest thing I've ever done."
Monkey Brain: (Woozy with adrenaline, he lifts his eyes from the dirt.) "...hoooo?...haa? "

I walked around in adrenaline shock for an hour. I'm going back in 2 days to check how he's doing. And there you go.

Whew. This picture was taken a few minutes after all this happened.

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

No Cubs for Festus

I survived my job today. I did a vasectomy on a lion. I am currently suffering from an adrenaline crash, and will probably be abed with back spasms soon.

We get the lion in the squeeze cage, and there is a mildly puzzled look in his face and pace. Then the first lunge and stab I make with the pole-syringe shatters the relative calm. I only got a little bit of drug in him unfortunately, and it stings. A lot.

Words really can't describe the noises he makes at me. "Snarl" is such a cute word. This cacaphony of anger isn't the beckoning "roar," though it is as deafening. This was not suffering a loud noise, this was feeling a crashing wave of angry sound, a manifestation of absolute fury, pounding at my chest. A stampede of rage assaults my ears. He has noticed me, it seems.

The insult I heard in his voice... "How dare you? How dare you touch me, squeaky food-thing. Kill you, bite you, toss you, thrash you."

Murderous, indeed, but I did not take it personally. By focusing on getting more drugs in him I am able to somehow ignore the charges and snapping screams at me. Fleeting moments come and go as he turns in his cage, almost taunting me with a clear stab at his enormous thigh, then a whirl and it is back to the teeth and the spittle and gold-green eyes that I am sure are memorizing my face.

Somehow I get two more injections in him, and by the fourth shot, he barely gives a twitch and a grumble over the sting. A butt scratch with the other end of the pole tells me he is almost unconscious. I tickle his ear hair and tap his cheek to see how strong he is blinking. When he doesn't pick his head up, we unlock the door and go in. He needed a total of 120cc's of drugs for the whole procedure, that is half of a cup of valium and "special K" to keep him out. Rock rock on.

We trimmed his nails, drew blood for screening, combed out the dreadlocks in his mane while I was stuffed into a corner, both legs asleep, balancing a flashlight in my lap to dissect out both vas deferens. They are almost as thick as a pencil, and it dulls a scalpel blade to get through the skin and tissues.

Time for the gym's jacuzzi and sauna, time for a beer, and definitely time for some Ibuprofen.
Click on the thumbnail for a HUGE picture, thanks to Imageshack!

Monday, September 20, 2004

Catch a Tiger by the Toes

Yesterday I got peed on by a lion, bit a dozen times by house cats, dodged a madly playful bobcat, grabbed a wolf by the back leg, and got to give a tiger a full-body hug.

Sunday I went to Valley of the Kings to work on the "tinies" (the house-cats that live in the barn). The plan was to vaccinate them against Feline Immunodeficienty Virus. I brought my welding gloves, welding gauntlets, and a great technician to help. The gauntlets protect against biting and slashing, unless the cat finds an open seam (which one did on my index finger), but they do not protect against the actual force of the bite. Four hours and several crushed fingers later, we had the ones we could hope to catch done. People have NO IDEA how strong their cute little fuzzball sitting on their lap actually is.

Then I got to pet and play with a new arrival, "Woogie" the bobcat. Very rambunctious since he is about a year old, and HUGE, like #40 or so. I narrowly missed some severe bites by watching for "the look" in his eyes that he was about to playfully latch onto my arm. Woogie purrs constantly.

Next was getting a blood sample from a wolf hybrid, "Bullet." He has basically a dog's personality, but you can never tell with hybrids what "mind" you will be dealing with every 10 seconds or so, a wolf or a dog... but everyone came out in one piece.

Last, but certainly not least, I got to anesthetize "Alti," an enormous Siberian tiger. This #700 tub of a cat knew almost right away that something was "up." I suspect he saw or smelled the tackle box that holds the anesthetics or he glimpsed the pole syringe.

Nothing quite prepares you for such a huge and dangerous animal intently staring and roaring at you. He was pissed. With some distraction and patience, I got enough medication in his butt to calm him down, and then two more injections got him to dreamland.

Alti is an old tiger, probably pushing 20. While his back nails are nice and sharp and short, he stopped sharpening his front claws a long time ago. With no wear, the claws grow into a semi-circle, and Alti had been limping for a while, presumably he had claws growing in his pads.

Sure enough, he had 4 pads that had ingrown nails and accompanying shallow infections.

From previous trial and error trimming big cat nails, the best and quickest solution is a Dremel tool with a diamond cutting wheel on it. It takes a steady hand, a strong back, and ignoring the risk of cutting off your own finger, but the Dremel goes much faster than anything I have tried (including pet nail trimmers, fine-tooth craft saws, cable cutters, and grinding stones).

A well-cared for tiger nail is about as long as half your pinky, and only curves about a quarter-circle. Don't forget the needle-sharp tip.

Poor Alti had two nails that were longer than my index finger, in a half-circle, with the last inch growing into his pad. Fortunately, tigers and lions are able to heal shallow wounds faster than any creature I know, and I expect Alti to be completely healed within the week. The quarter-CUP of penicillin we shot in his butt should help, too.

The plan is to see how Alti fares this winter, and to knock him out (one last time) next Spring and actually declaw him. The discomfort of the front-declaw will be much more humane than the terrorizing prospect of knocking him out every 6 months as well as the risk of anesthetizing an ancient tiger that frequently. It is certainly a difficult ethical challenge, but the final analysis is that the front declaw will give Alti the best chance to be pain-free and the longest life.

The adrenaline surge of working with such danger comes at a cost. We had to shift him in his cage, and myself and one other person were able to shove this 8 foot pile of muscle and fat a foot. I understand the "parent lifts car off toddler" stories... but today as I write this, almost every muscle in my body is aching from the unnatural and feral burst of lifting.

Thursday, July 29, 2004

888 4 Cat Doc

"A Behavior Vet for Cats" is the name of the business I have for in-home, feline-only, behavior consultations located in southern Wisconsin as well as the greater Seattle metro area.

Phone consultations are possible, but I highly encourage an appointment to assess the cat's environment.

Rates: $120 an hour base consultation fee.  Additional tests and supplies are extra.

To schedule an appointment for either an in-home or telephone consultation call:
1 - (888) 4 Cat Doc

Tuesday, July 27, 2004

Intentionally non-blank

My journey into e-narcissism has begun, I can feel it.

Seriously, this is mostly a test posting.  I hope to start making regular posts about amusing vet stories, cats, owners, tigers and lions from the sanctuary, as well as expanding my behavior consulting business to the web as well as Wisconsin and Seattle.

I hope to have articles up soon about common cat behavior problems like inappropriate urination, aggression, and the myriad of oddness that is cat.
 
Since I do not think that there will be a demand to spend money to find out why cats yowl, wake their owners up at night, eat grass, purr, sleep in such horrible positions, bang at the door, sneak outside, bang at the door to get in again, and generally differ from their human owner's expectations of behavior... I will post that here once I figure out more about blogging.

Sunday, July 25, 2004

picture archive

Click on the thumbnail for a much larger version. No thumbnail or picture may be used without the express permission of Christopher Pagel, DVM.
Scooter and a little friend

Scooter in the Jabba position

Czar

Kali grabbing her toes

Kivu blowing his King of the Jungle image

Darren

Timmy

Neko is missed

The single happiest moment in my life. Penny

Lion vasectomy

Me and Goliath, subject of a Fark photoshop contest
Tubby making a Flehmen face

Socrates yawning

Roary

Electra being coy

Chelsea being cute

Goliath and me

Again with Goliath