Help animals

Emergency aid

How animal lifes are saved

Those animals that are not yet able to benefit from the effects of the sustainable SUST development work and have been born into a world where they are not wanted need immediate help.

SUST offers immediate assistance through:

Emergency aid

SUST Emergency help is done by

  • Animal rescue operations
  • Social work in Switzerland
  • Financing of all livestock rescue services of the Swiss Large Animal Rescue Service
  • Laying hens actions (switching of "out-of-date" laying hens)
  • Organisation, implementation and/or financing of emergency plans and operations
  • Work horse treatments
  • First aid and veterinary interventions

 
and through the

SUST Orphan Animal Hospitals (SUST)

In many countries countless abandoned animals live on the streets. Many of these dogs and cats have been abandoned or have already been born as strays. Life on the street is dangerous and full of privation. Injured and sick animals usually have no chance of surviving and die mostly painfully and alone on the street. In such cases, there is often not a lack of willingness to help animal-loving people, but a lack of financial means to have street animals treated by a veterinarian.
 
To help these animals in need, the Susy Utzinger Animal Welfare Foundation set up the SUST Orphan Animal Hospitals.
 
There are currently one of these institutions in
 

 
Ever since its opening, animals that have been injured or ill are admitted daily to the SUST Orphan Animal Hospitals, where they are cared for and treated professionally. If the animals are healthy and strong enough to survive on the streets after their recovery, they will be released back to their territory. Special patients with special needs will be accommodated in animal shelters if possible. Fortunately, it is also possible to find new life places for patients on an ongoing basis.
 
The Susy Utzinger Animal Welfare Foundation finances the veterinary costs, clinic equipment, medicines, operations, therapies, food and care in the animal orphan hospitals. Often, SUST also finances the construction of the corresponding clinic.
 
The activities of the Susy Utzinger Foundation for Animal Welfare are financed exclusively by donations and legacies (no public support).

If you would like to find out more about the other SUST-emergency aid projects, such as:

  • Social work for Animals
  • Näpflein füll' Dich
  • Livestock rescue
  • Laying hens
  • Amphibians
  • Emergency actions
  • Rabies control
  • Feeding points for street dogs
  • Emergency food aid from SUST
  • SaveMyLive
  • Help for Ukrainian refugees and their pets

Please use your browser's translation extension to also access the German version of the website.

Activities

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Even our youngest amphibian rescuers hold out until late in the night when there are large numbers of amphibians!

March 2020

Frogs, toads and newts have spent the winter on land, and in spring they break free from the torpor of the cold and thousands of them make their way to their spawning grounds. Particularly on rainy nights, drivers near the water must be prepared for four-legged passers-by on the road. Every spring, countless amphibians set off on a hike to their spawning grounds: With high humidity and temperatures of 5 degrees and more, toads and frogs migrate all night long towards their spawning grounds. Every year from about 7 pm in the evening until 7 am, around 5 million amphibians start their honeymoon. On these spring migrations the animals cover distances between several hundred metres and several kilometres. However, many hundreds of thousands of them have to pay for their long journey with their lives: The animals are usually on the move in masses and are often run over and killed by cars in masses.

Every year, many helpers of the Susy Utzinger Animal Welfare Foundation therefore have to collect grass frogs, common toads and newts from amphibian fences late in the evening and early in the morning and take them to their spawning grounds. Despite safety measures, many amphibians end up on the roads every year and are dependent on the behaviour of every single driver.

At the time of the amphibian migrations, each of us can easily show consideration and save countless lives without much effort:

1. Pay attention to road signs: In the evening hours and during the night you should avoid roads marked with the famous frog warning triangle.

2. drive slowly: Even if the animals are not directly caught by the wheels, you will usually still suffer fatal injuries at speeds above 40 km/h due to the negative pressure. So if no bypass is possible, you will pass the affected road at a much reduced speed.

3. become active: contact the responsible municipality if you have observed a hiking route that is not yet protected from traffic and numerous animals that have been run over! Report your observations and ask whether measures have already been taken.

4. become a frog taxi: Every year hundreds of thousands of amphibians are carried safely across the roads in Switzerland by animal lovers, schoolchildren and other hard-working helpers

Country:
  • Switzerland
5 Pillars:
  • Emergency Aid
Even our youngest amphibian rescuers hold out until late in the night when there are large numbers of amphibians!
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