A Voice for your Pets

Alex's Blog

Welcome to where we discuss the latest in pet health advice, VetCare patient successes and animal news. We'd love you to weigh in with your comments.

A Week in Tonga with SPAW

Dr. Alex Melrose - Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Alex was in Tonga the 2nd week of November with the South Pacific Animal Welfare (SPAW) and took some great pictures and wrote a diary of his experiences.  Here is his story! 

 

4am. Up and go. Excitement tinged with apprehension provides a great counter to the call of sleep. Avoid the mirror, that’s why they call it a Red-eye flight. It’s a quick trip, less than 3 hours, the temperature’s already hitting 25 when we hit the Tongan tarmac. Customs seem happy with our bulging suitcases. With 2 pairs of shorts and 3 t-shirts the remainder of the 25kg made up of copious donated supplies from Pfizer, Shoof and Kahu Vets. A declaration we are working with their ministry keeps them totally happy and we’re waved through to an enthusiastic, welcoming and overheating Karen.

 

Buy some water.Into the Terrano and off we head, Dr Cathy and nurses Jo and Leanne complete the team. Lush fields, Taro and palms roll by. Roadside stalls sell fruit, veggies and fish every few hundred metres.

 

First stop, Kingdom Coffee, Jo and Vinnie Kupu. These guys are legends, a welcome local guiding light, nestled in the midst of their ultra-relaxing and amazing coffee plantation retreat.

Having someone on the ground that cares so deeply for animals and specifically our SPAW clinics… Invaluable.

The barbeques, the coffee, the smiles, the local contacts, the reception work and meet and greet at the clinic. Really oils the vet team machine.

 

Onto our digs. The Green Lodge. Great location half way between where we will be working, and Nukualofa township. The place is massive, totally secure with security fencing and really clean and tidy. Way flasher than expected, 3 houses, 9 bedrooms, not fully used by this smaller team but perfect for future visits of vet and nurse teams. It was to be accompanied by its own special nightly concert of roosters, wildlife, dogs and church choirs. Decibels.

 

 We unloaded some medicines, and 2 minute noodles, set our snorkeling gear aside and headed back down the road towards the clinic.

We’d hired the empty doctor’s surgery at Glenys Marfys, again, a perfect setup, front-side parking, waiting room, reception, surgery room with observation window, and a consult room.

The couple of hundred kg’s of supplies start to find their place on the shelves, and storerooms. We’re well stocked with all the basics thanks to our awesome sponsors.

 

We take a group vote and speed off to the closest beach to cool down , a cliff-top café, coral swimming holes and mini blowholes await. Fan-bloody-tastic.

 

Back to Kingdom coffee for barbequed whole parrot fish, what a day! A couple of large bats zoom past.

A quick breakfast and we speed over the potholes to kick off the clinic. Hand painted signs and radio ads have done their part and people start rocking up from 8am.

 

Pico, a little puppy, short on height, but fully believing itself to be the alpha male, he bossed the other arriving patients around to his little heart’s content. Perhaps he thought we said he was to be tutored rather than neutered. We’ll help his owners later on with getting him to Australia upon their return.

 

A steady stream of locals and ex-pat Kiwis and Aussie’s swing on by. Some gut infections to be treated, fevers to be alleviated, pregnant cats to spey and lots of nervous dogs ready for their ops. We have an audience. Interested and super grateful. Man it’s hot.

 

The ministry of Ag boss drops in to welcome us and wish us well and their small animal vet tech Nau joins the team. He’s one hell of a nice guy, skilled and a massive assist with communicating with local Tongans.

 

Cathy was taking the lead expertly, this being her second trip she knew all the routines that work best in this environment. When Dr Andy arrived the next day sharp as a tack it was my turn to pass down the routines.

 

House calls to places with 15 dogs, were followed by visits to the Prison and School farms to check conditions for their very valuable pigs and chickens.

 

Throughout the week the antibiotics flowed, the scalpels whirred (in controlled fashion of course) , the suture packets emptied, and groggy pets were safely shipped back home. Somehow we managed to fit in swims, snorkels, a dive or two, great dinners and a huge party at Jo and Vinnie’s.

 

We left Andy and Jo to carry on the great work and sped from the beach to the airport. What an adventure.

 

A unique experience. The hospitality on the island. The grateful owners. The daily challenges. The heat. The teamwork. The rescued pups. The community education. The glowing health of animals treated on previous trips.  Feels awesome!

Alex



Missing Pets

Contact us and we’ll put it on our website and spread the words Publish your notice…


Newsletter Signup


Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Email Newsletter

Photo of the Month

Pic of the month

Remy's new hairdo more pet stars

Testimonials

I've never before been at a clinic where all the staff knew every single patient walking through the door, you are truely special, stay passionate about your jobs.



From Christina

VetCare Recommends