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Nature / Animals > Leaving the Wild

Leaving the Wild: The Unnatural History of Dogs, Cats, Cows, and Horses

By Gavin Ehringer


Where to buy


Publish Date

March 12, 2019

Category

Pets / Cats
Pets / Dogs

Price

$22.95
A thought-provoking and surprising book that explores the ever-evolving relationship between humans and domesticated animals.

The domestication of animals changed the course of human history. But what are the consequences for these animals who have abandoned their wild existence in exchange for our care and protection? Domestication has proven to be a wildly successful survival strategy, but this success has not been without its drawbacks. A modern dairy cow’s daily energy output equals that of a Tour de France rider. Feral cats overpopulate urban areas. And our methods of breeding horses and dogs have resulted in debilitating and sometimes lethal genetic diseases. But these problems and more can be addressed, if we have the will and the compassion.

Human values and choices determine an animal’s lot in life even before he or she is born. Just as a sculptor’s hands shape clay, so human values shape our animals—for good and or evil. The little-examined, yet omnipresent act of breeding lies at the core of Gavin Ehringer’s eye-opening book.
Award-winning journalist Gavin Ehringer is a former cowboy, a horseman, and a dog trainer. He’s written for a wide range of animal publications, including Western Horseman, The Chronicle of the Horse, Dog Fancy, Dogster, and is the author of five animal-related books over a career that spans thirty years. He lives in Colorado Springs.

ISBN: 9781643130361
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Publisher: Pegasus Books
Published: March 12, 2019

"Animal devotees will be eager to explore Ehringer’s interpretative research that blends a mixture of natural history, human history, personal experience and science. His engrossing study presents ways humans can set and maintain high ethical and moral standards for the breeding and care of our animal partners now and in the future.""Through four case studies, Leaving the Wild reveals the extent to which humans over the millennia have drastically altered domesticated animals’ lives and created ethical quandaries that are now difficult to resolve. As a cowboy, horseman and dog trainer, Ehringer brings an engaging voice to his topic.""Solid, well-reported popular science for animal lovers.""Ehringer writes about the different ways dairy cattle are maintained, the 1980s craze for Arabian horses, the problem of feral-cat colonies, and the ongoing issues surrounding the dog known as the pit bull, fodder for Ehringer’s tracing of the part humans have played in the unnatural history of domestic animals.""Humans have bred animals for centuries. It’s only in recent times that our motives, techniques, and results have come into serious question. Gavin Ehringer’s Leaving the Wild is a timely compendium of breeding as it spans various species, with suggestions for regaining much-needed balance in the breeder-animal relationship.""Domestication is a two-edged sword. There’s no denying that many dogs, cats, and even horses live like royalty in our homes. But that’s not always the case. Sometimes the animals we love su er greatly. Leaving the Wild is a powerful entreaty to animal lovers everywhere to improve the lives of the animals in our care by adopting more compassionate breeding standards. I agree wholeheartedly.""Anybody at all interested in the animals closest to us—dogs, cats, cows, and horses—will want to read Gavin Ehringer’s Leaving the Wild. In a romp that is part natural and social history, and part personal storytelling, Ehringer takes us from a story of a scientist who decided to clone cattle from a prime steak to how the internet fueled the millennial generation’s cat craze. A highly enjoyable read.""Gavin Ehringer has written a lively and entertaining book on four of the species most commonly found living with humans: dogs, cats, cattle, and horses. No domesticated species has ever gone extinct, but the current state of domesticated animals is not wholly favorable, either. Ehringer has a good instinct for statistics as well as sharp observations that bring home the pitfalls and benefits of domestication.""Ehringer interweaves his extensive first-hand experiences of domestic animals with a fascinating account of their history, taking the reader right through to today's mix of sentiment and outright exploitation. Thought-provoking and controversial, this book pulls no punches in exposing the paradoxes implicit in our relationships with 21st century animals.""A fascinating account, taking the reader right through to today’s mix of sentiment and outright exploitation. This book pulls no punches in exposing the paradoxes implicit in our relationships with twenty-first century animals."