Thursday, 25 September 2014

Dogs kept calm with synthetic pheromones at the RSPCA's Big Adopt Out




Photo: RSPCA

With all the excitement of Saturday’s Big Adopt Out which successfully rehomed 129 dogs, calming pheromones were needed to ensure the happiness of the 300 dogs present at the event.

Over 30 animal rescue groups gathered at the Brisbane Show Grounds for a day of dog adoption, education and family activities including live music and guest speakers as well as a jumping castle.


...
Photos provided by the RSPCA


Managing director of the Queensland RSPCA, Sheila Collecott, says that a synthetic pheromone was applied to the bandannas or collars of the dogs at the event in a effort to keep the dogs calm in an exciting environment. 

“A lot of the dogs here, you’ll see them wearing bandanas so we’ve actually put a pheromone on the bandanas to help them relax a bit.

“For some dogs it makes a big difference, for some dogs it doesn’t,” she said.

The synthetic pheromone is commercially available from the company Ceva in the forms of sprays, collars and defusers.

Ceva representative Shonaugh Briscoe says the chemical used was a synthetic version of a pheromone that occurs naturally in female dogs.

“It’s a replica of a pheromone that’s produced by dogs in nature.
 
“In a natural situation when a female dog has puppies, a few days after giving birth to the puppies, while she’s lactating she starts to secrete this pheromone from around her belly area.

That pheromone is designed to calm the puppies and help them to feel relaxed and reassured around their mother and Ceva has managed to create a synthetic replica of that pheromone,” she said.

The use of pheromones was one of many strategies employed by the RSPCA to ensure the wellbeing of the dogs, most of which are not used to the large groups of people attending Saturday’s event, says Collecott.

“It can be stressful for the animals but that’s why we’ve got handlers with all the animals so that they can work with the animals and constantly be doing reinforcement and trying to keep them calm.

“Also by having people next to them, they’re not in crates. It’s like having their owner next to them so they’re a lot more comfortable with that but a lot of the dogs are not used to this amount of people so it can be stressful for them,” she said.


This was the second year for the RSPCA’s Big Adopt Out which was modelled after an event run by American rescue organisation Best Friends, says Collecott.

The event is one of many run by the RSPCA throughout the year to raise awareness and to prompt companion seekers to adopt rather than buy from breeders.

Dog abandonment is a big problem in Queensland and throughout Australia with upwards of 40,000 dogs being received by the RSPCA each year.

Fortunately figures are showing that dog abandonment and surrender are on a downward trend.



Data provided by the RSPCA

See here for a list of dog rescue centres in Brisbane and surrounding areas.







Monday, 22 September 2014

This Week in Brisbane: 22nd September

This Week

King George Square games night 
5pm-9pm Thursday 25th
100 Adelaide Street, Brisbane
Free event
Event website

Riverfire
7pm Saturday 27th
Over the Brisbane river, near South Bank
Free event
Event website

100 Horse commemorative ride
12pm-6pm Saturday 27th
Gather along Adelaide St (between George and Creek streets)
Free event
Event website

Marcia Hines live in Queen St Mall
1pm Sunday 28th
Queen St Mall
Free Event
Event Website


Brisbane Festival Events

Brisbane Airport Light Garden
Nightly September 6th-26th
Southbank Parklands
Free event
Event website

Exxopolis
10am – 6:30pm, September 6th-26th
South Bank Parklands
Tickets $7-$16
Event website

Do Do Land
6:45-7:30, September 6th-27th
Reddacliff Place Stage, 266 George St
Free event
Event website

What to find more events happening in Brisbane?

Monday, 15 September 2014

This Week in Brisbane: 15th September

This Week

Politics in the Pub
6pm Wednesday 17th
The Brisbane Powerhouse
Free Event
Event website

Free Burgers at Grill'd Launch
6-8pm Friday 19th
Grill'd Victoria Point
Free Event
Event website

Brisbane Good Food and Wine Show
9am-5pm Wednesday, Thursday & Friday
Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre
General Entry $26 ($23 Concession) 
Event website

Hobbit Picnic in the Park
12pm Saturday 20th
Kidspace, 7th Brigade Park, Chermside
Free Event
Event website

Big Adopt Out 
9am-3pm Saturday 20th
Brisbane Showgrounds
Free Event
Event website

