Camels in Canada
I was delighted to be supported by JMICAWE to
attend the 2018 Congress of the International Society for Applied Ethology
(ISAE) in Prince Edward Island on the east coast of Canada. Its organisation
was led by Professor Michael Cockram (previously of Edinburgh Vet School) at
the University of PEI, on the outskirts of Charlottetown. Campus, town and
indeed the whole island are pretty, and the lovely weather while we were there
made the whole event – conference, side events and tours – a thoroughly
enjoyable occasion.
That was helped by the famous friendliness of ISAE,
and I have been glad to play some small part in that as a member of Council,
including at the Council meeting (my last, as my term has now finished), at the
AGM, and wherever else appropriate, such as during the traditionally
enthusiastic dancing after the congress banquet. The conference’s scientific
programme was also consistently high in quality, and I played my part in
conferring, too. Indeed, I was doubtless in the category identified by our
President Bas Rodenburg in his opening remarks as People who Frequently Ask
Questions. His point was to encourage others to participate as well, and that
was successfully achieved. An innovation of recent years has been ‘Eating with
Ethologists,’ which arranges for students to share lunch tables with senior
scientists of their choice. I greatly enjoyed this, and the students I met then
and at other times were also enthusiastic about the opportunities for
communication, both scientific and personal. I was glad throughout the meeting
to represent Edinburgh and our work on welfare education for vets and others.
Finally, I gave the closing talk of the congress, with
the title ‘On the ubiquity and utility of camels.’ This was a light-hearted
look at the striking frequency with which animals appear in our everyday
idioms: for example, ‘the straw that breaks the camel’s back.’ Yet this also
reminds us of the importance of animals in our cultures, round the world and
through the ages, and of understanding their behaviour and protecting their
welfare for both their benefit and ours.
Mike Appleby
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