\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> Pet owners (from left to right) Sue Ward, Nick Brooks, with his two-year-old Paternal dog Rocco, Charlan Hopkin and Joe Manning<\/p><\/div> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> Nick Brooks (left) said that his Patterdale terrier Rocco (pictured) suffered poisoning symptoms<\/p><\/div> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> Mr Manning and Ms Hopkin were sent a video taken by an ecologist walking the field who found their cat Jasper (pictured) moving his head but unable to walk<\/p><\/div>Nick Brooks, 53, a company director on a neighbouring business park, told how his Patterdale terrier Rocco suffered poisoning symptoms three months ago after being walked on the site by his office manager Sue Ward.<\/p>He said: \u2018He went downhill really quickly, he was lying on the settee. I took him to the vets and they said he had symptoms of poisoning.\u2019<\/p>Ms Ward said: \u2018I\u2019d only walked him up to the top of the field and back. Luckily, he\u2019s absolutely fine now.\u2019<\/p>Mr Brooks added: \u2018I thought nothing of it then I heard about the cats. I thought hang on, this is in a similar time frame.\u2019<\/p>In August, Jasper, a six-year-old Snow Lynx Bengal cat belonging to Joe Manning, 57, and his partner Charlan Hopkin, 50, who live the Bellamy Estate the other side of the development site, became poorly.<\/p>Mr Manning, an engineer, said: \u2018We let him out on August 28 and he went onto the site. He came back and wasn\u2019t well but he went out again on August 29 and we never saw him again.\u2019<\/p>Earlier this month, Mr Manning and Ms Hopkin \u2013 who have two other cats - were sent a video taken by an ecologist walking the field who found Jasper moving his head but unable to walk. The man left to fetch a blanket to recover him but returned to find the cat had disappeared.<\/p>Mr Manning said: \u2018We believe Jasper may have been taken by a fox \u2013 so we won\u2019t ever find out what killed him. From how he looks in the video, he seems to have been poisoned.<\/p> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> Investigations have been launched by the RSPCA and council officials into what happened to the animals<\/p><\/div> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> One theory is that the pets may have become injured on the field on the eastern edge of the town<\/p><\/div> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> \u00a0Mansfield Council said they have launched a \u2018thorough investigation\u2019 into the mysterious incidents<\/p><\/div>\u2018According to a Facebook group for the estate, there are up to 10 cats missing from around here \u2013 meaning you have 10 heartbroken families. Other owners are keeping their cats indoors.<\/p>\u2018We don\u2019t know if someone is doing something deliberately or whether there\u2019s something on the site.\u2019<\/p>Neighbour Teresa Williams, a volunteer cat rescuer whose husband found one cat dead, told the BBC: \u2018I'd noticed there's been a few cats missing on the local [online] pages so we brought the cat back and checked its markings. When I picked it up, a leg came off; it was awful.<\/p>\u2018Another neighbour was looking for her cat after it went missing a few weeks before. She found it, but it was dead.\u2019<\/p>Another resident Sarah Blackshaw, who has been track down the missing cats, said: \u2018We've been traipsing around fields and we've found two dead ones.<\/p>\u2018One was on top of the bushes upside down believe it or not. It's so weird, there's that many cats turning up dead.\u2019<\/p>Elissa Loates, 17, is keeping her pet Dotty, a 13-year-old domestic shorthair cat, inside as a precaution.<\/p>She said: \u2018I don't want to one day let her out and she just doesn't come home.<\/p> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> The owners are keeping their animals indoors after at least five cats died, others went missing and a dog suffered suspected poisoning in a series of poisonings<\/p><\/div> <\/div> <\/noscript> <\/div> Locals in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, believe the animals may have been harmed deliberately by a sadist<\/p><\/div>\u2018It feels really awful knowing what other people are going through. I don't care how long we have to keep her inside, as long as she's safe.\u2019<\/p>Mansfield Council has launched a \u2018thorough investigation\u2019. Its spokesperson said: \u2018Unfortunately, we don\u2019t know the cause of the cats' deaths, or the exact number involved, at this stage.<\/p>\u2018We would encourage anyone with information to come forward and report it to us.\u2019<\/p>A spokesperson for the RSPCA said: \u2018At this stage we do not know if these were accidental incidents or deliberate but in the meantime we would ask everyone in the area to check where they keep their pesticides and chemicals and make sure they are secure and out of the way.<\/p>\u2018We are appealing to anyone who might have any information.<\/p>\u2018Pet-owners are asked to be vigilant and keep an eye on their cats\u2019 wellbeing - if they are showing symptoms of poisoning, take them for veterinary treatment immediately.\u2019<\/p>Housing developer Vistry Group, granted planning permission in 2022, said: \u2018Some initial ecological works are currently being carried out on site and we can confirm that no chemicals are being used and no other work is taking place.\u2019<\/p><\/div>\r\n[ad_2]\r\nSource link <\/a>","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Doggone Well Staff","url":"https:\/\/doggonewell.dog\/author\/admin\/","sameAs":["http:\/\/doggonewell.dog","admin"]},"articleSection":["PETS"],"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/i.dailymail.co.uk\/1s\/2024\/10\/20\/14\/91064469-13980385-image-a-9_1729429923598.jpg","width":0,"height":0},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"DOGGONE WELL","url":"https:\/\/doggonewell.dog","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"http:\/\/doggonewell.dog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/04\/doggone-well.png"},"sameAs":["https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/jegtheme\/","https:\/\/twitter.com\/jegtheme","http:\/\/youtube.com\/jegtheme","http:\/\/instagram.com\/jegtheme","#"]}}