Citra Malaysia 2014 
11am-2pm Saturday 20th
Queen St Mall
Free Event
Event website

Big Band and the Bluff 
12-3:30pm Sunday 21st
Spring Bluff Railway Station
Free Event
Event website

RapCity 
5pm Sunday 21st
The Brisbane Powerhouse
Free Event
Event website


Brisbane Festival Events

Brisbane Airport Light Garden
Nightly September 6th-26th
Southbank Parklands
Free Event
Event website

Exxopolis
10am – 6:30pm, September 6th-26th
South Bank Parklands
Tickets $7-$16
Event website

Do Do Land
6:45-7:30, September 6th-27th
Reddacliff Place Stage, 266 George St
Free Event
Event website

What to find more events happening in Brisbane?

Sunday, 14 September 2014

Historic walking tour of Brisbane City

As this week my event attendance focus was on trying Street Reads for a second time, which prompted me to update my former post rather than write a new one, I decided to try something different for this week's post. This week I have created a historic walking tour of Brisbane's City. Below I have embedded a Google map of a the trail, click on each pin for some information about the stop.




Friday, 12 September 2014

Brisbane Events, Brisbane Blogs and Brisbane Journalism: Right now! Live blogging

I dread the day I am asked to live blog, I really do. Live blogging might just be one of the most daunting tasks in the world of journalism. When you are live blogging an event the pressure could not be higher. In a lecture earlier this semester Susan said "The deadline is 'now' and every second after now is late" and I cannot think of a thing that scares me more. I also recently read "Are you an adrenaline junky? No I’m a journalist" a blog post by a fellow journalism student about live blogging. Edwina really seems to take to the idea saying that she hates it while it's happening but loves it once it's over and I completely understand what she means. I am somewhat of an adrenaline junky and I can definitely see the thrill and the merit in the pressure of the pump. Working under such restricted circumstances, racing against the clock, it makes your heart race and I can see why some people love that pressure. I am not one of those people. 

Me? I like to keep my adrenaline and my writing separate. I like to spend time thinking about what to write, editing my words as I write them, and milling over what I have written. There is, of course, no time for this in a live blog. 
 
I'm assured by lecturers, tutors and industry professionals that live blogging isn't all bad. People aren't so critical of our accuracy. You are given a bit of a grace period in which to fix your mistakes as long as they aren't too defamatory. This just isn't enough for me. Thanks for the grace period but I'll take low-stress and right first time over the intensity of live blogging any day. 

I'd be lying if I said I wasn't at least mildly freaking out though. You see all I have to go on when building my picture of what "real" journalism looks like are the anecdotes and lectures given by lecturers and industry professionals and they all seem to involve some level of live or high-pressure blogging or filing. What if they isn't what I want to do? Is that okay? Will I ever get a job? 

Don't get me wrong, I am expecting stress and pressure. Stress and pressure are fine, stress and pressure produce productivity but where's the fun in it all being over so quickly

In the mean time I'm choose plummeting towards the Earth at 200km/hr over live blogging a press conference any day. 

  

Monday, 8 September 2014

This Week in Brisbane: 8th September

This Week

Cycle for life Citycycle ride
7-11am Sunday 14th
Musgrave Park
$30 ($20 earlybirds)
Event website

Street Reads
3-14th September
Various locations
Free Event
Event website

Jo Lawry 
12-1pm Tuesday 9th

Brisbane City Hall, 64 Adelaide St, Brisbane
Free Event
Event website

Brisbane Festival Free Events

A Day With Our ABC
11:30am-10:00pm Monday 8th
The Telstra Spiegeltent, South Bank
Free Event
Event website

Twilight Music Series
5-7pm Thursday-Saturday nights
River Quay Green, South Bank
Free Event
Event website

Brisbane Airport Light Garden
Nightly September 6th-26th
South Bank Parklands
Free Event
Event website

Do Do Land
6:45-7:30, September 6th-27th
Reddacliff Place Stage, 266 George St
Free Event
Event website

Tawdry Heartburn's Manic Cures
6.30pm – 8.30pm Tuesdays-Saturdays
The Parade Ground, QUT  Kelvin Grove
Creative Industries Precinct
Free Event
Event website

Silent Drag Photo Booth of Berlyn
9:00-10:30pm Tuesdays-Saturdays
The Parade Ground, QUT  Kelvin Grove
Creative Industries Precinct
Free Event
Event website

Access Arts Camera Wonderer Installation
6:00-11:00pm Tuesdays-Saturdays
The Parade Ground, QUT  Kelvin Grove
Creative Industries Precinct
Free Event
Event website

What to find more events happening in Brisbane?

