Apply now for a credit card that supports the RSPCA while you shop
RSPCA Emergency Number 0300 1234 999
Annual Report and Accounts for 2007 now online
What to do if you find an injured or sick animal
What to do if your own animal is sick or injured
Please don't try to report cruelty or sick/injured animals by email as this is only checked once a day.
Dogs currently up for rehoming
Cats currently up for rehoming
Any dog whose vaccinations are not current could be at risk of contracting canine distemper or canine parvovirus. The disease is particularly dangerous to younger dogs who have never been vaccinated and is very often fatal. If your dog or puppy is not vaccinated please consult your vet - IT IS NOT WORTH risking a £500 vet bill and a dead dog at the end of it for the sake of saving the comparatively small cost of vaccination. If you are on benefits or state pension and really cannot afford the full cost, you may be eligible to have the vaccination given at our clinic at a lower rate than a private vet would need to charge.
If your dog is not vaccinated and starts vomiting or has diarrhoea DO NOT let them mix with other dogs and phone your vet for advice. If you have more than one dog, keep the sick one away from the ones who are still healthy. Contact your vet by phone for advice before getting the healthy dogs vaccinated - they may be carrying the disease and it is important that they are not brought into contact with other dogs.
If you have rabbits, now is the time to make sure their boosters are up-to-date. Cambridge is a high-risk area for myxomatosis, and pets are not protected unless they are given booster vaccinations every 6 months. Spring and Autumn are the most dangerous seasons.
Users of the RSPCA animal clinic must bring proof of benefits or paperwork such as a bank-statement which shows that they have a very low income each time they visit the clinic. If you are unable to bring your pet yourself it's fine for a helper to bring them for you, but the helper must show proof that you are in receipt of benefit and needs to have a signed note from you confirming that they are bringing the animal on your behalf.
RSPCA Pet Insurance The RSPCA offer extensive pet insurance for cats and dogs at great value prices extensively designed to help in times of greatest need. Low cost monthly premiums start at only £2.92 for cats and £5.41 for dogs. You can also compare other pet insurance policies via our webshop.
Branch animal welfare work figures for 2007 now online
Our main charity shop in Newmarket is at 156, the High Street. Our second-hand bookshop and retro/vintage charity shops are at 188 and 184 Mill Road, Cambridge. To keep our services running we need to achieve an average turnover per shop of at least £900 per week. With your help as shoppers we will do it!
Our bookshop at 188 is full of quality reading for all tastes and also videos, music CDs and artwork. Our charity shop at 184 offers high-end, vintage, retro and designer clothing to a fantastic standard, together with kitsch and collectables, games and curios.
The Cavendish House of Swavesey Village College raised a fantastic £434.24 by organising a sponsored walk. This is Claire, our chairman, receiving it at their school assembly in April 2008
Buy your pet a present that will go on providing protection throughout 2008 and help animals who are less fortunate. Our webshop gives you access to a choice of online quotes for pet insurance; and each policy taken out means a donation towards our welfare work
Watch the BBC report on the recent operation to rescue nearly 100 neglected horses in Amersham
|
Click the start button to view a short video on adopting a pet from the RSPCA. You can read more about adopting animals from our branch on our animal rehoming page. |
Living with a Rescued Cat |
Living with a Rescued Dog |
To Cambridge Veterinary Group, who have very generously donated the proceeds of their last client evening to the branch. The evening raised a total of £1,000 — enough to run our animal welfare services for four days and we are extremely grateful for their help.
Sponsor a kennel or cattery space
Snake in your garden? If you see a snake in your garden it is very unlikely that it is an adder (the only British snake which is poisonous). Follow the link to Froglife's guide to native snakes to get a positive identification.
Contrary to what most people think, the RSPCA does not receive automatic "funding" and local branch animal welfare services entirely depend on what volunteers can raise. In a typical week we will take in at least one animal with severe injuries requiring surgical repairs costing up to £500, followed by several weeks aftercare until it is well enough to be rehomed. We will also receive daily requests for help to pay for emergency veterinary treatment and we must find £2,500 per month to keep our animal clinic running and another £2,000 per month to pay for boarding and care of animals waiting to be found new homes.
Demands on our services continue to be very high, although our finances are not in such a critical position as they were last year. We still need donations and also saleable items for our charity shops at 184 and 188 Mill Road, Cambridge and at 156 High Street, Newmarket. Even damaged or worn items of clothing can still make money for us as we sell them on to be recycled for their fibre content. Prices for worn-out clothing, curtains, linens etc. for recycling are very good at the moment, so damaged items that you might not think are worth giving can still raise valuable funds for our work. This only applies to fabric items: unfortunately we can't sell damaged ornaments, toys etc.
This diary of a typical day in the life of the branch will show you why it is so important that we can keep going.
Annual Fun Dog Show
Buy animal care books via our website and help to support our work
Donations and legacies to the branch
Foot and Mouth: latest situation (link to DEFRA website)
Bird Flu - latest situation (link to DEFRA website)
| Directions
to our Animal
Clinic |
Animal
Adoptions and Rehoming |
| Directions to our Cambridge
charity shops (at 184 and 188 Mill Road) |
Cats and Dogs |
| Directions to our Newmarket charity shop | Ferrets |
| Download a form to volunteer
with the branch |
Rabbits |
| Join the RSPCA | Download a poster of rabbits looking for new homes |
| Email
us (NOT FOR EMERGENCIES) |
Not local to Cambridgeshire? All of England and Wales is covered by the RSPCA's network of local branches, although some branches are more active than others. We have a list of websites run by RSPCA branches. It is generated by a dynamic search, so the links are not in any alphabetical or geographical order and you will need to scroll through the list to find your own location. Branches are usually named after the main town or city in their area (e.g. Cambridge and District) or their county (e.g. NorfolkWest). |
| Donate | |
| Buy from our webshop |
On
average we have only twenty
pounds available for each animal needing our assistance! Our
branch deals with over two thousand animals each year.
If you would like to help us fundraise, follow
this link.
Our charity shops can turn your unwanted foreign change into funds to support our welfare work.
Cambridge charity shops: 01223 212 644
Newmarket: 01638 668 023
If you have any books, CDs, videos, pictures, clothes - in fact
anything saleable - which you no longer want, we can make good use of
it to raise funds.
Volunteering
area
Annual Report and Accounts for 2007 now online
Join the RSPCA
You can support us by
purchasing from
our webshop
Help us and support fair trade at the
same time by visiting The
EthicalStore in our Webstore
Latest issue of our Webshop
Newsletter
Please consider supporting our work with a secure online donation via the Charities Aid Foundation website
Animal welfare services we provide.
Every part of England and Wales is covered by the RSPCA's network
of local branches, although some branches are more flourishing than
others.
If you do not live within our own branch area this
page of links to the other RSPCA branches in
Region East may help you make contact with your own local branch.
Working
with animals (Off-site link to dynamic web search)
Last updated: 14/08/2008