亚洲免费av电影一区二区三区,日韩爱爱视频,51精品视频一区二区三区,91视频爱爱,日韩欧美在线播放视频,中文字幕少妇AV,亚洲电影中文字幕,久久久久亚洲av成人网址,久久综合视频网站,国产在线不卡免费播放

        ?

        DOG GONE

        2017-09-21 07:53:45BYSUNJIAHUI孫佳慧
        漢語(yǔ)世界 2017年5期
        關(guān)鍵詞:孫佳慧心愛寵物

        BY SUN JIAHUI (孫佳慧)

        DOG GONE

        BY SUN JIAHUI (孫佳慧)

        Pet funerals are the latest trend in a booming pet industry

        面對(duì)心愛的寵物,我們?cè)撊绾胃鎰e?

        Li Chao has one lifelong regret: Not burying his best friend properly. He’s been making up for it ever since.

        Li remembers Jojo’s death vividly. A long-haired husky, she’d lived with Li for seven years and witnessed some of his most intimate struggles, from bachelorhood to marriage. But one afternoon in October 2015, Jojo had an epileptic fit and died before Li’s eyes. Li wept for several hours before realizing he needed to do something about Jojo’s remains.

        Unfortunately, the cremation services he contacted only added to his pain. “Their manner was cold and distant. Everything was simple and crude,” Li tells TWOC. “And the final price was higher than what we’d agreed on. I should have said goodbye to her in a much better way.” The heartbreaking experience motivated Li to make a life-changing decision—he would open his own pet funeral service, to provide the level of attention and sympathy that he and his beloved Jojo had been denied.

        Over the objections of his family, Li quit his wellpaid job as a media manager, and began researching the market. A month later, he founded JoyPets .

        China’s pet funeral industry is on the verge of an expected boom. Citing the National Bureau of Statistics of China, a 2016 Forbes report on to overall pet industry—currently valued at 130 billion RMB (18.8 billion USD) and climbing—noted that China ranked third globally for dog ownership, with 27.4 million pet dogs, compared to 55.3 million in the US and 35.7 million in Brazil (it’s no slouch when it comes to felines, either: Chinese reportedly own 58.1 million cats). Beijing alone has 1.5 million registered dogs, according to the China Beijing Kennel Club, an organization managed by the local public security bureau. The club estimates that at least 200,000 pets die in Beijing every year, a huge potential market for firms like JoyPets.

        Like most startups, JoyPets had a hard time getting people’s attention: His customers either didn’t know about his business, or didn’t think it necessary. But Li’s first customer proved to be a special case—a 35-kilogram golden retriever, paralyzed and suffering from a tumor and severe bedsores, whose owner was about to have him put down. When Li saw the dying animal, he immediately understood the need: “There was nothing more in his life but suffering.”

        Golden retriever Maimai attends the funeral of his father Maiba, or Maverick

        “Faced with the death of their beloved pets, what people need is listening, caring, and professional advice,” says Li. “They are very fragile emotionally, a tiny mistake can cause a breakdown. We must comfort them from our heart, instead of going through the procedures mechanically.”Since then, Li has accompanied many pet owners through euthanasia. Swift and painless as the process is, seeing the life drain from a pet never gets any easier. “It’s torture,” says Li. “Every time someone calls for advice, I ask very carefully about the situation, the reason why…wherever possible, I’ll suggest keeping watch, keeping [the pet] company, instead of turning to mercy killing immediately.”

        Daodao was one whose fate Li delayed. The husky was suffering from incurable and painful bone cancer, but struggled intensely when taken to be put down, barking mournfully. The plan was shelved; Daodao’s owners spent another three days with their pet before the animal died peacefully at home.

        To date, JoyPets has served more than 1,000 clients. For cremation services, the company charges between 400 RMB to 600 RMB per animal—and also offers a taxidermy and “souvenir” alternatives, in which cremated remains are converted into objects such as jewelry.

        Yet most dead pets—about nine in 10—are still not disposed of properly or legally. Shen Ruihong, secretary general of the China Beijing Kennel Club, told the Beijing Evening News that the majority of owners bury their own pets, either in their residence’s garden or the woods or suburbs; a few simply leave them in trash bins, the body concealed in a plastic bag.

        According to China’s Law on Animal Epidemic Prevention and Technical Standards for Safety Disposal of Animals Dead from Illness, issued by the Department of Agriculture, animals that die of disease should be disposed with safely regulated methods, such as burning, vaporizing, or burying in designated locations.“In practice, those who abandon their dead pets in the garbage or casually bury the remains are rarely punished,”Shen told the Beijing Evening News.“It’s difficult to regulate pet funerals.”

        ANIMALS THAT DIE OF DISEASE SHOULD BE DISPOSED WITH SAFELY REGULATED METHODS BUT THOSE WHO cASUALLY BURY THE REMAINS ARE RARELY PUNISHED

        A pet cat is combed before cremation

        Small dog Xiaoxiao is laid to rest at a pet cemetery in Wuhan in March

        EVEN SOME PET STORE OPERATORS DON’T kNOW THE EXISTENcE OF THE PET FUNERAL INDUSTRY. MANY OF OUR cLIENTS TELL US THEY NEVER kNEW A PET cOULD BE cREMATED BEFORE

        “Improper burial may not only break the law, but also affect neighbors,” says Li. “And the owners have to worry that the dead pets could be dug up.”He once received a tearful phone call at midnight from a young woman who feared the cat she’d recently buried in the yard of her apartment complex was about to be excavated as part of a building redevelopment project.