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Brisbane Writers Festival - Street Reads

This was one I was really excited about. If you haven't heard of Street Reads before it's basically a choose your own adventure book played in the read world. The basic premise is that you would start in one of two starting locations (Reddacliff Place or the State Library forecourt) where you would find a poster with a QR code that you could scan on your smart phone and be linked to a webpage with a section of the story that you could either read or listen to. At the end of each section you would be given two or three options of what you want to do, each directing you to the next location. Pretty neat.


As a huge fan of the choose your own adventure books as a kid I loved this idea and headed out, enthausiastic as anything, the day it started. My gusto began to slowly crumble as I became increasingly aware of my limited knowledge of city street names and landmarks. This first occurred as I was being directed "along George Street in the direction of City Hall". City Hall? Where's that? That sounds like somewhere I should have heard of? I looked down George Street and took a gamble, I had a 50/50 chance of picking the right direction. I chose wrong. A few blocks down I was sure I'd gone in the wrong direction so, not letting that dampen my spirits, I turned around and away I went. Surely enough after a few blocks I found Adelaide St and the bins behind city hall that should have held my next chapter. Examining each bin as I went I found a poster, scanned it, nope, that one was the end of a different story. After about my third sweep of the street I accepted defeat on that one and decided to go back to my previous location and try a different route.

This time I was sent to Burnett Lane, fortunately I  had seen this street sign on my way to Adelaide St and knew where to go, so I set off, again. At this point I think it's important to note the alarm bells that were going off in my 20-year-old female brain as I turned down an alley that I would never have walked down alone without reason. Maybe it was just that day, but lined with construction workers, staff on smoking breaks and a general lack of other female presence the alley didn't give me the feeling of somewhere I should have been and I rechecked the street name before wondering why I was being sent down this undesirable alleyway.

Granted I was paying more attention to my safety than to any posters on the pavement, but again, the only poster I found was for a different story. I still wonder if the real poster was under one of the number of delivery trucks parked in the street, if it was there at all, or if I just missed it entirely but this was where my patience was lost and I gave up.

I did go back and try to restart the story entirely but with significantly less enthusiasm than before and I'm going to give the benefit of the doubt to the creators and give that as justification to not even finding the first section of that story.

Really I was quite disappointed in the experience, perhaps I was having an off day and just missed obvious posters, or maybe they had already been ripped down by vandals but the result was the same. I went home defeated that day. Persistent as I am I have refused to let this ruin what I think is a great idea and, as soon as I have gotten my drive back, I will give it another go and give a further update.

Update: September 13th



Last night I kept my word and attempted Street Reads for the second time. on this adventure I was uploaded into the Nexus of the Brisbane City simulator which was under the threat of Three-Dom, a kind of confusing omnipresent entity in the nexus. This time I was able to find all of the check points (called 'data nodes' in the story) and complete the story and I really enjoyed it. I will admit that some of my choices were still made based on my knowledge of the city, refusing to get lost again. I'm going to take the blame for this one as the creators really did make navigation as easy as possible with directions and maps included.

The initial options you are given for Street Reads allow you to choose the adventure you are embarking on, a pirates adventure, an alien invasion or a digital nexus quest. in my first attempt of Street Reads I chose the alien invasion, and that still sounds like the most fun to me, but in my second attempt I wasn't up for getting as lost and confused as on my first attempt so I chose the digital nexus simply because the QR codes I had mistakenly scanned before were from this story so I knew that at least some of the posters really were around the city. While the story was a little confusing in its over-use of fantasy jargon, it was a lot of fun. Coming out of the experience I felt a weird disappointment to be back in the real world but revelled in the lasting impact of some of the final words of the story that allowed me to hold onto the fantasy that what I had just experienced was more than fiction.

"The real world brightens around you. you're still in King George Square , still flattened and remade by Metricon, but somehow everything is more alive, more colourful. Did your digital adventure affect the real world?"


Going on this adventure reminded me of the games I would play everyday as a kid, I was some kind of adventurer or guardian secretly saving a world that was magical only to me. Being thrown back into this was a lovely, if not totally nostalgic experience.

