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Animal

Humanimal: tête de cochon / Mardi le 16 sept.

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Sur TV5- Mardi 16 Septembre 2008 | 20h30 Humanimal

Le porc est certainement le dernier animal auquel on penserait lorsqu'on parle d'intelligence. Et pourtant... Lorsqu'on franchit la barrière des préjugés, on découvre chez le cochon des facultés insoupçonnées. Le cochon est considéré par de nombreux scientifiques comme le 3e animal le plus intelligent de la création à égalité avec le chien...

Realisateur : Berrod Thierry
Année de production : 2006
Pays d'origine : France
Durée : 51 mins Rediffusion(s) :

Vendredi 19 Septembre 2008 | 00h00
Dimanche 21 Septembre 2008 | 04h30
Dimanche 21 Septembre 2008 | 14h00

http://www.tv5.ca/emissions/emission/humanima-tete-de-cochon-100162721.html

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L'unesco http://www.unesco.org/fr/ finance le programe PIG BANK Mad

Avez-vous vu les sacrifices MadCrying or Very sadSad

Les humains dans ce reportage avaient l'air tellement des imbéciles comparativement aux cochons intélligents du documentaire zut

Le cochon est l'animal que j'affectionne le plus, ça me rend tellement triste de les voir ainsi massacrés et torturés par centaines de millions chaque année! Crying or Very sadSad




Pigs caused traffic congestion in Hampshire
A group of pigs had caused traffic congestion in Hampshire when the sow decided to feed her hungry piglets at the middle of the road…

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Pigs as pets don't fly in many cities

By Terri Coles
tacoles@uwo.ca

Outdated and old-fashioned municipal bylaws are preventing people from discovering the wonderful companionship of potbellied pigs, said an area breeder.

People don't realize potbellied pigs are great pets because many cities -- including London -- don't let residents keep them, said June Knox.
"They're just a companion pet, like a dog or a cat," said Knox, who owns Broken Bridle Farm in Appin with her husband Frank, where they breed and sell potbellied pigs.


A litter of potbellied piglets born this summer at Broken Bridle Farm dig into their meal.
The pigs are excellent pets, said June Knox. Potbellied pigs are quiet, easy to look after and clean. They also don't cause allergies, like cats and dogs often do.

The Knox's got their first pigs about 14 years ago, but their farm garnered widespread attention when two of its pigs were featured in national television and print advertisements for Telus Mobility.

"The potbellied pigs -- named Lucie and Sparky -- were selected for our national picture messaging campaign because of their friendly, engaging and very photogenic nature, uniqueness -- how many potbellied pigs have you seen before? -- and the fact that they're very easy to work with," said Mark Langton, a Telus representative.

The advertisements feature the pigs, only a few weeks old at the time, holding flowers in their mouths and being carried upwards by a balloon.

Telus has received "an incredible number of compliments" about the ads, and people are interested in buying merchandise featuring the pigs, such as posters, Langton said.
Telus also sold more than 10,000 plush pigs during the holiday season, with the proceeds going to charity.

"I would say that this has been our most successful campaign to date," he said.
Since the campaign began last November, June Knox has also gotten many letters, emails and phone calls from people interested in buying pigs and keeping them as pets.
Knox suspects that much of the interest comes from the appeal of the pigs' expressive faces. Potbellied pigs always look like they've got a smile on their face, she said.



Broken Bridle Farm's black and white potbellied pigs are very photogenic.
But the increased interest hasn't led to an increase in sales. Knox doesn't hear back from many of the people she talks to. More often than not, they check their local bylaws and discover that the pigs are not allowed as house pets.

There was a movement to change the bylaws - many of which date back over 100 years -- when the pigs first arrived in Canada from Southeast Asia in the mid-1980s, she said. But the pigs were very expensive then -- Knox estimates a female pig would have cost $2,000, a male $1,000 -- so there was less interest in them and many laws didn't change.

Over time, the pigs have become less expensive. Knox sells a female for about $450 and a male for about $375. In the United States, the pigs are more accepted as house pets, though some people still have difficulty with bylaws, she said.

But in Canada, they are much less known and accepted, even though they moved into the U.S. from here. And there is still little movement to change the bylaws that prevent them from becoming more popular, said Knox.

"Canada seems to be a little more backwards in terms of accepting them as pets," she said. "Nobody seems to want to fight it here."

Some Canadian cities, like Guelph and Halifax, allow the potbellied pigs to be kept as house pets. And Knox still has success placing her pigs with good homes. For her, the best part of the Telus campaign is the chance to teach people a bit more about potbellied pigs, with the hope of eliminating some of the stereotypes that prevent them from being more widely accepted in Canada.

"They're not exotics and they're not farm animals," she said. "They're just an unusual pet."
http://www.fims.uwo.ca/olr/mar1704/teluspigs.htm

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Il y a déjà tellement d'usines à chiots au Québec, tellement d'animaux abandonnés, négligés, etc. , que ça ne serait vraiment pas drôle si on commençait à vendre des cochons nains dans les animaleries ...

Concernant cette émission d'hier soir, malgré le fait qu'au début de l'émission on démontrait que les cochons étaient des êtres très intelligents, il me semble qu'on a mis beaucoup d'emphase sur la soit-disant nécessité de les utiliser dans la recherche, car ils ressemblent beaucoup aux humains Rolling Eyes

Citation :
Les humains dans ce reportage avaient l'air tellement des imbéciles comparativement aux cochons intélligents du documentaire

Et comment !!!!!!!!!!! Surtout ceux qui participaient à ce concours débile du cri du cochon Thumb down

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Animal a écrit:
Il y a déjà tellement d'usines à chiots au Québec, tellement d'animaux abandonnés, négligés, etc. , que ça ne serait vraiment pas drôle si on commençait à vendre des cochons nains dans les animaleries ...

Concernant cette émission d'hier soir, malgré le fait qu'au début de l'émission on démontrait que les cochons étaient des êtres très intelligents, il me semble qu'on a mis beaucoup d'emphase sur la soit-disant nécessité de les utiliser dans la recherche, car ils ressemblent beaucoup aux humains Rolling Eyes

Citation :
Les humains dans ce reportage avaient l'air tellement des imbéciles comparativement aux cochons intélligents du documentaire

Et comment !!!!!!!!!!! Surtout ceux qui participaient à ce concours débile du cri du cochon Thumb down


Oui, une chance qu'on ne vend pas encore des cochons dans les animaleries...sinon, on sait très bien qu'ils finiraient abandonnés!

Dans une foire agricole, j'ai déjà vu des cochons vietnamiens à vendre scratch


C'étais pas du tout le reportage que je m'attendais à voir, je suis déçue! fache

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