Task of saving animals continues

US: First came the flood, then the animals - and not two by two. There are 200 dogs here. There are 50 cats

US: First came the flood, then the animals - and not two by two. There are 200 dogs here. There are 50 cats. A pot-bellied pig sleeps in the hay. Parrots and cockatoos flutter in cages. An iguana stands as still as a statue in a glass aquarium. There are goats, snakes, rabbits, guinea pigs, a pet rat and even a flying squirrel.

There are horses and mules, too, chestnut miniatures and massive Belgian draught horses. White stallions that used to pull newlyweds through the French Quarter and Arabian racers. Altogether, there are more than 220 equines here.

The stables of the Lamar-Dixon Expo Centre and 4-H Centre in Gonzales have been transformed into a zoo of refugees - home to many of the animals that were lost or abandoned during the flood. Animal care organisations from around the United States have poured into Louisiana to assist in the rescue and care of pets and workhorses.

"We're trying to get a way to get more of them," said Kathryn Destreza, the director of New Orleans' Animal Services Department. "These people have lost everything, so if we can at least give them their dog or their horse it won't be so bad."

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Pets have become a hindrance for rescuers, as many survivors of the flood are refusing to leave deluged homes because they want to care for their animals.

Many rescuers have stopped residents from coming aboard boats with their pets and most evacuation shelters do not have facilities for animals.

Ms Destreza said animal rescue efforts could help convince people to leave their homes. "It blows my mind that Fema [Federal Emergency Management Agency] and the Red Cross don't think about that."

The expo centre is set up alongside an evacuation centre between New Orleans and Baton Rouge housing about 2,000 people. Many of the animals there were brought by evacuees; others were recovered later by volunteers or even soldiers and police officers, who aren't supposed to recover animals but have been bending the rules.

Before the storm, state veterinarians and humane society officials plotted out the locations of veterinarian clinics, stables and other locations where animals could be trapped.

Bonnie Clark, an equine newsletter publisher, said she set up a horse evacuation database after Hurricane Andrew that was helping to guide rescue efforts. Horses and mules in Louisiana are required to have tattoos, brands or a microchip inserted in their neck to identify their owners.

Ms Clark said she had information on as many as 3,000 horses. The database eventually will help them find the owners.

Renee Poirrier of the Louisiana State Veterinarian office said the animals will be photographed and the images posted on the internet. - (LA Times, Washington Post service)