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ANIMAL MAGNETISM:
TURNING YOUR LOVE OF CRITTERS INTO A CAREER
Do many of your best friends
wear nothing but collars? Do they lick strangers
and urinate in public? Don’t be ashamed.
They also keep your bed toasty, embrace
you at the door and cuddle with you on a
lonely Saturday evening. But if a night
on the couch with Fluffy isn’t enough
to quench your love of four-footed furries,
consider turning your passion into a career.
For many Angelenos who currently work with
two-legged beasts, the switch shouldn’t
be that traumatic.
Whether you are a thirtysomething high
school grad who’s unhappy at the office
or a bio major at UCLA, there are options
to suit your educational level, unique skills
and interests. This is especially true for
L.A., which boasts a thriving population
of pet trainers, walkers, therapists, acupuncturists,
and mobile vets and groomers – and
the coting parents who have the dough but
not the time to be round-the-clock guardians.
The pay for most gigs won’t land you
a two-bedroom in Santa Monica, but most
animal workers would agree with veterinary
technician Dana Richards: “It doesn’t
pay enough money, but by God I love it.
I’m perfectly content doing this for
the rest of my life.”
There are many jobs like Richards, where
a year or two of training and some hands-on
experience are all you need to get started.
To launch her 20-year career, Richards attended
18 months of vet tech school, then aided
with research at the University of Pittsburgh
and in surgeries at a local ER clinic. Today,
she makes house calls drawing blood, cleaning
teeth, giving shots and helping vets with
allergy treatments. L.A. Animal Services
also employs vet assistants (two years’
training and exam), animal-control officers
(one year paid work with animals or 18 college
units in relevant field, 10 to 12 weeks’
training), animal-care technicians (six
months’ work or nine college units,
one week’s training) and vets. If
you’re an animal-control officer,
the city will shell out $30,500 (to start)
a year for you to reunite loose and lost
dogs with their owners, stop animal abuse,
and investigate colorful city folk who’ve
got more stray cats than Stephen King’s
Pet Semetary. The jobs can be tough and
require impressive people skills, but uniting
a lost dog with a child or saving a pet
from being skinned alive makes it all worthwhile.
If you hate needles and your record bars
you from government work, you can always
do your own enterprising thang. Many animal
fans make a living caring for others’
critters. High school grad Jennifer Perkins
took night courses in finance, marketing
and management, coupled them with years
of breeding experience and research, and
opened Holiday Pet Hotel in Encinitas. Though
she set up shop on a shoestring budget –
“which I wouldn’t recommend
today, even if it were possible!”
she says – and competition is fierce,
for 22 years she’s enjoyed the smiles
of joyful vacationers retrieving their pets.
“I always knew my life would be centered
on animals, “she says, mirroring the
sentiment of many animal-care professionals
who turn a childhood devotion into a lifelong
endeavor.
Take Dina De Sanctis, who began her sting
as a pet sitter at the ripe age of 14. Now
33, she has more than 300 clients that bring
her $30,000 to $40,000 per year ($12 to
$15 per 45-minute visit to feed and walk
the pets). Also a people lover, De Sanctis
has a certificate in child abuse and family
violence, and counsels children and those
who are grieving for lost pets. For both
women, the most difficult parts of the job
are caring for a sick animal or having to
say goodbye to a favorite pet. To De Sanctis,
a client’s pet’s deaths is “like
losing one of your own.”
Those who’ve endured such a tragedy
can pay a visit to lorin Linder, a psychologist
for grieving pet lovers, as well as for
those who abuse animals. She began a general
practice with a Ph.D. in clinical psychology
and a masters in public health, but eventually
concentrated on animals. “People are
often embarrassed to express an excessive
amount of grief over their pet, because
they’ get the response, ‘It
was just an animal. Get over it;”
she explains. But pets are a part of the
family, especially in big cities like L.A.,
where they are often the only “children”
in the home. Offering a different sort of
therapy, nonprofit organizations like Ahead
With Horses and the Human Dolphin Institute
use the natural bond between kids and animals
to improve disabled or autistic youngsters’
communication and physical skills. Severely
handicapped children at Ahead With Horses
learn to hold their bodies up and balance
while on a horse; some even learn to walk
there. Both centers also help disadvantaged
or terminally ill children who dream of
riding a horse or swimming with dolphins.
Nine-year-old Marie Armandine, a leukemia
patient with months left to live, was granted
her biggest wish – to play with dolphins
in the Gulf of Mexico. While entry-level
pay is often minimum wage, these are great
opportunities for those without degrees
of fluent English skills. Who would work
at a paint store rather than help a child
with no arms feed, brush and mount a horse
using only his feet?
Dealing directly with creatures is not
the only way to go. Many professionals in
other fields have animal specialties, such
as pet-care of animal-rights writers, pet
photographers, psychics, detectives and
animal agents (though all of these fields
are, well, dog-eat-dog). Michael Rotsten
had practiced law for 22 years when his
Alaskan malamute was poisoned and nearly
killed in ’92. Since then, he’s
gradually limited his practice to animal
cases and has done over 300 since, as one
of the few animal lawyers in the nation.
Like most folks who exclude human clients,
he earns a third to one-half the salary
he could be making, but he couldn’t
be happier. “I would have burned out
by now if I weren’t working with animals,”
Rotsten says. Why does he hang around? “If
I can keep a dog on death row from being
destroyed, I’m happy.” Still,
recent grads with student loans to repay
should build a general practice before homing
in on pets. “You can’t do the
kind of law I’m doing and pay off
an $80,000 or $100,000 debt,” he warns.
Often more cutthroat and costlier than
law school or a Ph.D program, veterinary
and science programs (biology, zoology or
marine science) are the traditional, high-profile
animal careers. Though they require the
most education (vet schools like to see
a 3.5 GPA, many physical and life-science
courses and a few years’ hospital
or clinic experience), a doctorate in veterinary
medicine or a masters in biology or zoology
will open many doors – namely those
of zoos, research institutions, universities
and hospitals. Unlike the HMO-cluttered
world of human medicine, private practice
is thriving and even expanding into areas
like acupuncture, chiropractic medicine
and holistic medicine – therapies
that heal musculo-skeletal and neurological
problems when Western remedies often can’t.
Dr. William Farber, a vet and certified
animal chiropractor, says he incorporated
Eastern methods into his practice after
experiencing their healing effects on his
own bad back. “I found out about alternative
therapies and wondered why we weren’t
doing more with animals,” he says.
If “doing more with animals”
is your goal, get creative. Skills as a
groomer, researcher, vet or behavior specialist
can be used at zooa, animal parks and wildlife
areas. There are tabby cats in Silver Lake
who need their teeth cleaned and would-be
seeing eye dogs in Sylmar waiting for trainers.
For a twist, take your dog-and-pony show
on the road as a mobile vet tech or animal
transporter (if a waitress’ Saint
Bernard has a bad kidney and won’t
fit into her 1984 Yugo, you’ll come
in handy). While education, salary and skills
play a part, only your imagination and devotion
limit your options. Says Rotsten, “If
someone is dedicated to animals, he’ll
find a way to make it work.”
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