The taxi is being piloted by AfriPaw and is aimed at providing access to its free monthly animal clinics for pets living in poor communities like Vrygrond.
Cape Town, South Africa (25 July 2024) — A handful of four-legged companions from Vrygrond in Cape Town got to test out a new bicycle taxi for pets run by the organisation, AfriPaw. The aim of the initiative is to provide access to the animal clinics for pets living in under-resourced communities like Vrygrond.
“We noticed that people were unable to come to the clinic because their pets didn’t want to walk the distance,” says Anél Wesson, Director and Co-Founder of AfriPaw. Once a month, the organisation brings a mobile clinic to the parking lot at Capricorn Primary School, where they offer vaccinations, sterilisations, and a number of other health checks.
Wesson says they found that some pet owners in the area were too old to walk to the mobile clinic. She says that after they saw a number of people bring their pets to the clinic in trolleys, they began to toy with the idea of starting a pet taxi.
Wesson says they needed the “taxi” to be simple and cheap so it could easily be operated by people from their community. While this is still the testing phase of the project, she says they are looking into which bicycle works best to pull the weight of the animals. The cart was built and designed by 4Evr Plastic Products pro bono.
Wesson says that AfriPaw is now looking for a company to sponsor the project. The setup costs for one unit is R25,000 for the first year, thereafter it would cost about R7,000 a year. This includes the bicycle, cart, cage and the wages of the rider. “We are looking to have between five and ten taxis in the first year,” she says.
AfriPaw was founded in 2017 and runs a host of programmes including the free monthly clinic, mass sterilisations and educational workshops in Vrygrond. The clinics are run with other animal welfare organisations such as TEARS Animal Rescue, Animal Lifeline and Aid4Animals in Distress. The monthly clinics serve about 650 pets including cats and dogs from the broader community. The programmes are run with the help of volunteers and ‘ambassadors’ who live in the community that get paid a stipend.
Vrygrond resident and volunteer Domaine Martin told GroundUp that pet owners in the community often struggled to get food for their companions. “Most people don’t have work, but they are trying to look after their dogs.”
“They provide a wonderful service for our animals”, says Capricorn resident Alessandro Jeftha, who brought his cat and three dogs to the clinic. He says that he is incredibly grateful for the free service.
Wesson added that the main purpose of the organisation is “to come alongside pet owners in informal settlements and under resourced areas to form relationships with them”.
She says that their ambassadors from the area educate and encourage pet owners to visit their monthly clinics. “It’s very much a community integrated effort,” she says. In the future she says that they would like to grow and replicate this model into other areas.
Sources: GroundUp
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