Pet owners (from left to right) Sue Ward, Nick Brooks, with his two-year-old Paternal dog Rocco, Charlan Hopkin and Joe Manning<\/p><\/div>
Nick Brooks (left) said that his Patterdale terrier Rocco (pictured) suffered poisoning symptoms<\/p><\/div>
Mr Manning and Ms Hopkin were sent a video taken by an ecologist walking the field who found their cat Jasper (pictured) moving his head but unable to walk<\/p><\/div>
Nick Brooks, 53, a company director on a neighbouring business park, told how his Patterdale terrier Rocco suffered poisoning symptoms three months ago after being walked on the site by his office manager Sue Ward.<\/p>
He said: \u2018He went downhill really quickly, he was lying on the settee. I took him to the vets and they said he had symptoms of poisoning.\u2019<\/p>
Ms Ward said: \u2018I\u2019d only walked him up to the top of the field and back. Luckily, he\u2019s absolutely fine now.\u2019<\/p>
Mr Brooks added: \u2018I thought nothing of it then I heard about the cats. I thought hang on, this is in a similar time frame.\u2019<\/p>
In August, Jasper, a six-year-old Snow Lynx Bengal cat belonging to Joe Manning, 57, and his partner Charlan Hopkin, 50, who live the Bellamy Estate the other side of the development site, became poorly.<\/p>
Mr Manning, an engineer, said: \u2018We let him out on August 28 and he went onto the site. He came back and wasn\u2019t well but he went out again on August 29 and we never saw him again.\u2019<\/p>
Earlier this month, Mr Manning and Ms Hopkin \u2013 who have two other cats - were sent a video taken by an ecologist walking the field who found Jasper moving his head but unable to walk. The man left to fetch a blanket to recover him but returned to find the cat had disappeared.<\/p>
Mr Manning said: \u2018We believe Jasper may have been taken by a fox \u2013 so we won\u2019t ever find out what killed him. From how he looks in the video, he seems to have been poisoned.<\/p>
Investigations have been launched by the RSPCA and council officials into what happened to the animals<\/p><\/div>
One theory is that the pets may have become injured on the field on the eastern edge of the town<\/p><\/div>
\u00a0Mansfield Council said they have launched a \u2018thorough investigation\u2019 into the mysterious incidents<\/p><\/div>
\u2018According to a Facebook group for the estate, there are up to 10 cats missing from around here \u2013 meaning you have 10 heartbroken families. Other owners are keeping their cats indoors.<\/p>
\u2018We don\u2019t know if someone is doing something deliberately or whether there\u2019s something on the site.\u2019<\/p>
Neighbour Teresa Williams, a volunteer cat rescuer whose husband found one cat dead, told the BBC: \u2018I'd noticed there's been a few cats missing on the local [online] pages so we brought the cat back and checked its markings. When I picked it up, a leg came off; it was awful.<\/p>
\u2018Another neighbour was looking for her cat after it went missing a few weeks before. She found it, but it was dead.\u2019<\/p>
Another resident Sarah Blackshaw, who has been track down the missing cats, said: \u2018We've been traipsing around fields and we've found two dead ones.<\/p>
\u2018One was on top of the bushes upside down believe it or not. It's so weird, there's that many cats turning up dead.\u2019<\/p>
Elissa Loates, 17, is keeping her pet Dotty, a 13-year-old domestic shorthair cat, inside as a precaution.<\/p>
She said: \u2018I don't want to one day let her out and she just doesn't come home.<\/p>
The owners are keeping their animals indoors after at least five cats died, others went missing and a dog suffered suspected poisoning in a series of poisonings<\/p><\/div>
Locals in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, believe the animals may have been harmed deliberately by a sadist<\/p><\/div>
\u2018It feels really awful knowing what other people are going through. I don't care how long we have to keep her inside, as long as she's safe.\u2019<\/p>
Mansfield Council has launched a \u2018thorough investigation\u2019. Its spokesperson said: \u2018Unfortunately, we don\u2019t know the cause of the cats' deaths, or the exact number involved, at this stage.<\/p>
\u2018We would encourage anyone with information to come forward and report it to us.\u2019<\/p>
A spokesperson for the RSPCA said: \u2018At this stage we do not know if these were accidental incidents or deliberate but in the meantime we would ask everyone in the area to check where they keep their pesticides and chemicals and make sure they are secure and out of the way.<\/p>
\u2018We are appealing to anyone who might have any information.<\/p>
\u2018Pet-owners are asked to be vigilant and keep an eye on their cats\u2019 wellbeing - if they are showing symptoms of poisoning, take them for veterinary treatment immediately.\u2019<\/p>
Housing developer Vistry Group, granted planning permission in 2022, said: \u2018Some initial ecological works are currently being carried out on site and we can confirm that no chemicals are being used and no other work is taking place.\u2019<\/p><\/div>\r\n[ad_2]\r\nSource link <\/a>","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Doggone Well Staff","url":"https:\/\/doggonewell.dog\/author\/admin\/","sameAs":["http:\/\/doggonewell.dog","admin"]},"articleSection":["PETS"],"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/i.dailymail.co.uk\/1s\/2024\/10\/20\/14\/91064469-13980385-image-a-9_1729429923598.jpg","width":0,"height":0},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"DOGGONE WELL","url":"https:\/\/doggonewell.dog","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"http:\/\/doggonewell.dog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/04\/doggone-well.png"},"sameAs":["https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/jegtheme\/","https:\/\/twitter.com\/jegtheme","http:\/\/youtube.com\/jegtheme","http:\/\/instagram.com\/jegtheme","#"]}}