Cedar Creek Kennels

Cedar Creek Kennels Cedar Creek Kennels Is A Professional Dog And Cat Boarding Facility and All Breed Dog Grooming Salon

Cedar Creek Kennels and Cat Cottage – Where Vets Board their Pets! Cedar Creek Kennels is located in Roberts Creek on the Sunshine Coast of British Columbia, a tourist destination and just plain nice place to be. If your pets cannot be with you then they should be a Cedar Creek Kennels – your pets home away from home! Our services include:

Dog boarding
Cat boarding
Vancouver shuttle – we come ove

r to pick up your pets! Grooming
Training
Cedar Creek is a large rural facility but most of the land is taken up with open fields and forest where you pet gains a safe opportunity to play and exercise. You will note that cleanliness is a mark of Cedar Creek for the assured health of your best friends. Most everything can be customized at Cedar Creek from the food to the bedding to the type of special care.

01/17/2025

Can you help our sweet boy?? Jalapeño’s journey hasn’t been easy. This brave 3-year-old cat was found alone at a truck stop, struggling to survive. Brought to LAPS by a concerned passer-by, he arrived with swollen, crusted eyes, a respiratory infection, and ear mites. Diagnosed with Entropion (a painful condition where his eyelashes are scraping his eyes) he now needs a specialist surgery to save his vision after his firsts surgery didn’t heal as planned.

Jalapeño has been in our care for 100 days battling this condition and waiting for a chance to see the world pain-free. He needs your help.. the TOTAL cost of his surgeries and all of his care is around $6,000 and we want to make sure he gets everything he needs as he is such a deserving boy. Every donation makes a difference. You can make a difference! ❤️

Click the link to donate:
https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/langley-animal-protection-society/p2p/jalapeno/

If you can’t donate please support him by sharing.

01/14/2025
01/14/2025
💔😥 We are sad to let him goHeaven has a new Angel What a celebration they must have had when he arrived 🌈🐕🐩🐈🐈‍⬛🦜🕊️🐢🐇🐇♥️♥...
01/14/2025

💔😥
We are sad to let him go

Heaven has a new Angel
What a celebration they must have had when he arrived 🌈🐕🐩🐈🐈‍⬛🦜🕊️🐢🐇🐇♥️♥️

So sweet Tortie is for Adoption with her sister Zee Zee 💜🩷
01/10/2025

So sweet
Tortie is for Adoption with her sister
Zee Zee 💜🩷

Warning
01/10/2025

Warning

H5N1 HPAI -- HIGHLY PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA

Normally, I like to do some lighthearted posts peppered with terrible (aka, amazing) puns, but in light of the current spread of the H5N1 HPAI (Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza), it’s time to get a little bit more serious.

H5N1 HPAI is a zoonotic virus that can spread and affect dairy cattle, cats, horses, humans, and (obviously) birds (both wildlife and domestic). It mainly affects the respiratory tract but can also cause gastrointestinal and neurological signs; it may progress to severe illness and can be fatal.

Most information about how it affects humans has already been reported in the news and through public health websites (I will link some relevant sites at the end if you want more information) so I won’t get toomuch into the risk for humans.

Instead, I'm going to get into what the risk is for our pets. This post was prompted by the recent recall of the Northwest Naturals brand of raw food, specifically the Turkey recipe. On December 24th, 2024, it was confirmed through PCR testing and whole genome sequencing that this food was linked to a confirmed case of H5N1 HPAI in a domestic cat, which resulted in the cat’s death; this was an indoor only cat with no exposure to wild or domestic birds.

This food is sold in BC, including the affected batches, so if you feed, or have recently fed, your pet this particular brand of food, check the lot numbers – if you have 5/21/26 B10 and/or 06/23/26 B1, then stop feeding it immediately, and monitor your pet for clinical signs. Early signs are malaise, lethargy, and decreased appetite – these are very vague signs, but they can progress to cough, fever, diarrhea, nasal and mucosal bleeding, jaundice, conjunctivitis, and possibly death. Early intervention is important, so the sooner you get your pet checked out, the better. If you suspect your pet has been exposed and you need to bring them into the vet to get checked, PLEASE make sure to tell the vet staff what you suspect before coming in so that we can take precautions to protect ourselves and our other patients as well.

That being said, I don’t want people to panic. Unless you’ve fed your pet the recalled raw food, or they have eaten or have had exposure to wild birds, then the odds of your pet contracting H5N1 HPAI is very low.

If you do feed or handle raw food for your pet (or if you handle or eat raw meat yourself), please keep in mind that freezing and freeze-drying are methods used to PRESERVE viruses in labs and clinical settings; the survival of the H5N1 HPAI virus in freeze-dried food specifically has not been fully assessed at the time of this writing, but it’s been proven it can survive anywhere from a few weeks to 5 months. High pressure pasteurization, which is another way raw food advocates have been trying to make it safer, has been proven to be only a risk reduction method, NOT a risk elimination practice like the more traditional heat pasteurization used for milk.

