• =?UTF-8?Q?Who_Let_The_Dogs_Out=3F_Not_Shanghai=E2=80=99s_Covid_Cops?=

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 7 10:04:27 2022
    Who Let The Dogs Out? Not Shanghai’s Covid Cops
    By Natasha Khan and Liyan Qi, April 4, 2022, WSJ

    That all changed last week, when Wu Qianyu, an official
    with the Shanghai municipal health commission told citizens,
    in effect, that the quarantine rules apply equally to man and
    man’s best friend alike. That meant no setting foot outside
    apartment units, including corridors and parking lots—not for
    throwing out the garbage, not for jogging and not for walking pets.

    As the implications of the dog lockdown became clear, pet owners
    spent their final hours of freedom stocking up on extra dog food
    and chew toys. Others collected leaves, dug up mulch and ordered
    patches of grass to set up “outdoor areas” in their homes.

    The founder of a local pet training academy held a live-streamed
    lesson on his social-media account to help owners train their dogs
    to get comfortable doing their business indoors. A Shanghai-based
    pet-sitting startup, Spare Leash, organized a virtual “doga”—that’s dog yoga—class for pets and their owners.

    One local vet, invited onto a local radio station to dispense
    advice to dog owners, counseled buying pet diapers and emphasized
    the importance of offering more emotional support to their animals.

    Some have struggled to adapt. One video widely circulated among
    Shanghai dog owners showed a small white dog being lowered from
    an apartment block onto the grass below by a very long leash
    before doing its business.

    Robert Gatti, an American expatriate in Shanghai, bought two big
    bags of fresh sod from a grass dealer, which he laid out in a few
    squares on his balcony. He then added some leaves he picked by hand
    from bushes outside his building for a pop of color and detail to
    recreate a park scene for his Shanghai rescue dog Xixi. “My dog is
    from the streets,” Gatti said. “I think she can manage this.”

    Heather Kaye, a NYC native who has lived in Shanghai for 16 years,
    isn’t so sure about Ruthie, her 4-year-old mutt mix, who is used to
    walking about 3 miles each day.

    Kaye, a fashion designer who's hunkering down with her husband and
    two adolescent daughters, had a roughly 10-sq-ft patch of grass
    delivered a day before the lockdown.

    Ruthie just stared at it, baffled. Rather than try to teach her
    old dog new tricks, Kaye called a municipal govt hotline to leave
    messages pleading for more attention to dogs and their owners. The
    family has decided it’s time to move back home.

    “I really get why [the govt] did what they did for Delta but this
    is a totally different game now,” said Kaye, who described her move
    as motivated both by personal reasons and the Covid restrictions.
    “We love Shanghai but we cannot do this anymore. It’s too much.”

    Kaye’s business partner, Indian expatriate Itee Soni, had spent
    recent weeks bringing her small dog Robyn, a 3-year-old terrier,
    almost everywhere she went, including the office and the grocery
    stores, in case she was caught in one of China’s periodic snap
    lockdowns, which have trapped unwitting people in shopping malls
    and office towers for hours and even days after an infection or
    close contact was identified there.

    Soni, who recalls earlier lockdowns in which dog-walking was
    permitted, said she tried to give Robyn a crash course in potty
    training as the lockdown approached. But delaying Robyn’s daily
    walks only seemed to stress her out, without the desired effect.

    After preparing a “go bag” for Robyn filled with treats and
    lotion, then making arrangements to have Robyn stay with Kaye,
    Soni changed her mind the day before the lockdown began, rushing
    Robyn to a pet hotel a half-hour’s drive outside the city, fearing
    that she might test positive for Covid and be taken away by health
    officials, leaving Robyn home alone for an indefinite amount of time.

    “I’ve used up all my bandwidth thinking about Robyn’s safety,” Soni said. “This round of outbreak and lockdown really broke me a little.”

    Kedl, the longtime American expatriate who dug up the familiar soil
    for his dogs Xiaoxiao and Lala, has found it harder going than he
    had expected.

    On the first day of lockdown, the dogs seemed not to notice having
    missed their morning walk, but when the afternoon walk time came
    without any signs of motion, Kedl said, “their eyes started crossing
    and they were getting a little nervous.”

    So Kedl, following the advice of one member of his Shanghai dog
    owners’ chat group, cordoned off the section of the balcony where
    he had set up the patch of grass, sprinkled with the soil he had
    scooped up, hoping to cultivate a sense of mystery around the faux-
    outdoor area.

    Then, in line with the instructions he had read, when it was time
    for a walk, Kedl dutifully leashed up his two dogs, walked them
    the 10 steps to the secret “outdoor” area and just waited.

    But rather than get on with it, Kedl’s two dogs sat down on the
    grass, blinking bemusedly at him. “They were questioning my sanity,” Kedl said. “And I’m not disagreeing.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/who-let-the-dogs-out-not-shanghais-covid-cops-11649018759

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Thu Apr 7 23:18:16 2022
    On Friday, April 8, 2022 at 1:04:29 AM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Who Let The Dogs Out? Not Shanghai’s Covid Cops
    By Natasha Khan and Liyan Qi, April 4, 2022, WSJ

    That all changed last week, when Wu Qianyu, an official
    with the Shanghai municipal health commission told citizens,
    in effect, that the quarantine rules apply equally to man and
    man’s best friend alike. That meant no setting foot outside
    apartment units, including corridors and parking lots—not for
    throwing out the garbage, not for jogging and not for walking pets.

