Bay County Animal Control offering free micro-chipping in Jan '08 for pets.
(full story)
(Must reside in Bay County.)
...During the month of January you can get a free micro chip at the The Bay County Animal Control Facility at 6401 Bay Line Drive, across from the incinerator. They are open Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Even though the microchipping is free, there is still a small registration fee to place your animals information into the international data base.
If you have any questions you can call Valerie Michaels at 784 - 4024....
...Microchipping is when a small computer chip is placed under your pets skin. A number on the micro chip is entered into an international data base with your dogs information attached to it.
That way if your pet is ever picked up by an agency like the Humane Society, the pet is scanned for a chip, then cross referenced in that data base to help reunite you with your lost pet.
Now, the science isn't perfect. There are unfortunately some kinks that need to be worked out. Like the fact that different chip manufacturers have different scanners.
So, if your pet gets picked up by an agency and they don't have the scanner for the micro chip in your pet or a universal scanner, the information can't get read. But the industry is rapidly approaching a point where one scanner will read all chips.
(full story)
(Must reside in Bay County.)
...During the month of January you can get a free micro chip at the The Bay County Animal Control Facility at 6401 Bay Line Drive, across from the incinerator. They are open Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Even though the microchipping is free, there is still a small registration fee to place your animals information into the international data base.
If you have any questions you can call Valerie Michaels at 784 - 4024....
...Microchipping is when a small computer chip is placed under your pets skin. A number on the micro chip is entered into an international data base with your dogs information attached to it.
That way if your pet is ever picked up by an agency like the Humane Society, the pet is scanned for a chip, then cross referenced in that data base to help reunite you with your lost pet.
Now, the science isn't perfect. There are unfortunately some kinks that need to be worked out. Like the fact that different chip manufacturers have different scanners.
So, if your pet gets picked up by an agency and they don't have the scanner for the micro chip in your pet or a universal scanner, the information can't get read. But the industry is rapidly approaching a point where one scanner will read all chips.