It is well established that cats eating infected birds can lead to infection with the H5N1 HPAI virus; dogs are less susceptible but that does not mean they are immune to it. The risks involved with feeding a raw food diet in general are well established, and the benefits are anecdotal at best, but if you can’t change your pet’s diet due to allergies or other health issues (or if you simply don’t want to), you don’t have to! You can eliminate the chance of virus transmission by simply cooking the food to an internal temperature of 165F/74C -- this applies to not only viruses like H5N1 HPAI, but also harmful bacteria like salmonella and E.coli.

So, with all that being said, what are some basic precautions you can take to keep you and your pets safe?

1) Do not touch sick or dead animals, or their droppings. This also extends to your pets – do not let them touch, sniff, lick, or eat dead animals (especially birds) or their droppings. The H5N1 HPAI virus is spread through inhalation and/or contact with secretions (like saliva, mucus, blood, etc) and f***s, so if you don’t get close or touch a potentially infected animal, then you’re good.

2) Do not bring sick wildlife into your home, for the reasons stated above. If you do find sick or injured wildlife, report it to the local conservation officer and/or to our provincial authority. For us in BC that means:

The CFIA -- https://inspection.canada.ca/en/about-cfia/contact-cfia-office-telephone
The Canadian Wildlife Health Co-Operative (scroll down for the BC info) -- https://www.cwhc-rcsf.ca/report_and_submit.php

3) Practice proper food safe handling and food preparation. This includes thoroughly washing all surfaces and utensils that raw food touches, as well as proper and thorough hand washing. As mentioned above, cooking will kill the virus – hunters who kill and eat wild birds, immune-compromised people, and households with immune-compromised people and pets, this is especially applicable to you as you will be higher risk!


I’ve included some links below if you need more information; there is a LOT out there, so please make sure you are getting your information from reliable sources like the ones below, and not from internet conspiracies and misinformation.

The CDC – This is the place for people with backyard poultry, bird enthusiasts, and hunters to find info relevant to them - https://www.cdc.gov/bird-flu/groups/

The Government of Canada – This is the place to find the latest information -- https://inspection.canada.ca/en/animal-health/terrestrial-animals/diseases/reportable/avian-influenza/latest-bird-flu-situation -- This is general information on prevention and risk management -- https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/diseases/avian-influenza-h5n1/prevention-risks.html

British Columbia Public Health – General Information -- https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/industry/agriculture-seafood/animals-and-crops/animal-health/reportable-notifiable-diseases/avian-influenza-ai

Canadian Veterinary Medical Association – Information about raw food diets -- https://www.canadianveterinarians.net/policy-and-outreach/position-statements/statements/safety-of-raw-meat-based-pet-food-products/ #:~:text=The%20Canadian%20Veterinary%20Medical%20Association%20%28CVMA%29%20finds%20there,or%20in%20contact%20with%20pets%20that%20consume%20them

Worms and Germs Blog – A great resource for a lot of information, but this is the link to H5N1 HPAI and raw food specifically -- https://www.wormsandgermsblog.com/2025/01/articles/animals/cats/h5n1-influenza-raw-diets-and-petsan-overview/

12/29/2024

We are seeking assistance for our newest intakes, Heavy pregnant Brownie … Maddy Newman needs your support for Helping Heavily Pregnant Brownie and her Babies

Adopted ♥️🎄🐾🐾🌟Little Drew and His Big Sister Diamond Living his Best Life Marmalade Animal Rescue Society
12/27/2024

Adopted ♥️🎄🐾🐾🌟
Little Drew and His Big Sister Diamond
Living his Best Life Marmalade Animal Rescue Society

12/20/2024

Santa Claus is coming to Gibsons Pet Food & Supplies this Sunday, December 22nd from 12pm-5pm. 🎅🏼🎄☃️🐶🐈‍⬛

• All proceeds go directly directly towards Marmalade Animal Rescue Society

• A donation bin will be on site for new pet products only

11/06/2024
11/01/2024

Foster’s needed!

From time to time, we need help from caring families or individuals to temporarily house animals in need. This truly is a partnership to help save lives.

The primary role of a foster care volunteer is to provide a safe, healthy environment for the pet and to socialize them in order to increase their adoptability.

We currently need foster care volunteers to provide temporary care for cats of all sizes and ages.

We take great care to match the animal to you and your situation. Your efforts will help prepare the animals for adoption and, more importantly, you will be preventing these animals from suffering “on the streets” and making space at the rescue for another animal who can take his/her place.

We are looking for caring, compassionate individuals or families, 21 years of age or older, who live on the Sunshine Coast and are willing to donate a portion of their lives to helping these animals.

If you are interested in becoming a Foster please email [email protected] for more information.

Address

1853 Sunshine Coast Highway
Roberts Creek, BC
V0N2W6

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 7pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 7pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 7pm
Thursday 7:30am - 7pm
Friday 7:30am - 7pm
Saturday 7:30am - 7pm
Sunday 9:30am - 5pm

Telephone

+16048868568

Website

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