• The "featherweight sanctuary" welcomes animals taken out of laboratories, mistreated or abandoned on 6,000 m2 in Charente.

  • He specializes in the care of new pets (NAC), which is almost all animals except dogs and cats, and in particular small ones.

  • After a sudden drop in the subsidy on one of their subsidized jobs, the co-founders launched an appeal for donations to continue their activity.

At the edge of a wood, in spacious and well-maintained enclosures, some 120 animals (goats, pigs, sheep, chickens, guinea pigs, rabbits, mice, etc.) live happy days under the benevolent care of Typhaine Genty and her husband, co-founders of the "Featherweight Sanctuary".

Animal lovers and sensitive to the animal cause, they created their association in 2015 and transformed it this year into a sanctuary, that is to say a place of permanent reception over 6,000 m2.

They have chosen to specialize in the care of new pets (NAC), small because there are few facilities for them.

Before their arrival at the sanctuary, these animals all have a difficult past in common.

Used for laboratory experiments

"We recovered pigs on which there had been skin tests of cream and mice which were used mainly for behavioral studies", explains Typhaine Genty.

When the experimental protocols come to an end, the Graal association, which specializes in the rehabilitation of laboratory animals, looks for places for them.

"Lab animals, when it comes to cats and dogs, there are a lot of shelters that take them, but it's more difficult for NACs," comments Typhaine Genty, who explains that the sanctuary cannot always meet the demand, to guarantee good living conditions for his little ones protected.

So far, 140 mice and six pigs from laboratories have taken up residence in the Charente haven of peace.

That day, the little pig göttingen,

A very strict protocol is applied to animals leaving the laboratory.

"Animals must not present any risks to the environment or to humans, with a veterinary certificate in support", testifies the co-founder of the sanctuary.

The departmental directorate for the protection of populations (DDPP) must also validate its transfer.

Although the sanctuary team is not in favor of animal testing, it has never observed any particular health concerns in those it has welcomed.

If they are sometimes fearful, they are rather social animals because they are handled a lot for humans.

“It is more difficult to socialize our three-legged sheep which has been abandoned in a meadow”, observes Typhaine Genty.

Abused or abandoned

Snuggled up in her cage, Judy the chinchilla was released from illegal breeding, blind and with a broken leg.

The hamsters were collected from a pet store because they were not "saleable", the gerbils from another which was closing.

Phoebe, a pigeon, was picked up by the association after being locked in a very small cage because her owner "did not realize that she needed more space", says, understanding, the co-founder of the sanctuary. .

She now coos willingly in the arms of Manon, a volunteer at the Sanctuary.

The guinea pigs were abandoned, one lot at the bottom of a building and the other in front of a pet store, "as if she was going to take them back", sighs Typhaine Genty.

Eleven rabbits were placed in a box near the river that borders the couple's property.

Surely from an industrial farm, they accumulate a lot of diseases: pasteurellosis, ringworm, ear mites etc.

and require a lot of care.

“One of them stayed in quarantine with us for two months,” points out Typhaine Genty.

There are also hens culled from breeding because they are no longer profitable and some ducks from a foie gras duck farm.

"They are sexed in the bud and piled up in large bins and come what may of them," she says.

Torti had a neck problem and I gave him physio sessions several times a day to straighten his head.

She has become super social.

A little goat remained abandoned in a meadow for two years and had to have one leg amputated.

A call for donations to continue

Typhaine Genty remembers the 15,000 staples affixed to the main aviary with her husband.

If some works were commissioned from craftsmen, many were carried out gradually by them.

Family companions and parents of two young children, they need to hire two caregivers to carry out the activity of the sanctuary.

But after a sudden drop in subsidy on their assisted contract, they launched a call for donations which continues until Friday.

“Our goal is to make the position permanent to avoid making another call for donations,” explains Typhaine Genty.

And the activity is not lacking.

A cabin for the reception of ferrets is under construction, requests for the reception of rabbits are daily and the sanctuary must refuse rescues for lack of space.

“We save a few animals here, but we need to act more upstream to change things, for example by imposing a little more control on sales or by offering sterilized animals in pet stores,” says the co-founder.

Planet

Animal abuse: In this shelter, laboratory rabbits find adoptive families

Society

Record animal abandonment this summer, especially cats and kittens, deplores the SPA

  • Poitou-Charentes

  • Animals

  • Planet

  • Animal protection

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