How a British writer ended up helping animals in Sliven Lucy Irvine’s year on a desert island once featured in a hit movie - now her LIFE organization fights for animal welfare. By Gabriel Hershman Peace is what she sometimes craves. But her nights can be surprisingly noisy. It's not the roar of traffic, of course, not here, deep in the Bulgarian countryside, a half hour drive from the city of Sliven. Instead, it's the thundering of horses' hooves that sometimes keeps the British pensioner awake in her caravan. Lucy Irvine is a writer and even a celebrity once upon a time in Britain. Now she lives in Bulgaria and rises at dawn to begin tending to her rescued animals; there are roughly 300 in total if you include all the horses, donkeys, dogs and cats under her supervision (some of which are in the community and not just in her yard). She keeps what she calls "tropical hours", especially during summer's scorching sun - the kind of heat that can drive tethered...
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Dog Control Proposals-Bulgaria
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The Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe welcomes a proposal from the authorities in Sliven, our nearest large town, to take a raft of measures over the next five years to control the stray dog population in the municipality. There are 32 outlying villages included in the municipality and within and around those villages, numerous Roma enclaves. LIFE operates primarily in and around villages within a 15 kilometre radius of our HQ in a village 22 kilometres from Sliven town but we have visited a number of more distant villages in the municipality and find the similar conditions regarding stray dogs obtaining in nearly all of them. The situation is desperate with horrible deaths from disease and starvation as well as human brutality common. Below is a quote from the proposal which informs us, encouragingly, that the municipality recognises the human causes of the problem of stray dogs and is prepared to try to tackle them from several angles. The s...
Barcelona
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One of the hardest things we face at the Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe is a heavily ingrained mindset about treatment of horses in the Roma community. Sons and grandsons have the same approach their fathers and grandfathers did and as grandad is often still living with the family, his voice still carries. Tradition, how wonderful! we might say. Or we could interpret the repetition of behaviours as failure to adapt to knowledge based on science and study with a preference to follow patterns that have obtained for centuries, because that's how things have always been done. These are some of the traditions regarding horses we see practiced in Roma communities here: A horse is bought to earn for the family. If it's a mare she's put to a stallion young so there's another horse in the pipeline. As soon as the foal arrives it's dominated by restraint. Generations of arms go around it to make sure it grows up easy to handle. Small boys hang on the edge of the crowd wield...
Kirichko
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In December 2020, a Roma contact told me of a foal who'd been kicked by his mother, who didn't want him. I was heading in the direction of that village, delivering food to puppies the Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe , supports near there, so dropped by. The yard was messy, with rickety fencing, discarded machinery and trampled-in manure to negotiate on our way to a narrow outbuilding which the owner said housed the foal. LIFE's Roma helper, Ilia, was with me. We'd already concluded that the owner was fattening the foal for Christmas. No doubt he hoped I'd pay more than the meat man. Fattening foals for the Festive season is common in backwater Roma enclaves. The two of them chatted in their own language as we sidled past discarded car parts and a thin, dejected donkey. It was dark in the shed. Peering in, I could only see the foal's face, which was trying to peer out. A pretty face topped by a tufty two-toned fringe. When the owner moved past me with a stick the ...
Kolio
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At the Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe (LIFE) we're accustomed to ups and downs; after all we work at the sharp end of animal rescue so we're bound to win some and lose some. The past fortnight, however, has been unusually packed with highs and lows. The lowest point for me was the mystery of eyeless cat Kolio's disappearance. It happened the same day we had a major success - sending four rehabilitated rescued horses out at on a mini-trek, ridden by local helper, Daniel, and volunteers. Those heaven-sent volunteers also ran errands for LIFE, fetching meds for sick cats from town, mending gates, giving attention to dogs who never get enough. They also left us with masses of second-hand towels and enough dog bowls to hand out during Outreach work for months to come - ultimately practical gifts. I'd dreamed of being able to put my hand on a towel for kittens or puppies whenever needed; now I can. Above all, I'm grateful for the time those people gave selfl...
Amber
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The Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe (LIFE) has rescued many horses, dogs and cats over the years but some stand out in my memory more than others. Maybe because she was the first foal I rescued, the story of Amber’s rescue is special to me. I've chosen to tell it here. My mission that day was to treat dogs against ticks and fleas in a rough Roma area. To this end, I was walking between mud-brick hovels, followed by a mob of barefooted children dragging dogs on leads made from string. I’d already treated several puppies and had stopped to remove a wire collar cutting into the neck of another, when a shout made me look up. Yanko, a man whose stallion I wormed last year, wanted me to look at his mare. He said she needed an injection because she’d had a foal he must ‘throw away’. I finished fastening a collar onto the puppy and told its five year old owner to loosen it as the puppy grew. I’d seen deaths due to throats severed by string or wire collars on older dogs Yanko showed me hi...
A Brief Newsround - Week ending 27/06/21
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I wrote in Castaway that I learned to walk on my island in the sun. From a rushed scuttle in London, dodging and weaving in crowds to catch a bus, my gait changed to a tranquil rolling stroll. I had only to catch a fish and it was extremely hot. The new pace was part of a process of adjustment and not only to the heat. I was adapting in order to survive. That was in the tropics on an atoll in the Coral Sea and I was 25. In Southern Bulgaria, where I live and work now, it’s not quite such a survive or perish situation – at least not for me – but it can also be extremely hot and I’m now in my mid-sixties. Much as I’d like to use my desert island walk as a learned strategy to cope with heat, I only can occasionally here, because hundreds of rescued animals depend on me and the Lucy Irvine Foundation Europe ’s other staff for their essential needs: water, shelter and food - water especially at this time of year. No-one, whether they have four legs or two, should have to wait for water...