        The incident brought home the issue for Li. “Currently, the problem [of improper burial and corpse disposal] is still serious. It’s partly because of the cost, but the main reason is lack of information. Even some pet store operators don’t know the existence of the pet funeral industry. Many of our clients tell us they never knew a pet could be cremated before.”

        Others have, perhaps, embraced the industry a little too enthusiastically. In 2015, a lavish funeral in Shanghai, replete with a wake, professional mourners, and limousine-chauffeured luxury coffin, provoked a variety of outraged comments after state media outlets shared the pictures online. A search for “pet funeral” on Taobao, China’s largest e-commerce platform, brings up dozens of results for postmortem services, with costs ranging from hundreds to thousands of RMB. In March, Beijing Youth Daily reported on the existence of severalupscale pet cemeteries, where plots can cost up to 10,000 RMB.

        JoyPets doesn’t offer cemetery plots or burial services. The most expensive funeral Li has organized was a memorial service for a dog, with about 20 relatives and friends attending, which cost 5,000 RMB. “We oppose over-consumption,” says Li, “The association between post-mortem pet care and sky-high burial prices results from some biased media reports. That’s a stereotype. The pet funeral is an industry, and burial is just one form of it, which the government and most practitioners don’t advocate.”

        Instead JoyPets, alongside several other companies, provides ecological alternatives, such as turning remains into fertilizer that can be used to grow a houseplant, or even stuffing an animal, a procedure that Li is reluctant to discuss for fear of a public backlash. (He assures TWOC the procedure is not only safe but environmentally friendly, and the taxidermy can last 30 to 50 years.)

        Only a tiny percentage of clients choose to stuff their pets, including a “very famous pop diva,” but, Li says, they usually do it for a personal reason. He recalled a client whose German Shepherd had scared away an intruder who broke into the family home. “When the dog died of old age, they wanted to keep their heroic friend with them forever,” says Li. “Different pets have different stories in different families…for some, a pet is a family member, and [taxidermy] makes them feel as if their pet never left.”

        SEVERAL cOMPANIES PROVIDE EcOLOGIcAL ALTERNATIVES, SUcH AS TURNING REMAINS INTO FERTILIZER THAT cAN FEED A HOUSEPLANT

        Despite the place most pets holds in people’s hearts, many of his friends disapprove of Li’s career, saying the industry is fragile, and vulnerable to misinterpretation and lack of acceptance. “Sometimes, a piece of negative reporting can incur a lot of backlash toward us. Some feel that it’s completely inappropriate to promote pet funerals”—since, even for humans, burial resources are scarce, and China’s funeral industry presents an impersonal and often coldly mechanical face—“other extremists even claim dogs are supposed to beeaten, and don’t deserve any kind of funeral at all; some consider us as a heartless industry making ‘black money.’ Our website has been hacked many times.”

        The elaborate funeral of a Shanghainese dog called Irwin in 2015 sparked a backlash

        The ashes of Maiba are now stored in a pet cemetery

        There are many problems in the industry, Li agrees, including a lack of clear procedures and the relatively poor quality of some facilities and services, particularly compared with those in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other developed areas. “But I know what I am doing and why I am doing it,” say Li. “Helping others see their pets off gives me a sense of purpose, especially when I experienced all of it myself. This industry is more complicated than I thought, and there is indeed a long way to go. But it shouldn’t be regarded as a shady business.”

        Irwin’s tragic passing was lamented by a team of professional mourners

        A stuffed pet serval, courtesy of JoyPets

        “SOME EXTREMISTS cLAIM DOGS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE EATEN, AND DON’T DESERVE A FUNERAL; SOME cONSIDER US AS A HEARTLESS INDUSTRY MAkING ‘BLAck MONEY’”

        猜你喜歡
        孫佳慧心愛寵物
        我的心愛之物
        小讀者(2021年4期)2021-11-24 10:49:03
        我的心愛之物
        小讀者(2021年2期)2021-03-29 05:03:16
        A Relic’s Return
        abroad ambitions
        Eating likeemperors
        HOLIDAY HUMBUG
        心愛的東西
        介紹一下你最心愛的玩具吧
        寵物
        抬起腳來(lái)
        激情亚洲一区国产精品久久| 亚洲av午夜成人片精品| 国产成人综合亚洲国产| 亚州终合人妖一区二区三区| 正在播放国产多p交换视频| 久久精品夜夜夜夜夜久久| 亚洲国产精品综合福利专区| 国产精品日韩亚洲一区二区| 免费网站内射红桃视频| 116美女极品a级毛片| 国产v精品成人免费视频400条| 黄片免费观看视频播放| 亚洲日韩精品无码av海量| 搡老熟女老女人一区二区| 十八18禁国产精品www| 国产最新网站| 狼人av在线免费观看| 日本免费影片一区二区| 国产精品永久久久久久久久久| 国产成人亚洲精品无码h在线| 亚洲电影久久久久久久9999| 日本韩国三级在线观看| 国产亚洲精品a片久久久| 亚洲gv白嫩小受在线观看| 国产精品,在线点播影院| 国产精品国产三级久久| 亚洲成在人网站av天堂| 国产亚洲精久久久久久无码苍井空| 国产一区二区三区porn | 欧美巨大巨粗黑人性aaaaaa| 一区二区三区日本大片| 国产一区二区三区四区色| 久久在一区二区三区视频免费观看| 亚洲av中文无码乱人伦在线播放 | 日韩中文字幕熟女人妻| 日韩av激情在线观看| 射精情感曰妓女色视频| 国内自拍视频在线观看| 亚洲综合av一区二区三区蜜桃| 国产一女三男3p免费视频| 91精品综合久久久久m3u8|