    As the implications of the dog lockdown became clear, pet owners
    spent their final hours of freedom stocking up on extra dog food
    and chew toys. Others collected leaves, dug up mulch and ordered
    patches of grass to set up “outdoor areas” in their homes.

    The founder of a local pet training academy held a live-streamed
    lesson on his social-media account to help owners train their dogs
    to get comfortable doing their business indoors. A Shanghai-based pet-sitting startup, Spare Leash, organized a virtual “doga”—that’s dog yoga—class for pets and their owners.

    One local vet, invited onto a local radio station to dispense
    advice to dog owners, counseled buying pet diapers and emphasized
    the importance of offering more emotional support to their animals.

    Some have struggled to adapt. One video widely circulated among
    Shanghai dog owners showed a small white dog being lowered from
    an apartment block onto the grass below by a very long leash
    before doing its business.

    Robert Gatti, an American expatriate in Shanghai, bought two big
    bags of fresh sod from a grass dealer, which he laid out in a few
    squares on his balcony. He then added some leaves he picked by hand
    from bushes outside his building for a pop of color and detail to
    recreate a park scene for his Shanghai rescue dog Xixi. “My dog is
    from the streets,” Gatti said. “I think she can manage this.”

    Heather Kaye, a NYC native who has lived in Shanghai for 16 years,
    isn’t so sure about Ruthie, her 4-year-old mutt mix, who is used to walking about 3 miles each day.

    Kaye, a fashion designer who's hunkering down with her husband and
    two adolescent daughters, had a roughly 10-sq-ft patch of grass
    delivered a day before the lockdown.

    Ruthie just stared at it, baffled. Rather than try to teach her
    old dog new tricks, Kaye called a municipal govt hotline to leave
    messages pleading for more attention to dogs and their owners. The
    family has decided it’s time to move back home.

    “I really get why [the govt] did what they did for Delta but this
    is a totally different game now,” said Kaye, who described her move
    as motivated both by personal reasons and the Covid restrictions.
    “We love Shanghai but we cannot do this anymore. It’s too much.”

    Kaye’s business partner, Indian expatriate Itee Soni, had spent
    recent weeks bringing her small dog Robyn, a 3-year-old terrier,
    almost everywhere she went, including the office and the grocery
    stores, in case she was caught in one of China’s periodic snap
    lockdowns, which have trapped unwitting people in shopping malls
    and office towers for hours and even days after an infection or
    close contact was identified there.

    Soni, who recalls earlier lockdowns in which dog-walking was
    permitted, said she tried to give Robyn a crash course in potty
    training as the lockdown approached. But delaying Robyn’s daily
    walks only seemed to stress her out, without the desired effect.

    After preparing a “go bag” for Robyn filled with treats and
    lotion, then making arrangements to have Robyn stay with Kaye,
    Soni changed her mind the day before the lockdown began, rushing
    Robyn to a pet hotel a half-hour’s drive outside the city, fearing
    that she might test positive for Covid and be taken away by health officials, leaving Robyn home alone for an indefinite amount of time.

    “I’ve used up all my bandwidth thinking about Robyn’s safety,” Soni said. “This round of outbreak and lockdown really broke me a little.”

    Kedl, the longtime American expatriate who dug up the familiar soil
    for his dogs Xiaoxiao and Lala, has found it harder going than he
    had expected.

    On the first day of lockdown, the dogs seemed not to notice having
    missed their morning walk, but when the afternoon walk time came
    without any signs of motion, Kedl said, “their eyes started crossing
    and they were getting a little nervous.”

    So Kedl, following the advice of one member of his Shanghai dog
    owners’ chat group, cordoned off the section of the balcony where
    he had set up the patch of grass, sprinkled with the soil he had
    scooped up, hoping to cultivate a sense of mystery around the faux-
    outdoor area.

    Then, in line with the instructions he had read, when it was time
    for a walk, Kedl dutifully leashed up his two dogs, walked them
    the 10 steps to the secret “outdoor” area and just waited.

    But rather than get on with it, Kedl’s two dogs sat down on the
    grass, blinking bemusedly at him. “They were questioning my sanity,” Kedl said. “And I’m not disagreeing.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/who-let-the-dogs-out-not-shanghais-covid-cops-11649018759

    Quarantined people at home will have to face the same problem with their dog in quarantine at home too . It is not so hard on the people when they not taken a walk for which they can walk at home too. But it is hard on the dog for not having a walk at
    all at all day long. Dog gets upset and frustrated when their time for walks is not met. They don't understand why their owner did not bring them out for walk. They will growl. The same goes to young children, too. Many children who cannot attend
    wondered why they were stopped going to school and they missed their friends at school everyday. But children can understand things when explained to them, but not dogs.

    Hence to solve the dog, they need to be innovative change of way of dog walking which can be done at home too. One way is to have dog owners to crowd ideas on how thread mill for dog should be made. With automatic and 5G internet technology already
    available, the thread mill can be produced and sold to dog owners who can automate the thread mill and also guide the dog safely to the thread mill and can monitor them though 5G mobile phone network in already available in China. If more innovative
    ideas are introduced to the thread mill machine or other forms of walking machines, dog will be happy to exercise at home too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)