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Microchipping Your Dog
A microchip is a
rice-grain-sized pellet that is implanted under the dog's skin. It
literally takes only a minute to implant and is painless ("Sure ma, easy
for you to say!"). This method, along with tattooing and having
identification tags attached to collars, will increase your chances of
recovering your dog should he or she become lost.
Question:
I must admit my ignorance and confess that I have no
idea what microchips for dogs are. Is it anything like having your dog
tattooed? Or is there more to it than that? I would love to hear what it
is and what the advantages are and any other info you would care to
share as it sounds very intriguing.
Answer:
Micro-chipping is an ever-growing, popular
pet-retrieval system that has been designed to enhance one's chances of
finding a lost pet. A permanent identification is provided by a tiny
(about the size of a grain of rice) microchip that is implanted between
the dog or cat's shoulders, quickly and safely. The "chip" is programmed
with a unique, unalterable code that can be identified with a hand-held
scanner, similar to the scanners in the grocery stores. These scanners
are being used in more and more vet's offices, animal shelters and
animal-control agencies, across the country. When a lost pet is brought
to one of these locations, the code is retrieved and called in to the
database, where your info is kept, and is accessible 24 hours a day, 365
days a year, through an 800#.
Note:
The Sierra-Tuolumne Kennel Club and the Tuolumne County
Animal Control are in possession of universal scanners. One scanner was
provided to Tuolumne County Animal Control as a courtesy from the
Sierra-Tuolumne Kennel Club.
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