Tomorrow is the final day for Street Reads 2014 and I really do urge anyone who hasn't yet to give it a try. If you miss this year's there is sure to be another next year.  
 

Friday, 5 September 2014

Brisbane Events, Brisbane Blogs and Brisbane Journalism: The where and the when

Each week I try to cover a relatively thorough list of free events happening in Brisbane, an idea that struck me when I realised that most of my friends and I really don't know anything about what is happening in the city around us or where to find this out. In the beginning I was hopeful that I would find some kind of site that compiled all the events happening in Brisbane in chronological order, or something similar. Instead I have found a few different websites that I rely on for my information but it still involves a lot of virtual running around and searches. When looking for events to list I will typically have around 10 tabs open, all searching for events that are new, exciting and free. Some of my favourite sources that I have come to rely on over the past weeks are:
It's important to remember that the key reason that I have to seek out so many sources to find a list of events that is varied enough for me is because the only type of event I am looking for is 'free'. People with different areas of interest are more likely to be in the know of events relevant to those interests and where to find out about them. This got me thinking in a recent lecture about crowdsourcing, could we create a crowdsourced page to collaborate and compile a sort of all-inclusive list of Brisbane events? A Brisbane Wiki of sorts.

I think it could be a very interesting and exciting project to create a website that easily allows all different walks of life to contribute to the list of events that are happening in the area. The events could be listed in chronological order and sorted under tags that would help to find events that you are interested in.

While you can contact the authors of the various sites I have listed and submit an event in our modern culture of immediacy and collaboration this doesn't compare to the potential that I see in a crowdsourced event list.

What is interesting to me about this idea is that I couldn't find an example of it on the internet that was user friendly and accessible. The closest I could find to a user friendly collaborative event wiki was scrolling through "nearby" events on my Facebook account which was largely just frustrating because it doesn't have easy search options such as event type so as a 20-year-old with 20-year-old friends I was mostly just browsing through nightclub events.

If you know of any websites like the one I have described comment below and let me know or, if you're a web designer with the skills to make this site happen let me know and we can work together to make something exciting.

Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Brisbane Apps: Brisbane Passenger Guide

This app is designed for those who are traveling to Brisbane and want to create an itinerary for their stay. The app has a very simple and easy user-friendly appearance making the app experience smooth and enjoyable. From the 'Home' menu we can see a the user can select the feature they are looking for with the app including features ranging from lists of activities and attractions to maps and hotels.



One of the key feature of the app is the itinerary feature.Users are able to select what days they will be in Brisbane to create an itinerary and can easily add events or attractions to each day by using the "add to itinerary" button at the top of each informational page. This feature is surprisingly easy to use and allows users to be linked back to the activities they have planned for each day.


Each attraction page gives a basic description of the attraction and provides links to wikipedia articles and official pages where possible.

  

The 'tours and attractions' page follows a similar format but add more information such as price, tour duration and a bookings link.



One of the final features of this app worth noting is the map. The online map uses GPS and mobile data to pin your location on the map as well as showing attractions or hotels in your area with links back to their respective pages.There is also a map available for offline use that can be purchased for $5.46.


This app is comparable to the Melbourne travel app I wrote about in my first app review. This app is user friendly and potentially a useful tool for organised tourists. Every city should have an app like this one.

Monday, 1 September 2014

This Week in Brisbane: 1st September

This Week
Gathering
12-1pm Wednesday 3rd
Queen St Mall
Free Event
Event website

Dance Til You Drop
2-3pm Sunday 7th

Brisbane Botanic Gardens, Mt Coot-tha
Free Event
Event website
  
Magic of Mandolins
10:30-11:30 Sunday 7th

Old Government House, QUT Gardens Point Campus
Free Event
Event website

Brisbane Writers Festival
3-7th September
Various locations
Event website

Street Reads
3-14th September
Various locations
Free Event
Event website

Brisbane Festival Events

Brisbane Airport Light Garden
Nightly September 6th-26th
Southbank Parklands
Free Event
Event website

Exxopolis
10am – 6:30pm, September 6th-26th
South Bank Parklands
Tickets $7-$16
Event website

Do Do Land
6:45-7:30, September 6th-27th
Reddacliff Place Stage, 266 George St
Free Event
Event website

What to find more events happening in Brisbane?